SOUNDS OF NOW: KONNAKOL, DRUM KIT & CODE

BC Manjunath, Alex McLean & Matt Davies

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 8 November 2025, 8.00pm

Tickets:
£17
£10 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

A newly-composed work for Konnakol (vocal percussive music from the South Indian Carnatic tradition), live-coded electronic music and percussion. Common to these disparate traditions is an interest in pattern, texture and complex rhythm, which mridangam and konnakol artist BC Manjunath, live-coder Alex McLean and drummer Matt Davies will explore through a unique and virtuosic live performance.

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PIANO CLASSICS

Libby Burgess

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 8 November 2025, 2.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

SCHUBERT (arr. Liszt) Standchen (6’)
JS BACH (arr. Bauer) Die Seele ruht in Jesu Handen (6’)
LISZT Liebeslied (after Schumann’s ‘Widmung’) (4’)
SCHUBERT Four Impromptus (28′)
RACHMANINOV Prelude in D Op.23 (5’)
RACHMANINOV Moments Musicaux in B minor Op.16 No.3 (4’)
RACHMANINOV Prelude in G sharp minor Op.32 No.12 (3’)
RACHMANINOV Elegie (from ‘Morceaux de Fantaisie’) Op.3 No.1 (5’)
RACHMANINOV Prelude in G Op.32 No.5 (3’)
BINGEN (arr. Marie-Luise Hinrichs) O frondens virga (2’)
C SCHUMANN Notturno Op.6 No.2 (5’)
PUCCINI Piccolo valzer (3’)
S COLERIDGE-TAYLOR Deep River (6’)
BONDS Troubled Water (5’) 

Praised for her “warm, sensitive pianism” (The Observer), and for performances that are “a masterclass in the art of holding an audience’s attention” (Cherwell), Libby Burgess returns to Sheffield for a recital of some of the best-loved music for solo piano. From the dazzling inventiveness of Schubert’s Four Impromptus to the lush romanticism of Rachmaninov’s Morceaux de Fantaisie, this concert showcases some of the finest writing for the instrument.

This concert is dedicated to Julia Wilton, a Friend and generous supporter of Music in the Round for many years

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Piano Classics

Franz Schubert’s ‘Ständchen’ (‘A serenade’) was originally a lied for solo voice and piano. Composed in 1826, it is a setting of the ‘song’ in Act 2, Scene 3 of Shakespeare’s Cymbeline. Evoking the coming of morning, the song begins: “Hark, hark, the lark at heaven’s gate sings, / and Phoebus ‘gins arise, / His steeds to water at those springs / on chalic’d flowers that lies”. Franz Liszt arranged Schubert’s ‘Ständchen’ for solo piano in 1838, including it as “Ständchen von Shakespeare” in his 12 Lieder von Franz Schubert. 

Another arrangement of vocal music, J. S. Bach’s ‘Die Seele ruht in Jesu Händen’ (‘The soul rests in Jesus’ hands’) was originally composed as an aria for his Cantata BWV 127. Written for a service on Estomihi (the Sunday before Lent), it is performed here in a transcription by the distinguished English-born American pianist and teacher, Harold Bauer.   

Liszt’s arrangement of Robert Schuman’s ‘Widmung’ (‘dedication’) for his ‘Liebeslied’ (or ‘Love Song’) preserves the lyrical emotion of the original while adding his own pianistic virtuosity. Gifted to his fiancé Clara as a wedding present, Schuman’s song is expanded and transformed; whereas Schuman’s ‘Widmung’ ends quietly, Liszt’s ‘Liebeslied’ finishes with a final pianistic flurry.  

Schubert wrote eight Impromptus, published in two sets of four – the first set (op. 90) was published during the composer’s lifetime, the second was published posthumously as Op. 142. Composed in 1827, the Four Impromptus Op. 90 D. 899 are a cornerstone of the piano repertoire. The first, in C minor, blends elements of sonata, variation, and through-composed structures. The second Impromptu in E♭ major is a swift ‘moto perpetuo’ with a ternary (or ABA) form. The third is a flowing and meditative piece in G♭ major, characterized by long melodic lines, while the fourth and final Impromptu, in A♭ major, is characterized by cascading arpeggios and a chordal response. 

Like Liszt, Sergei Vasilyevich Rachmaninov was a virtuoso pianist as well as a composer. Widely considered one of the finest pianists of his day, Rachmaninov’s pianistic talents can be heard in his writing for the instrument. The Ten Preludes, Op. 23, composed in 1901 and 1903, is part of a full suite of 24 preludes in all the major and minor keys. The Prelude in D Major is No. 4 in the collection. Marked andante cantabile (moderate and flowing with a lyrical quality), the short composition is in ternary form with an opening theme, developed in a middle section, returning at the end. Also performed is the Prelude in G Sharp minor Op.32 No.12. Among the composer’s most atmospheric pieces for piano, opening right-hand arpeggios fall across a distinctly Russian melody. The Prelude in G Major Op.32 No.5 is the most famous of the set, with its march-like outer sections contrasted by a more lyrical middle section. Rachmaninov himself had huge hands – stretching a 13th (an octave plus a 6th, or from middle C to a high A) – so would have had no difficulty bringing out the melody in the inner voice of the middle section.  

Rachmaninov’s set of Six moments musicaux were composed when he was just 23 years old. Keen to demonstrate his mastery of musical forms, as well as his virtuosity as a pianist, the third movement (in B minor) is the emotional heart of the set with a brooding melody played low on the piano, under wide, open chords. The 5 Morceaux de fantaisie (or ‘fantasy pieces’) were composed when Rachmaninov was younger still (aged 19) in 1892 and are dedicated to Anton Arensky, Rachmaninov’s harmony teacher at the Moscow Conservatory. The opening Elegy consists of gentle arpeggios and a deeply melancholic melody. 

Hildegard von Bingen was a 12th-century abbess and polymath, active as a composer, writer, and mystic. Her piece ‘O frondens virga’ (‘O blossoming branch’) was composed as a psalm antiphon for the Virgin Mary. It is performed here in an arrangement by the pianist, Marie-Luise Hinrichs.  

Giacomo Puccini’s ‘Piccolo Valzer’ (‘Little Waltz’) was published in 1894. The inspiration for the work was said to be the rocking of a boat on Lake Massaciuccoli, where Puccini loved to go fishing. It was subsequently re-elaborated by the composer and became one of the best-known opera arias, Musetta’s solo ‘Quando me n’vo’ in La Bohème. 

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s ‘Deep River’ was written in 1904 as part of the composer’s 24 Negro Spirituals. Coleridge-Taylor is reported to have said of the collection: “what Brahms has done for the Hungarian folk music, Dvorak for the Bohemian, and Grieg for the Norwegian, I have tried to do for these Negro Melodies”. 

Margaret Bonds arranged over fifty African-American spirituals for various instruments. The piano work ‘Troubled Water’ is based on the spiritual ‘Wade in the Water’ which was associated with Songs of the Underground Railroad, work songs used by slaves in the nineteenth century to share coded information for escape. Beginning with energetic, syncopated rhythms in the left hand, leading into the recognizable theme in the spiritual, the piece then thickens, with Bonds weaving in jazz-inspired sonorities. 

SONGS OF LOVE

Claire Booth & Ensemble 360

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Friday 7 November 2025, 7.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event
Photo of singer Claire Booth, soprano

Programme includes
DVOŘÁK (arr. Matthews)
Love Songs (18’)

DEBUSSY Trois poèmes de Stéphane Malllarmé (13’)
MUSSORGSKY The Nursery (selection) (10’)
DEBUSSY String Quartet (25’) 

Claire Booth is a singer celebrated around the world for her distinctive and characterful voice and the relentless curiosity in the range of work she presents. In recent years she has become a frequent collaborator with Ensemble 360, including a much-lauded CD release Pierrot Portraits. As they prepare for Sheffield Chamber Music Festival 2026, of which Claire is Guest Curator, they present a dazzling evening of French chamber music.

In 1913 Debussy and Ravel began a somewhat friendly rivalry to set three poems by Stéphane Mallarmé, whose words, like the music of these great French composers, explored the same shimmering textures beloved of their contemporary impressionist painters. Ravel’s Chansons madécasses – one of the most popular works in SCMF 2024 – opens this sensuous celebration of light and love which concludes with Debussy’s glittering string quartet.

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DVORAK Antonín, (arr. Matthews) Love Songs

i. Oh, that longed-for happiness does not bloom for our love (Ó naší lásce nekvete to vytoužené štěstí)
ii. So many a heart is as though dead (V tak mnohém srdci mrtvo jest)
iii. Around the house now I stagger (Kol domu se teď potácím) 
iv. I know that in sweet hope (Já vím, že v sladké naději) 
v. Over the countryside reigns a light sleep (Nad krajem vévodí lehký spánek) 
vi. Here in the forest by a brook (Zde v lese u potoka) 
vii. In that sweet power of your eyes (V té sladké moci očí tvých) 
viii. Oh dear soul, the only one (Ó duše drahá jedinká) 

 

Dvorak’s Love Songs are a reworking of his earlier collection Cypresses. The Cypresses were first written in 1865, but Dvorak revisited them again in 1889 to create 8 new songs out of the original 18.  Inspired by the traditional music of his native country, the works are settings of romantic poems by Gustav Pfleger-Moravsky, a fellow Czech who’s work Dvorak admired. The songs were rewritten in many forms by the composer, including a reworking for string quartet, and he pulled many of the main themes out of the song cycle for other works. Although originally written for piano and voice, this arrangement has the vocal line accompanied by violin, viola, cello and double bass. Love Songs are distinctive and known for their elaborate accompaniments and are argued to be the best example of his writing for solo voice. 

DEBUSSY Claude, Trois Poemes de Mallarmé

i. Soupir  
ii. Placet futile 
iii. Eventail 
 

Paris in the late-19th century was a hub of creative innovation. The poet Stéphane Mallarmé (1842-1898) was a central figure in this experimental scene. At his weekly meetings on Tuesdays at his apartment on the Rue de Rome, Mallarmé held court, speaking for hours about art and politics. Regular attendees included W.B. Yeats, Oscar Wilde, Édouard Manet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Emile Zola, Paul Gauguin, Edgar Degas, Paul Verlaine, Rainer Maria Rilke… and Claude Debussy.  

Debussy adored poetry, particularly the works of Mallarmé. Indeed, his most-famous composition, the orchestral tone poem Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune, is closely based on Mallarmé’s poem (‘The Afternoon of the Faune’). Debussy’s music evokes the languid feeling of the poem, while the work’s structure closely mirrors that of the text: Debussy’s composition has the same number of bars (110) as the poem has lines. 

This reverence for poetry can be seen in Debussy’s setting of three poems by Mallarmé, composed late in the composer’s life in 1913. In her analysis of the first of the three songs – ‘Soupir’ (Sigh) – musicologist Marianne Wheeldon notes that “Debussy’s setting tries to imitate the permutability of Mallarmé’s syntax”. Debussy closely mirrors the poem’s sophisticated form, adapting his music to the text (rather than attempting to make the poem fit a traditional musical structure) so that the poem’s ambiguity is preserved. Just as Mallarmé’s poem is written as a single breathless sentence – “Faithful, a white jet of water sighs toward the Azure / – Toward the tender Azure of pale and pure October” – Debussy imitates the freely flowing and associative form of Mallarmé’s poem in which the poet’s ‘soul’ reaches toward ‘autumn’, ‘freckles’, ‘the sky’, and so on.  

Debussy was not the only composer to set poems by Mallarmé. Famously, Maurice Ravel also composed his own Trois poèmes de Mallarmé. Indeed, it was Ravel who first secured the rights to set Mallarmé’s poetry to music. Both Debussy and Ravel set ‘Soupir’ and ‘Placet futile’, however whereas Ravel chose to end his collection with ‘Surgi de la croupe et du bond’ (‘ Risen from the crupper and leap’), Debussy finishes with ‘Eventail’ (‘Fan’), a setting of Mallarmé’s poem ‘Autre Éventail de Mademoiselle Mallarmé’.  Subtly erotic, the poem begins: 

O dreamer, so that I
May plunge in that pathless thing,
Pure delight, by a subtle lie
Learn to hold in your hand my wing. 

MUSSORGSKY Modest, The Nursery (selection)

Originally published in two series, The Nursey song cycle was written between 1868 and 1872. Made up of seven songs, Mussorgsky wrote both the music and the words. The text is written musically exactly as it would be spoken, which leads to some unexpected melodies, and a fluid rhythm in an irregular time signature. Mussorgsky was one of the first composers to make music from speech patterns in this way. The style of each song is varied, but Mussorgsky’s appreciation for humour is clear. Although written to express the feelings and ideas of a child, the music is not for children, as it is as advanced as any other work from that era, and offers a fresh but haunting insight into domestic life. 

DEBUSSY Claude, String Quartet in G minor Op. 10

Debussy’s String Quartet was first performed at the Société Nationale de Musique on 29 December 1893 – almost exactly a year before he shocked Paris with the Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune, the most laconic manifestation of his revolutionary creative spirit. The Quartet, composed just after the Prélude, is one of his earliest mature works – a piece that still has some roots in the musical language of César Franck but in which a fresh and brilliant imagination can be heard, not just in the free handling of forms, but also in the spectacularly inventive writing for string instruments – something absorbed by Ravel in the Quartet he wrote a decade later. The first movement is robust and confident, while the second, with its extensive use of pizzicato, hints at the Javanese music that Debussy heard at the 1889 Exposition. The slow movement begins with fragments of the theme split between the lower instruments before being introduced in full by the first violin, over rich chromatic harmonies. The finale has clear thematic links with the first. It starts hesitantly, gradually building up both tension and speed, on a melodic idea that is presented in different guises before reaching the dazzling conclusion in G major. 

Nigel Simeone © 2011 

RAVEL & GLASS: CINEMATIC QUARTETS

Piatti Quartet

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Thursday 6 November 2025, 7.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

HERMAN (arr. Birchall) Suite from ‘Psycho’ (10’) 
GREENWOOD Prospector’s Quartet from ‘There Will Be Blood’ (3’)
GLASS String Quartet No.3 (18’)
RAVEL String Quartet in F (30’)

Ravel’s glorious, rhapsodic Quartet is the joyous conclusion of this concert of string music composed for, and used in, cinema. From Radiohead’s Jonny Greenwood’s spare and spectral score for Paul Thomas Anderson’s Oscar-winning ‘There Will Be Blood’, to Bernard Herman’s iconic music composed for Alfred Hitchcock’s ‘Psycho’, and Philip Glass’s String Quartet No.3 (composed for the 1985 film ‘Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters’), the Piatti Quartet showcases the captivating range of chamber music composed for the big screen.

The Piatti Quartet have been described by composer Julian Anderson as “living treasures of chamber music… meticulous attention to detail is combined with strong expressive impulse and a wonderful sense of musical drama”, and return to the Playhouse after several rapturously received concerts across their stellar career.

FILM SCREENINGS
A specially curated series of film screenings inspired by the Piatti’s ‘Cinematic Quartets’ takes place at The Showroom to coincide with their concert.

Wednesday 5 November, The Showroom
5.15pm Music in Films panel discussion
6.00pm ‘Mishima’

A panel discussion, including violinist Emily Holland from the Piatti Quartet, will delve into the ways music brings film to life.
Find more details about the panel discussion here: showroomcinema.org.uk

Sunday 9 November, The Showroom
2.30pm ‘There Will Be Blood’

 

HERRMANN Bernard, (arr. Birchall), Suite from ‘Psycho’

‘Psycho’ can easily be said to have one of the most iconic scores in film history– even if you haven’t seen the film, you will have heard the screeching strings from the shower-murder scene. Herrmann scored 7 films for director Alfred Hitchcock in total, with Psycho being the 6th in their collaboration, and wrote the music for other epics such as Citizen Kane, The Twilight Zone and The War of the Worlds. The score for Psycho was written only for the string section of an orchestra, with the strings being muted throughout the film (apart from in the iconic scene) which was to aid in the film’s stark, dissonant, claustrophobic feeling. The music contains influences from composers like Bartok, Debussy and Stravinski, and is extremely effective in conveying the thing Herrmann most wanted it to: “terror”. 

GREENWOOD Jonny, Prospector’s Quartet from ‘There Will Be Blood’

As well as being lead guitarist of the rock band Radiohead, Jonny Greenwood has forged a hugely successful career as a composer of film scores. Credits include soundtracks for the films The Power of the Dog (2021, directed by Jane Campion) and We Need to Talk about Kevin (2011) as well as numerous films in collaboration with the director Paul Thomas Anderson – 2018’s Phantom Thread (for which Greenwood was nominated for an Academy Award) and 2007’s There Will Be Blood, from which this quartet is taken. 

As a child, Greenwood played both the recorder (an instrument he would continue to play into adulthood) and viola. It is his affinity for string writing, and his knowledge of both rock and classical traditions, that sets him aside a film composer. The score for There Will Be Blood, for example, features quotations from the works of Arvo Pärt and Johannes Brahms (as well as some of Greenwood’s own previous compositions) and is characterised by Greenwood’s signature lush string-textures. IndieWire called the soundtrack “One of the most memorable scores this side of the year 2000”, while Variety noted the evocative nature of the music: “Jonny Greenwood’s musical compositions almost become another character in the film. Think Bernard Herrmann and Taxi Driver, another portrait of a twisted soul, with sound effects and music to match”.  

Indeed, this is music that conjures the darkly unsettling world of Upton Sinclair’s novel Oil!, on which the film is based. In ‘The Prospector’s Quartet’, repeated notes played on the cello seem to evoke the machinery of oil extraction, while churning melodies in the strings grow in their foreboding intensity. Daniel Day-Lewis won an Oscar for his performance in the film. As IndieWire noted, “Greenwood’s work, which is string-heavy and beautifully unsettling, is as memorable as Day-Lewis’ performance … Close your eyes and you can almost feel the oil pulsing beneath the ground”.  

 

GLASS Philip, String Quartet No.3 ‘Mishima’

Philip Glass has a musical language that is instantly palatable, with its flowing arpeggios and lush instrumentation. It’s also confined to a very narrow strip in the spectrum of musical expression, yet the potential for infinite subtlety reveals itself quickly. The idea is reminiscent of Pablo Picasso’s blue period, during which he only uses shades of blue and green to convey incredibly nuanced ideas and emotions. In Glass’ third string quartet, the harmony revolves closely around D minor in the first four movements, and E flat major in the last two. The development of the piece is constructed through subtle changes in the layering of material, rather than through traditional thematic development. Originally, these six movements were written as a soundtrack to the film “Mishima”, directed by Paul Schrader. It tells the story of the Japanese writer Yukio Mishima, who was an active nationalist who ended up taking his own life through the act of Seppuku, a ritual suicide, after having led a failed coup d’état.

 

Johannes Marmen 2016

RAVEL Maurice, String Quartet in F

i. Allegro moderato. très doux

ii. Assez vif. très rythmé

iii. Très lent Vif et agité

 

The first two movements of Ravel’s Quartet were finished in December 1902 and the next month he submitted the first movement for a prize at the Paris Conservatoire, where he was still a student. The jury was unimpressed and the Director Théodore Dubois was typically acidic, claiming that it “lacked simplicity”. The failure to win a prize meant that Ravel’s studies with Fauré were over but Ravel persisted with the Quartet, and by April 1903 he had finished all four movements. He put it aside for yet another doomed attempt at the Prix de Rome, but it’s likely that he made further revisions later in the year. The pianist and composer Alfredo Casella recalled running into Ravel in the street in January 1904: “I found [Ravel] seated on a bench, attentively reading a manuscript. I asked him what it was. He said: It is a quartet I have just finished. I am rather pleased with it.” The first performance was given at the Schola Cantorum by the Heymann Quartet, on 5 March 1904. It is dedicated “à mon cher maître Gabriel Fauré”.

 

In a parallel with Debussy’s Quartet, Ravel makes use of cyclic themes – material heard in the first movement returns in various guises throughout. The second movement is notable for Ravel’s brilliant use of cross-rhythms as all four string players become a kind of gigantic guitar. The rhapsodic slow movement includes a dream-like recollection of the cyclic theme. In the finale, Ravel’s use of irregular time signatures generates a momentum that is not only impossible to predict but impossible to resist. Recollections of the cyclic theme are woven into the texture with great subtlety and the kaleidoscopic string writing produces a conclusion that glitters and surges.

 

Nigel Simeone © 2012

MESSIAEN ROUNDTABLE

Ensemble 360 & Christopher Dingle

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 1 November 2025, 4.00pm

Tickets:
£5
Free to ticket-holders for the evening concert, but please book in advance

Past Event
Ensemble 360 string musicians in performance

Leading Messiaen scholar Christopher Dingle (Professor of Music at Royal Birmingham Conservatoire) joins musicians from Ensemble 360 for this roundtable discussion exploring one of the great masterpieces of the twentieth century: Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time.

QUARTET FOR THE END OF TIME

Ensemble 360

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 1 November 2025, 7.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event
Ensemble 360 string musicians in performance

KLEIN String Trio (12)
SMIT Trio for Clarinet, Viola and Piano (12)
MESSIAEN Quartet for the End of Time (50)  

Olivier Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time is the centrepiece of this concert showcasing music to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War and the liberation of the internment, concentration and death camps of Europe. Considered one of the 20th century’s greatest works, Messiaen composed the Quartet while a prisoner of war in the Stalag VIII-A camp. As Steven Osborne writes, “the music seems to touch the far edges of human experience”. Also featured in the programme is Gideon Klien’s folk-infused String Trio, composed just ten days before Klien was transported from Terezín to Auschwitz, and Leo Smit’s lyrical and profoundly expressive Trio for Clarinet, Viola and Piano. 

Messiaen Roundtable
Crucible Playhouse, 4.00pm
Tickets £5 / Free to all ticket holders for the evening concert,
but please book here in advance

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KLEIN Gideon, String Trio

i. Allegro
ii. Lento
iii. Molto vivace
Gideon Klein was born in Moravia in 1919, and, like Zykmud Schul, he studied with Alois Hába at the Prague Conservatoire. In December 1941, along with thousands of other Prague Jews, he was deported to Terezín. It was thus in the environment of a prison camp that Klein reached maturity as a composer in his early twenties. In 1940 he had been awarded a scholarship to study at the Royal Academy of Music in London, but was prevented from taking this up by the Nazis. He was also an extremely gifted pianist, and gave performances in Terezín of works such as Beethoven’s Sonata Op.111, Schoenberg’s Three Piano Pieces Op.11, and Janáček’s I.X.1905. The String Trio, finished in October 1944, was to be his last work. It’s a piece of great energy and assurance, and stylistically it’s a fascinating mixture of music inspired by Czech dance rhythms, but also by the more expressionist works of the Second Viennese School. Even by the traumatic standards of music written in Terezín, the circumstances in which Gideon Klein composed his String Trio are shocking: by October 1944, when he completed this piece, Klein had witnessed the death of Schul, and nine days after finishing the Trio, he, too, was transported to Auschwitz, along with Pavel Haas, and two other composers – Viktor Ullmann and Hans Krasa. Klein was subsequently moved to a coal-mining labour camp near Katowice. He died on 27 January 1945, but the precise circumstances of his death are uncertain: he either perished in the mining camp, or as one of many fellow-Jews who lost their lives on a brutal forced march made to accompany the fleeing SS.

 

Nigel Simeone © 2011

SMIT Leopold, Trio for Clarinet, Viola and Piano

i. Allegretto 
ii. Lento 
iii. Allegro vivace 

Leopold Smit (1900-1943), known as ‘Leo’, was a Dutch composer. Born in Amsterdam, Smit studied at the Conservatorium van Amsterdam before moving to Paris in 1927 where he was in close contact with the group of composers known as ‘Les Six’ – musicians including Arthur Honegger, Darius Milhaud, and Francis Poulenc who pioneered the ‘neoclassical’ style.  

Smit moved back to Amsterdam in late 1937. In November 1942, he and his wife, Lientje, (both Jewish) were forced to move to the ‘Transvaal’ neighbourhood, a deportation district in the east of Amsterdam. In March 1943, they were summoned to the Jewish Theatre (today again known as Hollandsche Schouwburg and National Holocaust Memorial), then transported to Westerbork. By the end of April, the couple were transported to the Sobibor extermination camp where they were murdered upon arrival. 

Smit’s musical output is small but compelling. He was clearly influenced by the composers in his milieux – his use of polytonality (writing in two or more keys simultaneously) was inspired by the music of Darius Milhaud, for example, while the Trio for flute, viola and harp borrows Debussy’s instrumentation. There are obvious influences of jazz and light music (foxtrot, Charleston and rumba), also; Smit was particularly fond of George Gershwin. 

Smit’s most neoclassical piece is the Symphony in C. Jurjen Vis describes the work: “Mozartian themes are put through a bitonal wringer”. The Divertimento for piano four hands, although jazzier in character, likewise draws on Mozart – the piece was composed as a response to Smit’s continuous playing (with students) piano excerpts of Mozart Symphonies. 

In the Trio for clarinet, viola and piano, broadly developed and sensuous melodies tend to prevail. Composed in 1938, it is written for the instrumentation famously deployed in Mozart’s ‘Kegelstatt’ trio (K. 498). The work is in three movements: an opening Allegretto begins with a stately melody in octaves, then in dialogue with mysterious and chromatically rich, often fragmentary tunes that capriciously change in mood from one moment to the next. The central movement – ‘Lento’ – begins slow and solemn. Piano chords undergird long, winding melodies on the violin and clarinet, before the music develops in harmonic and textural complexity. The final ‘Allegro vivace’ sees pizzicato violin matched by staccato clarinet notes as the interplay between the instruments of the trio grows in intensity, each vying for the foreground before the piece reaches its dramatic conclusion.  

MESSIAEN Olivier, Quartet for the End of Time

Liturgie de Crystal

Vocalise pour l’Ange qui annonce la fin du Temps

Abîme des oiseaux

Intermède

Louange à l’Éternité de Jésus

Danse de la fureur, pour les sept trompettes

Fouillis d’arc-en-ciel, pour l’Ange qui annonce la fin du Temps

Louange à l’Immortalité de Jésus

 

Messiaen composed his Quartet for the End of Time during his captivity as a Prisoner of War at Stalag VIII-A in the autumn of 1940. With three fellow-prisoners to write for – a violinist, cellist and clarinetist – he began by composing a short movement for them to play without piano – the ‘Intermède’. Once the camp authorities had found Messiaen a piano, he set to work on a piece that explores the possibilities of the unusual ensemble in typically inventive ways, using the four instruments together on only a few occasions. The clarinet plays a long solo (‘Abîme des oiseaux’) while the cello and violin each have a slow movement with piano – the two ‘Louanges’, both of which Messiaen recycled from works he’d composed in the 1930s: the Fête des Belles Eaux for the 1937 Paris Exposition and the Diptypque for organ. The first performance of the Quartet took place on 15 January 1941 in one of the camp huts, to an audience of a few hundred prisoners. The audience was either entranced or baffled by what they heard on that extraordinary night. A review in the camp newspaper likened the occasion to the premiere of The Rite of Spring, noting that “it’s often a mark of a work’s greatness that it has provoked conflict on the occasion of its birth.”

 

Nigel Simeone © 2012

BACH & THE AMERICAN MINIMALISTS

Shani Diluka

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Friday 31 October 2025, 7.00pm

Tickets:
£23
£17 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

Music by Philip Glass, Meredith Monk and Moondog sits alongside works by JS Bach in this recital by Monegasque-Sri Lankan pianist, Shani Diluka. Described as “one of the greatest of her generation” (Piano Magazine), Diluka’s captivating performance connects across the centuries, from the energy of the American minimalists to Bach’s expressive and technically demanding solo keyboard works. Diluka was appointed to the prestigious French ‘Knighthood for Arts and Letters’, and performs regularly at concert venues including Philharmonie de Paris, Amsterdam Concertgebouw and Vienna Konzerthaus.

JS BACH (arr. Siloti) Prelude in B minor (4′)
GLASS Études: No.2 (7′)
JS BACH Prelude No.1 in C BWV846 (3′)
CPE BACH Solfeggietto (1′)
JARRETT Wild Irish Rose (5′)
GLASS Études: No.9 (4′)
CAGE Dream (8′)
JS BACH Prelude No.12 in F minor BWV857 (3′)
EVANS Danny Boy (extract) (3′)
JS BACH (arr. Petri) Cantata ‘Sheep May Safely Graze’ (5′)
GLASS Mad Rush (15′)
JS BACH (transc. Cortot) Aria BWV1056 (3′)
MOONDOG Canon VIII (2′)
JARRETT Be My Love (5′)
JS BACH (transc. Kempff) Sicilienne BWV1031 (4′)
MONK Rail Road (2′)
JARRETT I Loves You, Porgy (6′)
MOONDOG Barn Dance (2′)
JARRETT Shenandoah (6′)
GLASS ‘Opening’ from ‘Glassworks’ (7′)
JS BACH (arr. Marcello) Adagio from Oboe Concerto BWV974 (4′)
GLASS (arr. Diluka) Tyrol Concerto Mvt.2 (3′)
JS BACH Prelude in C minor from the ‘Well-Tempered Clavier’ BWV847 (3′)

In conversation with Shani Diluka
Crucible Playhouse, 5.30pm – 6.15pm
Tickets £5 / Free to all ticket holders for the evening concert,
but please book here in advance

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Bach and the American Minimalists

In Howards End, E.M. Forster wrote that “it will be generally admitted that Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony is the most sublime noise that has ever penetrated into the ear of man. All sorts and conditions are satisfied by it.” For scholar Scott Burnham, writing in Beethoven Hero, the composer has “arguably been to music what Socrates was to ancient philosophy: his music is heard as a direct expression of human values.” Yet, if there’s one transition that’s notable in a twenty-first century classical music culture, where Beethoven was a previous generation’s unquestionable genius, another might be set to replace him. In 2019, BBC Music Magazine polled 174 composers for their favorite composer of all time. Bach came out on top.  

 

Much as the porcelain busts, music festivals, and ample representation on concert programmes would lead us to believe, our musical heroes aren’t permanent, and are subject to constantly shifting forces. The fact that we know about Bach’s music at all is mostly thanks to Felix Mendelssohn, who revived Bach’s St Matthew Passion in 1829. (Because of his influential practice of historicism and revivalism—ideas that have fundamentally underpinned classical music culture ever since—there’s a fair argument to be made that Mendelssohn was the world’s most influential classical musician.) 

 

By shining a light on the way these histories are invented and constructed is not to deny the quality of the music. If anything, by showing the workings of these histories—in peeking behind the curtain—these towering world-historical figures become altogether more approachable, and we’re better placed to find ourselves amid their sometimes impenetrable legacies.Shani Diluka’s programme is not just an attempt to make sense of her own relation to Bach, but also how composers of diverse traditions and lineages are drawn to different parts of his artistry. Diluka chairs a big musical discussion, shining light that reflects back and all around. 

 

First comes a quartet of compositions all grouped around a single type of movement—the arpeggio, and its relation, the broken chord. Philip Glass is the modern-day king of the arpeggio; later in the programme, it’s hollowed out and hammered into shape in his Étude No. 9, but it first appears in a more incantory, scalic form in his Étude No. 2, creating something approaching the sound of Chopin. The kind of movement and atmosphere continues what’s been established in Alexander Siloti’s arrangement of Bach’s BMV855a; originally in E minor, Siloti transposes the piece down a fifth, darkens it, and adds pianistic flourishes that really enhance this romantic, watery version of Bach’s original. This section concludes with J.S. Bach’s son Charles Philipp Emanuel, and his Solfeggietto in C Minor, a fast, flourishing and popular toccata-style miniature, almost like a minor-key inversion of the Prelude in C Major by his father that precedes it. 

 

Later in his career, Keith Jarrett made the decision to return to Bach, a formative influence, and commenced a series of recordings on the ECM label of works like the Goldberg Variations, the Sonatas for Violin and Piano, the French Suites and both books of the Well-Tempered Clavier. Listening to My Wild Irish Rose, a song by Chauncey Olcott, and you’ll hear traces of that in the intricate contrapuntal underlay moving methodically under a serene, cantabile melody. That serenity continues in John Cage’s Dream, a gently hovering work originally used as music for a dance piece by Merce Cunningham. 

 

Two short pieces on shape follow. Bach’s Prelude in F Minor slowly builds harmonic shapes through arpeggiated movement, while Bill Evans’ arrangement of Danny Boy starts with unusual shapes, appearing in single gestures with a confidence, before expanding rhythmically into intricate part-leading around the second verse’s climax. 

 

From a pair of pieces on shape, to two pieces with a sense of procession. Mad Rush, a piece by Philip Glass originally for organ, was composed the Dalai Lama’s first public address in North America, in 1979 at New York City’s Cathedral of St. John the Divine. It’s made into an open score with multiple repeats to accommodate the leader’s entrance into the cathedral, and is quintessential Glass; almost all the material is made up of arpeggios of contrasting rhythm, whirring elliptically against one another. Though it comes from a cantata rather than a coronation, the slow-walk rhythms of Bach’s Sheep May Softly Graze give it a stately underlay. This version for solo was arranged by Egon Petri. 

 

During the 1960s, New York’s musically curious would be hard-pressed to miss Moondog: a blind, counter-cultural guru-like figure, dressed like a fantasy Viking and tethered to Manhattan’s 6th Avenue and 53rd Street, here was a gifted composer with a lifelong ambition to realise his particular vision in music. Two pieces by Moondog—a canon in the manner of a Bach Two-Part invention, then Barn Dance—are heard here. The latter is reminiscent particularly of Glass, who let Moondog stay on his couch for a year in exchange for an idiosyncratic musical education; it’s said that Glass learned more from Moondog than he did at Juilliard. In between these Moondog excursions come three songs of sorts: a sweetly melodic Sicilienne by Bach, Jarrett’s take on Be My Love (made popular by Mario Lanza) and Railroad, a short, insistent piece by Meredith Monk subtitled Travel Song. Two more Jarrett arrangements, of I Loves You Porgy from Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess, and the traditional American song Shenandoah. 

 

The hollowed-out arpeggios from Étude No.9 returns in the opening of Glass’s Glassworks, a project in which the composer sought to create a more “Walkman-friendly” type of writing. This kind of movement also characterises the Tirol Concerto, between which comes a section of Bach’s Oboe Concerto in D Minor, an example of Bach’s resourcefulness as a musician: this reconstructs a section of Marcello’s Concerto for Oboe and Strings, and parts of his own cantata BMV35. Diluka concludes with a work that synthesises all these broken-chord visions: Bach’s tempestuous Prelude in C Minor. 

BACH IN THE ROUND

Benjamin Nabarro of Ensemble 360

Upper Chapel, Sheffield
Saturday 25 October 2025, 10.30am / 3.30pm
Free event

10.30am – 12.30pm
3.30pm – 6.00pm

Free entry, donations welcome
No need to book, just turn up

Classical violinist Benjamin Nabarro from Ensemble 360

Another chance to step inside the music of Bach, up-close and reimagined, in this specially created surround-sound installation running alongside Benjamin Nabarro’s recitals in the tranquil setting of Upper Chapel.

To make this innovative, multi-speaker installation, fragments of Ben’s performance of Bach’s Sonata No.1 in G minor were recorded, layered, looped and transformed. Played through eight loudspeakers, visitors will be enveloped in Bach’s life-affirming music, reworked in this unique and immersive sensory experience.

BACH FOR SOLO VIOLIN

Benjamin Nabarro of Ensemble 360

Upper Chapel, Sheffield
Saturday 25 October 2025, 2.00pm / 7.00pm

Tickets:
£17
£10 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event
Classical violinist Benjamin Nabarro from Ensemble 360

BACH Sonata No.3 in C (25’)
BACH Partita No.3 in E (20’) 

Marvels of violin writing, Bach’s Sonatas and Partitas achieve the seemingly impossible: the solo violin is both melody and accompaniment, conjuring two, three or even four musical voices from a single instrument. Captivating to watch, the sonatas and partitas are equal parts spellbindingly expressive and technically demanding. This is music that demands virtuosic skill from its player. For this, the final in his series, Ensemble 360’s violinist Benjamin Nabarro will present Bach’s third Sonata and Partita. Inventive, profoundly imaginative, and demonstrating a mastery of the form unmatched in the 400 years since their composition, these are pieces that continue to dazzle and amaze.

Save 20% when you book for 10 or more Music in the Round concerts in one transaction.
Save 10% when you book for 5 or more Music in the Round concerts in one transaction. Find out more.

BACH Johann Sebastian, Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin

Bach’s Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin were composed at Cöthen in 1720 (the date on Bach’s beautifully written fair copy of the set), at about the same time as his Cello Suites. The three Sonatas follow the pattern of the sonata da chiesa, with four movements, alternating slow and fast, while the three Partitas are suites of dances. Even though they were not published until 1802, Bach’s contemporaries recognized his superlative achievement in these pieces. Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach wrote that his father ‘understood to perfection the possibilities of all stringed instruments. This is evidenced by his solos for the violin and violoncello without bass. One of the greatest violinists once told me that he had seen nothing more perfect for learning to be a good violinist.’ Which violinist Bach may have had in mind when he first wrote the pieces remains unknown. 

© Nigel Simeone 

SOUNDS OF NOW: ÉLIANE RADIGUE FOR HARP, VIOLIN & DOUBLE BASS

Rhodri Davies, Angharad Davies & Dominic Lash

Upper Chapel, Sheffield
Saturday 18 October 2025, 8.00pm

Tickets:
£17
£10 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

RADIGUE
Occam XXI (16)
Occam River XVIII (15)
Occam XVII (13)
Occam River XVII (16)
Occam (28)
Occam River XV (15)
Occam Delta XIV (17)

In this special concert, Welsh harpist and improvisor Rhodri Davies, together with Angharad Davies (violin) and Dominic Lash (double bass), present a selection of works composed for them by Radigue. Ranging from solos to ensemble pieces, this is a rare opportunity to explore the singular aesthetic of one of the 21st century’s most important composers, performed by some of the musicians with whom she has most closely collaborated. Through extended instrumental techniques (the harp is played using two violin bows) and a close attention to timbre, Radigue conjures luminescent, intricately layered and richly textural soundscapes that slowly evolve.  

Save 20% when you book for 10 or more Music in the Round concerts in one transaction. 
Save 10% when you book for 5 or more Music in the Round concerts in one transaction. Find out more. 

 

Part of: OCCAM OCEAN: THE MUSIC OF ÉLIANE RADIGUE 

“Radigue writes awesomely gradual music that is always on the move… It is music that flowers in some enchanted hinterland where sounds are sparse and mercurial, spiritual and grounded, narrative and abstract… she is always on the hunt for sound within sound – a realm of partials, harmonics, and subharmonics… the intangible cloud that makes up that note’s aura.”
Kate Molleson 

The French composer Éliane Radigue, now 93 years old, has dedicated the last quarter of a century to crafting her extraordinary, subtle and luminescent compositions for acoustic instruments. Each titled ‘Occam’ (after ‘Occam’s razor’, the idea that the simplest solution is often the best), these warm and generous works explore the essence of an instrument’s sound in gradually unfolding, richly present textures.  

For ‘Occam Ocean’, Music in the Round has curated a series of special events bringing together some of Radigue’s closest collaborators for two days of music and talks, offering a rare, immersive experience of this composer’s singular sound world. 

Presented in partnership with The University of Sheffield.  

 

Eliane Radigue Weekend

RADIGUE – Occam XXV (45′) 

OCCAM XXI – Angharad Davies (16mins) 

OCCAM RIVER XVIII – Rhodri Davies & Dominic Lash (15mins) 

OCCAM XVII – Dominic Lash  (13mins) 

OCCAM RIVER XVII – Angharad Davies & Rhodri Davies (16mins) 

OCCAM I – Rhodri Davies (28mins) 

OCCAM RIVER XV – Angharad Davies & Dominic Lash (15mins) 

OCCAM DELTA XIV – Angharad Davies, Rhodri Davies & Dominic Lash (17mins) 

 

The tenth piece in Claude Debussy’s first book of Préludes for piano is titled La cathédrale engloutie, the Sunken Cathedral. It’s a dreamy, pictorial piece, depicting a mythical Breton city swallowed by the ocean, a kind of Gallic Atlantis. What makes this short piece stick in the memory is not necessarily its vocabulary—of church bells, and watery organs—or its musical vernacular—borrowing pentatonic scales from Javanese gamelan—but its aura of sunkenness: it’s the dunking in a deep, quietly fizzing pool, in which everything moves in a new, collectively dislocated time. 

 

Water, sound, and sunkenness are ideas that the celebrated French experimental composer Eliane Radigue has returned to time and again, especially in the post-millenium creative spurt of this now 93-year-old composer. Waves form the obvious meeting point between these ideas: “We live in a universe filled with waves”, Radigue said in an interview given during the construction of Occam XXV, her piece with Frédéric Blondy: from the tiniest microwaves, to the point where our ears perceive sound, and extending to wavelengths found in the ocean. “We also come into contact with [the ocean] physically, mentally and spiritually”, she added. 

 

As well as working on a perceptual and sensual level, the link between sound and water also informs a key philosophical concept. Just as water flows seeking the path of least resistance, so the guiding mantra of Radigue’s constructions for instrumentalists—that of Occam’s Razor, the so-called parsimonious principle—is that the simplest route available is invariably the best. And so, the selection of pieces heard in this Radigue Weekend chart courses that, on paper, seem fairly simple: from deep to shallow, deep to high, broad to thin, dense to sparse, absent to present to absent again.  

 

Where the challenge comes is in what Radigue calls the “virtuosity of speed”. It’s like Paganini, but in reverse: performers require “a virtuosity of absolute control of the instrument, an extreme, subtle and delicate kind of virtuosity” when performing music that’s achingly restrained. Kate Molleson, in her book Sound Within Sound—a title which itself references Radigue’s sonic burrowing—tells of performers, so engrossed in the progression of one of Radigue’s pieces, that they’ve ‘woken up’ mid-performance, unaware as to how much time has elapsed, where they are, or who has been watching. 

 

Radigue’s music requires a certain virtuosity from the listener too: How to listen to music without event, in a musical space—and a digitised society—in which events are more abundant than ever? One key way into this unusual appreciative realm is by opening not just our ears to sound, but our bodies too. In 1974, Radigue visited her son in New York, and realised that she could no longer put a sound to the movement of her daughter-in-law’s lips. It turned out that she had lived almost fifty years with an unknown hearing impairment, something which she later realised had had a huge impact on how she sought out and shaped these slow-moving sounds. Sound, for Radigue, is something fundamentally bodily, as well as aural. And, when guiding newcomers in how to listen to Radigue, the writer Louise Gray channels Pauline Oliveros, pioneer of Deep Listening. In one of her exercises, Oliveros asks participants to “walk so silently that the bottoms of your feet become ears”. Feel the sound, as much as you hear it. 

 

Opening the weekend is Occam XXV, for organ, premiered by Blondy at Islington’s Union Chapel in 2018. These Occam works are organic forms from their conception. Radigue, who received no formal compositional training, prefers to work with performers individually and in person. Whatever seeds they come up with germinate, and are tended to by Radigue, the constant gardener. Though these works have no score, save for some pictorial guides, this is no free improvisation either. “The difference is that you are following the vision of another person”, trumpeter (and fellow “chevalier d’Occam”—knight of Occam) Nate Woolley writes. “The vision is very clear—the water, the razor, the idea that you never return, that you are always moving forward. These are things that Éliane shapes”. 

 

Over the course of forty-five minutes, Occam XXV rumbles from the deepest reaches of the organ—from the bass sounds you feel more than hear—through to the shrillest edges of perceivable sound. To describe these pieces in reference to structural milestones is futile, though it’s amazing how much these small, quivering forms morph and contort amid a perception that nothing is moving. To listen to Occam XXV is to climb a steep, never-ending mountain facing forward, occasionally allowing yourself an about turn to marvel at just how far you’re come. 

 

The following concert features a selection of works, mostly of around the same length, for violin, harp, and double bass, in various combinations, which continue this steadfast mode of work. All these works begin with thoughts of bodies of water, though the exact sources (and any representations) are kept hidden. In Occam XXI, written with violinist Angharad Davies, a line from Woyzeck springs to mind: “You’re running around like an open razor blade. You might cut someone”. Where other Occam works have a mellower quality, the various sheer overtones of the violin—coupled with the absence of a bass register—give XXI a feeling like stacked sheets of roughly cut glass: related, separate, dangerously sharp when in contact. 

 

OCCAM XVII, with bassist Dominic Lash, features slower, less abrasive material, though these harmonic clouds blacken from their previous light grey shade. The Davies siblings join for River XVII, then split for the longest piece in this concert: the first Occam piece of the series, for solo harp, featuring the unusual technique of bowing the harp with both hands. Two bodies of water flow past each other occasionally meeting in the duo piece River XV, and Delta XIV concludes with the trio altogether. This final piece premiered in 2019; the Delta tributary series is now up to XXIII. For all their steady restraint, Radigue’s riverworks flow ever onwards, and might even be accelerating. 

 

Hugh Morris, 2025 

SOUNDS OF NOW: ÉLIANE RADIGUE ROUNDTABLE

Rhodri Davies, Angharad Davies, Julia Eckhardt, Louise Gray & Dominic Lash

Upper Chapel, Sheffield
Saturday 18 October 2025, 6.15pm

Tickets:
£5
Free to ticket-holders for the evening concerts on 17 & 18 October, but please book in advance

Past Event

Musicians Rhodri Davies, Angharad Davies and Dominic Lash are joined by Louise Gray (writer on music and sound art for The Wire) and Julia Eckhardt (longtime Radigue collaborator and author of Éliane Radigue – Intermediary Spaces/Espaces intermédiaires) for this panel discussion exploring the unique practice and sound world of the pioneering French composer, Éliane Radigue. 

Part of: OCCAM OCEAN: THE MUSIC OF ÉLIANE RADIGUE 

“Radigue writes awesomely gradual music that is always on the move… It is music that flowers in some enchanted hinterland where sounds are sparse and mercurial, spiritual and grounded, narrative and abstract… she is always on the hunt for sound within sound – a realm of partials, harmonics, and subharmonics… the intangible cloud that makes up that note’s aura.”
Kate Molleson 

The French composer Éliane Radigue, now 93 years old, has dedicated the last quarter of a century to crafting her extraordinary, subtle and luminescent compositions for acoustic instruments. Each titled ‘Occam’ (after ‘Occam’s razor’, the idea that the simplest solution is often the best), these warm and generous works explore the essence of an instrument’s sound in gradually unfolding, richly present textures.  

For ‘Occam Ocean’, Music in the Round has curated a series of special events bringing together some of Radigue’s closest collaborators for two days of music and talks, offering a rare, immersive experience of this composer’s singular sound world. 

Presented in partnership with The University of Sheffield.  

SOUNDS OF NOW: ÉLIANE RADIGUE FOR ORGAN

Frederic Blondy

St Marie's Cathedral, Sheffield
Friday 17 October 2025, 8.00pm

Tickets:
£17
£10 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s

Past Event

RADIGUE Occam XXV (45) 

Éliane Radigue’s Occam XXV – written for, and performed here by, the French organist Frédéric Blondy – envelops its listener in a rich and slowly evolving ocean of sound. Beginning with a low, timbral rumble, the music grows over its 45 minutes, always imperceptibly changing, to a richly layered, shimmering and luxuriant texture which then, as the piece draws to a close, dissolves into air. This is music as sensation: sound to be immersed in – expansive and vibrational. As Radigue herself said, “I imagine how we are all bathing in a galactic ocean of sound waves. 

Save 20% when you book for 10 or more Music in the Round concerts in one transaction. 
Save 10% when you book for 5 or more Music in the Round concerts in one transaction. Find out more.

Part of: OCCAM OCEAN: THE MUSIC OF ÉLIANE RADIGUE 

“Radigue writes awesomely gradual music that is always on the move… It is music that flowers in some enchanted hinterland where sounds are sparse and mercurial, spiritual and grounded, narrative and abstract… she is always on the hunt for sound within sound – a realm of partials, harmonics, and subharmonics… the intangible cloud that makes up that note’s aura.”
Kate Molleson 

The French composer Éliane Radigue, now 93 years old, has dedicated the last quarter of a century to crafting her extraordinary, subtle and luminescent compositions for acoustic instruments. Each titled ‘Occam’ (after ‘Occam’s razor’, the idea that the simplest solution is often the best), these warm and generous works explore the essence of an instrument’s sound in gradually unfolding, richly present textures.  

For ‘Occam Ocean’, Music in the Round has curated a series of special events bringing together some of Radigue’s closest collaborators for two days of music and talks, offering a rare, immersive experience of this composer’s singular sound world. 

Presented in partnership with The University of Sheffield.  

Eliane Radigue Weekend

RADIGUE – Occam XXV (45′) 

OCCAM XXI – Angharad Davies (16mins) 

OCCAM RIVER XVIII – Rhodri Davies & Dominic Lash (15mins) 

OCCAM XVII – Dominic Lash  (13mins) 

OCCAM RIVER XVII – Angharad Davies & Rhodri Davies (16mins) 

OCCAM I – Rhodri Davies (28mins) 

OCCAM RIVER XV – Angharad Davies & Dominic Lash (15mins) 

OCCAM DELTA XIV – Angharad Davies, Rhodri Davies & Dominic Lash (17mins) 

 

The tenth piece in Claude Debussy’s first book of Préludes for piano is titled La cathédrale engloutie, the Sunken Cathedral. It’s a dreamy, pictorial piece, depicting a mythical Breton city swallowed by the ocean, a kind of Gallic Atlantis. What makes this short piece stick in the memory is not necessarily its vocabulary—of church bells, and watery organs—or its musical vernacular—borrowing pentatonic scales from Javanese gamelan—but its aura of sunkenness: it’s the dunking in a deep, quietly fizzing pool, in which everything moves in a new, collectively dislocated time. 

 

Water, sound, and sunkenness are ideas that the celebrated French experimental composer Eliane Radigue has returned to time and again, especially in the post-millenium creative spurt of this now 93-year-old composer. Waves form the obvious meeting point between these ideas: “We live in a universe filled with waves”, Radigue said in an interview given during the construction of Occam XXV, her piece with Frédéric Blondy: from the tiniest microwaves, to the point where our ears perceive sound, and extending to wavelengths found in the ocean. “We also come into contact with [the ocean] physically, mentally and spiritually”, she added. 

 

As well as working on a perceptual and sensual level, the link between sound and water also informs a key philosophical concept. Just as water flows seeking the path of least resistance, so the guiding mantra of Radigue’s constructions for instrumentalists—that of Occam’s Razor, the so-called parsimonious principle—is that the simplest route available is invariably the best. And so, the selection of pieces heard in this Radigue Weekend chart courses that, on paper, seem fairly simple: from deep to shallow, deep to high, broad to thin, dense to sparse, absent to present to absent again.  

 

Where the challenge comes is in what Radigue calls the “virtuosity of speed”. It’s like Paganini, but in reverse: performers require “a virtuosity of absolute control of the instrument, an extreme, subtle and delicate kind of virtuosity” when performing music that’s achingly restrained. Kate Molleson, in her book Sound Within Sound—a title which itself references Radigue’s sonic burrowing—tells of performers, so engrossed in the progression of one of Radigue’s pieces, that they’ve ‘woken up’ mid-performance, unaware as to how much time has elapsed, where they are, or who has been watching. 

 

Radigue’s music requires a certain virtuosity from the listener too: How to listen to music without event, in a musical space—and a digitised society—in which events are more abundant than ever? One key way into this unusual appreciative realm is by opening not just our ears to sound, but our bodies too. In 1974, Radigue visited her son in New York, and realised that she could no longer put a sound to the movement of her daughter-in-law’s lips. It turned out that she had lived almost fifty years with an unknown hearing impairment, something which she later realised had had a huge impact on how she sought out and shaped these slow-moving sounds. Sound, for Radigue, is something fundamentally bodily, as well as aural. And, when guiding newcomers in how to listen to Radigue, the writer Louise Gray channels Pauline Oliveros, pioneer of Deep Listening. In one of her exercises, Oliveros asks participants to “walk so silently that the bottoms of your feet become ears”. Feel the sound, as much as you hear it. 

 

Opening the weekend is Occam XXV, for organ, premiered by Blondy at Islington’s Union Chapel in 2018. These Occam works are organic forms from their conception. Radigue, who received no formal compositional training, prefers to work with performers individually and in person. Whatever seeds they come up with germinate, and are tended to by Radigue, the constant gardener. Though these works have no score, save for some pictorial guides, this is no free improvisation either. “The difference is that you are following the vision of another person”, trumpeter (and fellow “chevalier d’Occam”—knight of Occam) Nate Woolley writes. “The vision is very clear—the water, the razor, the idea that you never return, that you are always moving forward. These are things that Éliane shapes”. 

 

Over the course of forty-five minutes, Occam XXV rumbles from the deepest reaches of the organ—from the bass sounds you feel more than hear—through to the shrillest edges of perceivable sound. To describe these pieces in reference to structural milestones is futile, though it’s amazing how much these small, quivering forms morph and contort amid a perception that nothing is moving. To listen to Occam XXV is to climb a steep, never-ending mountain facing forward, occasionally allowing yourself an about turn to marvel at just how far you’re come. 

 

The following concert features a selection of works, mostly of around the same length, for violin, harp, and double bass, in various combinations, which continue this steadfast mode of work. All these works begin with thoughts of bodies of water, though the exact sources (and any representations) are kept hidden. In Occam XXI, written with violinist Angharad Davies, a line from Woyzeck springs to mind: “You’re running around like an open razor blade. You might cut someone”. Where other Occam works have a mellower quality, the various sheer overtones of the violin—coupled with the absence of a bass register—give XXI a feeling like stacked sheets of roughly cut glass: related, separate, dangerously sharp when in contact. 

 

OCCAM XVII, with bassist Dominic Lash, features slower, less abrasive material, though these harmonic clouds blacken from their previous light grey shade. The Davies siblings join for River XVII, then split for the longest piece in this concert: the first Occam piece of the series, for solo harp, featuring the unusual technique of bowing the harp with both hands. Two bodies of water flow past each other occasionally meeting in the duo piece River XV, and Delta XIV concludes with the trio altogether. This final piece premiered in 2019; the Delta tributary series is now up to XXIII. For all their steady restraint, Radigue’s riverworks flow ever onwards, and might even be accelerating. 

 

Hugh Morris, 2025