Ensemble Télémaque: New Music Brandeis Concert
7:30pm | Slosberg Recital Hall
OCTOBER LAB #7
Sounds, tears and skins
A century of artistic itinerancy at the crossroads of Marseille and the US (1929-2026)
In 2018, Ensemble Télémaque created October Lab, an international platform for musical creation that aims to produce and disseminate new works that transcend styles and trends. To this end, commissions are awarded to composers from around the world, built around continually renewed themes.
Sounds, Tears and Skins marks Ensemble Télémaque’s first collaboration with artists from the United States. Led by Raoul Lay, the ensemble is commissioning this year a new generation of American composers: David Dominique, Yu-Hui Chang, John Aylward, and Kate Soper, who are developing new musical works based on French and American texts that were written in, or left a significant imprint on, both Marseille, France and the United States.
The project also establishes a dialogue between four literary figures of the twentieth century: Claude McKay, Mary Jayne Gold, Franz Werfel, and Antonin Artaud — all of whom experienced various forms of discrimination and alienation linked to either their gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity, or ideological and political convictions.
Through the 20th Century histories these literary figures trace, our project explores the notions of travel and migration of marginalized communities who are connected by their intersections with the U.S. and Marseille, France. Our project asks our commissioned composers to respond to the fractured moments in history that their authors experienced and the frightening similarities to our present day: comparisons that raise profound questions.
Our event will consist of four works in which spoken and sung voices will engage in dialogue with the instrumental writing, allowing the intertextuality of the diverse literary figures represented to resonate.
Charlotte Campana [flute]
Linda Amrani [clarinet]
Gérard Occello [trumpet]
Julia Sinoimeri [accordion]
Christian Bini [percussion]
Yann Le Roux-Sèdes [violin]
Jean-Florent Gabriel [cello]
Brigitte Peyré [soprano]
Agnès Audiffren [actress]
Raoul Lay [conductor]
Program (in alphabetic order) :
John Aylward
Between heaven and earth
For actor, soprano and ensemble
2025
Commissioned by Ensemble Télémaque, Raoul Lay conductor
Yu-Hui Chang
Accidental Hero
A mini music drama
For actor, soprano and ensemble
2026
Commissioned by Ensemble Télémaque, Raoul Lay conductor
David Dominique
The imposter
Music by David Dominique - Words by Joseph Tepperman and David Dominique
For actor, soprano and ensemble
2026
Commissioned by Ensemble Télémaque, Raoul Lay conductor
Kate Soper
Antonin Artaud’s Drama of the Mind
(Featuring Paulo Ucello)
Text by Antonin Artaud
For actor, soprano and ensemble
2026
Commissioned by Ensemble Télémaque, Raoul Lay conductor
The Slosberg parking lot is very small and tends to fill up quickly on concert days. Because of this, we strongly encourage guests to park in the Spingold Theater Center parking lot, located behind the theater.
Event is free & open to the public. Walk-ins are welcome - RSVP is optional.
7:30pm | Slosberg Recital Hall
OCTOBER LAB #7
Sounds, tears and skins
A century of artistic itinerancy at the crossroads of Marseille and the US (1929-2026)
In 2018, Ensemble Télémaque created October Lab, an international platform for musical creation that aims to produce and disseminate new works that transcend styles and trends. To this end, commissions are awarded to composers from around the world, built around continually renewed themes.
Sounds, Tears and Skins marks Ensemble Télémaque’s first collaboration with artists from the United States. Led by Raoul Lay, the ensemble is commissioning this year a new generation of American composers: David Dominique, Yu-Hui Chang, John Aylward, and Kate Soper, who are developing new musical works based on French and American texts that were written in, or left a significant imprint on, both Marseille, France and the United States.
The project also establishes a dialogue between four literary figures of the twentieth century: Claude McKay, Mary Jayne Gold, Franz Werfel, and Antonin Artaud — all of whom experienced various forms of discrimination and alienation linked to either their gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity, or ideological and political convictions.
Through the 20th Century histories these literary figures trace, our project explores the notions of travel and migration of marginalized communities who are connected by their intersections with the U.S. and Marseille, France. Our project asks our commissioned composers to respond to the fractured moments in history that their authors experienced and the frightening similarities to our present day: comparisons that raise profound questions.
Our event will consist of four works in which spoken and sung voices will engage in dialogue with the instrumental writing, allowing the intertextuality of the diverse literary figures represented to resonate.
Charlotte Campana [flute]
Linda Amrani [clarinet]
Gérard Occello [trumpet]
Julia Sinoimeri [accordion]
Christian Bini [percussion]
Yann Le Roux-Sèdes [violin]
Jean-Florent Gabriel [cello]
Brigitte Peyré [soprano]
Agnès Audiffren [actress]
Raoul Lay [conductor]
Program (in alphabetic order) :
John Aylward
Between heaven and earth
For actor, soprano and ensemble
2025
Commissioned by Ensemble Télémaque, Raoul Lay conductor
Yu-Hui Chang
Accidental Hero
A mini music drama
For actor, soprano and ensemble
2026
Commissioned by Ensemble Télémaque, Raoul Lay conductor
David Dominique
The imposter
Music by David Dominique - Words by Joseph Tepperman and David Dominique
For actor, soprano and ensemble
2026
Commissioned by Ensemble Télémaque, Raoul Lay conductor
Kate Soper
Antonin Artaud’s Drama of the Mind
(Featuring Paulo Ucello)
Text by Antonin Artaud
For actor, soprano and ensemble
2026
Commissioned by Ensemble Télémaque, Raoul Lay conductor
The Slosberg parking lot is very small and tends to fill up quickly on concert days. Because of this, we strongly encourage guests to park in the Spingold Theater Center parking lot, located behind the theater.
Event is free & open to the public. Walk-ins are welcome - RSVP is optional.
Good to know
Highlights
- 1 hour 30 minutes
- In person
Location
Slosberg Music Center
415 South Street
Waltham, MA 02453
How do you want to get there?
