Research output per year
Research output per year
Dr
TW20 0EX
Zubin Kanga is a pianist, composer, and technologist. For over a decade, he has been at the forefront of curating and creating interdisciplinary musical programmes that seek to explore and redefine what it means to be a performer through interactions with new technologies.
In 2020, Kanga was awarded a £1.4 million UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship to fund his latest multi-year project Cyborg Soloists, based at Royal Holloway, University of London, where he is Senior Lecturer in Musical Performance and Digital Arts. Cyborg Soloists is unlocking new possibilities in composition and performance through interactions with AI and machine learning, interactive visuals, motion and biosensors, and new hybrid instruments. His Cyborg Soloists work was recently featured in The New York Times, The Wire, Classical Music Magazine, and Limelight Magazine.
Zubin has premiered more than 150 works and performed at many international festivals including the BBC Proms, Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, Aldeburgh Festival, London Contemporary Music Festival (UK) Melbourne Festival (Australia), Paris Autumn Festival (France), Time of Music (Finland), Music Current (Ireland), Klang Festival (Denmark), PODIUM Festival (Germany), Gaudeamus Festival (Netherlands) and Modulus Festival (Canada).
As a composer, Kanga’s output includes Dead Leaves for piano and live electronics, which was selected to represent Australia at the International Rostrum of Composers in 2018; Spider Web Castle for viola and piano, which he premièred with Brett Dean at Extended Play Festival; and Steel on Bone, which he premiered at hcmf//, featuring MiMU multi-sensor gloves morphing the sounds of extended techniques inside the piano, which The Times praised for its ‘bravura and madness’.
Recent collaborations include Philip Venables’ Answer Machine Tape, 1987, which explores the AIDS crisis through a crucial week in the life of New York artist David Wojnarowicz, using a KeyScanner to allow the piano to type text onto the screen like a typewriter; Neil Luck’s Whatever Weighs You Down, using MiMU sensor gloves to interact with Deaf performance artist Chisato Minamimura; Alexander Schubert’s internet-based score WIKI-PIANO.NET (performed 30 times across 9 countries as well as the BBC World Service) as well as a new collaboration with Schubert, Steady State, that uses EEG brain sensors to control music and holographic video.
In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This person’s work contributes towards the following SDG(s):
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Research output: Non-textual form › Performance
Research output: Non-textual form › Composition
Research output: Non-textual form › Performance
Research output: Other contribution
Kanga, Z. (PI)
1/02/21 → 31/01/25
Project: Research
Kanga, Z. (PI)
Economic & Social Res Coun ESRC
9/01/23 → 8/10/23
Project: Research
Kanga, Z. (Participant)
Activity: Other › Public engagement, outreach and knowledge exchange - Newspaper/magazine
Kanga, Z. (Interviewee)
Activity: Other › Public engagement, outreach and knowledge exchange - Newspaper/magazine