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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for ICMC HAMBURG 2026
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260510T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260510T220000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260421T081038Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260503T183216Z
UID:10000070-1778441400-1778450400@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:Opening Concert
DESCRIPTION:Please note: Since admission to the Elbphilharmonie is only possible with a ticket\, registration via Converia is required for the opening concert.\nThe opening concert is open to the public. Those without a conference pass can purchase a concert ticket here. \n\nProgram Overview\nIntroduction \nAlexander Schubert – SCANNERS (2013)\nfor string quintet\, choreography\, and electronics (12 min) \nNicole Brady – Ricochet (World Premiere 2026)\nfor chamber orchestra (10 min) \nAnthony Paul De Ritis – Filters (2015 / 2026)\nfor alto saxophone\, string orchestra\, and live electronics (10 min) \nIntermission (25 min) \nAigerim Seilova / Steffen Lohrey – Breath Mechanics (World Premiere 2026)\nfor two soprano saxophones\, string ensemble\, and live electronics (10 min) \nClarence Barlow – Im Januar am Nil (1985)\nfor ensemble (approx. 25 min) \nShort break (10 min) \nClosing & Conference Information (15 min) \n  \nPerformers\nEnsemble Resonanz – strings\nAsya Fateyeva – saxophone\nVlatko Kučan – saxophone\nJohn Eckhardt – double bass\nDulguun Chinchuluun – piano\nLin Chen – percussion \nConductor\nFriederike Scheunchen \nFind out more about the musicians playing at ICMC HAMBURG 2026 here.  \n  \nAbout the pieces\nAlexander Schubert: SCANNERS (2013)\nfor string quintet\, choreography\, and electronics \nThe piece SCANNERS copes with the physical qualities of instrumentalists in electro-acoustic music. It is a choreographed composition\, that takes movement as important as sound. The string ensemble turns into a performing machine. The main focus is on the movement of scanning – as well in the interaction of bow and instrument when producing sound as also in purely artificial gestures. There is no difference between musically necessary or choerographically determined mouvement. The piece can be seen as a comment on the relationship of man to digital content: the direct consequences of action can’t be explained by simple cause and effect principles any more\, the musicians become puppets or at least a part of a complex machine. At the same time the piece offers a special focus on the highly specialized genre of the string orchestra: the mechanizing emphasizes the accuracy of the interpreter and the elegance of the traditional movement\, here being staged independently from the production of sound.\nScanners belongs to a series of compositions that deal with physicality\, as there is e.g. Point Ones with interactive conductor or LaPlace Tiger with a sensor-wired drummer. \nAbout the composer\nAlexander Schubert (1979) studied bioinformatics\, multimedia composition. He’s a professor at the Musikhochschule Hamburg. Schubert’s interest explores the border between the acoustic and electronic world. In music composition\, immersive installation and staged pieces he examines the interplay between the digital and the analogue. He creates pieces that realize test settings or interaction spaces that question modes of perception and representation. Continuing topics in this field are authenticity and virtuality. The influence and framing of digital media on aesthetic views and communication is researched in a post-digital perspective. Recent research topics in his works were virtual reality\, artificial intelligence and online-mediated artworks. Schubert is a founding member of ensembles such as “Decoder“. His works have been performed more than 700 times in the last few years by numerous ensembles in over 30 countries. \n  \nNicole Brady: Ricochet (World Premiere 2026)\nfor chamber orchestra and live electronics \nRicochet explores the idea of deviation from an expected path after an initial impact\, leading to new directions. Inspired by the ricochet bowing technique\, this concept unfolds both physically and metaphorically within the ensemble.\nA responsive electronic system listens to the orchestra and generates a parallel sonic layer. Energetic passages produce scattered\, percussive textures\, while quieter material leads to dense\, sustained sound fields. The system alternates between listening and generative modes\, interacting closely with the performers.\nSubtle references to composers such as Couperin\, Ravel\, and Mozart connect historical material with contemporary sound\, while the electronics act as an additional\, autonomous voice within the ensemble. \nAbout the composer\nNicole Brady is an award-winning composer and creative director whose work spans concert music\, immersive installation\, and video game franchises including Final Fantasy\, Tekken\, and Valkyria Chronicles. Her work has been honoured by the Peabody Awards and IndieCade\, and her immersive sound album Lost Palace was released with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. Recent commissions and performances include the Omega Ensemble\, Melbourne Symphony Orchestra\, Flinders Quartet\, and Lyris Quartet. As creative director of WLDR studio\, her immersive multisensory works have reached over 20\,000 participants across Illuminate Adelaide and Spier Light Art Festival. Nicole is a researcher at the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music and recipient of the Director’s Award for Exceptional Doctoral Research. \n  \nAnthony Paul De Ritis: Filters (2015 / 2026)\nfor alto saxophone\, string orchestra\, and live electronics \nOriginally composed for alto saxophone and electronic playback\, Filters explores the layering and spatial diffusion of sound. Recorded saxophone material creates a “second” voice\, blending with the live soloist into a unified\, resonant field.\nIn this version for saxophone\, string orchestra\, and multi-channel electronics\, the ensemble extends these layers\, producing a rich interplay between live instruments and their electronically mediated “shadows.”\nThe solo saxophone remains at the expressive center\, while the surrounding textures generate depth\, movement\, and an immersive spatial experience. \nAbout the composer\nDescribed as a “genuinely American composer” (Gramophone)\, “a bit of a visionary” (Audiophile Audition)\, and “bracingly imaginative” (The Boston Globe)\, Anthony Paul De Ritis has received performances around the world\, including at Lincoln Center\, Beijing’s Yugong Yishan\, Seoul’s KT Art Hall\, the Italian Pavilion at the 2015 World Expo in Milan\, and UNESCO headquarters in Paris. \nDe Ritis’s 2012 release “Devolution” by the GRAMMY® Award-winning Boston Modern Orchestra Project\, featuring Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky as soloist\, was described as a “tour de force” (Gramophone); and his “Pop Concerto” (2017) featuring Eliot Fisk was lauded as “a major issue of American music\,” (Classical CD Review) and his “Electroacoustic Music – In Memoriam: David Wessel” (2018) was cited as among the “Best of 2018” in the electronic music category (Sequenza 21). \nHe holds a Ph.D. from the University of California\, Berkeley\, and is Professor at Northeastern University\, where he co-founded the music technology program. \n  \nAigerim Seilova and Steffen Lohrey: Breath Mechanics (World Premiere 2026)\nfor two soprano saxophones\, string ensemble\, and live electronics \nThis work is a composition for two soprano saxophones\, string ensemble (4.4.4.2)\, and 8.1 live electronics\, submitted for the ICMC Special Call 1: Ensemble Resonanz . The piece serves as a spectral dialogue with Clarence Barlow’s Im Januar am Nil\, adopting his strategies of timbral fusion and hocketing but transposing them into the age of Machine Learning. The central material is derived from “ChordsNest\,” a multiphonics palette extension for MaxScore\, which is repurposed here as a training set for a neural network. The compositional core is an “AI Translation Error” in which the model was tasked with reconstructing the cylindrical bore spectra of the digital archive using the conical bore of the live saxophones and the acoustic textures of the string ensemble. \nThe resulting score is a transcription of the AI’s “hallucinations\,” where the ensemble physically replicates the digital artifacts of the style transfer process. The 8.1 electronics mediate this through a dual-role feedback loop. They function first as a synthesized “externalized memory” of the source spectra and secondly as a live inferencing engine that generates “retrospective hypotheses” by attempting to recover source-states from the acoustic performance. This architecture stages a recursive friction between the explicitly presented digital archive and the machine’s error-prone attempt to reconstruct it through physical sound. \nAbout the composers\nHamburg-based composer Aigerim Seilova integrates acoustics\, electronics\, and interactive media. A doctoral researcher at HfMT Hamburg\, her works are performed by Ensemble Modern and the Norwegian Radio Orchestra at festivals like Tanglewood and Chelsea Music Festival. Awards include the Hindemith Prize\, Leonard Bernstein Fellowship\, and Radio France Prize. She serves as Deputy Chair of the DKV Hamburg\, promoting contemporary music and interdisciplinary exchange. \nBorn in Gießen in 1987\, Steffen Lohrey studied Digital Media with a focus on sound in Darmstadt and Multimedia Composition at the Hamburg University of Music and Drama (HfMT Hamburg). His work exists at the intersection of composition\, installation\, and code. He has been involved in a wide range of projects\, including Picadero with the Haa Collective (presented at venues such as Deltebre Dansa and the Fusion Festival)\, Crawlers with Alexander Schubert (ZKM Karlsruhe)\, and Shibboleth by Aigerim Seilova at HfMT Hamburg. His work and collaborations have been featured at Blurred Edges\, the Teatre Principal Terrassa\, and the GREC Festival\, among others. In addition\, Steffen Lohrey works as an audio engineer and sound designer in Hamburg. \n  \nClarence Barlow: Im Januar am Nil (1984)\nfor 2 soprano saxophones (1st+clarinet\, bass clarinet)\, 4 violins\, 2 celli\, double bass\, piano\, percussion  \nIm Januar am Nil was written in 1981 for Ensemble Köln – the instrumentation: two soprano saxophones\, percussion (five Japanese temple bells\, a Korean gong\, a crotale\, a cymbal\, a side drum and a bass drum)\, a piano\, four violins\, two cellos and a double-bass. In 1984 the completely revised piece was premiered in Paris by Ensemble Itineraire.\nThrough the piece runs a constantly repeated melody\, increasing both in length and density – new tones appear in the expanding gaps\, first in a purely auxiliary function\, but gradually harmonically rivalling the older tones. A single note at the start develops into a flowing melody moving from transparent tonality through multitonality to a dense self-destructive atonality.\nAt first the melody is played almost inaudibly by the bass clarinet\, amplified by overtones heard as natural harmonics in the strings: the resultant timbre is phonetic\, based on a Fourier analysis of German sentences (as for instance the title itself) containing only harmonic spectra\, namely liquids\, nasals and semi-vowels. Ideally these “scored Fourier-synthesized” words should be comprehensible\, but an ensemble of seven strings can only be approximative. After a few minutes of bass clarinet and strings\, the piano enters in an explicit rendition of the melody\, developing it as described above and timbrally coloured by “hocketing” soprano saxophones. The double bass now also explicitly plays the melody without further developing it – in a “frozen” state it is contrasted with the piano part and slows down during further repetitions due to its increasing length. \nAbout the composer\nClarence Barlow (1945–2023) was a composer and pioneer of computer music\, born into the English-speaking minority of Calcutta (now Kolkata)\, India. He received his early education there\, studying piano\, music theory\, and natural sciences\, and began composing at the age of twelve. After graduating in science from the University of Calcutta in 1965\, he worked as a conductor and teacher of music theory at the Calcutta School of Music.\nIn 1968\, Barlow moved to Cologne\, where he studied composition and electronic music at the Hochschule für Musik\, alongside studies at the Institute of Sonology in Utrecht. During this period\, he began using computers as a compositional tool\, becoming one of the early figures to explore algorithmic and computer-assisted composition.\nFrom the 1980s onward\, Barlow played a central role in shaping the field of computer music. He was closely associated with the Darmstadt Summer Courses\, where he directed computer music activities for over a decade\, and was a co-founder of GIMIK (Initiative Musik und Informatik Köln). He also held numerous academic positions across Europe\, including at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague\, where he served as Professor of Composition and Sonology and later as Artistic Director of the Institute of Sonology.\nFrom 2006 until his retirement\, Barlow was Corwin Professor of Composition at the University of California\, Santa Barbara. His work is characterized by a unique synthesis of mathematical rigor\, cultural hybridity\, and innovative approaches to musical structure\, making him one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary music. \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/opening-concert/
LOCATION:Elphilharmonie Hamburg\, Recital Hall\, Platz der Deutschen Einheit\, Hamburg\, 20457\, Germany
CATEGORIES:10-05,Concert,Music,Special Event
ORGANIZER;CN="ICMC HAMBURG 2026":MAILTO:info@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260511T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260511T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260421T084731Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260512T080321Z
UID:10000077-1778506200-1778511600@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:Lunch Concert 1A
DESCRIPTION:After the Opening Concert of ICMC HAMBURG 2026\, the regular music program begins today. This first Lunch Concert offers an insight into the current international computer music scene. What makes this event special is the personal presence of the artists: the composers are either on stage themselves or have brought the musicians they wrote for with them to Hamburg.\nIt is a program of short distances between idea and sound. The works demonstrate how diverse collaboration between humans and technology can be today—from the classical solo clarinet to interactive formats. \nThis Lunch Concert is open to the public. Those without a conference pass can purchase a ticket here. \n  \nProgram Overview\nTyche\nSever Tipei\nClarinet: Esther Lamneck \nHOTPO\nMichael Edwards\nAlto Saxophone: Henrique Portovedo \nItera \nDeniz Caglarcan \nTessellae\nRodrigo Cadiz\nPercussion: Thierry Miroglio \nThe Center of the Universe\nSunhuimei Xia \nLa Nuit Bleue\nZhixin Xu and Yunze Mu \nDream Voyager: A Pilgrim of the Infinite\nZoe Yi-Cheng Lin \n  \nAbout the pieces & artists\nSever Tipei: Tyche \nTyche for Bb clarinet and fixed media is a composition generated with original software for Computer-assisted (algorithmic) Composition and sound design developed by the composer and his collaborators.\nDivided into four main sections of 2-3-1-2 minutes\, the work utilizes stochastic distributions\, Markov chains\, sieves and Just Intonation as well as detailed control of spectra\, FM transients\, spatialization and reverberation. A basic framework of precise proportions and deterministic procedures are complemented by random details governed by Tyche\, the goddess of fortune\, chance\, providence and fate. \nAbout the artist\nA composer and a pianist\, Sever Tipei was born in Bucharest\, Romania\, and immigrated in the United States in 1972. He holds degrees in composition from the University of Michigan (DMA) and piano performance from Bucharest Conservatory (Diploma). Tipei taught at Chicago Musical College of Roosevelt University and\, between 1978 and 2021\, at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign School of Music. After retirement Tipei continues to teach in the School of Information Sciences where he also directs the “James W. Beauchamp Computer Music Project”. He is also a National Center for Supercomputing Applications Faculty Affiliate. Between 1993 and 2003 Tipei was a Visiting Scientist at Argonne National Laboratory where he worked on the sonification of complex scientific data.\nMost of his compositions were produced with software he designed: MP1 – a computer-assisted composition program first used in 1973\, DIASS – for sound synthesis and M4CAVE – software for the visualization of music in an immersive virtual environment. More recently\, Tipei and his collaborators have developed DISSCO\, software that unifies computer-assisted (algorithmic) composition and (additive) sound synthesis into a seamless process. His compositions have been performed in the US\, Australia\, Brazil\, France\, Germany\, Italy\, Portugal\, Romania\, Spain\, United Kingdom and Taiwan. \nClarinet: Esther Lamneck \n  \nMichael Edwards: HOTPO \nHinting at something a little more coarse\, the title HOTPO is in fact a completely innocent reference to the Collatz Conjecture. This mathematical proposition\, also known by other names\, refers to a succession of numbers called the hailstone sequence (or wondrous numbers)\, because their values usually ascend and descend like hailstones in a cloud.\nThough the mathematical proof of the conjecture is complex\, the proposition is very simple: Take any positive whole number; if it is even\, divide it by two; if it is odd\, multiply it by three and add one (hence the acronym Half Or Three Plus One: HOTPO); repeat the process with the result and you will find that no matter which number begins the process\, you will always\, given enough iterations\, reach one.\nThe algorithm is easy to programme and experiment with plus it produces rather nice images when given different starting numbers and plotted over various iterations. I used the algorithm in this piece to generate section lengths and repeated structures from nine basic rhythm sequences\, hence my sequence was 9 28 14 7 22 11 34 17 52 26 13 40 20 10 5 16 8 4 2 1. The piece alternates sections opposing mixed materials (odd section numbers) with obsessively repeated material (even). The numbers are also used for the generation of the sound files triggered during the performance. Despite the rather abstract nature of the generative procedure\, the results of the algorithms were developed intuitively and the piece as a whole arises out of and proceeds through a maelstrom of events fitting to the imagery of a hailstorm.\nHOTPO was commissioned by Henrique Portovedo for the World Saxophone Congress 2018 in Zagreb. That version included an ensemble. In 2020 I reworked the sound files to include MIDI data from the ensemble and made a solo + computer version. This was revised in 2024. \nAbout the artist\nMichael Edwards is a composer\, improvisor\, software developer\, and since 2017 Professor of Electronic Composition at ICEM\, Folkwang University of the Arts\, Essen\, Germany.\nHe is the programmer of the slippery chicken algorithmic composition package. His compositional interests lie mainly in the development of structures for hybrid electro-instrumental pieces through the integration of algorithmically produced scored materials with similarly generated computer-processed sound. He also improvises on laptop\, saxophones\, and MIDI wind controller\, performing for instance at the 2008 Montreaux Jazz Festival.\nMichael Edwards studied composition at Bristol University with Adrian Beaumont (BA\, MMus) and privately with Gwyn Pritchard. In 1991 he moved to the US for further studies in computer music with John Chowning at CCRMA\, Stanford University (MA\, Doctor of Musical Arts). Whilst studying there he also worked at IRCAM\, Paris\, with a residence grant at Cité des Arts.\nDuring 1996-7 he was a consultant software engineer in Silicon Valley. He developed a Document Recognition System used in several US hospitals. In 1997 he was appointed Lecturer in Music Theory at Stanford but later that year moved to Salzburg\, Austria. He was Guest Professor at the Universität Mozarteum until he left to teach at the University of Edinburgh in 2002. \nAlto Saxophone: Henrique Portovedo \n  \nDeniz Caglarcan: Itera\nItera is an audiovisual work that explores the evolving relationship between gesture and texture through iterative transformation. Built upon AI-generated visuals and parametric fractal structures\, the piece constructs a dynamic world where sound and image continuously reshape one another. Drawing its name from iteration\, Iterareveals a process in which each repetition diverges—transforming and unfolding into new visual and sonic forms. A formal dichotomy underlies the visual composition\, where parametricism and AI-driven aesthetics contrast continuity with abrupt disruption. The result is a constantly shifting mechanism that invites the viewer into the liminal spaces between each transformation.   \nAbout the artist\nDeniz Çağlarcan is an Istanbul-born\, Santa Barbara–based composer\, violist\, and conductor working across sound\, image\, and technology. He combines acousticinstruments\, electronics\, and interactive visuals to build immersive spatial-audio environments with interdisciplinary teams. His work spans concert music\, electroacoustic/audiovisual pieces\, installations\, and film/game scores. He holds the following degrees\, MM in Viola (CMU)\, MA in Composition (Bilkent)\, MS in Media Arts and Technology and\, PhD in Composition at UC Santa Barbara.  \n  \nRodrigo Cadiz: Tessellae \nTessellae for percussion and live electronics unfolds as a mosaic of small rhythmic tiles laid in time by a single performer. The percussion writing is built on Euclidean rhythmic principles\, patterns that distribute events as evenly as possible\, expanded through asymmetric tuplets (notably groups of three and five)\, repetitions\, and carefully placed silences that create a strong sense of anticipation from phrase to phrase. Only one or two instrumental lines sound at a time\, allowing the listener to perceive each gesture as a discrete tessera within a larger rhythmic surface. The live electronics\, built on RAVE\, a real-time variational autoencoder developed at IRCAM and trained on a corpus of percussion sounds\, listen to the performer and respond by reshaping timbre and resonance in the moment\, extending and refracting the acoustic material without fixing it in advance. The result is a dialogue between strict rhythmic architecture and fluid sonic transformation\, where expectation\, delay\, and renewal are central expressive forces. Tessellae was composed for Thierry Miroglio. \nAbout the artists\nRodrigo F. Cádiz is a composer\, researcher and engineer. He studied composition and electrical engineering at the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (UC) in Santiago and he obtained his Ph.D. in Music Technology from Northwestern University. His compositions\, consisting of approximately 70 works\, have been presented at several venues and festivals around the world. His catalogue considers works for solo instruments\, chamber music\, symphonic and robot orchestras\, visual music\, computers\, and new interfaces for musical expression. He has received several composition prizes and artistic grants both in Chile and the US. He has authored around 70 scientific publications in peer reviewed journals and international conferences. His areas of expertise include sonification\, sound synthesis\, audio digital processing\, computer music\, composition\, new interfaces for musical expression and the musical applications of complex systems. In 2018\, Rodrigo was a composer in residence with the Stanford Laptop orchestra (SLOrk) at the Center for Computer-based Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA)\, and a Tinker Visiting Professor at Stanford University. In 2019\, he received the prize of Excellence in Artistic Creation from UC\, given for outstanding achievements in the arts. In 2024\, he was a visiting researcher at the Orpheus Instituut in Belgium. He is currently full professor at the Music Institute and Electrical Engineering Department of UC. \nPercussion: Thierry Miroglio \nSince several years Thierry Miroglio is realizing a brilliant solo career where he is invited to give in more than forty countries recitals and solo concerts in numerous venues and prestigious Festivals such as Salzburg\, Philharmonie Berlin\, New York\, Wien Konzerthaus\, Boston\, Besançon\, San Francisco\, Munich\, Schleswig Holstein\, Madrid\, Rom\, Tokyo\, Milan\, Zagreb\, Nice\, Köln\, Paris\, Hamburg\, Athen\, Sao Paulo\, Lisbon\, Monte Carlo Printemps des Arts\, Hong Kong\, Buenos Aires Colon Theater\, Genève\, Brugge Concertgebouw\, Bucarest Atheneum\, Peking\, Amsterdam\, Linz Brucknerhaus\, Rio\, Darmstadt\, Helsinki\, Johannesburg\, Mexico\, Seoul\, Shanghai\, Moscow\, Biennal of Venice … \n  \nSunhuimei Xia: The Center of the Universe\nThe Center of the Universe\, an algorithmic music work integrated with interactive technology\, draws inspiration from the artist’s immersive impressions of New York City gleaned through multiple on-site visits. Standing atop the Empire State Building\, the artist perceived the metropolis as a dynamic global nexus where people of diverse cultural and ethnic backgrounds converge\, weaving a vibrant\, multifaceted urban tapestry that resonates with the energy of an interconnected world. Taking the phrase “The Center of the Universe” as its foundational sonic material\, the work delivers innovation through experimental multilingual vocal manipulation—deploying the core line in English\, Spanish\, French\, German\, Italian\, Russian\, Chinese\, Japanese\, Korean\, and Thai—with all vocal textures sourced from sampled macOS AI voices\, blending computational sound synthesis with linguistic diversity to push the conventional boundaries of vocal-based algorithmic composition. It achieves nuanced translation by converting the artist’s subjective perceptual experience of the city into an audible\, interactive sonic landscape\, while translating the abstract idea of cross-cultural convergence into tangible musical logic via the layered interplay of multilingual vocal samples. Further embodying participation\, the piece adopts wireless Nintendo Wiimote Controllers as its interactive performance interface\, enabling the performer to stand at the “center” of the stage and manipulate the musical structure in real time; this design redefines the dynamic between creator\, performer\, and audience\, turning the performance into a collaborative process where physical movements directly shape sonic evolution. \nAbout the artist\nSunhuimei Xia\, Associate Professor of Art and Technology at Wuhan Conservatory of Music’s Composition Department\, Dr. Xia holds a Master’s from Johns Hopkins University and a Doctorate from the University of Oregon (U.S.). Mentored by renowned composers Jian Feng\, Jian Liu\, Geoffrey Wright\, and Jeffrey Stolet.\nAs central and western China’s first DMA in data-driven musical instrument composition and performance\, this accomplished composer focuses on computer music creation and music-technology integration\, with core interests in interactive data-driven instruments\, algorithmic composition\, and data sonification.\nHonored as a Music Entrepreneurship and Innovation Talent by the Ministry of Culture and an Outstanding Young and Middle-Aged Literary and Art Talent by Hubei Federation of Literary and Art Circles\, her works won the Hubei Golden Bianzhong Music Award\, with over 10 pieces showcased at top global events including ICMC\, ISMIR\, NIME\, SMC\, SEAMUS\, NYCEMF\, EMM\, IRCAM\, WOCMAT and Musicacoustica-Beijing.\nShe released China’s first DVD album of data-driven instrument works\, published by Shanghai Music Publishing House and Shanghai Literature & Art Audio-Video Electronic Publishing House. She guided students to secure 20+ domestic and international awards\, leads provincial projects and participates in the Ministry of Education’s Humanities and Social Sciences Youth Fund Project\, driving music-technology innovation. \n  \nZhixin Xu and Yunze Mu: La Nuit Bleue\nLa nuit bleue is a piece written for solo harpsichord and live electronics. After three years of harpsichord study\, I had a strong thought in my mind that write a piece for harpsichord and live electronics. After the spectral analysis of the harpsichord sound as well as look through some pieces like Saariaho’s Jardin Secret II and Cage’s HPSCHD\, I realized that live spectral processing of this kind of idiophonic sound would be a big challenge because of the broad frequency distribution in spectrum. So\, I decided to use both fixed sounds and live processed sounds in the electronic part. Jardin Secret II and HPSCHD inspired me a lot while looking for sounds for electronics. Both of them contain noisy and glitchy sound in the tape part which are homogenies to harpsichord sound in some aspect\, although somehow radical for the time they were composed\, they worked well for harpsichord sound. With this idea\, I set the tone of the timbral character for this piece. \nAbout the artists\nZhixin Xu is a composer\, sound artist and computer music researcher based in Shanghai\, China. His compositions often involving electronics\, sometimes generated by the software he develops. Much of his recent music has been focused on exploring how purely computer-generated sound materials can be used along with musical instruments and purely acoustic sounds. His music and multimedia works have been heard in the U.S\, Europe and Asia on many events including ICMC and SEAMUS conferences.\nXu holds a Doctor of Musical Arts degree from the University of Cincinnati’s College-Conservatory of Music where he studied with Mara Helmuth\, and earlier degrees from CCM and the Shanghai Conservatory of Music. He is now assistant professor at Shanghai Jiao Tong University. His compositions are available on the ABLAZE label. \nYunze Mu \n  \n\nZoe Yi-Cheng Lin: Dream Voyager: A Pilgrim of the Infinite\nDream Voyager: A Pilgrim of the Infinite is an immersive musical work accompanied by a visual component that serves as a poetic guide rather than a narrative driver. The performance begins with a flutist and an actor on stage\, situated in waking reality. As the music unfolds\, the visual imagery gradually transitions into the realm of dreams\, leading the audience into an inner journey of consciousness. The work portrays a journey of the soul through a lucid dream—a state in which consciousness remains fully awake within the dream\, perceiving reality with radiant clarity\, even to the point of leaving the body. The music begins at the threshold of sleep\, gradually descending into deeper layers of awareness beneath a starlit sky. The soul then rises swiftly beyond the firmament\, gazing down upon the dreamlike Earth\, awed by its vivid presence and driven by a longing to understand its essence. A distant bell resounds\, symbolizing ancient wisdom dwelling within the heart and calling the voyager toward cosmic truth. Guided by textures of light and ice\, the pilgrim descends to touch the mud and stone of forgotten lands\, entering memories of an ancient civilization—serene yet mysterious. It soon reveals itself beneath the ocean’s depths\, magnificent but ephemeral\, its rise and fall exposed as a dream of the cosmic mind. As time and space dissolve\, the pilgrim senses the universal breath—the cosmic inhale and exhale uniting all beings in a single living rhythm. When the celestial bell sounds again\, layers of golden light\, like lotus petals\, guide the soul back to waking reality. What returns is not merely memory\, but awakened insight—an expanded vision that perceives the world through a cosmic lens. As the dream dissolves\, the figures on stage awaken and take their final bow. The work thus gestures toward a “dream within a dream\,” resonating with Buddhist perspectives in which the boundaries between reality and illusion are ultimately indistinguishable. In the context of contemporary technological society\, this question becomes ever more urgent: what is real\, and what is virtual or dreamlike? The distinction grows increasingly ambiguous. Employing Ambisonic spatial techniques\, the electronics articulate vertical and immersive motion: sound ascends\, drifts\, expands\, and finally resurfaces\, mirroring the soul’s movement through space and awareness. While the work may evoke a cinematic sense of narrative\, it is entirely independent of visual imagery. All spatial perception\, emotional meaning\, and narrative continuity arise solely through sound\, demanding a high degree of sonic precision and expressive depth\, allowing the music itself to become a complete sensory and contemplative journey. Furthermore\, the dancer and background imagery in the dream sequences are driven by Music Information Retrieval (MIR) features extracted from the music in real time. Implemented in TouchDesigner\, the visual system functions as a responsive virtual stage that is generated through the act of listening. Special thanks to the Taiwanese flutist\, Cheng-Yu Wu\, for the flute recording. \nAbout the artist\nZoe (Yi-Cheng) Lin is a composer and software engineer specializing in digital music. Her electronic music has been exhibited in Europe\, Asia\, North and South America\, and Australia\, across 21 countries and 50 major international festivals. She holds a doctorate in composition from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and was the Chief Music Officer at an AI music company\, leading AI music generation R&D. Currently\, she is a full-time composer and adjunct assistant professor at NTNU. Zoe specializes in synesthetic and 3D immersive electronic music. Her work has been/will be showcased worldwide at NYCEMF 2026\, ICMC 2025\, NYCEMF 2025\, JINLAC2025\, SEAMUS 2025\, REF 2024\, Ars Electronica 2024\, IRCAM Forum 2024\, NYCEMF 2024\, ICMC 2024\, and more. Her music is featured on albums from EMPIRICA RECORD\, SiMN 2023\, and MUSLAB 2023. She was selected for the Anthropocene Project 2024 and EMPIRICA RECORD 2024\, championing experimental and electronic music. \n\n  \nVolunteers\nTechnical Director / Main Sound\nSteffen Lohrey\nLeon Sudahl \nSound Assistants\nJakob Seyberth\nTim Christiansen \nStage / Light / Video\nEvelin Lindberg\nDong Zhou\nJames Tsz-Him Cheung \nProduction\nAigerim Seilova\nHuixin Xue\nHaonan Guo\nXinyi Yang\nNiko Yin\nJiwon Seo\nMenghuan Feng \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/concert-1a/
LOCATION:Hamburg University of Technology\, Building I\, Audimax 2\, Denickestraße 22\, Hamburg\, 21073\, Germany
CATEGORIES:11-05,Concert,Music
ORGANIZER;CN="ICMC HAMBURG 2026":MAILTO:info@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260511T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260511T210000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260421T085527Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260512T080602Z
UID:10000079-1778526000-1778533200@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:Evening Concert 1B
DESCRIPTION:This evening concert marks a special collaboration between the international ICMC community and Hamburg’s music scene. At its center is Ensemble 404 from the Hamburg University of Music and Drama (HfMT). For this occasion\, a video wall will be specially installed in the Friedrich-Ebert-Halle to highlight the synergy between sound and image.\nThe program ranges from intimate solo pieces with computer support to complex ensemble compositions and large-scale video works. \nThis Evening Concert is open to the public. Those without a conference pass can purchase a ticket here. \n  \nProgram Overview\nMachinarium\nJoão Pedro Oliveira \nFantasy for Viola and Computer\nRichard Dudas\nViola: Zeynep Sertoğlu (Ensemble 404) \nNeuro Translation Engine\nVincenzo Russo\nFlute: Giusy Panzanaro\nClarinet : Yuriy Nepomnyashchyy\nCello: Antonio Lo Curto\nPiano: Valentina Donato\n(Ensemble 404) \nClimate II for piano and computer \nRikako Kabashima\nPiano: Valentina Donato (Ensemble 404) \nJamshid Jam \nJean-François Charles and Ramin Roshandel\nSetar: Ramin Roshandel\nLive electronics: Jean-François Charles \nDelicate Anticipation\nKotoka Suzuki\nPercussion: Michael Murphy \nAir-Carving Bamboo\nYu Chung Tseng\nPercussion: Vitalia Agrba (Ensemble 404) \n  \nAbout the pieces & artists\nJoão Pedro Oliveira: Machinarium\nMachinarium unfolds as a journey through an imaginary city of machines\, where mechanisms seem to think and structures begin to breathe. Layers of image and sound interlock like gears\, evoking a world in which the boundary between living organism and industrial artifact becomes uncertain.  \nAbout the artist\nComposer João Pedro Oliveira holds the Corwin Endowed Chair in Composition for the University of California at Santa Barbara. He studied organ performance\, composition\, and architecture in Lisbon. He completed a Ph.D. in Music at the University of New York at Stony Brook. His music includes opera\, orchestral compositions\, chamber music\, electroacoustic music\, and experimental video. He has received over 70 international prizes and awards for his works\, including the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship in 2023\, the Bourges Magisterium Prize\, and the Giga-Hertz Special Award\, among others. His music is played all over the world. He taught at Aveiro University (Portugal) and Federal University of Minas Gerais (Brazil). His publications include several articles in journals and a book on 20th century music theory.  \n  \nRichard Dudas: Fantasy for Viola and Computer\nThis work for solo viola and real-time audio processing in Max is a composed extension of some prior improvisational works using Max. It was written in part as an exploration of Bohlen-Pierce tuning (in the electronics)\, which divides the perfect twelfth into thirteen unequal justly-tuned steps. The viola part is pitted against this\, performing in standard twelve-unequal-steps-to-the-octave tuning\, juxtaposing and combining several different musical fragments\, each with its own character and mood. All sounds in the electronics are live: they are derived from the sounds of the on-stage violist. Max audio processing includes formant filtering to provide a vocal quality to the transposed and resonated viola sounds. \nAbout the artists\nRichard Dudas holds degrees in Music Composition from The Peabody Conservatory of Music of the Johns Hopkins University\, and from The University of California\, Berkeley. He additionally studied at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest\, Hungary and the National Regional Conservatory of Nice\, France. In addition to composing music for acoustic instruments\, he has been actively involved with music technology since the late 1980s. As a computer musician\, he has taught courses at IRCAM\, and developed musical tools for Cycling ’74. Since 2007 he has been teaching music composition and computer music at Hanyang University in Seoul\, Korea. \nViola: Zeynep Sertoğlu (Ensemble 404) \n  \nVincenzo Russo: Neuro Translation Engine\nIn the future\, global societies remain marked by a multitude of languages\, dialects\, idiolects\, and diverse phonetic and cultural systems. Despite advances in AI-driven translation\, fundamental limits persist in the loss of emotional nuance\, imprecise interpretations\, and gaps between what is said and what is perceived. A team of computational linguists and neuroscientists develops an advanced artificial entity: the Neuro Translation Engine (NTE)\, capable of surpassing traditional textual or acoustic translation. The NTE does not translate words\, but the neural intentions behind language. It stimulates a specific area of the human brain\, the resonance cortex\, designed to receive universal neurosensory patterns. The result is a world where everyone can speak their native language while perfectly understanding others. Linguistic diversity is not diminished but enriched through mutual comprehension. The composition for ensemble and electronics illustrates how the NTE processes\, transforms\, and reconstructs communicative material. Through sound transformation techniques\, the acoustic material is dematerialized\, representing the machine’s “internal work”: the conversion of complex signals into a unified code. The final sound is entirely electronic\, devoid of recognizable references to the original ensemble. It forms a new language\, perceived as a pattern directly interpreted by the brain. \nAbout the artists\nVincenzo Russo (1995) holds a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration from the University of Naples “Parthenope.” He began his musical studies in Composition for Visual Media at the San Pietro a Majella Conservatory in Naples under the guidance of the late Maestro Lucio Lo Gatto. In July 2025\, he completed the second-level degree (Master’s degree) in Composition. Alongside his academic work\, he is active as a composer\, arranger\, and music producer\, working from his own recording studio. \nFlute: Giusy Panzanaro\nClarinet : Yuriy Nepomnyashchyy\nCello: Antonio Lo Curto\nPiano: Valentina Donato\n(Ensemble 404) \n  \nRikako Kabashima: Climate II for piano and computer \nThis work was composed based on a variety of ideas inspired by climate change. In recent years\, translating insights from the natural world into my own compositions has become an important experiment in my creative practice.\nIn particular\, this piece draws inspiration from the rapid climate fluctuations caused by global warming\, a pressing issue worldwide. Each measure in the work is specified in seconds rather than traditional beats\, and there is no fixed meter. Within each measure\, rhythms are performed improvisationally according to the given duration.\nThis approach allows for different rhythms and nuances to emerge in every performance\, reflecting the ever-changing nature of the climate itself. \nAbout the artists\nRikako Kabashima was born in Kagoshima\, Japan\, in 1996. She began studying piano at the age of three and later pursued composition at Senzoku Gakuen College of Music in Tokyo. After completing her undergraduate studies in 2021\, she entered the master’s program in composition at Toho College of Music\, where she studied with Kazuro Mise and Hitomi Kaneko\, and explored computer music under the guidance of Takayuki Rai. She earned her master’s degree in March 2025.\nHer works have been selected at international festivals including the New York City Electroacoustic Music Festival (NYCEMF) in 2023\, the International Computer Music Conference (ICMC) in 2023\, 2024\, and 2025. \nPiano: Valentina Donato (Ensemble 404) \n  \nJean-François Charles and Ramin Roshandel: Jamshid Jam \nThe sonic dust of a country that has been burned to the ground several times over the centuries and yet has formed some of the most elaborate and highly sophisticated musical structures to have ever existed. According to Persian myths\, Jamshid\, who ruled during several centuries\, was responsible for inventions ranging from the manufacturing of weapons to the mining of jewels to the making of wine. He is also credited with the discovery of music. This is what brought the Jamshid Jam duet together: the search for music at the crossroads of the Radif tradition (Persian classical music) and the development of musical instruments such as the turntable and live electronics. \nAbout the artists\nRamin Roshandel grew up in a family surrounded by artists; his luthier dad\, his painter uncle\, and his setar instructor\, Farshid Jam\, had strong influences on him as a teenager. Ramin worked with the renowned Mohammad Reza Lotfi at Maktab-Khāne-ye Mirzā Abdollāh. As a composer\, his works have been performed by Jack Quartet\, the University of Iowa Center for New Music\, and Ligament Duo\, among others. Ramin holds a PhD in Music Composition from the University of Iowa. He served as a lecturer at Iowa State University in Spring 2026 and is teaching music composition at Augustana College in Rock Island\, USA. More info: ramin-roshandel.com \nJean-François Charles is Associate Professor of Composition and Digital Media at the University of Iowa. He creates at the crossroads of music and technology. As a clarinetist\, he has performed improvised music with artists ranging from Douglas Ewart to Gozo Yoshimasu. He worked with Karlheinz Stockhausen for the world premiere of Rechter Augenbrauentanz.\nRamin Roshandel & Jean-François Charles have worked on several projects together. Roshandel was the setār soloist for the premiere performances of Charles’ opera Grant Wood in Paris in 2019. They performed together as part of the live soundtrack composed by Charles and Nicolas Sidoroff to the 1923 Hunchback of Notre-Dame movie\, a commission by FilmScene with premiere performances in November 2023 in Iowa. In 2025\, they composed and performed a series of 13 concerts with the Red Cedar Chamber Music ensemble. \nSetar: Ramin Roshandel \nLive electronics: Jean-François Charles \n  \nKotoka Suzuki and Michael Murphy: Delicate Anticipation\nThis work is written as part of the series “In Praise of Shadows\,” inspired by Junichiro Tanizaki’s essay of the same title\, written at the birth of the modern era in imperial Japan. The essay describes how shadows and negative space are integral to traditional Japanese aesthetics in music\, architecture\, and food\, extending even to the design of everyday objects. As Tanizaki explains\, “We find beauty not in the thing itself but in the patterns of shadows\, the light and the darkness\, that one thing against another creates… Were it not for shadows\, there would be no beauty.” \nThe focus of the first of its sequence\, “In Praise of Shadows” for three paper players and electronics is placed on the collective loss of the tangible in our modern life\, analogues to how the excessive illumination of Edison’s modern light affect Japanese aesthetics and culture. Following this work\, “Orison” is composed for three music box players and electronics. The work is further inspired by the voices of children of war\, both from past and present\, speaking and singing about hope\, peace as well as sorrows arising from their personal experiences. These melodies\, presented as empty spaces on the music score\, reveal as they are fed through the music boxes. \nIn the third part of the sequence\, “Delicate Anticipation\,” written for a solo percussionist\, electronics\, and lights\, shadow is the central focus\, honouring the “patterns of shadows\, the light and the darkness\, that one thing against another creates”. Positioned behind the scrim\, the percussionist is only visible as a shadow while performing with lights and instruments primarily of metal and skin\, manipulating patterns of carefully choreographed shadows. The title derives from the English translation of the essay\, which describes the sensation of gazing at the silent liquid in the dark depths of a Japanese lacquerware bowl. As Tanizaki writes\, “What lies within the darkness one cannot distinguish…. …the fragrance carried upon the vapor brings a delicate anticipation.” \nAbout the artists\nKotoka Suzuki’s work engages deeply with the visual\, conceiving of sound as a physical form to be manipulated through the sculptural practice of composition. Artists such as the Arditti Quartet\, Eighth Blackbird\, Nouvel Ensemble Moderne\, and Mendelssohn Chamber Orchestra (Leipzig) have featured her work internationally through numerous venues and broadcasts\, including BBC Radio 3\, Schweizer Radio\, Lucerne Festival\, Heroin of Sound Festival\, Ultraschall\, and ZKM Media Museum. Suzuki is currently an Associate Professor at the University of Toronto. \nPercussion: Michael Murphy\nMichael Murphy is a Chinese-Canadian percussionist praised by The New York Times\, Opera Canada\, and The Herald. He has toured across North America\, Europe\, Scandinavia\, and Asia\, performing with ensembles including the Toronto Symphony Orchestra\, the National Ballet of Canada Orchestra\, and Philharmonisches Orchester Freiburg. A leading advocate for new music\, he has premiered concertos by Alice Ping Yee Ho\, Liam Ritz\, and Bob Becker and champions contemporary repertoire internationally. \n  \nYu Chung Tseng: Air-Carving Bamboo \n“Air-Carving Bamboo Music” premiered at the 2025 C-LAB Sound Arts Festival_DIVERSONICS . This work is an Acousmatic / electroacoustic music. The material comes from the composer’s field recordings of bamboo colliding on the shores of Emei Lake in his hometown of Hsinchu County in Taiwan. Through editing and transformation using DAW software\, and incorporating feedback material from AI Somax 2 on some of the bamboo collision rhythms\, the work was finally organized into an electroacoustic music piece.\nIn terms of performance style\, the composer wanted to differentiate themselves from traditional purely played electroacoustic music\, creating a synesthetic aesthetic experience for both the ears and eyes\, and letting electroacoustic music visible .\nThe composer invited percussionist Hsieh Yi-chieh to wave glow sticks in the dark\, as if drawing out or sculpting the electroacoustic music in air\, a technique akin to “grabbing music from a distance.” This presentation method\, besides giving electroacoustic music a performative quality\, greatly enhances the visual appeal\, auditory appeal\, and sonic dramatic tension of the performance. Postscript: Having composed electroacoustic music for more than 2 decades\, the composer occasionally wants to dabble in this area\, slightly transcending the aesthetic/philosophical view of “sound-only/purely auditory” in Acousmatic / electroacoustic music listening. \nAbout the artists\nYu-Chung Tseng\, receiving his DMA from UNT in Texas\, is a professor of computer music composition and the director of Sound Lab at National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University(NYCU) in Taiwan.\nHis works have received performances at festivals and conferences\,\nincluding Taiwan-CLAB\, ICMC(19 times)\, NYCEMF\, Musicacoustica\, SICMF\, SMC2016\n\,Visiones Sonoras Festiva\, La Hora Acusmatica\, FIME\, MUSLAB\, and Musica Nova.\nHis music has been recognized with selection/awards from Pierre Schaeffer International Computer Music Competition (2003 1st Prize)\, Città di Udine International Contemporary Music Competition(2019 Winner)\, Musica Nova (2010 First Prize)\, Metamorphoses (2006-2010 Finalist)\, ICMC Region Best Music Award(2011/2015/2022)\, RMN Classical Electroacoustic(2023 Winner)\, KLANG International Acousmatic Composition Competition(2023 2nd Prize)\, Musica Nova (2025 1st Prize) and ICMC2025 Best Music Award. \nPercussion: Vitalia Agrba (Ensemble 404) \n  \nVolunteers\nTechnical Director / FOH\nGiovanni Dinello \nSound Engineering \nLuciano Correa \nLight Design\nGabriel Saber\, Lukas Becker \nStage & Sound Assistance\nAdrián Velasco \nProduction\nValentina Donato\nHaewon Sim \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/concert-1b/
LOCATION:Friedrich-Ebert-Halle\, Alter Postweg 34\, Hamburg\, 21075\, Germany
CATEGORIES:11-05,Concert,Music
ORGANIZER;CN="ICMC HAMBURG 2026":MAILTO:info@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260512T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260512T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260421T165721Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260512T080329Z
UID:10000176-1778592600-1778598000@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:Lunch Concert 2A
DESCRIPTION:The second lunch concert of ICMC HAMBURG 2026 takes listeners on a journey through different cultures and technological approaches. The focus is on transformation: how are traditional instruments\, natural sounds\, or even everyday noises reinterpreted through the lens of computer technology and artificial intelligence?\nThe international composers are once again partly supported by Hamburg’s Ensemble 404\, which bridges the gap between academic composition and vibrant performance. \nThis Lunch Concert is open to the public. Those without a conference pass can purchase a ticket here. \n  \nProgram Overview\nPlight of the Monarch\nSalvatore Siriano \nSprinkle\nHuixin Xue\nPipa: Yinghan Liu\nComputer Music Designer: Shihong Ren \nLate Shift \nBenjamin Broening\nFlute: Giusy Panzanaro (Ensemble 404) \nFall and Rise\nWan Heo\nViolin: Bahar Erunsal (Ensemble 404) \nSqueakeasy \nJonathan Wilson\nViolin: Yao Dong Zhang (Ensemble 404) \nI Dreamed of Naïma \nChristopher Dobrian\nVibraphone: Aiyun Huang \nFree-Wheelerish (a movement from the suite Things Ain’t What They Used To Be)\nMark Whitlam\nPercussion: Mark Whitlam\nBassoon: Rodrigo Rodrigues (Ensemble 404) \n  \nAbout the pieces & composers\nSalvatore Siriano: Plight of the Monarch\nMonarch butterfly populations face ongoing and compounding threats driven by habitat loss\, pesticide exposure\, invasive plant species\, and continued encroachment on open land where milkweed once thrived. Since the mid-1990s\, eastern migratory monarch numbers have fallen to a fraction of their historical peaks; although recent seasons have shown modest recovery\, populations remain far below long-term averages.\nWithin this context\, the work traces key stages of the monarch lifecycle\, including overwintering in Mexico\, migration\, mating\, and reproduction\, using scientific data from the Monarch Joint Venture and the U.S. Geological Survey translated into sonic parameters through additive and FM synthesis. Long-term population trends shape the evolving texture\, dynamics\, and rhythmic behavior of the sound\, allowing ecological data to inform the temporal and spectral structure of the audio.\nTranslation also operates across media. Original filmed footage from the Fox River Valley in Illinois\, a recurring migratory and breeding landscape for eastern monarch populations\, is transformed through point-cloud and depth-camera processes. Human presence and natural environments are rendered as shifting\, particle-based forms whose fragmentation mirrors the precarity of monarch habitats\, situating ecological data within a perceptual and embodied frame rather than a purely representational one.\nThe work concludes with documentation of a community-based public artwork that distributes milkweed seeds to local residents. While the piece does not involve direct audience interaction\, this closing gesture reframes participation as shared responsibility. Rather than positioning environmental change solely at the level of policy\, the work emphasizes individual and community-scale actions\, such as reducing pesticide use\, planting milkweed and other native species\, and allowing greater biodiversity within managed landscapes\, as tangible responses to ongoing habitat loss. Because eastern North American monarch butterflies lay their eggs exclusively on milkweed\, these localized decisions directly shape their capacity to survive and reproduce. \nAbout the artist\nSalvatore Siriano is a Chicago-based composer\, audiovisual artist\, and educator whose work explores the relationship between sound\, image\, and the natural environment through digital media. His recent works have been presented at Sound/Image Festival (UK)\, SICBM (Brazil)\, Seoul International Computer Music Festival\, Art Alive Festival (Portugal)\, WOCMAT (Taiwan)\, NOIS//E (Italy)\, as well as ICMC\, NYCEMF\, and SEAMUS. He is full-time music faculty at Triton College. \n  \nHuixin Xue: Sprinkle\nThis piece seeks to explore new timbres and performance techniques for the pipa\, aiming to integrate the language of electronic music with the instrument’s sound in order to present a novel acoustic effect.\nThe pipa uses an unusual strings A #D E #G. \nAbout the artists\nHuixin Xue is a Chinese composer\, music producer and Music AI researcher. She is a Ph.D. candidate in Music AI at Shanghai Conservatory of Music\, an exchange student at the Hamburg University of Music and Theatre. She graduated from the Music Engineering Department of Shanghai Conservatory of Music both for her bachelor’s and master’s degrees.\nHer pieces won numerous awards\, including The Honorable Mention of the 2024 Sound Chain International Electronic Music Composition Competition (the only Chinese winner among the 6 winners worldwide). Her work was presented at the 2025 ICMC. Her pieces have been performed at major festivals. She also has participated in over twenty commercial music creation projects.\nDuring her doctoral studies\, she participated in the development of the AI Music Therapy Pod at the Shanghai Conservatory of Music\, co-developed SongEval\, the first aesthetic evaluation dataset for AI-generated songs\, and contributed to organizing the Automatic Song Aesthetic Evaluation Challenge at ICASSP 2026. \nPipa: Yinghan Liu \nComputer Music Designer: Shihong Ren \n  \nBenjamin Broening: Late Shift\nLate Shift explores the liminal light of dusk as shadows lengthen\, the bright colors of day darken\, and the familiar world is gradually transformed. A comparable transformation takes place in Late Shift: the flute and electronics slowly descend to lower registers over the course of the piece as flute sounds are gradually replaced by whispering percussion sounds in the electronics. \nAbout the artists\nBenjamin Broening’s music has been called “adventurous\, thoughtful\, eloquent\, and disarmingly direct.” His orchestral\, choral\, chamber and electroacoustic music has been performed in over twenty-five countries and across the United States by many soloists and ensembles.\nBroening is recipient of Guggenheim\, Howard and Fulbright Fellowships\, and has also received recognition and awards from the American Composers Forum\, Virginia Commission for the Arts\, ACS/Andrew Mellon Foundation\, the Jerome Foundation and the Presser Music Foundation among others.\nTrembling Air\, a Bridge Records release of his chamber music recorded by Eighth Blackbird\, has been praised as “haunting” and “enchanting” (Cleveland Plain Dealer)\, “magical” (Fanfare)\, “other-worldly” (Gramophone)\, and “coruscatingly gorgeous” (CD Hotlist). Critics have called Recombinant Nocturnes\, a disk of music for piano recorded by Duo Runedako “ breathtaking” (World Music Report) and “deep\, troubling” (François Couture). Nineteen other pieces have been released by Ensemble U: in Estonia and on the Centaur\, Everglade\, Equilibrium\, MIT Press\, Oberlin Music\, Open G\, Métier\, New Focus\, Ravello and SEAMUS record labels.\nBroening is founder and artistic director of Third Practice\, an annual festival of electroacoustic music at the University of Richmond\, where he is Professor of Music. He holds degrees from the University of Michigan\, Cambridge University\, Yale University\, and Wesleyan University. \nFlute: Giusy Panzanaro (Ensemble 404) \n  \nWan Heo: Fall and Rise\nFall and Rise is the second episode of my previous solo cello piece\, When It Falls. Drawing from the same inspiration\, which was the fallen leaves on the ground at Jeolmul Forest in Jeju Island\, Korea\, with a variety of colors and shapes\, this version for amplified violine and electronics focuses more on the timbre of the instrument. Particularly\, transitions between normal to harmonics\, different fingerings\, and how they create different textures and sonorities. \nRecording of When It Falls and field recordings from Jeolmul Forest were processed using modular synthesis\, creating certain atmosphere to the piece. Pitch and rhythmic materials for the violin was extracted from spectral analysis of the recordings which gives the sonic coherence to the three different sound sources. \nAbout the artists\nWan Heo is a Korean-born composer based in Chicago. Her works have been performed internationally in South Korea\, Germany\, Italy\, Singapore\, Spain\, and throughout the United States. Her percussion solo Unveiled Future is published by Alfonce Production.\nWan’s music has been commissioned and featured by Darmstädter Ferienkurse\, SEAMUS\, Yarn/Wire\, VIPA\, among others. She received an Honorable Mention for the Christine Clark/Theodore Front Prize in the IAWM New Music Search.\nHer doctoral dissertation explores the vulnerability of South Korea’s sonic environments through field recordings made at Buddhist mountain monasteries. Works from this project have been presented at NYCEMF\, the Composition in Asia Conference\, and NSEME.\nWan is a Visiting Assistant Professor at Wake Forest University. She holds a B.M. in Composition from Ewha Womans University and an M.M. in Composition from Florida State University. She is currently ABD in the Ph.D. program in Composition and Music Technology at Northwestern University\, where she works under the guidance of Alex Mincek\, Stephan Moore\, and Jay Alan Yim. \nViolin: Bahar Erunsal (Ensemble 404) \n  \nJonathan Wilson: Squeakeasy \nSqueakeasy was written for Maja Cerar during the COVID-19 pandemic from late 2020 to the early summer of 2021. The composition was conceived from my accidental discovery of a metallic chair that was loosely bolted to a metal patio set and could pivot in such a way to create an ear-piercing\, yet irresistible screech. The timbral qualities of that chair intrigued the composer to determine the various sonic transformations that could be realized after recording that initial sound\, which quickly led to pairing the electronics with the violin because of the multimbral similarities observed between them. Additional recordings of squeaky wooden surfaces\, such as a wooden chair and floorboards\, were included to enhance the timbral relationships between violin and electronics. The composer’s decision to explore their timbral relationships was partly inspired by Denis Smalley’s “Base Metals” by relating metal-based and wood-based sound families from the electronics to different violin timbres or extended techniques such as col legno\, glissando\, tremolo\, pizzicato\, ricochet\, and natural and artificial harmonics. The structure of this composition alternates between sections with performer + electronics and cadenzas with amplified violin\, which could be loosely described overall as a concertino for amplified violin based on the virtuosic elements of the violinist’s performance. The sound of the violin is amplified throughout the work by the electronic performer’s patch that was programmed on Max/MSP. The performer of the electronics triggers each instance of fixed media from the laptop while the performer follows both the score and a counter/timer that is displayed on a separate computer monitor. \nAbout the artists\nDr. Jonathan Wilson’s works have been performed at the Ann Arbor Film Festival\, European Media Art Festival\, ICMC\, SICMF\, SEAMUS\, NYCEMF\, MUSELAB\, NSEME\, Napoleon Electronic Music Festival\, Iowa Music Teachers Association State Conference\, and Midwest Composers Symposium. He is the winner of the 2014 Iowa Music Teachers Association Composition Competition. Jonathan has studied composition with Lawrence Fritts\, Josh Levine\, David Gompper\, James Romig\, James Caldwell\, Paul Paccione\, and John Cooper. In addition\, studies in conducting have been taken under Richard Hughey and Mike Fansler. Jonathan is a member of Society of Composers\, Inc.\, SEAMUS\, ICMA\, and the Iowa Composers Forum. \nViolin: Yao Dong Zhang (Ensemble 404) \n  \nChristopher Dobrian: I Dreamed of Naïma\nI Dreamed of Naïma for vibraphone and interactive computer system references a composition by John Coltrane in fragmented and distorted fashion\, as if recollected in a dream. The computer program\, written in Max for Live\, senses the sound of the vibraphone\, and algorithmically adds its own sounds to extend and elaborate the instrumental sound. The 7-minute piece mixes composition and improvisation\, with the computer performing interactively and responsively (with no attending technician needed)\, such that each performance is unique. \nAbout the artists\nChristopher Dobrian is Professor Emeritus of Integrated Composition\, Improvisation\, and Technology in the Department of Music\, with a joint appointment in the Department of Informatics\, at the University of California\, Irvine. He is a composer of instrumental and electronic music\, and taught courses in composition\, theory\, and computer music. He conducts research on the development of artificially intelligent interactive computer systems for the cognition\, composition\, and improvisation of music. He has published technical and theoretical articles on interactive computer music\, and is the author of the original reference documentation and tutorials for the Max\, MSP\, and Jitter programming environments by Cycling ’74. He holds a Ph.D. in Composition from the University of California\, San Diego\, where he studied composition with Joji Yuasa\, Robert Erickson\, Morton Feldman\, and Bernard Rands\, computer music with F. Richard Moore and George Lewis\, and classical guitar with the Spanish masters Celin and Pepe Romero. Dobrian has been an invited Fulbright specialist at the Korean National University of Arts\, the University of Paris-Sorbonne\, McGill University in Montreal\, and the Accademia Chigiana in Siena\, and has been a guest professor at Yonsei University\, Taiwan National Normal University\, University of Paris 8\, and the National University of Quilmes in Argentina. \nVibraphone: Aiyun Huang\nAcclaimed percussionist Aiyun Huang has performed with leading orchestras and at major international festivals worldwide\, premiering works by contemporary composers. Her research explores the performing body across music\, dance\, theatre\, and media technology\, and she directs the TaPIR Lab at the University of Toronto\, where she is Professor of Music. She founded the biennial Transplanted Roots percussion symposium\, has served as a juror and keynote speaker at prestigious events globally. Born in Taiwan\, Aiyun was named a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2024. \n  \nMark Whitlam: Free-Wheelerish (a movement from the suite Things Ain’t What They Used To Be)\nThe movement from a longer suite—titled in reference to Duke Ellington’s big band jazz classic\, released over sixty years ago—offers a gentle provocation\, contrasting traditional approaches to jazz improvisation with emerging paradigms in human–AI interaction. Combining real-time machine learning and deep learning tools\, the piece stages a live collaboration between improvising human musicians and generative AI agents. Central to the work is a subversion of the established technique of the contrafact\, whereby new melodies are composed over pre-existing chord progressions. Here\, the process is inverted: AI agents are tasked with reharmonising composed melodic lines\, thereby disrupting the expected harmonic framework. This indeterminacy both encourages and challenges the performers to find new musical responses. \nLeveraging technologies including Somax2\, RAVE\, Mosaïque\, and Google MediaPipe within MaxMSP\, the system enables algorithmic agents to act as both collaborative and disruptive partners in the performance loop. These agents generate unexpected musical gestures and offer novel\, interactive visual and audible modalities that stimulate and provoke the performers. The result is an evolving musical language that emerges from the entangled dynamics of this extended network of human and machine improvisers. \nAbout the artists\nMark Whitlam has been a professional musician for 25 years\, having toured internationally with UK jazz luminaries including Andy Sheppard\, Iain Ballamy and Jason Rebello (Sting) and Mercury Prize Nominee Eliza Carthy. Recent collaborations have included work with Adrian Utley (Portishead) and Will Gregory (Goldfrapp). He has also collaborated with Mercury Prize His compositions and performances have received airplay on BBC radio 2\, 3 \,6 and Jazz FM\, with TV credits including HBO’s miniseries Industry. Mark teaches in the UK at Bath Spa University and BIMM University\, where he is a senior lecturer. He is mid-stage in his PhD in Composition at the University of Bristol\, UK\, exploring the affordances offered by generative AI agents in the liminal space between composition and improvisation. He also has a keen interest in the links between actor network theory and 4E cognition in the space of human-AI mediated music-making. \nPercussion: Mark Whitlam \nBassoon: Rodrigo Rodrigues (Ensemble 404) \n  \nVolunteers\nTechnical Director / Main Sound\nSteffen Lohrey\nLeon Sudahl \nSound Assistants\nJakob Seyberth\nTim Christiansen \nStage / Light / Video\nEvelin Lindberg\nDong Zhou\nJames Tsz-Him Cheung \nProduction\nAigerim Seilova\nHuixin Xue\nHaonan Guo\nXinyi Yang\nNiko Yin\nJiwon Seo\nMenghuan Feng \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/lunch-concert-2a/
LOCATION:Hamburg University of Technology\, Building I\, Audimax 2\, Denickestraße 22\, Hamburg\, 21073\, Germany
CATEGORIES:12-05,Concert,Music
ORGANIZER;CN="ICMC HAMBURG 2026":MAILTO:info@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260512T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260512T210000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260421T170217Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260512T080618Z
UID:10000219-1778612400-1778619600@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:Evening Concert 2B
DESCRIPTION:This Evening Concert promises a special experience for both eyes and ears. At the center of this session is the saxophone\, performed by one of the most distinguished artists of our time: Hamburg-based saxophonist Asya Fateyeva. Together with her talented students\, she presents five works specially conceived for her and her instruments.\nThis instrumental focus is complemented by two striking video works\, presented on the specially installed video wall in the FEH\, which dissolve the boundaries between sonic and visual space. \nThis Evening Concert is open to the public. Those without a conference pass can purchase a ticket here. \n  \nProgram Overview\nSaxophone: Asya Fateyeva \nAdaptive_Study#06 – Symbolic Structures Enhanced\nRiccardo Dapelo \nExpandiere \nChing Lam Chung \npan:individual\, “come closer\, come home”\nFranz Danksagmüller \nSilent “human bird language” \nYongbing Dai and Yiping Bai \nCor Ddiglwed (Unhearing Chorus) \nJoe Wright \nWind Blown Rain\nMara Helmuth\nClarinet and Tarogato: Esther Lamneck\nVideo: Alfonso Belfiore \nPoetic Encounter with the digital shadow\nNicolas Kummert \n  \nAbout the pieces & the artists\nRiccardo Dapelo : Adaptive_Study#06 – Symbolic Structures Enhanced\nAdaptive_Study#06 – Symbolic Structures Enhanced (2025) is the sixth work in a series of compositional studies initiated in 2015\, exploring musical forms that are not temporally fixed. The piece investigates adaptive processes based on symbolic structures\, short-term memory\, and performer–system interaction. The live electronics analyses performer input and generate responses through the transformation and recombination of symbolic data. Rather than functioning as an autonomous generator\, the system acts as a responsive partner\, shaping musical form through evolving interactions over time. Control of event density at micro and macro-structural levels plays a central role\, preventing entropic saturation. The work is conceived as an open study\, in which form emerges through the negotiation between performer and system\, maintaining stylistic coherence while allowing variability across performances. \nAbout the artist\nRiccardo Dapelo (b. 1962) studied composition with G. Manzoni and A. Vidolin. His work focuses on acoustic and electronic composition\, live electronics\, and interactive systems\, and has been performed internationally. He has published articles and lectured on voice analysis\, spatialisation\, philosophy of art\, and musical time. He collaborates with visual artists on interactive works and sound installations for museum and exhibition spaces. He teaches Composition at the Conservatory of Piacenza. \n  \nChing Lam Chung: Expandiere\nThis piece explores the different sound qualities of the baritone saxophone—from pitched materials to mechanical sounds—and its interaction with electronics\, thereby investigating the sonic hybridity between the instrument and electronic media. Both tape and live electronics are used: the fixed electronics allow sound objects to be precisely organized within the spatial environment\, while the live electronics serve as a bridge between the instrument and the fixed electronics\, enhancing their connections. \nThrough this approach\, the piece creates a unique sonic environment in which different sound objects interact and evolve with one another\, offering the audience a varied auditory experience in which the instrument and electronics fully merge. \nAbout the artist\nCHUNG Ching Lam\, Mavis (b.2003)\, was born and raised in Hong Kong. Mavis currently studies Master music composition at Frankfurt University of Music and Performing Arts\, under the guidance of Orm Finnendahl and Ulrich Alexander Kreppein.\nMavis’s music thoughtfully explores timbre\, transforming ordinary sounds into unexpected auditory experiences. Her compositions discover the beauty of melancholy as she creates a unique sonic landscape that reflects her philosophy and experiences.\nShe received third prize in the 2nd NC Wong Young Composers Award and was chosen for the electroacoustic composition fellowship at the Delian Academy 2024. She also participated in the URTIcanti contemporary music festival and the Internationales Digitalkunst Festival. Furthermore\, she attended the South China Contemporary Creative Music Institute and has been selected for the Mixed Media category at the iISUONO Contemporary Music Week 2025. Her compositions have been performed in Greece\, Germany\, and Italy.\nShe studies Bachelor music composition at Hong Kong Baptist University\, under the guidance of Eugene Birman\, Camilo Mendez\, Stylianos Dimou and Ka Shu TAM. \n  \nFranz Danksagmüller : pan:individual\, “come closer\, come home”\npan:individual is a participatory work for organ\, live electronics\, mobile phones\, and audience that explores how individual perception\, agency\, and identity are transformed within digitally mediated collective systems. The piece examines how contemporary technologies shape experiences of belonging\, guidance\, and participation\, blurring the boundary between individual action and collective behavior.\nThe performance unfolds as a distributed audiovisual environment in which audience members access individualized video streams on their mobile phones. Initially fragmented and asynchronous\, these streams gradually align\, forming a shared sonic and visual field. The organ part follows algorithmic and process-based instructions that guide constrained improvisation\, functioning not as an authoritative voice but as one element within a larger collective texture shaped by live electronics.\nAs the performance progresses\, audience members are invited to participate vocally\, tuning into sustained pitches suggested by the audiovisual environment. Digital avatars address participants directly\, encouraging alignment and proximity and culminating in the formation of a collective sonic organism.\nRather than presenting a narrative or explicit critique\, pan:individual creates an experiential situation in which participants are invited to reflect on how digitally mediated systems influence collective identity\, agency\, and the desire to belong. \nAbout the artist\nFranz Danksagmüller (*1969) is an Austrian organist\, composer\, and media artist working at the intersection of instrumental performance\, live electronics\, rule-based improvisation\, and participatory systems. He is Professor for Organ and Improvisation at the University of Music in Lübeck and currently Visiting Professor at the Royal Academy of Music\, London. His works include music theatre\, ensemble and vocal works\, and participatory projects integrating digital technologies and audience interaction\, presented internationally across Europe\, Asia\, Africa\, and North America. \n  \nYongbing Dai and Yiping Bai: Silent “human bird language” \nThis work\, composed for saxophone and electronic music\, uses the saxophone’s unique multiphonic harmonics\, distinctive timbre\, and various techniques such as tonguing to evoke an effect of ancient human “bird language\,” akin to “abstract writing” incomprehensible to modern humans. It uses this to question the constant self-destruction that occurs on our shared planet. We can consider this: we have entered the age of artificial intelligence\, with highly advanced science and technology. Yet\, even in this civilized context\, for their own benefit\, humans can disregard and kill their fellow human beings. This is utterly absurd and tragic. How is this different from the barbaric slaughter of ancient times? What is the significance of the development of human technology and civilization? \nAbout the artists\nDai Yongbing holds a doctorate in Electronic Music Composition from the Shanghai Conservatory of Music. He currently teaches electronic music at the Art and Technology Department of the Composition Department of Wuhan Conservatory of Music. He was sponsored to study composition and electronic music composition at the Royal Danish Academy of Music\, where he received a master’s degree in composition. In 2023\, he studied sound art at the University of Music and Drama in Munich\, Germany.In 2024\, he was sponsored by the European Union’s Erasmus program to study electronic music composition with Professor Karlheinz Essl at the University of Music and Drama in Vienna\, Austria. The electronic music work “Two Trembling Hearts” won the first prize at the Hangzhou International Electronic Music Festival. In June 2022\, he was selected for the academic class of computer music design and performance at the IRCAM-Manni-festival Music Festival at Pompidou in Paris\, France. His work “Two Worlds of Monks” won the first prize in the UPI-Sketch professional group at the 2022 Xenakis (CIX) Music Center in France. His wind band work “Non-Taoism” was premiered by the Shenzhen Symphony Orchestra. His works have been performed all over the world\, such as Munich and Düsseldorf in Germany\, Amsterdam in the Netherlands\, Vienna in Austria\, Lisbon in Portugal\, Copenhagen in Denmark\, New York in the United States\, Tokyo in Japan\, Seoul in South Korea. \nYiping Bai \n  \nJoe Wright: Cor Ddiglwed (Unhearing Chorus) \nCor Ddiglwed (unhearing chorus) takes inspiration from Daphne Oram’s ‘Bird of Parallax’\, and was developed with the one-of-a-kind\, Mini Oramics\, developed by Tom Richards based on Oram’s designs for a revised version of her pioneering graphical synthesis machine. \nIn the piece\, the author phrases/samples recorded with Oramics\, alongside field recordings taken locally to his home in South Wales and live processed saxophone which uses the instrument as input to a phase vocoder designed to mimic the writing / replaying / overwriting process that Mini Oramics facilitates. \nThe piece was written in the context of a highly divisive by-election in which local communities in South Wales saw a hot rise in populist sentiment\, and a rise in polarised rhetoric on and offline. While the technical inception of the piece draws heavily on Oram and the legacy of her synthesiser design\, the field recording process at this time highlighted the importance shapes and forms in captured human and animal voices – seen through an Oramics lens. The piece explores the idea of diverse clashing narrative threads in a fight for attention – as a metaphorical mirror to the author’s recordings of local dawn choruses. Both in the piece and the context of its composition\, these voices are\, despite their differences\, interconnected by common challenges and under-explored common ground\, yet are broadly unheard by others. \nThe piece forms part of a broader body of recent work that explores Oramics in the context of Oram and Iannis Xenakis’ work\, and the ways that their thinking and legacy can apply to contemporary musical composition\, instrument design\, and accessible musical tools and resources. \nAbout the artist\nJoe Wright is a musician and maker based in Cardiff\, with an interest in collaborative music making\, field recording\, accessible music technology/practice\, and creative code. As a saxophonist\, Joe is currently playing across the UK and Europe with jazz/contemporary music groups led by Rob Luft\, Corrie Dick\, and in FORJ. He also has a long-standing collaboration – Onin – with experimental musician\, James L Malone that explores unstable systems and atypical interactions. Recently\, Joe has been exploring field recording with a focus on his local natural spaces in South Wales. \n  \nMara Helmuth\, Esther Lamneck and Alfonso Belfiore: Wind Blown Rain\nWind Blown Rain was inspired by natural processes and forces involving water. Water metamorphoses between many opposing states: from a gentle drizzle to a stormy downpour\, from a tiny droplet to a crashing ocean. Life on earth is dependent on water\, and also at its mercy. This piece focuses mainly on the transformed sounds of rain\, and its reflections in the tárogató sound. Samples were recorded in Venice and Ascea\, Italy. The music was composed in Italy in the summer of 2025 at Wassard Elea Artist’s residency in Ascea by a computer music composer and a performer/real time composer. While most of our previous collaborations have relied solely on the sound of the performer’s instrument for the computer part\, in this piece the instrumentalist interacts primarily with music created from natural recordings and their processed transformations. A third artist created the video part in response to the music from his own water-related video recordings. The video component of Wind Blown Rain is a visual meditation on the natural landscape\, filtered through the inner rhythm of rainfall. Created with images generated and modified using artificial intelligence\, the editing alternates slow-motion sequences\, crossfades\, and subtle variations to evoke a dilated sense of time. The environment\, immersed in rain\, transforms gradually\, suggesting a fragile balance between presence and dissolution. The visual work accompanies the music as a mental landscape—fluid and contemplative. \nAbout the artists\nMara Helmuth (b. 1957)\, internationally known computer music composer/researcher\, received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2025. Her research explores sonification\, granular synthesis\, wireless sensor networks\, Internet2\, and RTcmix. She is Professor at College-Conservatory of Music\, University of Cincinnati\, where she received the George Rieveschl Award for Scholarly / Creative Works at in 2023. She served on the International Computer Music Association board of directors and as President. D.M.A.: Columbia Univ.\, earlier degrees: Univ. Ill. U-C. \nClarinet and Tarogato: Esther Lamneck\nThe New York Times calls Esther Lamneck “an astonishing virtuoso.” She has appeared as a soloist with major orchestras\, with renowned chamber music artists and an international roster of musicians from the new music improvisation scene. http://www.estherlamneck.com/ \nVideo: Alfonso Belfiore\nAlfonso Belfiore is a composer and visual artist whose work explores the relationships between sound\, image\, movement\, and perception. Former professor of electronic music at the Conservatories of Florence and Padua\, he has collaborated with international institutions\, creating performances\, sound installations\, and multidisciplinary projects that merge musical innovation with digital art. His recent work investigates memory\, dreamlike space\, and the fragile line between reality and imagination. \n  \nNicolas Kummert: Poetic Encounter with the digital shadow\nThis proposal invites saxophonist Asya Fateyeva into an improvisatory performance that explores the encounter between acoustic virtuosity and real-time electronic transformation. The project centres on a live-electronics setup I have developed within artistic research contexts over several years—a system deliberately designed to be simple\, flexible\, affordable\, and fast to deploy. It requires only a close microphone (ideally the Vigamusictools Intramic)\, a small audio interface\, a laptop\, and three compact controllers. Its purpose is not to impose effects but to extend the sonic and expressive possibilities of the acoustic instrument while remaining transparent and highly responsive.\nThe concept is straightforward: the saxophone produces the primary musical material\, and I modulate that sound live through controlled timbral\, spectral\, and temporal transformations. The electronics behave as a reactive partner—what I call the performer’s digital shadow: a sonic counterpart that follows\, shapes\, questions\, or briefly detaches from the acoustic gesture. The identity of the acoustic sound remains fully audible\, while the electronic layer opens new directions within the improvisation.\nThe artistic foundations of this work draw on several research frameworks:\n• Improvisation as assemblage (after Deleuze): the performance is approached as a self-emergent system in which performers\, instruments\, digital processes\, acoustics\, and feedback relations act together to shape the form in real time. • Paulo de Assis’s Logic of Experimentation: the focus lies on what the instrument–electronics constellation can do when activated through exploratory performance\, rather than on pre-defined material. • Georgina Born’s theory of musical mediation: the setup foregrounds the interplay between acoustic sound\, digital transformation\, performer interaction\, and audience perception. • Laurent Cugny’s audiotactile perspective: the electronic layer functions as an extension of touch\, gesture\, and micro-timing rather than an external effect. The project treats improvisation as a co-embodied process that produces a hybrid sonic entity.\nMusically\, the performance is structured as a series of improvisatory episodes that examine different modes of relationship between acoustic and transformed sound: – subtle extensions of timbre and resonance; – interactive textures and rhythmical counterpoints between acoustic phrasing and electronic responses – sections where Asya’s sound is heavily transformed in real time\, while the unprocessed acoustic sound is replayed in the pauses of her playing\, blurring the audience’s visual-aural connection\, and questioning the musician’s immediate relationship to her own instrument.\nBecause the system is lightweight and adaptable\, the collaboration requires limited rehearsal and can be shaped around Asya’s musical language and preferred improvisational strategies. The format proposes an accessible but conceptually rigorous exploration of improvisation\, mediation\, and electronic augmentation. It offers the conference audience an accessible example of how simple\, flexible computer-music tools can generate rich musical dialogues and expand the expressive ecology of the acoustic instrument\, shedding new light on various aspects of improvisation.\nI propose to conclude the performance with a short discussion in which Asya can reflect on how the electronic shadow influenced musical decision-making\, interaction\, and perception—offering insight into the core research questions driving this work. \nAbout the artist\nNicolas Kummert (1979) is a Belgian saxophonist\, electronic artist\, composer and researcher known for his melodic sense\, openness and exploratory approach. He has recorded over 70 albums and performed worldwide with artists such as Lionel Loueke\, Jeff Ballard\, DRIFTER and many others. Active in hybrid acoustic–electronic projects\, film and dance music\, and interdisciplinary research\, he develops innovative modulation processes and collaborates across jazz\, poetry\, contemporary dance and African music. \n  \nVolunteers\nTechnical Director / FOH\nGiovanni Dinello \nSound Engineering \nLuciano Correa \nLight Design\nGabriel Saber\, Lukas Becker \nStage & Sound Assistance\nAdrián Velasco \nProduction\nValentina Donato\nHaewon Sim \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/concert-2b/
LOCATION:Friedrich-Ebert-Halle\, Alter Postweg 34\, Hamburg\, 21075\, Germany
CATEGORIES:12-05,Concert,Music
ORGANIZER;CN="ICMC HAMBURG 2026":MAILTO:info@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260513T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260513T153000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260421T161440Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260512T080354Z
UID:10000085-1778679000-1778686200@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:Lunch Concert 3A
DESCRIPTION:Concert 3A offers a fascinating stage for the Steinway Spirio—the world’s most advanced self-playing piano system. In this session\, the piano is taken far beyond its traditional role: it acts as an autonomous performer\, a controller\, and even an interface for human brain activity. \nThis Lunch Concert is open to the public. Those without a conference pass can purchase a ticket here. \n  \nProgram Overview\n“Empathic Machines” for One Pianist’s Mind and Steinway & Sons SPIRIO\nMasatsune Yoshio and Atsushi Mori\nPiano: Atsushi Mori \nMulholland Revisited \nHeloise Garry \nUsher\nJeffrey T.V. \nSpring Code \nJian Feng\nHarp: Armand Brunet (Ensemble 404) \nVoici que la saison décline\nMikako Mizuno\nClarinet: Anyu Lyu (Ensemble 404) \nElevator Pitch\nJuan Vassallo\nCello: Antonio Lo Curto (Ensemble 404) \nChant\nYoonjae Choi\nCello: Antonio Lo Curto (Ensemble 404) \n  \nAbout the pieces & artists\nMasatsune Yoshio: Empathic Machines\nWhat lies beyond the pianist’s technical skill – music in which body and mind are fully integrated.\nIn this work\, the pianist’s brainwaves are detected using the FocusCalm™ device together with the Good Brain app\, which enables UDP measurement. The data is then processed in Max 9 and Somax2 to generate performance information\, which is transmitted to and played by the Steinway & Sons SPIRIO self‑playing piano.\nThrough this body‑extended form of expression\, a kind of piano music emerges that cannot be reached by human hands alone\, offering a speculative answer to the question posed at the beginning. \nAbout the artists\nMasatsune Yoshio (1972- ) was born in Kobe. He is a composer and Media Master No. 75. His specialty is the composition of fine art pieces using computers and the compositions are based on the creation of and research regarding algorithmic compositions\, acoustic synthesizing\, live electronics\, and expression with information technologies. His electroacoustic pieces were performed within and outside of Japan. He is an associate professor at Showa University of Music. \nPiano: Atsushi Mori\nAtsushi Mori is an Associate Professor at the Junior College Division of Showa University of Music.He completed his studies in the Department of Composition and the Graduate School at Showa University of Music\, studying under Kazuhisa Akita.\nIn 1987\, he received the Silver Prize in the A1 Category of the PTNA Piano Competition\, and in 1993\, he performed with the Warsaw Philharmonic as part of the Yamaha JOC overseas concert tour. He composed Fanfare for the “Festival of Student Orchestras” in 2002.\nIn addition to his work as a composer\, Mori is active as a keyboardist\, providing live support\, arrangements\, and recordings. He also specializes in music production using DAWs such as Ableton Live and Logic\, and is dedicated to the analysis of popular music and the development of solfège teaching materials. His research focuses on the integration of digital technology and music education. \n  \nHeloise Garry: Mulholland Revisited\nMulholland Revisited is an interactive composition for Yamaha Disklavier / MIDI keyboard and ChucK\, integrating real-time interaction between acoustic and electronic elements. By leveraging MIDI input\, the piece enables the piano to function as both a performer and a controller\, triggering ChucK-generated sound textures in response to live performance. Inspired by a pivotal phone conversation in Mulholland Drive (Lynch\, 2001)\, the work explores the blurred boundary between dream and reality through a dynamic interplay between piano-generated material and algorithmic sound synthesis. The electronic elements emerge as an extension of the piano’s acoustic voice\, reinforcing the psychological tension that defines the narrative arc. An homage to David Lynch\, the piece mirrors his fascination with fractured identities and surreal atmospheres\, immersing the listener in a sonic landscape that expands the piano’s traditional interface into new musical and narrative dimensions. \nAbout the artist\nHéloïse Garry is an artist working at the intersection of filmmaking\, theater\, and performance\, exploring the aesthetics of totality across art forms. Her compositions reflect a deep interest in cross-cultural and linguistic experimentation\, and sonic storytelling. Her work has been presented at ICMC\, NIME\, NYCEMF\, ICAD\, Audio Mostly\, the Audio Engineering Society\, and the Internet Archive. As a Yenching Scholar at Peking University\, she researched the politics of independent Chinese cinema and the role of music in the films of Jia Zhangke. An artist-in-residence at Gray Area and the Mozilla Foundation in San Francisco\, she has collaborated with IRCAM and the Columbia Computer Music Center\, and explored the sonification of the universe under the mentorship of physicist Brian Greene. In September 2024\, she joined Stanford’s Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA)\, where she studies with Mark Applebaum\, Paul DeMarinis\, and Ge Wang. Héloïse holds bachelor’s degrees in Filmmaking\, Economics\, and Philosophy from Columbia University\, Sciences Po\, and Sorbonne University. \n  \nJeffrey T.V.: Usher\nUsher is a new soundtrack for the 1928 silent film The Fall of the House of Usher\, co-directed by J.S. Watson and Melville Webber and based on the 1839 short story by Edgar Allen Poe. The primary goal of this electronic score was to enhance both the dramatic content of the film and emphasize the surrealist imagery laden throughout. Through the use of modular synthesizers\, this resulted in a piece existing between filmscore and audio-visual composition. \nAbout the artist\nJeffrey T.V. is a New England-based electroacoustic composer and classically trained vocalist. His compositional output primarily deals in combining generative sound withimprovised response through combinations of electronic and acoustical instruments\, with a special interest in modular synthesizers. His music has been featured at Electronic Music Midwest\, SEAMUS\, NYCEMF\, ICMC\, Salisbury University\, Bucknell University\, the University of Kentucky Art Museums\, and other venues across the United States.  \n  \nJian Feng: Spring Code\nSpring Code is a real-time interactive audiovisual work that revives the konghou (Chinese harp)—once lost for centuries—through a custom responsive interface. Treating classical poetic aesthetics as a generative source\, it reimagines Wang Wei’s line “Clear spring flows over stones” not as an illustration\, but as executable logic: a living data stream shaped by performance.\nThe konghou functions simultaneously as an instrument and an expressive interface. Its acoustic output—plucks\, harmonics\, string vibrations—is captured via a microphone\, while performer gestures are tracked through laser distance\, pressure\, and sliding touch sensors. All inputs are fed into an integrated system built on Max/MSP\, Arduino\, and TouchDesigner\, driving real-time granular synthesis\, adaptive spatialization (VBAP)\, dynamic visuals\, and responsive light from addressable LED strips.\nThe resulting soundscape evokes the fluidity of mountain streams; its visual layer maps audio features to flowing particles\, creating a multimodal environment where cultural memory is continuously re-encoded. “Spring” embodies nature’s flow; “Code” pulses as digital lifeblood. Rather than preserving tradition as an artifact\, Spring Code compiles it anew in every performance—where hand gestures conduct light and data\, and konghou tones shape space and sound.\nBetween the echo of a mountain spring and the pulse of an algorithm\, the work constructs an inexhaustible river of resonance across time. In Spring Code\, the spring never dries—the code never stops flowing. \nAbout the artists\nJian Feng is a composer and Associate Professor at the Wuhan Conservatory of Music\, where she serves as Director of the Center for Computer Music Composition Research. She was a visiting scholar at the Center for New Music and Audio Technologies (CNMAT) at the University of California\, Berkeley\, supported by the China Scholarship Council.\nHer creative and research practice centers on interactive electronic music and the application of artificial intelligence in musical contexts. Her works have been presented at leading international forums and festivals\, including the International Computer Music Conference (ICMC)\, the International Society for Contemporary Music (ISCM) World New Music Days\, Frontier+ Festival (UK)\, MUSICACOUSTICA-Beijing\, MUSICACOUSTICA-Hangzhou\, and the Shanghai International Electroacoustic Week.\nFeng holds key roles in China’s interdisciplinary arts–technology community: Deputy Secretary-General of the Electronic Music Society of the Chinese Musicians Association\, Committee Member of the Art & Artificial Intelligence Specialized Committee of the Chinese Association for Artificial Intelligence (CAAI)\, and Executive Committee Member of the Computational Arts Division of the China Computer Federation (CCF). \nHarp: Armand Brunet (Ensemble 404) \n  \nMikako Mizuno: Voici que la saison décline\, for clarinet and electronics\nThe electronic part of this piece comprises sound files containing grains of different pitches and sizes\, all of which are derived from clarinet performance. These grains are placed in the field by spat. program and diffused through a cube-shaped multi-channel system. The subscribed version is rendered into four channels. The solo clarinet is required to produce special tone colours using multiphonic techniques\, breath tones\, harmonic colour trills\, etc. The subtle timbre of the instrument connects the minute changes in visual colours and the passing of time\, which were depicted in a poem by Victor Hugo.\nThe title of this piece comes from one of Hugo’s poems. At the end of summer\, the season seamlessly transitions to autumn. The bright blue sky turns grey\, the birds shiver and the grass feels cold. I tried to create sounds that reflect these slight changes and delicate nuances.\nThe clarinet’s multiphonic sound is enhanced by harmonised breath tones. The harmonisation\, realized by special signal processing\, involves not only layered pitches\, but also the filtering of noisy long breaths. In the performance\, especially in the latter half of the piece\, Max for Live is necessary to certify the effective interactive ensemble between the clarinet player and the electronic part\, which must fulfil the notated musical ensemble. The instrumentalist can play the piece according to the usual musical notation\, because some notated guides in the electronic part show the tempo and the nuance of phrase for the musician\, which are often the case in the latter half of this piece. The instrumentalist is sometimes demanded to catch the electronic un-pitched noisy sounds during the fermata or the rest. \nAbout the artists\nMikako Mizuno. Composer/Musicologist. Mainly active in Japan\, her music has been heard in many places including France Germany\,Austria\, Hungary\, Italy\, Republic of Moldova\, and international festivals and conferences such as ISEA\, ISCM\, EMS\, Musicacoustica\, WOCMAT\, NIME\, ICMC\, NYCEMF. Her pieces range from orchestra\, chamber music\, vocal ensemble\, traditional Japanese instruments (sho\, koto\, shakuhachi\, no-flute\, biwa etc.) to networked remote performance through ipv6. \nClarinet: Anyu Lyu (Ensemble 404) \n  \nJuan Vassallo: Elevator Pitch\nPhilosopher Hartmut Rosa suggests that our society is characterized by acceleration due to rapid technological advancements\, leading to constant time shortages. As we adapt to quick updates via smartphones and social media\, communication becomes faster and more fragmented\, favoring brief\, direct forms like the elevator pitch. An elevator pitch is a short summary speech meant to convey ideas or products within the duration of an elevator ride. It is aimed at being clear and persuasive to a wide audience.\nIn politics\, new communication techniques exploit these brief\, impactful messages\, often oversimplifying complex issues and lacking depth. Such strategies have been criticized for manipulating public opinion and stirring emotions\, leading to biased and divisive rhetoric that can aid authoritarian or intolerant movements.\nThe piece poses an artistic focus on these contemporary methods of communication -such as an elevator pitch- and the potential for manipulation of sound-bite content by political figures. The piece thus is a sardonic analogy to a political speech\, which is portrayed here as empty of substance\, and as a construct derived from a carefully crafted algorithmic rhetoric\, and the sonification of spoken phrases. Additionally\, nonsensical political speeches synthesized through commercial text-to-speech systems are used as sound material for the electronics. \nAbout the artists\nJuan Sebastián Vassallo is an Argentinian composer and live-electronics performer based in Bergen\, Norway. He holds a Ph.D. in Artistic Research from the University of Bergen. His artistic research explores human–computer interaction in art creation\, at the intersection of computer-assisted composition\, artificial intelligence\, algorithmic poetry\, generative visuals\, and live electronics. \nHis music has been performed internationally by ensembles and soloists including Projecto RED (Argentina)\, Quasar Saxophone Quartet (Canada)\, Hinge Quartet (USA)\, Vocal Ensemble Tabula Rasa (Norway)\, Edvard Grieg Kor (Norway)\, JÓR Saxophone Quartet (Scandinavia)\, Zone Experimental Basel (Switzerland)\, and Lucas Fels (Germany)\, among others. \nHis work has received multiple awards\, including first prize at the AI-based composition contest at the IEEE Conference on Big Data (Washington\, D.C.) for Oscillations (iii). Other distinctions include selections and awards from the National Endowment for the Arts (Argentina)\, ISCM/Chengdu River Sun Prize (China)\, and several contemporary art competitions. \nHe has received international grants from UNESCO-Aschberg and the Organization of Ibero-American States (IBERMÚSICAS)\, supporting artistic residencies in the United States. His practice is strongly collaborative and interdisciplinary\, and alongside his experimental work\, he maintains an active career as a tango pianist and arranger. \nCello: Antonio Lo Curto (Ensemble 404) \n  \nYoonjae Choi: Chant\nChant is a live electronic work that transforms the cello through vowel-based formant processing\, creating a hybrid vocal–instrumental language reminiscent of primordial voice. As part of a broader research project on real-time live electronics formant synthesis\, the piece explores how electronic modulation can expand instrumental identity and shape emotive\, multi-voiced textures. \nAbout the artists\nYoonjae Choi is a South Korean composer whose work explores the musical potential of extended tones and spectral qualities drawn from both traditional instruments and non-instrumental materials. His compositional practice focuses on integrating acoustic sound with live electronics\, soundscapes\, and computer-based technologies. He frequently collaborates across media arts and experimental music disciplines. \nHe studied with Richard Dudas at Hanyang University and with John Gibson and Chi Wang at Indiana University. He is currently pursuing a doctoral degree in composition at the University of North Texas\, studying with Panayiotis Kokoras. His music and research have been featured at international conferences and festivals. \nCello: Antonio Lo Curto (Ensemble 404) \n  \nVolunteers\nTechnical Director / Main Sound\nSteffen Lohrey\nLeon Sudahl \nSound Assistants\nJakob Seyberth\nTim Christiansen \nStage / Light / Video\nEvelin Lindberg\nDong Zhou\nJames Tsz-Him Cheung \nProduction\nAigerim Seilova\nHuixin Xue\nHaonan Guo\nXinyi Yang\nNiko Yin\nJiwon Seo\nMenghuan Feng \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/lunch-concert-3a/
LOCATION:Hamburg University of Technology\, Building I\, Audimax 2\, Denickestraße 22\, Hamburg\, 21073\, Germany
CATEGORIES:13-05,Concert,Music
ORGANIZER;CN="ICMC HAMBURG 2026":MAILTO:info@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260513T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260513T210000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260415T121938Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260421T201129Z
UID:10000121-1778700600-1778706000@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:[Off-ICMC] Concert | Florentin Ginot: "Disturbance"
DESCRIPTION:Photo: Florentin Ginot\n  \n“Disturbance” is an audiovisual solo performance that blends elements of concert\, video art\, and theater. With his double bass and analog synthesizers\, Florentin Ginot invites the audience on a live nocturnal journey. Past and present collide with ghostly glitches and pulsating electronic rhythms.  \nregistration required here \n  \nThe Off-ICMC\nMusic is what brings us together\, even when everything else pulls us apart.\nMusic everywhere—it is part of our everyday lives. And yet\, we’re hearing it performed live on analog instruments less and less. Instead\, it often reaches us through speakers or headphones\, as files\, from the cloud. What does music mean to you? What does it sound like today? Where does it begin—and where does it end?\nThe ligeti center invites you to listen more closely and discover new sounds—to explore\, experiment\, and play. This year\, ICMC HAMBURG 2026 revives an old tradition: the Off-ICMC\, a free and accompanying festival curated for the general public and anyone curious about computer music. \nAll Off-ICMC events are free of charge.  \n\n  \n \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/off-icmc-concert-florentin-ginot-disturbance/
LOCATION:Stellwerk Hamburg\, Hannoversche Straße 85\, Hamburg\, 21079\, Germany
CATEGORIES:13-05,Concert,Music,Off-ICMC
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260514T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260514T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260421T162627Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260514T103041Z
UID:10000093-1778765400-1778770800@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:Lunch Concert 4A
DESCRIPTION:Concert 4A marks a special moment of collaboration between Hamburg’s local music scene and international composers. A particular highlight are two world premieres written especially for the renowned Hamburg-based double bassist John Eckhardt. Known for his explorations at the boundaries between new music and sound art\, Eckhardt here pushes the sonic extremes of his instrument in dialogue with the computer.\nAlongside the focus on the double bass\, the audience can expect a journey ranging from “electroacoustic romanticism” to AI-driven violin improvisations. \nThis Lunch Concert is open to the public. Those without a conference pass can purchase a ticket here. \n  \nProgram Overview\nX6 – Hexaphonic Spatialized Guitar\nFrancesco Perissi and Giovanni Magaglio \nThe Water lily in the blaze\nNatsuki Kambe\nDouble bass: John Eckhardt \nconfim\, assim\, sem fim\nRodrigo Pascale\nDouble bass: John Eckhardt \nThe Week\nHenrik von Coler \nEmpress Luo\nYao Hsiao \nResonant Thresholds\nCecilia Suhr \n\n\n  \nAbout the pieces & artists\nFrancesco Perissi and Giovanni Magaglio: X6 – Hexaphonic Spatialized Guitar\n\nThe “X6 – Hexaphonic Spatialized Guitar” project is about an augmented electric guitar designed for 6.1 channel spatialization. With the X6 setup and a special breakout cable\, it is possible to manage the sound from a hexaphonic pickup\, which separates the guitar signal into six independent channels\, one for each string. These signals are sent to a computer\, where Max/MSP processes them in real time with filters\, loops\, sound manipulation\, and spatial projection. The first version of the project had a fixed structure controlled by a sequencer that automated the filters. In the latest version\, a flexible multi-channel filter matrix has been added\, together with inputs for voice\, electronic instruments\, and samples. This makes the performance more open and improvisational\, allowing for control over time\, sound layering\, spatial gestures\, and vocal or electronic transformations. The idea is to build a self-made hyper-instrument where the performer and the algorithms influence each other\, creating electroacoustic music distributed in space and combining different musical practices. The newest patch\, version 20\, also uses artificial intelligence. With machine learning tools (FluCoMa)\, the system can recognize instrumental gestures and automatically change filter settings. With neural synthesis (RAVE)\, it can modify the sound of each string by acting on the latent spaces of the model\, producing deep timbral changes. The project also includes an interactive audio-visual part made with software TouchDesigner\, where the screen is divided into six sections that represent the six guitar strings. The visuals are generated with AI using prompts inspired by Renaissance painting\, but mixed with modern themes such as social distortion\, bias\, and the perceptual effects of today’s hyper-technological world. Overall\, the concept points to a kind of “second Renaissance.” It suggests that we are living in a new era in which imagination is shaped not by traditional art forms or systems of patronage\, but by digital technology. This new technè inaugurates unprecedented creative possibilities\, while also raising ethical\, cognitive\, and epistemological questions that we are only beginning to grasp. \nAbout the artists\nFrancesco Perissi is a composer\, guitarist\, and sound engineer based in Florence. He teaches Computer Music at the “Maderna Lettimi” Conservatory in Cesena and is the creator of the “X6” project for hexaphonic spatialized guitar\, as well as the founder of “match”\, a meeting dedicated to electroacoustic improvisation. His research explores the expressive potential of technology in music\, with a focus on the relationship between instruments and sound spatialization. Using interactive devices\, multichannel systems\, and real-time processing\, he creates works for electronic music\, installations\, and live performance\, blending contemporary languages with avant-pop influences and emphasizing the relationship between body\, gesture\, and space.\nGiovanni Magaglio is a sound and visual artist whose work centers on concrete sound\, timbral transformation\, and the perception of acoustic space. He creates layered soundscapes that invite immersive and active listening. He teaches Multimedia at the Conservatory of Florence and works across installations\, theater\, and audiovisual productions for short and feature films. His practice investigates the interplay between image\, sound\, and perceptual space\, shaping sensory environments where reality and representation intersect.\n\nGiovanni Magaglio\n  \n\nNatsuki Kambe: The Water lily in the blaze \nThis work for double bass and live computer electronics explores the wide range and rich timbral possibilities of the instrument through real-time signal processing in Max. Combining the powerful energy of the low register with the delicate beauty of flageolet harmonics in the high register\, the piece evokes the poetic image of water lilies glowing in a blazing sunset. This work was composed to explore the wide range and rich timbral possibilities of the contrabass. In addition to the instrument’s inherent variety of tone colors\, the composer further expands its sonic potential through live electronics. The low register conveys a powerful\, flame-like energy\, while the high register\, produced through flageolet harmonics\, possesses a delicate beauty reminiscent of water lilies. These contrasting elements are brought together into a single poetic image: a burning sunset reflected on a pond\, with water lilies blooming in its shadow.\nFor the electronic component\, the composer used TRLib\, a Max object library for the realization of interactive computer music developed by Takayuki Rai. Throughout the piece\, grbFM\, which realizes granular sampling techniques in real time\, is employed extensively: in the low register\, it generates noise-based textures\, including quarter-tone inflections\, while in the high register\, it creates chordal sonorities inspired by the Japanese traditional wind instrument shō.\nAbout the artists\nNatsuki Kambe was born in 2004 in Yokohama\, Japan. They began studying piano at the age of five and started composition studies with Kazuo Mise at the age of fifteen. In 2020\, she graduated from the Music Department of Toho Girls’ High School.\nIn the same year\, they entered Toho Gakuen College of Music as a composition major and are currently a third-year student (as of January 2026). Since April 2024\, she has been studying computer music under Takayuki Rai. \nDouble bass: John Eckhardt \n  \nRodrigo Pascale: confim\, assim\, sem fim\n“confim\, assim\, sem fim” was composed in 2024 during the Laboratorio de Composición Mixta of Resonancias Iberoamericanas. It is dedicated to the Festival Expresiones Contemporáneas and to Francisco. This composition explores the concept of infinity within limited systems.\nThe pre-compositional research involved extensive explorations of harmonies based on mathematical ratios. I established a structure featuring 15 harmonies\, beginning with two frequencies at a ratio of 16/15. Each subsequent harmony added a new frequency derived from the initial ratio\, multiplied by a series of ratios following the sequence [16/15\, 15/14\, 14/13\, 13/12\, 12/11\, 11/10\, 10/9\, 9/8\, 8/7\, 7/6\, 6/5\, 5/4\, 4/3\, 3/2\, 2/1]. Notably\, some harmonies—including the second—utilized this sequence in reverse. For instance\, the ratio [15/14] was employed as the foundation for the first two frequencies\, while the third harmony emerged from multiplying [15/14] by [16/15]\, yielding [8/7].\nThe forward sequence often led to more dissonant harmonies\, while the backward sequence inclined towards consonance\, and I frequently juxtaposed the two. An exception occurred between harmonies 13 and 14\, where both utilized forward sequences to create heightened tension\, concluding in a consonant 15th harmony. The sequence employs a set of regressive numbers\, each divided by its preceding integer. This approach allows for the potential to extend beyond 2/1 to 1/0\, thus engaging with a well-known mathematical problem. As the results of division increase when the denominator decreases\, division by zero is said to “tend to infinity.”\nIn this exploration\, I realized that the logical conclusion of the composition was to approach infinity musically. However\, I confronted the challenge that the double bass can only produce a finite range of sounds\, and that the human hearing spans approximately from 20 Hz to 20 kHz. Faced with this problem\, I sought solutions that transcended the confines of the system itself. This led me to investigate how the limitations of our auditory perception could be brought to the forefront\, creating illusions of seemingly ever-rising glissandi and of rhythm turning to pitch. The transformation of percussive sounds into frequencies and the use of Shepard tones played a crucial role in this composition.\nconfim\, assim\, sem fim delves into the boundaries of auditory perception\, aiming to investigate the concept of infinity within limited systems. This composition begins with a sequence of harmonies\, where subtle facets of infinty aer explored through the techniques of the double bass. In its culminating section\, the work unveils the full potential of this exploration by incorporating exceptionally high frequencies and an enduring reverberation\, creating an immersive sonic landscape that invites listeners to experience the infinity within these media. \nAbout the artists\nRodrigo Pascale (b. 1996) is an internationally awarded Brazilian composer whose works have been performed worldwide by leading ensembles including JACK Quartet\, ICE\, MCME\, Splinter Reeds\, loadbang\, Hypercube\, Hinge\, and Sound Icon. A Prix CIME 2025 recipient and Gaudeamus Award 2026 Finalist\, he is pursuing a DMA at Peabody and has studied with Haas\, Kampela\, Fineberg\, Wubbels\, and Hersch. \nDouble bass: John Eckhardt \n  \nHenrik von Coler: The Week\nOne Week is an acousmatic composition that integrates a staged reading in live performance. Drawing on an introspective autobiographical text\, it reflects on emotional states and personal experiences during periods of transition and uncertainty. The work may be understood as a form of Electroacoustic Romanticism: in line with the 2026 ICMC theme\, One Week translates romantic ideas into the language of electroacoustic music. In doing so\, it explores a balance between technological investigation and personal expressivity. At the same time\, the piece seeks to reach a broader range of listeners by foregrounding emotional engagement and incorporating a contemporary text that resonates with present-day cultural contexts. \nThe tape part of One Week is constructed from autobiographical field recordings combined with analog signal processing and experimental sound synthesis. In addition to conventional contemporary techniques\, the production draws on echo chambers\, analog and digital tape machines\, and vintage synthesizers and effects units. This process produces dense\, noisy\, and organic timbres and textures while consciously engaging with recognizable tropes of acousmatic music. During performance\, the tape part is live-diffused by the composer. Delivered in Ambisonics (up to seventh order)\, the work can be realized on a wide range of spatial sound systems\, in both 2D and 3D configurations. \nThe staged reading is performed by a musician and multimedia artist zl!ster\, who collaborated closely with the composer to refine the original text for performance. Through this revision\, the text is reshaped for the present moment while remaining anchored in the work’s autobiographical framework. \nAbout the artist\nPerformer: zl!ster is a Panamanian-American artist based out of Atlanta\, Georgia. His music embodies self-exploration through misinterpretations and exaggerations of real life. At times\, his work is a direct reflection of self; at others\, it is distorted\, shaped more by perception than reality. Rooted in curiosity and at times bravado\, his music lives in the realms of alternative rap and indie rock. \nComposer: Henrik von Coler is a musician and researcher\, working at the intersection of art\, science and technology. In 2024 he founded the Lab for Interaction and Immersion (L42i) at Georgia Tech’s School of Music. Before that he was the director of the Electronic Music Studio at TU Berlin and head of the Computer Music Team at the Audio Communication Group. In his research and creative work\, Henrik has explored various aspects of electronic music and musical instruments. This includes interface design\, algorithms for sound generation and experimental concepts for composition and performance. Most of his projects treat space as an integral part of music. In 2017 he founded the Electronic Orchestra Charlottenburg – an ensemble of up to 12 electronic musicians – to explore music interaction on immersive loudspeaker systems. He has since worked on ways to enhance how musicians and audiences experience spatial music and sound art. \n  \nYao Hsiao: Empress Luo\nEmpress Luo is a mixed-media electroacoustic composition inspired by the historical and literary figure Zhen Mi\, whose image is intertwined with the Luo River Goddess depicted in Cao Zhi’s poetic work Ode to the Nymph of the Luo River. Drawing from Peking opera traditions associated with this narrative\, the piece explores themes of political power\, gendered violence\, and silenced agency through an integration of live voice\, processed sound\, and gestural control.\nThe work incorporates melodic and expressive references to the Peking opera Ode to the Nymph of the Luo River\, particularly scenes associated with the guqin and the lament Eighteen Songs of a Nomad Flute\, historically attributed to Cai Wenji. These materials are recontextualized within an electroacoustic framework to highlight parallels between women whose lives were shaped by forced displacement\, marriage\, and warfare.\nA Wacom tablet is employed as a gestural controller\, functioning both as a performative interface and as a symbolic extension of the protagonist’s corporeal presence. Through touch-based interaction\, the performer shapes selected sonic parameters in real time\, evoking both the physical posture of guqin performance and the imagined divine authority of the Luo River Goddess. This interface mediates control between the performer and the system\, reflecting fluctuating degrees of autonomy and constraint.\nThe sonic structure combines live vocal performance with pre-recorded and live-triggered audio materials. At times\, the voice assumes a dominant role; at others\, it is fragmented\, processed\, or submerged within the playback system. This dynamic relationship mirrors the tension between personal expression and externally imposed forces\, suggesting a trajectory from presence and agency toward erasure.\nTextual fragments drawn from classical Chinese poetry appear within the work\, referencing fraternal conflict\, political rivalry\, and lamentation. Through the interaction of voice\, gesture\, and electronic sound\, Empress Luo reflects on historical narratives of loss and power while reimagining them within a contemporary performance context. \nAbout the artist\nYao Hsiao is a performer-composer and voice artist from Taiwan\, specializing in music\, theater\, and multimedia art. They are the First Prize winner of the 2025 SEAMUS Student Commission Competition for Daiyu\, and a finalist in the 2024 Sweetwater/SEAMUS Student Commission Competition for Consort Yu. Hsiao has performed at international festivals including NIME\, SEAMUS\, ICMC\, NYCEMF\, MOXsonic\, EMM\, SPLICE\, CampGround\, and Click Fest.\nThey hold a Master of Music in Composition from Indiana University and are pursuing a Ph.D. in Data-driven Music Performance and Composition at the University of Oregon under Jeffrey Stolet\, where they also serve as a Graduate Employee.\nInspired by literature—from Western poetry to Chinese verse and Japanese haikus—Hsiao creates interdisciplinary works that blend traditional vocal techniques\, Peking and Yue Opera\, and Chinese dance with live electronics\, reflecting their cross-cultural and technological vision. \n  \nCecilia Suhr: Resonant Thresholds\nResonant Thresholds explores the liminal space between human expression and technologically mediated sound. Structured around a fixed audio score\, the work unfolds as a slowly transforming audiovisual environment in which live violin performance interacts with real-time electronic processing. Noise\, resonance\, and breath-like textures blur distinctions between acoustic intimacy and digital vastness\, allowing the materiality of sound to become porous and unstable. Through structured live comprovisation (composed improvisation)\, the performer actively shapes the unfolding sonic landscape\, while the processed audio simultaneously generates an evolving visual score that functions as a symbolic translation of sound. The work invites listeners to inhabit a threshold between perception and imagination\, where meaning emerges through the continuous negotiation between composed structure\, live performance\, and technological extension. \nAbout the artist\nCecilia Suhr is an award-winning intermedia artist\, multimedia composer\, researcher\, author\, and multi-instrumentalist (violin\, cello\, voice\, piano\, bamboo flute). Her honors include the Pauline Oliveros Award (IAWM)\, a MacArthur Foundation DML Grant\, the American Prize (Honorable Mention)\, Global Music Awards\, Best of Competition from BEA\, among other distinctions. Her work has been presented at ICMC\, SEAMUS\, NYCEMF\, EMM\, SCI\, ACMC\, Mise-En\, MoXsonic\, and many more. She is a Full Professor at Miami University Regionals. \n  \nVolunteers\nTechnical Director / Main Sound\nSteffen Lohrey\nLeon Sudahl \nSound Assistants\nJakob Seyberth\nTim Christiansen \nStage / Light / Video\nEvelin Lindberg\nDong Zhou\nJames Tsz-Him Cheung \nProduction\nAigerim Seilova\nHuixin Xue\nHaonan Guo\nXinyi Yang\nNiko Yin\nJiwon Seo\nMenghuan Feng \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/lunch-concert-4a/
LOCATION:Hamburg University of Technology\, Building I\, Audimax 2\, Denickestraße 22\, Hamburg\, 21073\, Germany
CATEGORIES:14-05,Concert,Music
ORGANIZER;CN="ICMC HAMBURG 2026":MAILTO:info@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260514T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260514T210000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260421T163025Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260513T090720Z
UID:10000096-1778785200-1778792400@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:Evening Concert 4B
DESCRIPTION:Concert 4B presents the full range of contemporary computer music in a chamber ensemble setting. Ensemble 404—Hamburg’s specialists in new music—navigates a program that spans highly spatialized sound worlds to audiovisual metamorphoses.\nExperience how physical instruments meet the precision of algorithms\, creating new hybrid identities in the process. \nThis Evening Concert is open to the public. Those without a conference pass can purchase a ticket here. \n  \nProgram Overview\nUnforeseen Metamorphic\nJoshua Rodenberg and Fumiaki Odajima \nKryptobioza\nLidia Zielinska \nTide\, breath\nZihan Wang \nEverybody Loves Me\nHoward Kenty \nIntermission – 15 mins \nPresent-Day Jakuchu Series: Butterfly Pictures “Inachis io”\nNaotoshi Osaka \nComing and Vanishing \nYixuan Zhao \nZusammenspiel I\nJavier Alejandro Garavaglia \nVesscape\nDanni Zhao and Congren Dai \n  \nMusicians\nEnsemble 404 \nFlute: Giusy Panzanaro \nRecorder: Karolina Mydlářová \nClarinet: Yuriy Nepomnyashchyy \nBassoon: Rodrigo Rodrigues \nPercussions: Vitalia Agrba \nPiano: Valentina Donato \nViolin: Wakako Matsubara \nViola: Malte Buschenlange\, Zeynep Sertoğlu \nCello: Antonio Lo Curto \nDouble bass: Ricardo Silva \n  \nAbout the pieces & artists\nJoshua Rodenberg and Fumiaki Odajima: Unforeseen Metamorphic\nA seven minute acousmatic performance explores perception as a field where sound becomes a medium of transformation. The work begins with pure sine waves tuned in just intonation\, forming a low intensity sonic layer that permeates the space rather than occupying the foreground. Slow modulation and close interval relationships generate micro beating and phase drift\, unfolding at the threshold of audibility and drawing attention to subtle shifts in listening.\nWithin this continuous membrane\, a second live system of modular synthesis enters as an autonomous partner. Instead of accompanying the sine field\, it negotiates with it\, introducing pulses\, harmonics\, and timbral pressure that can align\, destabilize\, or dissolve. The piece is shaped by interference\, emergent resonance\, and the physical behavior of sound in the room\, producing a shared acoustic field that changes moment to moment. \nAbout the artists\nJoshua Rodenberg is a sound and video artist based in Doha\, Qatar\, where he is Head of the Innovative Media Studios and Associate Professor at Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts in Qatar. His practice connects art\, technology\, and environmental research\, translating natural oscillations and field data into live sonic and visual performance. In 2024 he received the VCU Quest Research Grant and participated in the Arctic Circle Artist Residency in Svalbard. His work has been presented internationally\, including the International Computer Music Conference in Boston\, Haus 1 in Berlin\, and EAI ArtsIT 2025 in Dubai. \nFumiaki Odajima is a Tokyo and Amami based artist working with multichannel pure sine waves\, just intonation\, and long timescale transformations to shape perceptual listening environments. He holds a BFA from The Ohio State University and an MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University. Recent projects focus on large scale sine wave diffusion\, exploring interference\, micro beating\, and sound as material at sensory thresholds. Selected performances include Synthesis at ART SPACE BAR BUENA in 2024 and Re:Synthesis at Safi Heimlichkeit Nikai in 2024\, and he released Icecream Daydreaming in 2020 with the improvisational unit kani kani club. \n  \nLidia Zielinska: Kryptobioza\nCryptobiosis is a reversible\, temporary state of extreme reduction in life activities of a composer\, as a response to unfavourable environmental conditions. \nAbout the artist\nLidia Zielinska (*1953) – Polish composer\, professor-emeritus of composition and director of the Electroacoustic Music Studio at the Poznan Academy of Music; numerous awards for orchestral\, multimedial\, electroacoustic works; books\, papers\, guest lectures\, summer courses in Europe\, both Americas\, Asia\, New Zealand; vice-president of the Polish Society for Electroacoustic Music. \n  \nZihan Wang: Tide\, breath\nThis work integrates spatialised fixed-media electronic music with semi-improvised acoustic instrumental performance. Animated scores and sound scores are employed to guide performers and to synchronise their actions with the electronic sections. The compositional focus is spatial counterpoint which extending the interplay of traditional contrapuntal voice relationships into three-dimensional space. This approach generates perceptible parallels\, interweaving\, imitation\, and conflict between instrumental and electronic elements through the parameters of position\, distance\, diffusion\, and timbre. Spatial attributes therefore function as primary compositional parameters rather than post-production effects.\nThe work is inspired by reflections on the macro and micro-structures of two kinds of sound: human crowds and natural environments. Through extensive field recording\, I observed a shared underlying principle: both soundscapes arise from the continuous accumulation and interaction of innumerable micro-sonic events\, producing macro-level shifts in energy\, fluctuations in density\, and emergent directional tendencies. For example\, footsteps\, conversations\, breathing\, and whispers in a crowd collectively form an ever-shifting granular timbre. Similarly\, natural sounds such as rain\, wind\, rivers\, and flocks of birds can exhibit comparable behaviours. This work seeks to establish a perceptual and structural connection between these two sound worlds through electronic composition. \nAbout the artist\nZihan Wang is an electroacoustic music composer\, film composer\, and sonic artist. He is currently a post graduate research student at Monash University\, Melbourne\, Australia\, where his work investigates compositional strategies for ambisonics-based environments. His research engages with Robert Normandeau’s concept of timbre spatialisation and Denis Smalley’s theory of spectromorphology\, with a particular emphasis on timbre\, spatial articulation\, and electroacoustic composition. His creative practice includes fixed-media electroacoustic works\, sound installations\, animated score composition\, and film scoring. His work has been presented at venues and conferences including TENOR 2025 and the Melbourne International Film Festival (MIFF). \n  \nHoward Kenty: Everybody Loves Me\nThis piece was written in 2017 and performed regularly through his first administration. The view backward in 2026 is very different\, considering all that’s transpired and our current state. I’ve wrestled with the benefits and meaning of performing the piece in 2026; can it elucidate\, change anyone’s mind\, serve as a cathartic repudiation\, or something else?\nUltimately\, it feels right to bring it back now. So let us use his own words to reveal a progression of behavior and influence that begins with deep insecurity\, an insatiable need for validation\, and an extreme sense of entitlement\, untempered by want. Let us trace this through to the fear\, intolerance\, and violence that the speaker stokes in many of his followers. Where does this path ultimately end?\nThe salient question for me is how to expose this inherent toxicity to those who don’t immediately recognize it; his power lies in exciting latent fear. When we each enter this type of exploration\, what deep-rooted fears of Other might we find that we harbor within ourselves? Crucially\, how do we deal with them in our actual interactions?\nThis piece attempts these challenges by taking his quotations as its compositional seeds\, adapting their contours\, cadences\, and words directly into pitches\, rhythms\, and text\, implementing and re-arranging them to form the entirety of the work. While the audience’s challenge is reflection and considered action\, the performer’s is simultaneously more difficult and potentially more alluring; they must possess themself entirely of this visceral\, uninhibited id\, becoming pure reactive malice\, discord\, and excitation\, unencumbered by contemplation or morality. It’s a remarkably seductive path for everyone\, regardless of philosophy.\nBurdens of persuasion this tremendous are perhaps impossible for this piece; maybe another desperate scream of absurdity and horror is the only thing realized. Nevertheless\, I believe it is a profound moral obligation for each of us to consider these questions and to act on our considerations\, deliberately.\nThis piece was composed while in residence at the Aaron Copland House\, from July through August\, 2017. Great thanks go to the Copland House organization and the premiere performer\, the dauntless Daniel Pate. \nAbout the artist\nHowie Kenty is a Brooklyn-based composer and performer\, occasionally known by his musical alter-ego\, Hwarg. His music\, called “remarkable” with “astonishing poetic power” (International Compendium Prix Ars Electronica)\, is stylistically diverse\, encompassing ideas from contemporary classical\, electronic\, rock\, and ambient genres\, as well as sound art\, political issues\, and visual and theatrical elements. \nBesides regularly composing and performing his own music\, Howie is half of Ju-eh+Hwarg\, whose The Living Dying Opera has been called “a profoundly entertaining\, interactive night of operatic fun” (New York Music Daily). He plays guitar and composes in the progressive rock group The Benzene Ring\, whose album Crossing the Divide has been hailed as “a true masterpiece” and a “gorgeous piece of experimental rock/metal” (Recyclable Sounds; Progarchy). Howie earned his PhD in Music Composition from Stony Brook University\, and is an Assistant Professor in the Studio Composition program at Purchase College. Random past fancy bits include a Carnegie Hall performance by PUBLIQuartet\, first prize at Shanghai Electronic Music Week\, a residency at Copland House\, and performing his own raucous experimental political art at National Sawdust. Listen at hwarg.com. \n  \nNaotoshi Osaka: Present-Day Jakuchu Series: Butterfly Pictures “Inachis io”\nIto Jakuchu (1716–1800) was a mid Edo period Japanese painter renowned for his brilliantly colored depictions of plants and animals. I have long been fascinated by his works. There was a time when I myself collected butterflies\, and I was deeply captivated by the designs and patterns on their wings. This piece is inspired by those wing patterns\, transforming their visual designs into musical imagery. Jakuchu also painted butterflies\, and with the idea of composing as if I myself were Jakuchu painting a picture\, I titled this work as part of my “Present-Day Jakuchu” series.\nWhen visual and auditory perception are viewed at a higher level of abstraction\, they share many common qualities. In this work\, the visual impressions of the butterfly are linked to the sounds and musical structure.\nInachis io (The European Peacock Butterfly) has eye spot patterns on a reddish brown ground\, reminiscent of a peacock’s feathers\, which gives the species its name. Although it is not found in North America\, South America\, or Oceania\, it is widely distributed across the Eurasian continent\, including Europe and Asia. Many butterflies of the Nymphalidae family are elegant in appearance\, and this species is no exception; it can be seen in many places. In the composition\, I developed the music around two motifs: the background coloration and the eye spot patterns. Unlike my previous work\, this piece does not depict flight or resting behavior; instead\, it focuses solely on the coloration and patterns visible when the wings are fully spread.\nThis piece was originally written in 2023 for violin and piano. For this performance\, it has been newly expanded with an added electroacoustic part\, making this the premiere of the updated version. The electroacoustic materials were created as fixed media\, primarily using granular synthesis and FM synthesis. However\, the sound files are structured as passage level cues\, and their playback timing is performer controlled and triggered in real time. \nAbout the artist\nNaotoshi Osaka received his Master’s degree from Waseda University and\, after working at NTT Laboratories\, has pursued research and composition in electroacoustic music. His works have been selected for the ICMCfive times\, and for the New York City Electroacoustic Music Festival (NYCEMF)three times. He served as President of the Japan Society for Sonic Arts (JSSA) from 2009 to 2018. He is currently a research fellow at Waseda University and Tokyo Denki University\, holds a Ph.D. in engineering\, and is Professor Emeritus at Tokyo Denki University. \n  \nYixuan Zhao: Coming and Vanishing  \nComing and Vanishing is an Audiovisual work for solo flute and electronics that explores a transient and unstable phenomenon.\nThe flute interacts closely with the electronic layer through air sounds\, breath tones\, and extended techniques. Pitch and noise are deliberately blurred\, allowing the instrument to function not as a melodic foreground but as a fluctuating presence. The electronic part is primarily built from processed human whispers and breaths\, materials detached from linguistic meaning. Through subtle layering and diffusion\, the voices lose semantic clarity and become abstract sonic matter. Acoustic and electronic sound exist in a continuous state of mutual negotiation\, shaping and destabilizing one another in real time.\nThe visual draws inspiration from traditional Chinese landscape painting while incorporating a surrealist sensibility. Through gradual transformations of light and shadow\, the imagery reveals and amplifies microscopic details within the sound. Rather than illustrating the music\, the visuals function as a parallel perceptual layer\, extending the listening experience into a spatial and visual field.\nSound and visual are not merely layered media\, but revealing a dynamic process\, existing only within the persistent tension between appearance and disappearance\, presence and loss\, immediacy and dissolution. \nAbout the artists\nComposer: ZHAO Yixuan is a composer\, a lecturer at the Dept. of Music AI and Music Information Technology\, Central Conservatory of Music\, China\, and a visiting researcher at the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire\, UK.\nShe has been dedicated to exploring the practice of digital audio and artificial intelligence in music composition and collaborating with performers to search for more possibilities in technological performance environments. Her composition spans interactive music\, electroacoustic music\, contemporary music\, and new media art. \nVisual Designer: WU Shuangqi (/’su:ki/) is an inter-media creator and visual-physical experimenter engaged in visual media\, contemporary theatre\, physical improvisation\, visual design\, sound\, audiovisual\, photography\, editing\, etc.\nHer creations are mainly based on physical experience\, deconstructing and visually outputting the body and external information\, intending to explore the assembly\, pattern\, motivation and form in the algorithms of flesh and behaviour\, to gain extension in perversion and mutation. \n  \nJavier Alejandro Garavaglia: Zusammenspiel I\nComposition in which viola and clarinet are combined with spectral digital effects and multi-channel spatialization. The idea of “playing together” contained in the title in German was the starting point of the artistic working process. This is clearly noticeable from bar 1\, as the chosen pitches for both instruments are intertwined so that\, together with the real-time electronics\, all 3 create timbres that portray their fusion rather than the sound of each instrument alone. In addition\, the composition presents innovative aspects in terms of real-time digital effects\, for example\, the accumulation and evaporation of spectra of both instruments captured by the electronics in real time or the combination of different techniques (among others Ambisonics) responsible for the particular spatialization of the electronics. Moreover\, the composition is another example of the complete automation of the electronics\, a technique developed by the author for years.\nZUSAMMENSPIEL I was made possible thanks to the support and funding provided by MUSIKFONDS Deutschland. \nAbout the artist\nJavier Alejandro Garavaglia. Award-winning composer\, violist\, sound artist and retired university music professor with a broad and interdisciplinary approach to digital art and related technologies. His work focuses primarily on various aspects of music/sound composition and performance supported by computing\, with a constant search for new sonic experiences combining new developments in computer-aided sound synthesis\, live interaction\, extended instrumental techniques and sound spatialisation. Compositions are performed/broadcast in Europe\, America and Asia in world-renowned concert halls/broadcasters and include electroacoustic music (acousmatic\, interactive\, multimedia)\, instrumental music (e.g.\, solo instrument\, ensemble & orchestra) and sound art (e.g.\, installations). Plenty of his acousmatic music can also be found on commercial CDs by Edition DEGEM\, Cybele\, EMF\, etc.\nMore about Javier Alejandro Garavaglia here. \n  \nDanni Zhao and Congren Dai: Vesscape\nThis work repeatedly performs the same action: pouring sound into a hollow system. \nThe breath of the flute is not treated as lyrical material\, but as a continuously failing act\, namely\, blowing\, gasping\, breaking\, and losing control. Pitches emerge again and again\, yet never settle. The electric bass introduces low-frequency pressure and inertia\, an irresistible downward pull that keeps the entire sound field at the edge of overload. \nA live electronic system analyses the performed sound using AI\, distributing features such as breath\, impact\, and pitch deviation across multiple “vessel” sound sources and visual entities. In its touring performance version\, the original vessel installation has been translated into an 8.1 spatial audio field\, allowing the acoustic presence and directional behavior of the vessels to be simulated through multichannel diffusion. These vessels are not metaphors for containers; they function as receivers of pressure\, being filled\, stretched\, and forced into vibration. The harder the music pushes\, the more unstable the vessels become; when the performer attempts to regain control\, the system exposes even more fractures. \nThe structure begins with an almost violent injection of energy\, gradually shifting into a direct confrontation between body and object. Unstable registers and microtonal deviations are continuously amplified; rhythm is fragmented into dense\, short bursts of broken gestures\, until the system briefly collapses. In the end\, sound is exhausted\, leaving only residual breath and unfinished pitch afterimages. \nThis is not a work about “generation”. It is a sustained experiment in pressure\, control\, capacity\, and limits. The system never truly responds to the performer; it merely records how pressure fails\, again and again. \nAbout the artists\nDanni Zhao is a Chinese composer and electronic music artist. She studies Electronic Music Composition at the Central Conservatory of Music\, where she received the National Scholarship and recommendation for postgraduate study. Her works have won awards at international composition and electronic music competitions and have been presented at events such as ICMC and major music festivals. She is active in concert music\, film\, documentary\, theatre\, and game scoring. \nCongren Dai is a PhD candidate at the Central Conservatory of Music\, specialising in Music AI. He holds an MRes in AI and Machine Learning from Imperial College London and an MSc in Data Science from King’s College London. Having interned in computer vision at Google and engaged in music AI projects at Huawei\, he now applies Large Language Models to musical score understanding and instrument recognition in his research\, alongside contributions to continual learning. \n  \nVolunteers\nTechnical Director / FOH\nGiovanni Dinello \nSound Engineering \nLuciano Correa \nLight Design\nGabriel Saber\, Lukas Becker \nStage & Sound Assistance\nAdrián Velasco \nProduction\nValentina Donato\nHaewon Sim \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/evening-concert-4b/
LOCATION:Friedrich-Ebert-Halle\, Alter Postweg 34\, Hamburg\, 21075\, Germany
CATEGORIES:14-05,Concert,Music
ORGANIZER;CN="ICMC HAMBURG 2026":MAILTO:info@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260515T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260515T220000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260421T171512Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260516T112406Z
UID:10000177-1778875200-1778882400@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:Evening Concert 5B (Lübeck)
DESCRIPTION:Program Overview\nFound Violin x Aromantic Hobby \nDong Zhou \nThe Letter\nMinho Kang \nTidal Unit for Sonic Activities\nIlia Viazov \nTokens & Strings: an improvisation between an electric guitarist and a local LLM\nOlivier Jambois \nRhythmic Traces | Twisted Electronics\nNicola Leonard Hein \nMoloch whose mind is pure machinery!\nEric Lyon \nImprovising Machine #7325: Inside My Trumpet\, Again\nJeff Kaiser \n  \nAbout the pieces & artists\nDong Zhou: Found Violin x Aromantic Hobby \nFound Violin is an improvisation system that treats the violin as just one of many sound objects. Since late 2024\, Dong Zhou has started to develop Aromantic Hobby\, a series of strap-on midi controllers. After a few prototypes\, the current controller features a bunny-shaped appearance and wirelessly transmits kinetic data from the wearer to control a chaotic synthesizer. With Found Violin played with the upper body and Aromantic Hobby on on lower body\, the musician plays a duo with themselves. \nAbout the artist\nDong Zhou is a composer-performer based in Hamburg. Zhou gained a B.A. in music engineering at the Shanghai Conservatory and an M.A. in multimedia composition at the Hamburg University of Music and Drama. Zhou won several prizes\, including the first prize in the 2018 ICMC Hacker-N- Makerthon\, the finalist of the 2019 Deutscher Musikwettbewerb\, the Nota-n-ear Award 2022\, and the shortlist of the 2025 Giga-Herz Pop Experimental Production Award. Zhou had works included in the ‘Sound of World’ Microsoft ringtones collection and was commissioned by festivals and institutions such as the Shanghai International Art Festival\, ZKM Karlsruhe\, Stimme X Festival\, etc. Zhou is currently a doctoral candidate in ICAM of Leuphana University. \n  \nMinho Kang: The Letter\nThe Letter is a work of consolation created using an FFT Channel Vocoder with Additive Synthesizer. \nHistorically\, the vocoder was developed during wartime to enable communication among allies. It reduces wideband speech to a narrower band for transmission and then reconstructs it at the receiver. In short\, a vocoder sends important words over distance and makes their faint traces audible again.\nAs a composer\, creating music is much the same. I keep listening to people and the world\, their voices. Then\, I compress\, interpret\, and reassemble those words in my own terms and offer them back as a piece.\nUnlike the vocoder’s original purpose\, in a time when war is no longer shocking news\, I wanted to use this technology to carry comfort. The lyrics come from a poem I wrote during my military service to endure a hard period (not in combat). This piece does not present a political agenda; it is a letter to anyone facing painful circumstances\, on any side\, in any degree. \nTechnically\, I aimed to design a vocoder with greater precision than a conventional channel vocoder. Instead of using bandpass filters\, I applied Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) analysis to collect more detailed and accurate amplitude information\, which allowed clearer rendering of vowel formants. This approach led to the creation of a Max for Live (M4L) FFT Channel Vocoder patch.\nI also developed an Additive Synthesizer M4L patch capable of producing a wide spectrum of sounds\, from pure sine waves to noise. When combined with the vocoder\, this synthesizer allows the clarity and harmonicity of speech to change according to the lyrics. Since the text relates to the transformation of light\, I used this Additive Synthesizer to achieve a tone painting that reflects those luminous changes. \nAbout the artist\nMinho Kang is a Korea-born composer and computer musician. His artistic interests\, which began in popular music and moved into contemporary music\, have expanded into electronic music at the intersection of technology and art. Drawing on introspective reflection and close observation of the world\, he brings diverse imaginings into his works.\nHis music has been presented at conferences and festivals including SEAMUS\, ICMC\, and the TurnUp Multimedia Festival. He completed his bachelor’s degree at Indiana University\, where he studied composition with Jeremy Podgursky\, Aaron Travers\, P. Q. Phan\, David Dzubay\, and Don Freund\, and electronic music with John Gibson and Chi Wang at the Center for Electronic and Computer Music. \n  \nIlia Viazov: Tidal Unit for Sonic Activities\nPerformance-presentation of tusa (Tidal Unit for Sonic Activities). Tusa is a framework for Tidal Cycles live-coding environment that binds together different parts of the application in one Bash executable. It is an attempt to accomplish Tidal Cycles\, expanding it to a software DMI. It seeks to fulfill essential needs during performance with the environment\, keeping the setup very minimal yet sturdy\, while remaining modular and extendable. The framework allows the user access to the interpreter\, text editor\, reference window and server during live-coding practices.\nThe performance is aimed on live-coding improvisation with machine learning tools using spatialisation synthesis techniques. \nAbout the artists\nIlia Viazov (born in 1999 in Voronezh\, Russia) is a composer and sound artist working at the intersection of electronic music\, performance\, self-built instruments\, machine learning\, and software development. His personal and collaborative works have been presented at and supported by Ars Electronica Festival\, platformB Stuttgart\, and Darmstädter Ferienkurse. He is developing the framework tusa for Tidal Cycles live-coding environment\, a terminal implementation that allows the user run it locally\, fully interact with all parts of the environment and extend it. \nSoftware Development: Ilia Viazov and Nicola L. Hein \n  \nOlivier Jambois : Tokens & Strings: an improvisation between an electric guitarist and a local LLM\nThis performance explores a real-time co-creation between a human performer and a machine\, specifically investigating the improvisational capabilities of Large Language Models (LLMs) within a musical context. The project originates from an inquiry into the potential of using established LLM architectures —notably the one behind ChatGPT— as responsive\, autonomous improvisational partners. \nA primary challenge in this research is the nature of the LLM: as these models are designed for symbolic processing rather than direct audio generation\, the system must bridge the gap between acoustic signals and semantic analysis. A secondary challenge lies in giving the LLM “a voice”. \nA portable system was developed using a local LLM that listens to the guitar in real time and generates a pattern for a minimal drum set. The pattern is then routed through a RAVE module (Real-time Audio Variational auto-Encoder\, developed by IRCAM)\, allowing the raw source to be transformed into a more sophisticated timbric sound. \nWhile local models typically feature smaller reasoning capacities\, the system has been optimized for musical generation and inference speed through careful prompt design and constraint-based logic. This opens the door to a responsive dialogue between the musician and the LLM-based machine\, making this live exploration possible. \nAbout the artist\nOlivier Jambois is a guitarist\, composer\, and researcher working at the intersection of acoustic tradition\, analog electronics\, and digital innovation. He holds a PhD in condensed matter physics and a master’s degree in jazz and modern music\, a dual background that defines his analytical yet avant-garde approach to music.\nHe has won the Jazz à Vienne national competition in 2012\, received “Revelation” honors from Jazz Magazine for his album “Les composantes invisibles” and a grant from the Generalitat de Catalunya to support his research into DIY magnetic tape echoes (2023). He has published several albums\, performed at major european festivals. His 2025 release\, Eclosió\, featuring drummer Jim Black\, reflects his ongoing involvement in the contemporary improvisation scene.\nHe is currently professor and researcher at ENTI\, University of Barcelona\, Spain. His research focuses on AI and generative systems. \n  \nNicola Leonard Hein: Rhythmic Traces | Twisted Electronics\nThe piece Rhythmic Traces|Twisted Electronics deals with the question of how the integration of the body and skin resistance into the circuit of an analog synthesizer(Buchla Music Easel) and the connection with a machine learning-based musical agent system(SuperCollider) can change the tonal and rhythmic fluidity of the instrument and develop it beyond its limits. For this piece\, Nicola Leonard Hein uses a unique circuit-bending controller that completely alters the musical reading of the 1970s Buchla Music Easel. Furthermore\, he uses a multi-effect unit programmed in SC and realized with a Bela Microcomputer. Hein’s musical agent learns to interact musically\, creating the music in real time together with Hein on the synthesizer and developing the interaction between a human and a machine musical voice. The systemic economy of movement and the interaction with the AI musical agent create polyphonic rhythmic\, tonal\, and spatial structures. The piece focuses on the emergent Dances of Agency (Pickering). \nAbout the artist\nDr. Nicola Leonard Hein is a sound artist\, guitarist\, composer\, and researcher in music aesthetics and cybernetics. He is a professor of Sound Arts & Creative Music Technology\, as well as the artistic director of the studio for electronic music at the University of Music Lübeck.\nHe holds a Ph.D. from Columbia University\, where he conducted extensive research in Critical Improvisation Studies and Human-Machine Improvisation\, working with George E. Lewis. His work is determined by the interaction of sound\, space\, light\, movement\, and the emergent dynamics of aesthetic systems. He fuses cybernetic human-machine interaction with interactive AI music systems\, augmented reality\, telematic real-time art\, ambisonic sound projection\, instrument-making\, and conceptual compositions. With the support of the Goethe-Institut and numerous other institutions\, his works have been realized in over 30 countries. Presentations of his work have taken place at MaerzMusik Festival (Berlin)\, Ars Electronica (Linz)\, Moers Festival\, A L’ARME! FESTIVAL (Berlin)\, Super Deluxe (Tokyo)\, Sonica Festival (Glasgow)\, Experimental Intermedia (New York)\, and many more. \n  \nEric Lyon: Moloch whose mind is pure machinery!\nAllen Ginsburg’s poem Howl was published in 1956\, the same year as the Dartmouth Summer Research Project on Artificial Intelligence. The two events portend seemingly incompatible futures that nonetheless are both with us now. A bursting forth of cultural chaos in an “armed madhouse” and the technocratic reduction of intelligence to code. Ginsburg’s poem’s ritualistic and repetitive rant about Moloch inspired this performance\, a tone poem that derives its sounds from two main sources – AI-generated music and the OB-Xd virtual analog synthesizer VST plugin manipulated using the Slewable Utility for Random Parameters (SLURP) designed by the composer. The performance interface consists of a Korg nanoKONTROL2 unit and the Google MediaPipe face landmarker. \nAbout the artist\nEric Lyon is a composer and audio researcher focused on high-density loudspeaker arrays\, dynamic timbres\, virtual drum machines\, and performer-computer interactions. His audio signal processing software includes “FFTease” and “LyonPotpourri.” He has authored two computer music books\, “Designing Audio Objects for Max/MSP and Pd\,” a guidebook for writing audio DSP code for live performance\, and “Automated Sound Design\,” a book that presents technical processes for implementing oracular synthesis and processing of sound across a wide domain of audio applications. He has written extensively about the possibilities of multichannel spatial audio. In 2016-17\, Lyon was guest editor for the Computer Music Journal on Volume 40(4) and 41(1) covering various aspects of High-Density Loudspeaker Arrays (HDLAs). \nIn 2015-16\, Lyon architected both the Spatial Music Workshop and Cube Fest at Virginia Tech to support the work of other artists working with HDLAs. In 2025 he co-created the Spatial Audio Tidepool to provide technical instruction for creative uses of high-density loudspeaker arrays. Lyon’s compositional work has been recognized with a ZKM Giga-Hertz prize\, MUSLAB award\, the League ISCM World Music Days competition\, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Lyon teaches in the School of Performing Arts at Virginia Tech\, and is a Faculty Fellow at the Institute for Creativity\, Arts\, and Technology. \n  \nJeff Kaiser: Improvising Machine #7325: Inside My Trumpet\, Again\n“Improvising Machine #7325: Inside My Trumpet\, Again” places the audience inside a trumpet\, exploring the instrument’s interior sonic world through an immersive human–machine improvisation system. The work is built from an extensive\, purpose-built sample library captured by placing microphones deep within the instrument. These samples document the mechanical sounds and embodied actions of trumpet performance without the instrument being played traditionally—collections of the sound of valves descending\, springs releasing\, air being compressed and released by slides\, valve caps loosening\, spit-valve gurgles\, and a range of non-tonal lip\, air\, and tongue sounds produced through the mouthpiece and leadpipe. \nTwenty-eight autonomous virtual agents (“robots”)\, authored by the composer in Max/MSP and hosted in Ableton Live\, inhabit a 360-degree ambisonic field surrounding the audience. Each agent draws from its own subset of the sample library and listens to the live trumpet performance in real time. Their behaviors fluctuate between responsive and indifferent\, generating shifting environments that range from highly chaotic to unexpectedly calm. As a result\, the improvising performer becomes entangled with a machine ensemble that both reflects and subverts the human gestures\, creating a continuously changing dialogue between human and technological agents. \nAbout the artist\nJeff Kaiser is a trumpet player\, media technologist\, and scholar. Classically trained as a trumpet player and composer\, Kaiser now takes an integrative\, systemic view that involves his traditional instrument\, emergent technology (in the form of custom interactive/generative software and hardware interfaces)\, space\, and audience: all being critical and integral participants in his performances. He gains inspiration and ideas from the rich history of experimental improvisation and composition\, as well as cognitive science\, and the vast timbral and formal affordances provided by combining traditional instruments with new and repurposed technologies. The roots of his music are firmly in the experimental traditions within jazz\, improvisation\, and Western art music practices. Kaiser is currently Associate Professor of Music Technology and Composition at the University of Central Missouri. \nMore information at https://jeffkaiser.com/ \n  \nVolunteers\nTechnical Director / FOH\nKris Kuldkepp \nAssistants\nGoeun Kim\nGrigorii Osipov \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/evening-concert-5b-lubeck/
LOCATION:Lübeck University of Music: Großer Saal\, Große Petersgrube 21\, Lübeck\, 23552\, Germany
CATEGORIES:15-05,Concert,Excursion to Lübeck,Music
ORGANIZER;CN="ICMC HAMBURG 2026":MAILTO:info@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260516T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260516T150000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260421T163825Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260515T145608Z
UID:10000105-1778938200-1778943600@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:Lunch Concert 6A
DESCRIPTION:Concert 6A forms a bridge between the distant past and a radically digital future. It is a search for the edges of the audible—whether in the almost imperceptible silence of a saxophone\, in the raw 1-bit synthesis of early computer music pioneers\, or in the lament of the Gorgons on a reconstructed ancient instrument. \nThis Lunch Concert is open to the public. Those without a conference pass can purchase a ticket here. \n  \nProgram Overview\nApparizione del Silenzio \nYisong Piao\nTenor saxophone: Moritz Christiansen (SPIIC Ensemble) \ntibone\nKerry Hagan \nA Hatful of Feathers \nMarc Ainger\nAlto flute: Ann Stimson \nchime\nTiffany Skidmore and Patti Cudd \nCyanotypes for Vibraphone and Live Electronics\nElaine Lillios\nPercussion: Patti Cudd\nPatch and sound: Marc Ainger \nGorgons’ Cry for Aulos and Live Electronics\nKonstantinos Karathanasis\nInstrumentalist: Cullum Armstrong \n  \nAbout the pieces & artists\nYisong Piao: Apparizione del Silenzio  \nApparizione Del Silenzio does not contain “silence” itself—at least\, not in the conventional sense of an absence of sound. Instead\, it is built upon sounds that lie at or beyond the threshold of human perception: vibrations outside the usual spectrum\, the friction between air and metal\, the dissipation of sound waves in space—those margins of sound that are ignored\, inaudible\, yet undeniably existent. The apparition of silence is therefore neither stillness nor emptiness\, but the manifestation of a presence perceived as silence. It is a non- sonic sound: at the limit of hearing\, silence ceases to signify absence and becomes another mode of existence.\nThe piece is written for tenor saxophone and electronics\, combining fixed media with live processing of hyper-amplified micro-sounds from the instrument. Semi-improvised passages invite the performer to enter the interstice between sound and silence\, where breath\, touch\, and hesitation become part of an almost inaudible voice.\nThe generative logic of the work is not the appearance of silence\, but its presentation: silence here is not what is conventionally called “silence\,” but a subject that reveals itself through its auditory traces. \nAbout the artists\nYisong Piao (b. 1992\, China) is a Seoul-based composer specializing in electroacoustic and instrumental music. His works have been presented at ICMC 2023 (China)\, ICMC 2024 (Korea)\, and ICMC 2025 (Boston). He is a researcher at the Center for Research in Electro-Acoustic Music and Audio (CREAMA)\, focusing on microtonality and algorithmic approaches in composition. \nTenor saxophone: Moritz Christiansen (SPIIC Ensemble) \n  \nMiller Puckette and Kerry Hagan: tibone \nKerry Hagan presents an improvisation on 1-bit synthesizers. Rather than pursuing chip tunes or similarly low-bit music\, she navigates a range of possible timbres in an exploratory performance. \nAbout the artists\nMiller Puckette and Kerry Hagan began focused collaborations on academic and musical projects in 2014. Together their duo has performed in North America and Europe. They have introduced novel synthesis algorithms through new performances. Their work explores timbre\, spatialization\, real-time computer processes\, algorithms\, interaction design\, performance practice\, and performance systems. \n  \nMarc Ainger: A Hatful of Feathers\nIn A Hatful of Feathers for Alto Flute and Computer\, the flutist creates a music in realtime that is informed by expanded possibilities\, using traditional and extended techniques. The work builds from Willian Sethares’ research into spectra and tuning.\nThe computer analyzes the pitch\, amplitude\, and spectral content of the flute playing (including all of the sounds created by the mechanism of the flute\, such as the sound of the keys)\, interacting with the live sound in various ways (stretching/contracting and/or spatializing various spectra\, retuning spectra\, granulating and creating micro-glissandi\, etc). We use a custom Max/Msp patch using some well-known spectral and spatial techniques\, along with some extensions of these techniques. \nAbout the artists\nMarc Ainger (USA) has developed an idiosyncratic body of work that embraces a wide range of music/sound and music/sound-making. He is interested in the relationships between the real and the imagined – the ways in which the visceral world of sound and sound production inform our imagined worlds of sound\, and the ways our imagined worlds\, in turn\, inform our concrete experiences.\nPerformances of Ainger’s works have included the New York Philharmonic Biennial; the INA/GRM; the Royal Danish Ballet; CBGB; Late Night with David Letterman; the Goethe Institute; the American Film Institute; SIGGRAPH; the Palais de Tokyo (Paris); FolkwangWoche NeueMusik(Essen); Gaggego!(Gothenburg); the Joyce Theater (New York); Guangdong Modern Dance; and New Circus artists. Awards include the Boulez/LA Philharmonic Composition Fellowship\, the Irino International Chamber Music Competition\, Musica Nova Prague\, Meet the Composer\, and the Esperia Foundation. \nAlto flute: Ann Stimson\nAnn Stimson made her professional debut at the age of eighteen as a member of the Debut Orchestra in Los Angeles and has gone on to perform with various orchestras and ensembles and as a soloist throughout the US and Europe. Her work seeks to extend traditional instruments and modes of performance into new\, imaginative realms of action and interaction. \n  \n  \n  \nPatti Cudd: chime\nPatti Cudd performs “chime\,” for percussion and fixed media\, composed for her by Tiffany M. Skidmore. “chime” requires 2 snare drums\, 6 crotales\, 12 distinctive beaters\, and 2 bluetooth bone conduction\, wireless speakers. Each speaker is affixed to the underside of one snare drum. All 6 crotales are placed on a single drumhead. The performer plays a complex series of patterns moving between bare drumhead and unmoored crotales using combinations of beaters. Mechanistic\, unpitched patterns begin to merge with melodic\, pitched elements that sometimes bend to ultimately become a metallic wall of overtones as the line between electronic and live acoustic sound comes into and out of focus. This piece was premiered by Cudd at the VT New Music + Technology Festival in May 2023\, ICMC represents the premiere of a revised version of the electronics and the first time Patti will use the bone conduction speakers that were originally intended for this piece. \n“chime” happens on three planes: a long\, liquidating chiasmus meets two rotating pitch constellations. \nAbout the artists\nComposer/Associate Director of the Mizzou New Music Initiative Tiffany M. Skidmore has held faculty positions at the University of Minnesota\, Virginia Tech\, and the University at Buffalo (SUNY)\, where from 2023-2024\, she held the Birge Cary Chair in Music Composition. In 2025\, she was Visiting Professor at McGill University\, in residence at the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Music Media and Technology. She is Co-Founder\, Executive Director\, and Artistic Director of 113\, producing the Twin Cities New Music Festival\, guest residencies\, and concerts throughout the world. \nDr. Patti Cudd is active as a percussion soloist\, chamber musician and educator. Patti is a member of the acclaimed new music ensemble\, Zeitgeist. Her other diverse performing opportunities have included CRASH\, the Minnesota Contemporary Ensemble\, Minnesota Dance Theatre and the Borrowed Bones Dance Theater.\nAs an active performer of the music of the 21st century\, she has given concerts and master classes throughout North America\, Asia\, Europe and South America. As a percussion soloist and chamber musician\, she has premiered well over 200 new works. \n  \nElaine Lillios: Cyanotypes \nCyanotypes\, with their characteristic white imprints on a deep blue field\, transcend mere photographic representation; they serve as blueprints that reveal the essence of objects through their negative form. This transformative process redefines the concept of the “object\,” not as a fixed entity\, but as an echo\, a trace\, or an imprint of presence. In this conceptual framework\, cyanotypes become a metaphor for the translation of physical and temporal phenomena into abstracted impressions. Inspired by this principle\, Cyanotype’s Five Studies approaches the vibraphone not through its direct sound or physicality\, but as a series of rhythmic imprints — sonic blueprints that capture the vibraphone’s articulate and resonant characteristics. \nThe vibraphone is renowned for its shimmering sustain\, dynamic control\, and ability to produce both melodic and percussive textures. In Cyanotype’s Five Studies\, these qualities are refracted through the instrumental language itself\, emphasising the vibraphone’s unique ability to articulate rhythmic patterns with clarity and tonal nuance. This work creates a rich sonic landscape for exploring how vibraphone rhythms can be abstracted\, deconstructed\, and re-imagined as imprints within sound. \nEach study acts as a sonic cyanotype\, distilling the essential rhythmic and timbral gestures of the vibraphone into textures that evoke the original instrument’s expressive potential without relying on straightforward replication. The vibraphone’s capacity for sustained tones and nuanced dynamic shading allows for a complex rendering of rhythmic articulation\, translating percussive strikes into lingering tonal shapes. The five studies function collectively as a blueprint series—each revealing different facets of the vibraphone’s character through a process of mediation\, exploring articulation\, rhythmic complexity\, timbral contrast\, and dynamic variation. \nBy conceptualising the work as an imprint rather than a direct transcription\, the piece invites listeners to reconsider the relationship between source and representation. It challenges traditional notions of musical interpretation by emphasising the transformative potential of the vibraphone to embody and reinterpret its own characteristic sound patterns. The blue-white dichotomy of the cyanotype process parallels the interplay between presence and absence in sound—notes articulated and decayed\, rhythm asserted and refracted\, the physical gesture and its sonic echo. \nUltimately\, Cyanotype’s Five Studies proposes a dialogue between visual and auditory art forms\, grounded in the shared concept of imprinting. Just as the cyanotype renders the visible object in reverse contrast\, this work explores how musical objects—rhythms and timbres—can be refracted through mediation to reveal new expressive dimensions. The vibraphone becomes both subject and medium\, transforming its distinctive voice into a series of articulate\, resonant imprints\, inviting a deeper engagement with the ephemeral nature of sound and the processes of artistic representation. \nAbout the artists\nComposer: Elaine Lillios \nElainie Lillios is an American composer whose music explores sound\, space\, and the physical experience of listening. Her works often blend acoustic instruments with electronics\, field recordings\, and subtle timbral shifts. Lillios’s music has been performed internationally and is known for its immersive\, textural quality and imaginative use of resonance and sonic detail. \nPercussion: Patti Cudd \nPatti Cudd is an American percussionist\, educator\, and new-music advocate. A member of Zeitgeist and a professor at the University of Wisconsin–River Falls\, she specializes in contemporary percussion\, electroacoustic music\, and commissioning new works. Cudd has performed internationally\, recorded widely\, and collaborated with leading composers to expand the modern percussion repertoire. \nSound design: Marc Ainger \nMarc Ainger (USA) has developed an idiosyncratic body of work that embraces a wide range of music/sound and music/sound-making. He is interested in the relationships between the real and the imagined – the ways in which the visceral world of sound and sound production inform our imagined worlds of sound\, and the ways our imagined worlds\, in turn\, inform our concrete experiences. \n  \nKonstantinos Karathanasis: Gorgons’ Cry for Aulos and Live Electronics\nThis programmatic composition is inspired by the 12th Pythian Ode\, written by Ancient Greek poet\, Pindar\, in honor of a formidable Aulos player. When Perseus\, aided by goddess Athena\, beheaded sleeping Medusa\, the only mortal of the three sister Gorgons\, the two immortal Gorgon sisters\, Stheno and Euryali woke up\, realized the crime and chased the culprit with terrible cries and laments. Athena listened to the Gorgons’ cries and created Aulos\, a double pipe-double reed wind instrument to imitate them.\nIn contrast to the ancient poet\, and profoundly stirred by ongoing contemporary reports of femicides\, the composer interprets this myth from a feminist perspective. Medusa is portrayed as a tragic victim of patriarchy\, and the Gorgons cry out in extreme anger\, mourning the lost beauty of their sister.\nIn modern days\, Archeomusicologists study fragments\, or entire pieces of excavated Auloi from various sites and eras to recreate exact replicas to learn more about the sounds and performing techniques of this long-lost instrument. This piece is based on a Pydna aulos\, an instrument entombed in Macedonia\, Greece at about the 2nd half of the 4th century BCE. Melodic materials derive from the archaic Spondeion scale that was used to accompany certain religious processions.\nThe computer alters the aulos sound in real-time based entirely on custom combinations of variable delay and FFT algorithms\, without using any prerecorded materials. Gorgons’ Cry is the first composition in the modern repertory involving aulos and live electronics. \nAbout the artists\nKonstantinos Karathanasis as an electroacoustic composer draws inspiration from modern poetry\, artistic cinema\, abstract painting\, mysticism\, Greek mythology\, and the writings of Carl Jung. His compositions have been performed at numerous festivals and received awards in international competitions\, including Musica Nova\, SIME\, SEAMUS/ASCAP\, Música Viva and Bourges. Recordings of his music are released by SEAMUS\, ICMA\, Musica Nova\, Innova\, Equilibrium and HELMCA. Ravello Records released in March 2026 his solo album Resonant Mythologies with the support of the University of Oklahoma. Konstantinos holds a Ph.D. in Music Composition from the University at Buffalo. He serves as Professor of Composition & Music Technology at the University of Oklahoma. More info at: http://karathanasis.org \nInstrumentalist: Callum Armstrong\nCallum Armstrong is an award winning multi-instrumentalist specialized in Early Music. For over a decade\, Callum has devoted a great deal of his time to the revival of ancient Greek and Roman auloi. He has a YouTube channel\, the ”The Aulos Collective” which is dedicated to how auloi were made\, played\, and used\, in collaboration with the luthier Max Brumberg. Callum regularly performs internationally as a soloist\, in various ensembles\, and works as a composer\, teacher and session musician for film and computer games. Recently Callum was the subject of the documentary ‘Callum Armstrong the Aulete’ which won 1st price from the Ierapetra international film festival. \n  \nVolunteers\nTechnical Director / Main Sound\nSteffen Lohrey\nLeon Sudahl \nSound Assistants\nJakob Seyberth\nTim Christiansen \nStage / Light / Video\nEvelin Lindberg\nDong Zhou\nJames Tsz-Him Cheung \nProduction\nAigerim Seilova\nHuixin Xue\nHaonan Guo\nXinyi Yang\nNiko Yin\nJiwon Seo\nMenghuan Feng \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/lunch-concert-6a/
LOCATION:Hamburg University of Technology\, Building I\, Audimax 2\, Denickestraße 22\, Hamburg\, 21073\, Germany
CATEGORIES:16-05,Concert,Music
ORGANIZER;CN="ICMC HAMBURG 2026":MAILTO:info@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260516T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260516T210000
DTSTAMP:20260617T154254
CREATED:20260421T164223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260515T145558Z
UID:10000106-1778958000-1778965200@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
SUMMARY:Evening Concert 6B
DESCRIPTION:Concert 6B focuses on a monumental instrument that bridges centuries-old tradition and futuristic technology: the FEH organ. In this concert\, its powerful pipe sounds merge with AI agents\, mobile networks\, and immersive live electronics. It is an invitation to experience the organ not only as a sacred instrument\, but as a living\, breathing part of a digital ecosystem—complemented by outstanding chamber works for flute\, saxophone\, and violin. \nThis Evening Concert is open to the public. Those without a conference pass can purchase a ticket here. \n  \nProgram Overview\nThe Man in the Mangroves counts to Sleep \nJames A. Moorer et al. \nTraversée IIIb \nNicolas Brochec\nFlute: Lauriane Boulezaz (Ensemble 404) \n《Missed Call》\nYi-Tzu Huang\nFlute: Lauriane Boulezaz (Ensemble 404) \nULYSSES II\nRoberto Cipollina\nViolin: Wakako Matsubara (Ensemble 404) \nIntermission – 15 mins \nSchattenwald \nSarah Proske \nOpus\nS. Ali Hosseini and Federico Lessio \nles lignes de désir\nPierre Alexandre Tremblay\nViolin: Wakako Matsubara (Ensemble 404) \n  \nAbout the pieces & artists\nJames A. Moorer et al.: The Man in the Mangroves Counts to Sleep \nThe Man in the Mangroves Counts to Sleep is the first of its kind: a speech-synthesized opera novella\, based on an original poem. It is an innovative work that merges poetry\, music and animation\, embracing the vocal and musical elements of an opera with the narrative thrust of a short novel. The narrator’s digitized voice has been transformed through computer techniques into a variety of musical forms. The film is unique for its totally synthetic score\, generated mathematically using computer speech synthesis technology. The poem and music are brought to life through animation that reveals layers of meaning in both poem and score.  \nThe movie recounts the inner monologue of a homeless mathematician living in a Key West mangrove swamp. As he surveys his current circumstances\, “The Man” reflects on his past\, his struggles\, and his yearning. The movie originated from the poem of the same name by Tallahassee\, Florida poet Donna Decker. The poem dramatizes her experience meeting “The Man” in a Key West\, Florida homeless encampment.  \nIn preparation for the movie\, please read the poem\, “The Man in the Mangroves Counts to Sleep\,” by Donna Decker here. You will find a German and English version side-by-side. \nAbout the artist\nJames A. (Andy) Moorer – Producer/Director/Original Score – An internationally known figure in digital audio and computer music\, Moorer is the winner of an Emmy® Award and an Academy Award® “for his pioneering work in the design of digital signal processin and its application to audio editing for film.” He is also the creator of the THX1 Deep Note sound—THX’s sonic logo\, heard in thousands of movie theaters around the world.  \nThe Man in the Mangrove Counts to Sleep builds on Moorer’s pioneering work in computer music and more specifically in the use of computer speech synthesis for music. As an MIT and Stanfordtrained engineer\, Moorer’s innovations include advances in the technology used for these compositional purposes. Many of these advances have become routine today in the world of electronic music.  \n  \nNicolas Brochec: Traversée IIIb  \nTraversée IIIb is a mixed music piece for flute\, live electronics\, and Somax AI agents\, in which the electronic part is generated in real time. In Traversée IIIb\, the generation of electronic material is controlled by a real-time playing-technique recognition system. Combined with Somax AI agents\, this enables close interactions between the instrumental and electronic parts\, producing sonic responses ranging from counterpoint to accompaniment\, and occasionally introducing unexpected electronic events. For this reason\, a functional notation is used for the electronic part of the score\, describing actions and parameters rather than musical results\, which cannot be fully predetermined. \nAbout the artists\nNicolas Brochec is a composer and sound artist specializing in contemporary instrumental and electroacoustic music. He has studied with leading contemporary composers\, including Philippe Manoury\, Martin Matalon\, José Manuel López López\, and Daniel D’Adamo. His work has been commissioned by institutions such as the Philharmonie de Paris\, NHK member ensembles\, and Improtech (IRCAM). His compositions have received international recognition\, including the First Prize at the Sound’Ar-te Electric Ensemble competition (Portugal) and a Special Prize at the Ise-Shima Competition (Japan). He is currently a PhD candidate at Tokyo University of the Arts and has been awarded a Japanese Government (MEXT) Scholarship as well as grants from the Foundation for the Advancement of Telecommunications (NTT). \nFlute: Lauriane Boulezaz (Ensemble 404) \n  \nYi-Tzu Huang:《Missed Call》\nMissed Call for flute and live electronics was composed in 2025. The compositional idea was inspired by the concepts of “making choices” and “paused time”\, exploring the subtle connection of social relationships. The sound materials of live electronics are totally based on the flute timbre\, which not only imitates the intonations of the female voice but also motivates the dynamic of musical gestures throughout the whole piece. Moreover\, I attempt to depict the potential feelings through the background of light electroacoustic sound. In the music\, “Missed call” symbolizes unaligned energy and temporary pauses\, while “receiving a call” represents a force that can change current reality of musical unfolding. Therefore\, what may appear as a break or auditory interruption is actually a moment of inner preparation or cognitive balance\, allowing the musical closure to be awakened again. \nAbout the artists\nYi-Tzu Huang is a Taiwanese composer who studies in graduate program of music composition at the Institute of Music of National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University. Her music focuses on the subtle connections between sound and human emotions\, exploring both the musical time and auditory space of human cognition. The experiments in electronic or instrumental timbres and the expression of sound are emphasized in her current research. \nFlute: Lauriane Boulezaz (Ensemble 404) \n  \nRoberto Cipollina: ULYSSES II\nUlysses 2 is a project conceived by composer Roberto Cipollina. The work serves both as a performative and technological exploration of real-time performer-machine interaction\, emphasizing the role of AI not as a passive tool\, but as an active and adaptive musical agent within the creative process.\nThe work is conceived as a closed-form improvisational structure for acoustic instrument and real-time interactive electronics\, developed specifically to explore the creative potential of artificial intelligence in relation to the performer’s improvisation.\nAt the core of Ulysses 2 is the integration of Somax2\, a real-time generative system developed within the Max environment\, which enables responsive electronic behavior through the analysis and transformation of live performance data.\nWhile the project fully embraces aleatory elements and the concept of extemporaneity\, it also adheres to an organized formal structure that guides its overall development. In fact\, the performer engages with a series of prompts provided by the composer\, ensuring a coherent trajectory.\nThe electronic component\, built from a database of sampled sounds recorded by Eleonora Sofia Podestà\, responds and adapt to the performer’s expressive gestures in real-time. Through Somax2’s processing\, the system generates musically congruent textures and transformations.\nThis piece highlights the software’s ability to translate performance parameters into musically coherent electronic answers\, fostering a dynamic and co-creative dialogue between human performer and machine intelligence. \nAbout the artists\nRoberto Maria Cipollina is a composer and researcher in immersive technologies applied to music\, whose works have been performed across Europe and America. His compositions include A Lover’s Tale (2018)\, Alchimie (2020)\, Lu Re d’Amuri (2022)\, and Al-Qantarah (2024). Author of two musicological books and lecturer on palazzi della memoria in music\, artificial intelligence\, and virtual reality\, his works are internationally performed and published by Da Vinci Records. \nViolin: Wakako Matsubara (Ensemble 404) \n  \nSarah Proske: Schattenwald \nSchattenwald mixes recorded organ sounds with the real organ. The hissing and whistling of a small\, fully mechanical organ forms the basis of an almost romantically fragmentary soundscape. At the same time\, the organ reveals something of its inner workings and sounds like “musique concrète instrumentale.” In addition to this technical aspect\, the title reveals something about the poetic approach. Nature and culture collide. One thinks one can hear the call of an eagle owl\, the wind rustling through the trees\, the creaking of branches…\nThe electronics are based on recordings of a small\, fully mechanical organ. Playing with the key pressure and half-drawn registers creates mystical-sounding tones\, which have been arranged into a dramaturgically designed soundscape through multiple layers. The similarity to natural sounds is intentional here and is picked up and commented on by the live organ performance. A slightly changing chord (fixed with wooden wedges) emerges between the shadow sounds and increasingly dominates the tonal structure of the piece. The organist is repeatedly given musical material with which he improvises within the given framework.\nThe performance of the piece must be adapted to the respective organ; alternatives are indicated in the score. The composition was written for the organ in St. Nikolai\, Hamburg\, with its special possibilities\, in particular wind swellers and built-in percussion instruments. \nAbout the artist\nSarah Proske was born in Suhl (Thuringia) in 1999. She completed a church music degree (Master’s degree\, with a focus on IKN – improvisation\, composition and new media) as well as a master’s degree in organ improvisation with Prof. Franz Danksagmüller at Musikhochschule Lübeck. She has received several composition commissions\, such as works commissioned by the “Orgelstadt Hamburg e.V.”\, Erzbistum Paderborn\, Dommusik Linz for the vocal ensemble „Cantando Admont“\, as well as compositions for choir and ensemble for the Diocese of Graz-Seckau.\nShe won awards in different disciplines\, so as a composer as well as a soprano and organ improviser at different competitions.\nHer compositions have been performed at venues including the Orgelpark Amsterdam\, the opening oft he festival „Leer_raum“ at Stiftskirche Tübingen\, „Nordische Filmtage“ in Lübeck and the Schönberger Musiksommer.\nSarah Proske has been working as an assistant organist at St. Jakobi Lübeck\, and as a tutor for the subject “Improvisation\, Composition and New Media” at the MHL. Since April 2026 she is based in Cologne\, working as organist and choir director at Martin-Luther-Kirche Köln-Porz. \n  \nS. Ali Hosseini and Federico Lessio: Opus\nThis project draws inspiration from the works of German filmmaker and cinematographer Walter Ruttmann\, a pioneering figure in abstract experimental cinema.\nBy studying Ruttmann’s visionary approach\, I have reinterpreted his work through a contemporary lens\, integrating modern technology to introduce a new dimension of abstraction.\nMy goal is to build upon his artistic legacy\, pushing the boundaries of visual expression while staying true to the essence of his groundbreaking innovations.\nThe musical composition for this project blends electronic\, electroacoustic\, and acoustic elements to authentically capture its essence.\nBy incorporating synthesizers and concrète sounds\, I seek to establish a fresh sonic approach\, one that bridges tradition with innovation\, enhancing the abstract nature of the work through a dynamic and immersive auditory experience. \nAbout the artists\nS. Ali Hosseini. Born in 1991 in Tehran\, Iran. I hold a Bachelor’s degree in Composition from the Tehran Conservatory of Music\, where I focused on Classic music and composition. Currently\, I am pursuing a Master’s degree in Applied Music (Musica Applicata) at the Conservatorio G. Nicolini in Piacenza\, Italy. My studies encompass electroacoustic\, electronic\, and contemprory composition\, as well as sound design and the integration of video and short films.\nI am currently exploring new approaches to composition based on spatial audio and microtonality and integration with visual Art.\nMy works have been featured at several prestigious festivals\, including the PdMaxCon25~ (USA)\, UVM 2025: COSMOCENO (Brazil)\, Simultan Festival (Romania)\, MA/IN Festival (Italy)\, SEHSUCHTE film festival (Germany)\, Musicmediale Festival (Italy)\, Appennino Festival (Italy)\, Piacenza Music Festival (Italy)\, Pensiero Contemporaneo Festival (Italy)\, and La Notte dei Ricercatori (Italy)\, 43rd Festival Tous Courts (France)\, Evimus 2025 (Germany). \nFederico Lessio \n  \nPierre Alexandre Tremblay: les lignes de désir\nArchitects\, luthiers\, designers\, urban planners\, and other dreamers\, imagine a Platonic aesthetic intended use of the object of their creativity. A vision of beauty in action. Yet lives/masses/swarms/users have their ways\, and soon emerge lines of desire. \nThis piece is an ode to the beauty of aging and experience\, of traces of time passing and writing its story\, of patina and of wrinkles\, of used leather boots\, of rusty structures\, of crow’s feet. Fragile and subtle at first\, these lines\, in the wake of usage\, are the witnesses of the soft and gentle resistance of the ignored wanderer. \nIt is an homage to the emerging beauty of subversive (ab)uses. \n— \nThanks Irine Røsnes\, Linda Jankowska\, the FluCoMa team\, Notam’s team\, and CeReNeM’s Creative Coding Lab. \nAbout the artists\nPierre Alexandre Tremblay (Montréal\, 1975) is a composer and performer on bass guitar and electronic devices\, in solo and group settings\, between electroacoustic music\, contemporary jazz\, mixed music and improvised music. He also worked in popular music\, and practises creative coding. His music is available on empreintes DIGITALes. He was Professor of Composition and Improvisation at the University of Huddersfield (England\, UK) from 2005 to ’24. In September 2024\, he joined the team of the Conservatorio della Svizzera italiana as a research professor in composition. \nViolin: Wakako Matsubara (Ensemble 404) \n  \nVolunteers\nTechnical Director / FOH\nGiovanni Dinello \nSound Engineering \nLuciano Correa \nLight Design\nGabriel Saber\, Lukas Becker \nStage & Sound Assistance\nAdrián Velasco \nProduction\nValentina Donato\nHaewon Sim \n 
URL:http://icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de/event/evening-concert-6b/
LOCATION:Friedrich-Ebert-Halle\, Alter Postweg 34\, Hamburg\, 21075\, Germany
CATEGORIES:16-05,Concert,Music
ORGANIZER;CN="ICMC HAMBURG 2026":MAILTO:info@icmc2026.ligeti-zentrum.de
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