Robert Laidlow: Reality Eaters album review
This NMC debut album from British composer Robert Laidlow sets ambitious scientific and technological ideas to orchestral and chamber music, ranging from Einstein's field equations to artificial intelligence's impact on creativity. The Guardian's review finds Laidlow's work intricate and wildly imaginative yet still approachable for listeners, despite the complexity of the underlying concepts, making it a notable release for those interested in the intersection of classical music and science.
The album features Warp, a 12-minute piano concerto performed by Joseph Havlat with the BBC Philharmonic under Vimbayi Kaziboni, which musically interprets Einstein's field equations; Gravity, played by the Piatti Quartet as a tribute to Newton's law of universal gravitation; and Silicon, a three-movement symphonic work exploring AI's effect on human creativity, including a movement using adaptive electronics for musical "deepfakes" and a finale pitting the orchestra against an AI trained on its own broadcasts.
- Robert Laidlow's NMC debut album blends classical music with science and AI themes
- Includes Warp (Einstein), Gravity (Newton) and Silicon (AI creativity) works
- Reviewed as complex yet approachable, with strong orchestral performances
AI Americas Art Culture Entertainment Music Technology World