Voorjaarscreaties in MIRY: Arian Sadrayi, Daan Vanreybrouck & Milo Paulus
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TLF Trio / Dylan Henner, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesDouble bill with TLF Trio, mixing improvisation, sampling and electronic beats with classical chamber music, minimalism, pop and house; and the mysterious Dylan Henner with his characteristic use of ambient-tinged synths, marimba, digital choir and processed voice.
TLF Trio
TLF Trio is an experimental music ensemble consisting of cellist Cæcilie Trier, pianist Jakob Littauer and guitarist MK Velsorf.They released their first album, Sweet Harmony, on the French electronic and experimental label Latency in 2022 and an EP, New Songs & Variations, with new material and reworks by German techno pioneer Moritz von Oswald on Latency in 2023. 2025 saw their sophomore full-length album, Desire, come out via 15 love on September 4.
Dylan Henner
Dylan Henner remains a somewhat mysterious figure within the ambient scene. Since his debut in 2020 — via cassette releases on labels such as Phantom Limb, Dauw and AD93 — he has mainly let his music do the talking. He avoids public promotion, but his disarmingly poetic titles betray a sharp imagination. His debut album, The Invention of the Human, explores big questions about humanity, civilisation and technology. In the follow-up, You Always Will Be (2022), Henner sketches the entire course of life, from birth to death. His latest work, Star Dream FM, is an experimental ambient album peppered with choral singing that sounds like a mysterious radio broadcast full of childhood memories.
Klinck Trio, dudal & de Roover, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesDouble bill with Klinck Trio and dudal & de Roover: from lovely soundscapes with a bite to mesmerizing tape loops. Klinck Trio creates slowly unfolding soundscapes where melody and silence are interwoven, resulting in a delicate, childlike space of intimacy and discovery. Dudal & de Roover brings tape loops that patiently and organically move toward grainy ambient.
About dudal & de Roover
The Belgian musicians Pieter Dudal and Adriaan de Roover explore the tactile, ritualized art of tape loops, where every gesture — cutting, shifting and layering tape — shapes the evolving sound. Their practice has developed through live performances at Meakusma Festival and residencies at arts centers such as VIERNULVIER, Ancienne Belgique and Volta, combining acoustic and electronic sources into immersive soundscapes that unfold with both careful craftsmanship and organic growth.
Based in Brussels, Adriaan de Roover has been carving a unique path in experimental electronic music for over a decade, with releases on labels such as [PIAS], Dauw, Consouling and Fog Mountain. He is an experienced collaborator, installation artist and commissioned composer — recently creating music for a fashion exhibition by Milk of Lime (DE) and a 4DSOUND project co-produced by STUK Leuven and MONOM. His latest album, Other Rooms (Dauw), was praised by Bandcamp, HHV and The Vinyl Factory.
Dudal is the moniker of Pieter Dudal, a Ghent-based sound artist and musician. He is the founder and curator of the labels Dauw and blickwinkel. His work intertwines lo-fi melodies with slowly evolving textures, resulting in delicate electroacoustic compositions. In 2021, he released his debut album Can You Say It Again, and he currently hosts a monthly show on Kiosk Radio in Brussels.
About Klinck Trio
With their debut album, My Hair is Everywhere, Klinck Trio—Elisabeth Klinck (violin, vocals), Adia Vanheerentals (saxophone, vocals), and Maya Dhondt (piano, vocals)—unfolds an intimate language in which melody and silence hold each other in a fragile balance. Rooted in improvisation, the music exudes an openness in which every sound and pause is given meaning.
The album sounds like an invitation to attentive listening: from whispering details and breathing spaces to playful melodies and tender resonances. Inspired by artists like Meredith Monk, the music moves between lightness and melancholy, searching for a fragile beauty that only fully unfolds in silence.
Elisabeth Klinck is a contemporary violinist, composer, and performer from Brussels, known for her timeless, profound soundscapes. Her albums ‘Picture a Frame’ (2023) and ‘Chronotopia’ – selected by The Quietus as one of the best albums of 2025. In 2025, Elisabeth was selected as one of radio station Klara’s De Twintigers, a group of promising young artists who are shaping the future of Belgian classical music.
Adia Vanheerentals is one of Belgium’s most promising young musicians. She was selected for Klara De Twintigers (2024) and is also the driving force behind Bodem, her trio with Anke Verslype and Willem Malfliet, with which she toured during JazzLab in 2025. Her solo LP ‘Here Are 5 Reasons to Meditate’ was released in 2024 on Ultra Eczema, and her next album ‘Taking Place’ on Relative Pitch Records is scheduled for release in November 2025.
Maya Dhondt is a Brussels-based pianist and abstract virtuoso whose practice ranges from glitch-pop experiments to contemporary piano works. She has performed at festivals such as Rewire (The Hague) and Fifty Lab (Brussels), and her debut album ‘wow, x’ was released in 2024 on VIERNULVIER Records.
Susanna Braun, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesFranz Liszt is often depicted as an eccentric, and the historian Gregorovius once called him “Mephistopheles disguised as a priest.” Eccentric or not, his contribution to the piano repertoire cannot be overstated. Pianist Susanna Braun pays tribute to the Hungarian composer. She begins with a nocturnal pilgrimage to her own Switzerland with Les Cloches de Genève: Nocturne. She then showcases her technical abilities in one of Liszt’s études. She also selected the Sonata in B minor and the Hungarian Rhapsody No. 19 in D minor. That Liszt occasionally drew inspiration from a famous namesake can be heard in Das Sterbeglöcklein from 6 Melodien von Franz Schubert. Liszt at his best. How could it be otherwise, with a pianist who obtained her master’s degree at the Hochschule für Musik Franz Liszt in Weimar?
Programme
Franz Liszt (1811-1886)
– Les Cloches de Genève: Nocturne uit Années de pèlerinage - Première année: Suisse, S. 160/9
– Douze études d'exécution transcendante, S. 139 no. 10 Appassionata in F minor
Franz Liszt / Franz Schubert (1797-1828)
– 6 Melodien von Franz Schubert, S. 563: III. Das Sterbeglöcklein, in A-flat Major
Franz Liszt (1811-1886)
– Hungarian Rhapsody no. 19 (S. 244/19) in D minor
– Sonata in B minor, S.17
Cellists Ye-Won Cho and Dilshod Nazillaev are preparing their participation in the Queen Elisabeth Competition. Their programme includes the cello concerto by Leopold Hoffmann, a contemporary of Joseph Haydn, who composed no fewer than eight concertos for the instrument. They also perform Stravinsky’s contrasting Suite Italienne — a 1930s reworking of his Pulcinella Suite, created in collaboration with the legendary cellist Gregor Piatigorsky. The evening concludes with Espace 1, written in 1992 by the South Korean composer Isang Yun. Cho and Nazillaev are accompanied at the piano by Katsura Mizumoto and Dana Protopopescu.
Programma
Ye-Won Cho
– L. Hoffman (1738-1793)
– Concerto
I. Stravinsky (1882-1971)
– Suite italienne
Isang Yun (1917-1995)
– Espace 1
Ryelandt Ensemble, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesThe Ryelandt Trio, known for their recordings of Flemish music, expands to a quintet for the occasion, joined by violinist Linde Verjans and violist Séamus Hickey. This Ryelandt Ensemble pairs music by Sjostakovitsj with that of — how could it be otherwise — Joseph Ryelandt.
Although Joseph Ryelandt (1870–1965) and Dmitri Shostakovich (1906–1975) lived in largely overlapping historical periods, the two composers could hardly have been more different. Ryelandt, a French-speaking aristocrat from Bruges, wrote music that never sounds dissonant in any way, whereas Sjostakovitsj’s work contains a grimness closely tied to the constant threat of persecution in Stalin’s Communist Russia. Ryelandt’s lyrical melodies thus form a welcome counterbalance to the urgency that speaks from every note of Sjostakovitsj.
Nikola Meeuwsen, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesTwenty-three years old and winner of the Queen Elisabeth Competition, the Dutch pianist Nikola Meeuwsen hardly needs an introduction anymore. He won over both the audience and the jury with sensitive and colourful piano playing. The versatile Variations sérieuses by Felix Mendelssohn fits Meeuwsen like a glove. In the theme and the seventeen variations that follow, he can showcase his refined virtuosity to the fullest. Scriabin’s dreamy Poème then sketches a completely different sound world. To conclude the programme, we hear a Carnaval à la Schumann — far more exuberant than we are used to from the composer: in this early work Schumann clearly still brimmed with vitality, though a darker edge already glimmers through from time to time. And so we end an evening that began in a serious vein on a somewhat lighter note after all.
Program
F. Mendelssohn (1809-1847)
– Variations serieuses
A. Scriabin (1871-1915)
– Poème op. 32 no. 1 in Fis majeur
R. Schumann (1810-1856)
– Carnaval op. 9
Boyan Vodenitcharov, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesUntil a century ago, it was taken for granted that a classically trained musician could also improvise. Cadences in concertos, for example, lent themselves perfectly to this. Soloists such as Paganini and Ysaÿe were renowned for their improvisational talent and their compositions. Why this skill has fallen into disuse is less important than the question of how it can be revived. Boyan Vodenitcharov intends to dust off improvisation and reintroduce spontaneity into classical music. His playing balances on the border between classical and jazz.
Vodenitcharov was third laureate of the Queen Elisabeth Competition in 1983. He has been a regular jury member for the competition since 2003. He passes on his knowledge at the conservatories of Ghent, Liège, and Brussels.
Barbican Quartet, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesWhen Franz Schubert began work on his fourteenth string quartet in 1824, he borrowed from his own repertoire: he recycled the theme from one of his songs, ‘Der Tod und das Mädchen’ (Death and the Maiden), thereby giving the quartet not only its unofficial name, but also an intriguing second movement. It begins with a funeral march, immediately setting the tone: death is approaching, and although it occasionally shows its most charming side, the undertone is unmistakably threatening.
The Barbican Quartet, which won first prize in the ARD International Music Competition in 2022, once again demonstrates its versatility. In addition to Schubert's classic, they perform Haydn's Opus 20, No. 6. They place this forefather of the string quartet alongside the lesser-known but equally interesting Szymanovski. Barbican chose his second quartet.
Duo Altiler, Aaricia Ponnet & Haroun Iqbal, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesBeethoven's Kreutzer Sonata has often been a source of inspiration for other artists in the past — think of Tolstoy and Janáček — and the piece continues to provoke. This makes it ideal for Will to Wander, which shines a different light on classical works.
Beethoven dedicated his 9th sonata to his good friend, violinist Rodolphe Kreutzer, who is best known among violinists for his etudes. The original commission was for Bridgetower, who premiered the piece but found it unplayable. To err is human: the work is now part of the standard violin repertoire and is performed frequently. Tonight, you will hear it first in its original form by Duo Altiler, who won Klara's Supernova competition in 2025 and also took home the audience prize. After that, Aaricia Ponnet & Haroun Iqbal will let their imagination run wild.
Jeroen Berwaerts & Akiko Nikami, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesIf you ask Jeroen Berwaerts what he is working on, chances are that the answer will be extensive and varied. This internationally acclaimed soloist and teacher moves smoothly between all musical styles – mostly as a trumpeter, but sometimes also as a (jazz) singer. He performs as a soloist with various orchestras of the highest caliber, collaborates in chamber music with luminaries such as Alexander Melnikov, and regularly premieres new works. Rarely does a musician manage to convey such a rich range of styles and roles with such conviction.
This recital also demonstrates that versatility is his trademark. Together with pianist Akiko Nikami, a much sought-after accompanist and soloist, he performs repertoire from the 20th and 21st centuries, from Théo Charlier and Toshio Hosokawa to Gershwin, Ligeti, and Rodgers.
Pianoduo Simplexity & Merel Vercammen, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesAt Will to Wander, you will hear each piece twice: first as it was written, then in a new guise. The central piece this evening is Steve Reich's Piano Phase. It is a constant shifting of similar material, divided between two pianos that seem to contradict, support, and complement each other. This is right up the alley of piano duo Simplexity, who want to understand how simplicity and complexity relate to each other. After the original performance, violinist Merel Vercammen will present her interpretation.
In the same vein as Piano Phase is John Adams' Hallelujah Junction, in which seemingly simple material is again divided between the two pianos in such a way that it produces an ‘acoustic version of a digital delay’. It sounds like a flight of starlings looks: like a cloud that keeps changing its mind.
Merel Vercammen, in turn, explores the artistic possibilities of the electric five-string violin. Inspired by the characteristic repetitive patterns in the piano repertoire of Steve Reich and John Adams, she develops a new soundscape in which the violin transforms into a full-fledged sound orchestra. Piano Phase and Hallelujah Junction are built on layered repetitions and subtle shifts in rhythm and harmony. This structure forms the starting point for Merel’s approach. Within that framework, improvisations arise that develop according to Reich’s and Adams’ logic of gradual transformation, but with their own voice and dynamics. In this context, the electric five-string violin is amplified and expanded with a series of guitar pedals. This technology makes it possible to create a layered, pulsating and richly orchestrated sound field live, on her own.
Lea Bertucci, Chuck Roth, Sarah Grace Graves & Ali Choupani, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesTwo idiosyncratic artists who actively unlearn tradition in order to create highly intuitive compositions that convey their very personal styles through guitar, woodwinds, and electronics.
Double bill with classically trained guitarist Chuck Roth on a curious musical exploration of the world of electronic music, and Lea Bertucci, the self-taught and idiosyncratic composer who weaves field recordings and noise techniques with woodwinds into installation art and creative masterpieces full of strings, wind instruments, percussion and creatively misused audio technology.
About Lea Bertucci
Lea Bertucci is an experimental musician, composer and performer whose work describes relationships between acoustic phenomena and biological resonance. In addition to her longstanding practice with woodwind instruments, her work incorporates spatialized speaker arrays, radical methods of free improvisation and creative misuses of audio technology. In recent years, her projects have expanded toward site-specific and spatially aware projects that initiate new access points to architecture. Her approach to music is marked by dense masses of sustained dissonance and a fascination with the sonic substance of common experience.
Her discography spans over a decade, with eight full-length solo albums and a number of collaborative projects. In 2018 and 2019, she released solo albums Metal Aether and Resonant Field on NNA Tapes, and has since gone on to found her own label, Cibachrome Editions, with 2021’s A Visible Length of Light as the inaugural release followed by 2022’s Murmurations, a duo with Ben Vida.
About Chuck Roth
Chuck Roth’s music wanders. The New York-based guitarist’s inquisitive style builds from rippling patterns that center the physicality of his instrument, roaming wherever they take him. watergh0st songs, his Palilalia debut, collects songs from the past half-decade, presenting an intimate snapshot of his music that draws from an eclectic background in classical guitar, electronic music, and improvisation.
Though Roth’s music often feels quite direct, there is a dreaminess that lives inside of it. His lyrics don’t feel too hot or cold, instead they have a wistfulness and melancholy of what it feels like to live through every passing day. His exploratory style bolsters these lyrics, giving the music its sense of ennui, as does his focus on texture. Each track takes on a different structure: “Bunny Hop” unfolds like a squirrel jumping from branch to branch of a tree, while “Private Boy” has a slower approach, growing from delayed harmonics that almost sound like bowed strings. His textures range from metallic and bristling to soft and feathery, evolving with gentleness. It is about ending up somewhere different than where it started, and watching the notes that fall in between.
About Sarah Grace Graves & Ali Choupani
Representing the GAME ensemble, Sarah Grace Graves and Ali Choupani bring Swallow’s Embrace, two works that approach the intimate, interior space joining voice and instrument. In Swallow’s Dream, Choupani traces the border between wakefulness and sleep, where sound drifts into dream and memory and imagination intertwine. In Embrace, the voice folds in on itself by way of multiphonics to create a tactile field of sound that feels both solitary and shared. Ali Choupani is a flutist, improviser, and sound designer whose work moves between classical performance, experimental practice, and sound research. Sarah Grace Graves is a singer and composer working where recital meets ritual. Her solo album Three Names was released with Elektramusic in 2025. They are both students in the advanced master contemporary music at KASK & Conservatorium.
Benjamin Kruithof, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesSome compositions seem timeless. This is certainly true of J.S. Bach's six Suites for Solo Cello. Written in the first quarter of the 18th century, they have lost none of their charm 300 years later. Rediscovered by Pablo Casals in the early 20th century, the Suites are now part of the standard cello repertoire. Rising Star (European Concert Hall Organisation) and Young Artist of the Year (International Classical Music Awards 2025) Benjamin Kruithof brings his fresh interpretation to the piece. This Luxembourg cello talent has literally played his way into the spotlight as a soloist and in various chamber music ensembles. In 2022, he won first prize at the George Enescu International Competition. In 2025, he will tour Europe's most beautiful concert halls, with our beautiful MIRY as a stopover tonight.
Revue Blanche, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesFew composers have written such a diverse and fascinating body of work as Maurice Ravel. He absorbed melodies and rhythms from other genres and cultures like a sponge and used them as inspiration for his own music, which is impossible to categorize. As if that weren't reason enough to program his music, it is also 150 years since his birth. A tribute was therefore inevitable. Revue Blanche, an ensemble as idiosyncratic as Ravel himself, honors the unique composer with their unusual combination of soprano, flute, viola, and harp. They pull out all the stops: from Mother Goose in her enchanted garden to popular Greek melodies and a tribute to Couperin. With Ravel, you never get bored, especially when Revue Blanche gets involved.
Symphonic orchestra KASK & Conservatorium, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesAn evening of musical diversity with works by Mozart, Beethoven and Barber. Classical clarity meets romantic depth and modern lyricism in a programme that sparkles with contrast and character.
Mozart's witty and brilliant orchestral sound stands alongside Beethoven's energetic symphonic power, while Rune Minne shines as soloist in Samuel Barber's compelling Violin Concerto – a work full of lyricism, virtuosity and emotional intensity.
A concert that brings together the richness of three great masters from different eras in one fascinating musical journey.
Clarinet ensemble of KASK & Conservatorium, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activities[please note: the date of this concert has been changed to 06.11.25 at 20:00]
For the omnivorous or the indecisive, the practical week means you don’t have to choose!
On Wednesday 5 November, six percussionists, four pianists, a violinist, a cellist, two clarinetists, and a quartet of female voices unite for Steve Reich’s intriguing Music for 18 Musicians.
On Thursday, voices will be warmed up for a performance following a masterclass by B’Rock, under the direction of harpsichordist and conductor Frank Agsteribbe. In the evening, the clarinet classes of KASK & Conservatorium form a real clarinet choir for the occasion.
On Friday, violins and other symphonic instruments will be tuned for the next concert, featuring music by Mozart and Beethoven, conducted by Michel Tilkin with a soloist from our own ranks.
Classical music students KASK & Conservatorium, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesFor the omnivorous or the indecisive, the practical week means you don’t have to choose!
On Wednesday 5 November, six percussionists, four pianists, a violinist, a cellist, two clarinetists, and a quartet of female voices unite for Steve Reich’s intriguing Music for 18 Musicians.
On Thursday, voices will be warmed up for a performance following a masterclass by B’Rock, under the direction of harpsichordist and conductor Frank Agsteribbe. In the evening, the clarinet classes of KASK & Conservatorium form a real clarinet choir for the occasion.
On Friday, violins and other symphonic instruments will be tuned for the next concert, featuring music by Mozart and Beethoven, conducted by Michel Tilkin with a soloist from our own ranks.
Students classical music of KASK & Conservatorium, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesWith Music for 18 Musicians (1976), Steve Reich wrote one of the milestones of minimalist music. The work is an enchanting sound world of repetition, shifting and breathing. Instead of traditional melody and harmony, everything revolves around rhythm, pulse and gradual change: patterns shift over each other, sounds fade and return like waves.
The ensemble of eighteen musicians – including pianos, marimbas, vibraphones, clarinets, singing voices and strings – forms a living organism in which each player has an indispensable role. The music breathes, moves and grows, sometimes almost imperceptibly, but always with a hypnotic intensity. Tom De Cock will be conducting this evening.
Music for 18 Musicians is not a piece to simply listen to, but to experience: a ritualistic experience in which time dissolves and sound transforms into movement.
Masayoshi Fujita, Bertel Schollaert & Hein Devos, GAME, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesHimself a migratory bird at heart, Japanese vibraphone and marimba player Masayoshi Fujita has written a soundtrack for the endless journey of his fellow creatures with his latest album, Migratory. He evokes a dreamlike universe in which the listener effortlessly soars above the clouds. Like migratory birds, Fujita never stays in one place for long, his restlessness disguised as a promise. He enriches the sounds of his melodic percussion with electronic effects, something Bertel Schollaert and Hein Devos also know a thing or two about. This symbiotic duo creates an equally intriguing sound world with bass and baritone saxophone and electro-acoustic manipulation techniques. Sound like a blanket that envelops you, with no clear origin and no clear contours or boundaries.
Duo Coordonné & ‘Ontzingen’ by Eva Binon and Arend Pinoy, MIRY Concert hallconcertAgendaArtistic activitiesYou may remember Thomas Langlois (lute) as one of Klara’s Twintigers (Twenty-somethings) in 2023. Together with mezzo-soprano Anna Nuytten, he forms Duo Coordonné. They share a great love for Dowland’s work.
John Dowland wrote his Lachrimae, also known as Seven Tears, in 1604, based on a song, Flow my tears, which he had written a few years earlier and which became a real hit. Seven Tears was originally wordless: Dowland wrote it for a viola da gamba consort. Duo Coordonné rewrote the composition and alternates the seven variations with earlier songs by Dowland.
Ontzingen by Eva Binon and Arend Pinoy presents a version of Seven Tears that lies somewhere between performance and musical performance, between laughter and tears, between punk and consolation.
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