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Explore Ensemble
Image credit: © Dimitri Djuric

Archived Event

LCMF x Wigmore Hall

London Contemporary Music Festival: The Artist Is Not Present

Date
Thu 20 Nov 2025, 7.30pm
Tickets
Archived Event
Duration

This concert will be approximately 2 hours in duration, including an interval

Availability

Important Information

Confirmation of Programme
The programme for the above concert has now been confirmed and will be as below.

Artists

  • Explore Ensemble
    • Jack Sheenconductor
    • Jennifer Walshevoice
    • George Bartondrums
    • Dominic Murcottplayer piano

    Programme

        • Studies for Player Piano
          :
        • Study No 3a
        • Study No. 20
        • Study No. 25
        • Instructions for the composition of as many waltzes as one desires with two dice, without understanding anything about music or composition (1792)
          (attributed to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart)
        • A method for making six bars of double counterpoint at the octave without knowing the rules (1757)

    Interval

    1. LCMF/Wigmore Hall co-commission

    Overview

    The London Contemporary Music Festival (LCMF) and Wigmore Hall present a programme that charts the way composers have engaged with AI-adjacent ideas for centuries. Moving from the age of Mozart to the modern day, this evening’s concert shows how startling, amusing, mesmerising and even moving music can be when composers throw the dice and embrace the algorithmic. The ever-adventurous Explore Ensemble and acclaimed percussionist George Barton will showcase neglected figures Clarence Barlow and Hanne Darboven; composer Dominic Murcott will present several firecracker works for player piano from the great Conlon Nancarrow – on a replica of Nancarrow's own player piano; Jennifer Walshe returns with a new commission delving into the history and future of computational thinking and artificial intelligence in music; and there will be a very rare outing of a selection of Musikalisches Wùrfelspiele (musical dice-games) – works attributed to or by Mozart and C.P.E. Bach et al. – early examples of algorithmic composition that took the Enlightenment by storm. 

    Tonight's concert will be prefaced by a pre-concert talk from Jennifer Walshe at 6pm.

    Part of