LONE HEMISPHERES
Experience a rare sonic universe – where solos and electronics fuse in real time to create a sum bigger than their parts.
DETAILS
SATURDAY 1 AUGUST 1PM, CARRIAGEWORKS, SYDNEY
PROGRAM
MAURICIO KAGELSchattenklänge: II. Presto (bass clarinet)(1995)
CONNOR D’NETTOSome kinda way: part 3 (through) (clarinet + electronics) (2025)
MARTIN WESLEY-SMITH For Marimba & Tape (1983)
KAIJA SAARIAHO Noa Noa (flute + electronics) (1992)
CHRISTOS HATZIS Fertility Rites (movt 1) (marimba + electronics) (1997)
TRISTAN COELHODaybreak (flute + electronics) (2018)
KATE MOORESynaesthesia Suite (violin + electronics) (2014)
Concert Duration: 75 minutes (no interval)
PERFORMERS
Claire Edwardes (Artistic Director, percussion)
Lamorna Nightingale (flutes)
Jason Noble (clarinets)
Véronique Serret (violin)
DESCRIPTION
Join Ensemble Offspring for Lone Hemispheres this July when they invite you within a rare sonic universe – where solos and electronics fuse in real time to create a sum bigger than their parts. Drawing from the radical imagination of the European avant-garde to the distinctive voices of contemporary Australian composers, this 70 minute program traces a lineage of music technology spanning the pioneering Fairlight Computer from the 70’s to contemporary sampling techniques and the use of Ableton and MAX/MSP sound manipulation and creation.
Jason Noble (bass clarinet), Lamorna Nightingale (flute), Claire Edwardes (marimba) and Véronique Serret (violin) perform alone yet move within each others orbits. As richly layered electronic combine with their acoustic virtuosity they form a constellation of immersive sounds where genre is blurred and boundaries dissolve.
“timeless and surreal”
“a night of exciting music-making”
Accessibility Information
Please let Carriageworks know of any accessibility requirements by contacting them via email boxoffice@carriageworks.com.au
Click here for more information about accessibility at Carriageworks.
SUPPORTED BY
Ensemble Offspring is supported by the NSW Government through Create NSW and is assisted by the Australian Government through Creative Australia, its principal arts investment and advisory body.
Photo: Lamorna Nightingale by Oliver Miller
