Quentin Robinson and Cameron Murphy (Photo: UW Madison)

In Franz Kafkaโ€™s Metamorphosis, for reasons outside of his control, Gregor Samsa wakes up one day as a giant creepy-crawling critter โ€” some say a cockroach โ€” so Gregor has to navigate the world as a giant bug, which as you can imagine is quite an isolating experience. This isolation, in turn, leads to a bleak ending with neglect, hatred, and ultimately death. After going through a year of isolation ourselves, much like Gregor, itโ€™s likely that some of us have a pretty bleak, Kafkaesque outlook on life. But for others, isolation brought new values and a refreshed will to create, learn, and collaborate. This latter case was true for the Grammy-winning percussion quartet Third Coast Percussion and Movement Art Is, founded by dancers and choreographers Jon Boogz and Memphisโ€™ Lil Buck.

When in-person interactions could not take place with the two groups based in Chicago and Los Angeles respectively, they worked together over many Zoom meetings to create their own Metamorphosis, a much more hopeful performance that explores the experiential lens of young Black men growing up in America today. โ€œItโ€™s about the dancers as the main characters โ€” them growing and discovering who they are through their experiences through their life,โ€ says Jenny Davis, music department manager at Crosstown Arts, where the show will be performed on May 3rd.

In this performance, the street-style, popping and Memphis jookinโ€™ choreography by Lil Buck and John Boogz is transferred onto different bodies โ€” dancers Cameron Murphy and Quentin Robinson โ€” so that the dancing itself represents how one artistโ€™s energy becomes absorbed and translated by another. Meanwhile, the dance will be set to Third Coastโ€™s interpretation and reimagination of music by contemporary composers, electronic artists Jlin and Tyondai Braxton as well as Philip Glass. Such modern classical music, Davis points out, โ€œis really fascinating because itโ€™s influenced by all these other genres, too.โ€

With this blending of different styles and interpretations of music and dance, Davis says, โ€œI think thatโ€™s inspiring to see how things that kind of exist separately can work together.โ€

Metamorphosis, Crosstown Theater, Tuesday, May 3, 7:30-9:30 p.m., $25-$40.