Emeritus Professor Leigh Landy presents work at the ΑΚΟΥΣΜΑΤΑ festival in Corfu

On 8 May, MTI Emeritus Professor Leigh Landy presented the latest piece in his radio series, ‘Aplican Términos y Condicciones’ (Terms and Conditions Apply) recomposing dozens of hours of Mexican radio broadcasts at the annual ΑΚΟΥΣΜΑΤΑ festival at the Ionian University of Corfu where he is Visiting Professor. It includes a video translation. He is also working with a group of advanced undergraduate students making a collaborative piece ‘Κέρκυρα Ρέμιξ’ (Corfu Remix) which will be premiered at the Hellenic Electroacoustic Music Days in November, also in Corfu.

Sonic Arts Forum held at DMU 18 April 2026

The Sonic Arts Forum, a national/international UK workshop for electroacoustic and experiemental sonic arts was held at DMU on Saturday 18 April. 

The event, organised by Leeds-based composer Coryn Smethurst, has run for over 20 years at many different UK venues and is an opportunity for creative people working with sound and technology as a significant element in their practice to introduce their work and receive feedback from an audience in a friendly, supportive environment.
This was the first time it has been hosted by DMU, giving participants the opportunity to hear their work in the PACE Studio 1 immersive audio space, including a number of ambisonic and audiovisual works.

Participants:
Tom Williams – Clouds and Clocks
Matt Brombley – Collaborative improvisation
Salma Ahmad Caller – Counter Sonic archives
Jonty Harrison & Pete Stollery – Aides… mémoires… project
Holly Gowland – Natural vs artificial
Sibylle Pomorin – Colour sound flow
Tristan Kersten – Process based composition
Bruno Quast – Acousmatic film sound design
Andrey Chugunov – Astrophysical sonification
John Biddulph – Digital and analogue microtonality

Book chapter, published score, conference lecture and a premiere from Edward Clijsen

PhD candidate Edward Clijsen has a chapter in a new book Innovation in Music: Innovative Creative Practice, just published by Routledge. The book’s contents have been developed from selected papers given at the Innovation in Music 2024 conference in Oslo.

Clijsen’s chapter, titled “Redividing the Octave for Expanded Tonal Spaces: Preliminary Practical Explorations of Formalised Approaches to Microtonal Composition”, discusses the outcomes and implications arising out the compositional process for an early version of his piece Geïsoleerd (2024) which represented an exploration of methods for intuitive utilisation of microtonally-informed extended techniques on the Kingma System alto flute, to provide insight on the location of new affective potentials. The score for Geïsoleerd is now also available via Tetractys Publishing.

Clijsen also delivered a lecture at the recent Hyperchromatic Music Festival at Goldsmiths, entitled: “Redividing the Octave for Expanded Tonal Spaces: Reflections on Recent Practical Explorations of a Formalised Approach to Microtonal Composition”. The lecture reflected on the development of a formalised approach to microtonal composition by tracing its development through the portfolio of works encompassed within his PhD.

The festival's Saturday evening concert also premiered Clijsen’s Äußern (2024) for “19-div” and “Quarter-Tone” Microtonal Trumpets in 38-/48-divisions of the octave, written in collaboration with, and performed by, Stephen Altoft of Microtonal Projects.


 

MTIRG Symposium April 2026

Members of the Music, Technology and Innovation Research Group met for a one-day symposium on 17 April.

Presenters included
Robert Chafer: Foundations, Potentials, and Practice of Mixed Reality Spatial Audio Composition.
Edward Clijsen: Redividing the Octave for Expanded Tonal Spaces: Reflections on Recent Practical Explorations of a Formalised Approach to Microtonal Composition.
Matthew London: The Integrated Soundtrack: An Analytical Exploration of the Soundtrack Elements of Music, Sound Design, and Dialogue Within Horror Cinema.
Samvaran Rai: Is dramaturgy an invisible locus of control? An enquiry on dramaturgy and what it could mean for ambiguity in electroacoustic music.
Joanna Cogle: Hypersourced Scoring Practice And Expanding The Integrated Soundtrack In Contemporary Media Scoring.
Conor Snape: Navigating the Oddverse: Adaptive Audio and Interactive World Design.



Symposium participants: Front row (L-R) Pawel Wietrzykowski, Matthew London, Samvaran Rai,
Bret Battey. Back row (L-R) Edward Clijsen, James Andean, Simon Atkinson, Robert Chafer,
Joanna Cogle, Conor Snape, John Young

Jake Parry @ IRCAM Forum, Paris

PhD candidate Jake Parry has recently returned from Paris, where he gave a paper at the prestigious IRCAM Forum, with the support of the M4C Doctoral Training Partnership.

Parry's PhD project on spatial audio is interrogating the ideological and conceptual foundations of immersion. Against a backdrop of rapid technological development in spatial audio, Parry's paper addressed convergences between art and product, examining how immersive strategies circulate between experimental practice and commercial design. 

Using gambling media as a case study, it highlighted problematic features of the immersive paradigm—illustrating how sound in this context is carefully engineered to regulate attention, sustain engagement and elicit compulsive behaviours, while simultaneously obscuring the extractive mechanics that drive commercial profit.

Prior to heading to the IRCAM Forum, Parry gave a paper at the School of Music, University of Birmingham.

Jake Parry at the IRCAM Forum 2026





Eddie Clijsen @ University of Montréal

PhD candidate Eddie Clijsen has just returned from a six-week research/composition residency at the Faculty of Music at the University of Montréal, under supervision of Prof. Jimmie LeBlanc and with the support of the Midlands4Cities Doctoral Training Partnership. The residency continues a long-standing research connection between DMU's Music, Technology and Innovation Research Group and the Faculty of Music at the University of Montréal.

In Montréal Eddie completed Équinoxe—a multichannel acousmatic work exploring a formalised approach to polytemporal polymicrotonal composition.  Équinoxe utilises multiple instances of microtonally-retuned and digitally-effected virtual pianos.  The work was conceptualised, implemented and composed in the multichannel studio spaces in the Faculty of Music at the University of Montréal, specifically the Studio Hexa, Octo and Gris.

Eddie Clijsen in the University of Montreal multichannel studio

 

 

Saturday 28 March in PACE Studio 1: The Call of Flute: Shashank Subramanyam


The Call of Flute: Shashank Subramanyam,
6pm - 7:30pm Studio 1, PACE Building, DMU Leicester

One of the most extraordinary flautists of our time takes to the stage for an evening of Carnatic classical music at its most intimate and transporting. Carnatic music does not simply play to an audience. It draws them inward, through intricate melodic architecture, cascading rhythmic patterns and improvisations that feel both spontaneous and inevitable.

Shashank Subramanyam, Grammy-nominated and honoured by the French Government with the Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres, possesses a rare gift for making this ancient tradition feel vital and immediate. His bamboo flute singing in ragas that shift colour with every breath, he guides the audience through a journey that is as deeply felt as it is technically breathtaking.
Subramanyam's story is as remarkable as his music. A child prodigy who first stunned his family at nine months and performed publicly at six, he is today the youngest-ever recipient of the Sangeet Natak Akademi's senior award and has performed in over fifty countries. Joining him is his long-standing percussionist and trusted musical partner Parupalli S. Phalgun on mridangam, a maestro of rhythmic dexterity and deep Carnatic theory, who has toured over forty countries and whose contributions to fingering technique have reshaped the art of mridangam playing. Together, this is a partnership refined over more than two decades on the world's greatest stages.
 
 
 

Bret Battey's 'Estuaries 4' Selected for Bangkok Festival


Prof Bret Battey's audiovisual composition Estuaries 4 has been selected for inclusion in the inaugural festival of the Thai Electroacoustic Music Society (TEAMS) at the Bangkok Kunsthale, April 17-19, 2026. 

PhD Student Matthew London — Talk at University College Dublin, June 2026

PhD student Matthew London has been accepted to present a 20-minute paper titled “The Non-Composer Influence: Speculating on the Poietic Processes Shaping Film Music and Sound” at the Music and Media: Directions and Aesthetics of the Digital Era conference at University College Dublin, 11 - 12 June 2026.

The paper explores how non-composer figures - such as directors, producers, sound designers, music supervisors, and re-recording mixers - contribute to shaping a films sonic identity. Adopting a speculative, poietic perspective, it examines how distributed creative decision-making challenges traditional models of authorship in film music and points toward multiple forms of integrated-soundtrack practices.

John Young's 'Three Spaces in Mid-Air' in Lugano

John Young's acousmatic work Three Spaces in Mid-Air will feature at the Teatrostudio, Lugano Arte e Cultura in Lugano, Switzerland, on 12 January 2025 in a concert organised by the Conservatorio della Svizzera italiana's Spazio 21 series.
The theme of the concert is 'silence'. https://electropresence.com/en/even/47910-ear-2025-26-ear-1  

Three Spaces in Mid-Air was published on Young's solo CD Espaces lointains by empreintes DIGITALes in 2024, and was first prize winner of the 6th KLANG! International Electroacoustic Composition Competition (Montpellier, France, 2019).

Landy invited talk and international jury member in Macau

In mid November, Prof. Landy headed to the Academy of Music at the Macau University of Science and Technology where was asked to offer an invited extended lecture entitled ‘Innovative Music Making: Interesting or engaging? Why not both?’. He also served as international jury member at their Macao International Digital Intelligence Music Competition. 

Landy Peformance and Talk, EMS 2025 Paris


Prof. Landy presented a composition, Qing + Cha  磬 + 镲     Old / New 舊 / 新 (2023) and a talk at the Electroacoustic Music Studies Network (EMS) 2025 conference in Paris. The talk returns to a much-cited composition access tool he launched in a 1994 publication, suggesting its expansion based on the further developments, experiences and feedback from the interim thirty years. That talk is entitled ‘The Something to Hold on to Factor 2’. Both reflect the conference interest in cultural and intercultural approaches within the field.

The event took place Nov 19-21 at multiple venues in and near Paris. Landy is also Founding Co-director of EMS, the global subject research association in the field.


Landy Keynote at Bowed Electrons 25 Conference/Festival in Cape Town

Emeritus Professor Leigh Landy presented a keynote talk (not for the first time at this event) at the Bowed Electrons conference/festival hosted by The South African College of Music/University of Cape Town, SAE Creative Media Institute, part of the international School of Audio Engineering and the Media Art unit at the University of the Arts, Karlsruhe (Germany). It took place at the SAE Institute in Cape Town.

Landy presented a work ‘Musical Bow Old/New’ commissioned by the festival last year in the final concert and offer a keynote, alas online, on the same day entitled ‘Making Sonic Creativity Relevant’. The event took place on 28-29 November 2025.