Events

EXAUDI: The Mirror of Speculation - Durham, UK
EXAUDI vocal ensemble will be performing pieces from Mark Dyer’s Scribe project in this performance of mediaeval vocal music. Featuring pieces from the Codex Chantilly (ca. 1400) and the Old Hall manuscript - the manuscript which Dyer sampled to create the works in his project - EXAUDI will also be performing new works created for them by A-level students at St Leonard’s Catholic School, in partnership with Durham Music Service.
Johannes Ciconia: Le ray au soleyl
Jacob Senleches: La harpe de melodie
Rodericus: Angelorum psalat
Various: Music from the Old Hall Manuscript
Marcel le Gan, ed. Mark Dyer: Scribe
Guillaume de Machaut: Tant doucement; Fin cuers doulz; Riches d’amour
James Weeks: Four virelais
For full details and to book tickets, visit Durham University’s webpage for the performance →

EXAUDI: The Mirror of Speculation - Cork, Ireland
In this programme, EXAUDI create an aula specularum – a Hall of Mirrors – reflecting ancient and modern speculations back on each other until medieval and contemporary seem to merge. From the Ars subtilior repertoire, Ciconia’s puzzle-canon Le ray au soleyl is ‘solved’ in a multitude of ways; Senleches’ famous La harpe de mellodie is performed both with and without its canonic triplum; and Rodericus’ notoriously hermetic Angelorum psalat is presented in competing notations and turned into a musical uroboros, eating its own tail. Machaut’s lilting lovesongs are interleaved with Evan Johnson’s delicate treatment of Petrarch, and then filtered through a work by John Cage in James Weeks’ Four Virelais.
At the heart of the programme is the world premiere of composer Mark Dyer’s project Scribe. Working with RNCM PRiSM, Dyer trained a computer to ‘learn’ the notation of the English Old Hall manuscript, dating from c.1415, using machine learning, and to produce new facsimiles, which Dyer transcribed. The resulting compositions are attributed to a fictional 14th-century musician and presented alongside original Old Hall works in a fascinating extension (and obfuscation) of ‘speculation’ – this time by an incognito, non-human composer.