Interview with Sylvia Lim
Before we discuss the music on your CD, can you tell us a bit about your background: where you come from, how you came to experimental / contemporary music, where you studied, & where you're based...
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Sample The Album:
Sylvia Lim-composer
Natasha Zielazinski-cello
Mira Benjamin-violin
Heather Roche-bass clarinet
Michelle Hromin-clarinet
Ben Smith-piano
Kerry Yong-piano
Simon Limbrick-vibraphone, percussion
Hugh Millington-guitar
Saki Kato-guitar
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Label: Another Timbre
Catalog ID: at255
Squidco Product Code: 37452
Format: CD
Condition: New
Released: 2026
Country: UK
Packaging: Cardboard Gatefold
Grafting, Things We Overheard and Shadowfolds recorded at Goldsmiths Recording Studio, in London, UK, in January, 2026, by Simon Reynell.
Field of Play recorded Guildhall School of Music and Drama Recording Studio, in London, UK, in September, 2024, and January, 2025, by Seth Scott-Deuchar, Eze Day and Mark Rainbow.
Flare recorded at Durham University, in Durham, UK,in June, 2021, recorded by Simone Tarsitani.
Same But Different recorded at Wigmore Hall, in London, UK, in June, 2021.
Interview with Sylvia Lim
Before we discuss the music on your CD, can you tell us a bit about your background: where you come from, how you came to experimental / contemporary music, where you studied, & where you're based now?
I'm currently based in London. I moved here to study composition at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama after finishing school. Before that I had spent equal parts growing up in Petaling Jaya, Malaysia and Sydney, Australia. At school my music was mostly influenced by musical theatre and Australian contemporary choral music, but at Guildhall things shifted as I encountered the diverse interests of staff and students. During my undergraduate studies I remember getting very excited when James Saunders gave a guest seminar and mentioned how a very slow bow speed on a string instrument could affect the stability of the sound - this was so new to me and I loved it. I was also really struck by the beautifully delicate world of Edmund Finnis's Unfolds which had a huge impact on me at the time. I became increasingly drawn to unstable and fragile sounds as a way of exploring my own experiences of migration and change, which developed into a PhD on decay. Now I'd say my practice is shifting yet again and I hope it will continue to do so!
An interest in and exploration of fragility is certainly evident in the music on your CD, but can you say more about the current / latest shift in your music? How would you characterise it, and do any of the pieces on the album exemplify this?
During my PhD I became interested in more dynamic processes of decay (e.g. growth within decay), moving away from fragility as solely approaching emptiness or absence. This feels important to mention because it led to a preoccupation with timbral richness. The pieces on this album were written in the years following this. They reflect a deeper exploration of timbre, and consider how form and notation might emerge from the specific materiality of the sound rather than predetermined conceptual framings. For instance, flare explores the harmonics of just two keys on the piano, and in same but different, one of the guitars is prepared with a cotton bud. Writing these pieces involved working out what the possibilities were within those defined parameters, and listening attentively to what the sounds needed, which I think more frequently led me to places I was not expecting. I'd say the more recent pieces on the album (Field of Play, Grafting) take this further. The exception to this approach is things we overheard, where the sounds are very open-ended and loosely defined - the players respond to field recordings which they listen to privately while playing.
Yes, so focusing in on the music on the album, can we start with the last track, the cello solo, Field of Play, which was the kind of starting point for the CD as it was the first piece you sent me? On the cover you credit Natasha Zielazinski not just as the cellist, but as co-composer. Could you explain how the piece came about, and why you wanted to give Natasha this additional credit?
I met Natasha Zielazinski while I was a student at Guildhall (she was a mentor on a project). Over the past ten years we've been working together on new pieces in various contexts, having discovered a shared interest in certain kinds of sounds and ways of making. A few years ago I became very interested in instrumental preparations, after hearing Angharad Davies preparing her violin with a nail file at IKLECTIK. I loved how the instrument could take on this new richness, as though tapping into another reservoir of coloristic possibility. Some of these sounds are so complex and otherworldly, while at the same time foregrounding the very physical materials and ways in which they are being produced. I started exploring preparations in more depth in my other work, but also separately with Natasha.
Field of Play is a collection of pieces, with each one exploring a single preparation - a butterfly hair clip (hidden place), a bobby pin (contact), and a piece of cork (seesaw A & B). We were led by our curiosity and intuition, our questions which emerged in the moment and our constant reorientation as we tried to understand what we were doing. Each sound suggested its own world and form, its own imagery and processes.
From the start of the project, we wanted to see what would happen if we both shared the creative responsibility for decision-making. This was a new dynamic for us, although it felt like an extension of how we were working together before. It was a joint practice in which we brainstormed and reflected together, and compared our own 'maps'/ documentation of our materials to see how we were individually understanding the sounds we were working with. The project was as much about exploring preparations as well as finding new methods for us to work together. Meeting in the home for more extended periods of time (with our routine of making salad or soup for lunch) allowed our project to intersect with home life, which informed the work (e.g. the butterfly hair clip we used belongs to Natasha's daughter).
Great. I also really like the first piece on the CD - shadowfolds. Could you say a bit about what were you looking for there?
I was responding to your invitation to create a new piece exploring polyphony with a slightly larger ensemble to balance out the other pieces in the album. It was an appealing challenge, since polyphony doesn't usually feature in my music, and I thought it could push me in new directions.
I wanted to explore lines that were more to do with timbre and the physicality of the instrument rather than pitch or melody. I was more interested in the overall sonority, the artefacts that are created through the interaction of the lines (beating, microtonal shifting, resonance), the sonic detail and atmosphere. I didn't want the lines to go anywhere, but to simply inhabit a space.
The title is borrowed from a fabric art technique called shadowfolds, developed by the artist Chris K. Palmer, in which cloth is sewn to create geometric folds that play with shadow and light. In my piece the lines are more like shadows or blurrings, fragile and translucent, marked across the form through subtle repetition. Although my encounter with this technique came after the piece was written, I feel that it shares deep connections with the ideas I was trying to convey.
At first I was intimidated by the craft and history behind polyphony, but found it helpful to consider works that were, to me, rooted in a sense of intimacy and simplicity (e.g. Cassandra Miller's Thanksong, the first movement of James Weeks's Leafleoht, Grisey's spectral polyphony, multi-screen installations by visual artists Bill Viola and Allison Chhorn, etc.). I wanted my approach to reflect something personal, something to do with vulnerability, tenderness and care. In the end what felt most intuitive to me was working outwards from multiphonics, harmonics, and other instrument-specific gestures, and getting hands-on with the instruments where possible so I could still feel that physical connection in my body.
That's really interesting. Finally, I want to ask about the shape of the album as a whole because I find the movement across the course of the disc compelling. While - as you've said - a lot of the music is quite fragile, a couple of the earlier pieces - the title track Flare and the guitar duo same but different are nonetheless relatively upbeat and lively. Then there's Grafting - the trio for violin, bass clarinet and cello, the penultimate piece, which is in two movements. The first movement is - once again - quite fragile, but also at times rather luscious with fragments of melody drifting through. The second, shorter movement is even softer, but also bleaker in that the lusciousness has given way to a more barren, strangled soundworld. This is followed by the last track - the solo cello piece, Field of Play - which is even more hushed and similarly bleak. Overall it gives me the sense of the music across the album slowly disintegrating into a kind of despairing near-silence. I find it really sad, even unforgiving, but remarkably effective aesthetically. Do you find this too when you listen to the album as a whole, and was it something you had in mind from the start, or did it just emerge as the pieces were assembled together?
The shape of the album emerged as the pieces were assembled together. I know what you mean, there does seem to be a shift from the second movement of Grafting. While composing this movement I was aware that it sounded closer to the world of Field of Play, since in the bass clarinet and violin we hear a very exposed, collective recreation of the cello's sound (the cello is prepared with a cotton bud). Grafting as a whole was born out of a failed piece from Field of Play that never made it onto the album. It uses only one sound from the original (that you hear at the start of movement 1), but in a new context that as you say, is more melodic in the first movement.
So in listening to the second movement of Grafting and Field of Play I do sense the bleakness you mention, although I feel that this comes through more in the overall context of the album, and differs from the compositional preoccupations at the time. This is particularly true for Field of Play, which to me is nocturnal and subterraneous, but also playful, even hopeful and full of possibility. But within the context of the album, yes, seesaw A & B (Field of Play) in particular feel like disintegrated versions of flare and same but different, alluding to some of the warmth (from the fifths) but only in a sparse and fragile way. Whether bleak or not, perhaps this shift you mention is more of an invitation for a different kind of listening, a zooming in to a more microscopic world.
Artist Biographies
• Show Bio for Mira Benjamin "Mira Benjamin is a Canadian violinist, researcher and new-music instigator. She performs new and experimental music, with a special interest in microtonality & tuning practice. She actively commissions music from composers at all stages of their careers, and develops each new work through multiple performances. Current collaborations include new works by Anna Höstman, Scott McLaughlin, Amber Priestley, Taylor Brook and James Weeks. Since 2011, Mira has co-directed NU:NORD - a project-based music and performance network which instigates artistic exchanges and encourages community building between music creators from Canada, Norway & the UK. To date NU:NORD has engaged 79 artists and commissioned 62 new works. Through this initiative, Mira hopes to offer a foundation from which Canadian artists can reach out to artistic communities overseas, and provide a conduit through which UK & Norwegian artists can access Canada's rich art culture. Originally from Vancouver, British Columbia, Mira lived for ten years in Montréal, where she was a member of Quatuor Bozzini. Since 2014 she has resided in London (UK), where she regularly performs with ensembles such as Apartment House, Decibel, and the London Contemporary Orchestra Soloists, and is currently the Duncan Druce Scholar in Music Performance at the University of Huddersfield. Mira is the recipient of the 2016 Virginia Parker Prize from the Canada Council for the Arts. The prize is awarded annually to a Canadian musician in recognition of their contribution to the artistic life in Canada and internationally." ^ Hide Bio for Mira Benjamin • Show Bio for Heather Roche "Born in Canada, clarinetist Heather Roche trained in England, lived in Germany for 7 years and now lives in London. She has performed at some of the major European festivals, including musikFest (Berlin), BachFest (Leipzig), Musica Nova (Helsinki), Acht Brücken (Cologne), the International Computer Music Conference (Huddersfield, Ljubljana), the Dias de Música Electroacústica (Seia, Portugal) and the Agora Festival (Ircam, Paris). She has also performed solo programmes at the Zagreb Music Biennale, the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, the New York Electroacoustic Symposium, at CIRMMT (Montreal), Unerhörte Musik (Berlin), Eavesdropping (London), and with the Birmingham Electroacoustic Sound Theatre (BEAST). She has performed with ensembles and orchestras including Musik Fabrik (Cologne), the WDR Orchestra (Cologne), mimitabu (Gothenburg), the London Symphony Orchestra (London), ensemble Garage (Cologne), ensemble interface (Berlin), the Riot Ensemble (London), the Alisios Camerata (Zagreb), and ensemble proton (Bern). She also plays across the UK in a trio with Carla Rees (flutes) and Xenia Pestova (piano) and in 2015 formed an duo with the accordionist Eva Zöllner, with whom she has played across Germany, the UK and in Portugal. She is a founding member of hand werk, a 6-person chamber music ensemble based in Cologne, and worked with the group from 2010-2017. She has solo CDs out on the HCR/NMC and Métier labels. Please see the Discography for further details. In 2014 she was awarded a DIVA (Danish International Visiting Artists Fellowship), and lived in Copenhagen for two months. Since 2016 she has acted as the Reviews Editor for TEMPO, a quarterly journal for contemporary music published by Cambridge University Press. Her website is host to one of the most widely read new music blogs on the Internet. In 2017 it had 75,000 hits from around the world. She successfully crowdfunded in 2014 in order to host her first composition competition. Six young composers were chosen out of 270 applicants to write new pieces, which were premiered in 2016. She is a fervent advocate of collaboration, and her PhD research at the University of Huddersfield (under the supervision of Dr. Philip Thomas) explored the nature of dialogue within performer-composer relationships. She has given workshops in instrumental technique and/or iPad use in performance all over Europe, for example in London, Munich and Copenhagen. Heather completed her Masters of Music (Orchestral Training) in 2006 at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London, studying under Joy Farrall and Laurent Ben Slimane, in addition to conducting with Sian Edwards. Following her degree she completed residencies with the International Ensemble Modern Academy, at IMPULS in Graz and with ensemble recherche in Freiburg, the Darmstadt Summer Courses 2008 and 2010 and the International Ensemble Modern Academy in Innsbruck, Austria. She has performed in masterclasses with Michael Collins, Ernesto Molinari and Shizuyo Oka, to name a few. She completed her BMus in 2005 at the University of Victoria, Canada, studying under Patricia Kostek." ^ Hide Bio for Heather Roche • Show Bio for Michelle Hromin "Michelle Hromin is a Croatian-American multidisciplinary artist, specializing in contemporary clarinet performance, writing, and curation. She uses mediums such as spoken word, electronics, and improvisation in her artistic practice to explore her identity, heritage, and human relationships. Recent engagements include touring "A Steve Reich Celebration" with the Colin Currie Group in Japan and across the US and performing at the BBC Proms. As an in-demand clarinetist, she has performed in venues such as Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, Tokyo Opera City, Iklectik, and Cafe Oto and worked with groups such as eighth blackbird, English National Opera, London Mozart Players, Fifth House Ensemble, Lisa Bielawa's Broadcast from Here series, Audentia Ensemble, and International Contemporary Ensemble. An advocate for new music, Michelle has commissioned and performed dozens of new works, including as a 2022 Fellow with Bang on a Can and 2023 eighth blackbird Creative Lab Fellow. Her 2021 performance project Kalendar: 12 Miniatures for 2021 brought awareness to her Croatian heritage through improv-based clarinet works informed by the months of the Slavic calendar. The two-volume EP was self-released on Bandcamp. Michelle is the Artistic Director of standard issue, a new music collective aiming to explore the archetypal boundaries within music and its culture. She performs, curates, and commissions new works with the group to promote experimental music accessibility and inclusivity. As a writer, she enjoys analyzing human connection and emotion within today's creative ecosystem. She is a contributing writer for I Care If You Listen, Which Sinfonia, New Music Box, and runs a blog called About That." ^ Hide Bio for Michelle Hromin • Show Bio for Ben Smith "Ben Smith is a London-based composer and performer specialising in contemporary music. He is interested in - amongst other things - phenomenological and semiotic approaches to musical analysis, and compositional encounters with silence and repetition. Ben was a Junior Fellow at Guildhall School of Music & Drama from 2020-2022, where he previously studied with Laurence Crane, Rolf Hind, and James Weeks. His recording of Evan Johnson's complete piano music was released on all that dust in November 2021." ^ Hide Bio for Ben Smith • Show Bio for Kerry Yong "Kerry is a musician who lives in east London. He trained as a pianist and now also performs on keyboards and live electronics. Kerry has performed at Audiograft, Chisenhale Arts Club, Kämmer Klang, Rational Rec, Borealis Festival, Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, ISCM World Music Days, Kings Place, City of London Festival, Music We'd Like To Hear, Nonclassical and in groups Apartment House, ELISION, Plus-Minus Ensemble and Ensemble Offspring. Kerry studied piano with Stephanie McCallum at the University of Sydney (where he also studied composition) and at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music. He completed a doctorate at the Royal College of Music where he studied piano with Andrew Ball and researched Performance practices of music for piano with electroacoustics. He has also dabbled with the other side, playing with bands Apopalyptics, Casiokids and Half-handed Cloud and the Welcome Wagon. Kerry also directs music at Grace Church Hackney (which meets in Hoxton), where they are happy to use ancient chants, traditional hymns and new works with choirs, bands, electronics, objects and the like." ^ Hide Bio for Kerry Yong • Show Bio for Simon Limbrick "Simon Limbrick's involvement in music embraces performance, composing and education.
He was a member of the cult systems orchestra The Lost Jockey and Man Jumping, recording for EG Editions and creating scores for leading dance companies, Second Stride, London Contemporary Dance, Rosemary Lee and Sue MacLennan. He has been in demand as a percussionist performing all over the world with the Nash Ensemble, Birmingham Contemporary Music Group, Endymion Ensemble, Composers' Ensemble and Fibonacci Sequence as well as recording with artists such as Alabama3, Gavin Bryars Pete Lockett and for Blue Note Records. He has been guest principal with the LSO and worked under conductors, Leonard Bernstein, Oliver Knussen, Simon Rattle and Tom Ades. He has featured on film and television including documentaries about Steve Reich and Kenneth MacMillan's award winning Judas Tree.Compositions created for him include works by Javier Alvarez, Brian Elias (Kenneth MacMillan's last ballet The Judas Tree), Vic Hoyland and Andrew Poppy. He has performed the world-premieres of solo pieces by James Dillon, Frederic Rzewski , Claude Vivier, Philip Cashian, Thea Musgrave, Harry de Wit, Howard Skempton, Michael Wolters and Ed Kelly. His solo performances have been broadcast by the BBC, RAI, Radio France, Dutch TV and radio. Recently, he performed his own concerto Bulls Yard and Stockhausen's Zyklus at the Sage, Gateshead,(see review) solo steel-pan in Brian Elias' Judas Tree at Royal Opera House, London, in 2010 and directed his mixed-media project, dot-machine, a web-based musical construction accessible on www.marimbo.com. He created a 24 hour long piece surfaces with the composer James Saunders, with financial assistance from the Arts Council of Great Britain and premiered at the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival in 2011. In education, Simon has led workshops since 1982, and been a returning resident artist in festivals and organisations, including Blackheath Concert Halls, Aldeburgh Music, Sound It Out , Spitalfields Festival. Workshop projects have been led by him throughout Europe. As a fully-qualified teacher, he has led Music and Performing Arts in Secondary Schools for five years. He has led school and community projects for Aldeburgh Music. As Artistic Director, he helped establish In Harmony Norwich, creating mixed-ability orchestral pieces for professional and young student players. Until the School of Music closed in June 2014, he was Director of 'Musician in the Community' and 'Creative Leadership' courses at University of East Anglia.
As a composer, Simon has gained an MA in Electroacoustic Composition from City University and collaborated as a composer on a number of large scale works, including a project at Fort Dunlop, Birmingham, with Rosemary Lee and site-specific work with Dutch composer/sound sculptor Harry de Wit in Holland and Brussels.He has produced film scores for TV and film festivals and composed music for theatre productions at the National Theatre and Royal Shakespeare Companies. Groups he has created pieces for include Mary Wiegold's Songbook, Roger Heaton Group, Ensemble Bash, Network of Sparks, Endymion Ensemble, Richard Durrant, Ritmatic, Hooloo. The Brighton Youth Orchestra performed machina lumina , for string ensemble and vibraphone throughout 2009. His composition Machine for Living for Landesmusikrat/Splash was recorded at Deutschlandradio. He has produced recordings for wergo and others.Currently composing a large piece for jazz brass and marimba. He has created the CDs, Steam, Hooloo, Clean, Ritmatik, Dot-Machine, Hammer, Rise and Fall, , between and Relay, which are frequently broadcast and available on well-known download sites. NEW RELEASE of a double CD RELAY, of contemporary steel-pan music in Sept 2014. Sound Composer for the film 3 Church Walk by the director Emily Richardson premiered on 18th Oct 2014 at The London Festival, BFI, London." ^ Hide Bio for Simon Limbrick
5/26/2026
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5/26/2026
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
5/26/2026
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
5/26/2026
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
5/26/2026
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
5/26/2026
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
Track Listing:
1. Shadowfolds 07:00
2. Flare 06:50
3. Things We Overheard 04:53
4. Same But Different - Movement 1 04:26
5. Same But Different - Movement 2 05:19
6. Grafting - Movement 1 09:33
7. Grafting - Movement 2 02:42
8. Field Of Play - Hidden Place 08:57
9. Field Of Play - Seesaw A 02:04
10. Field Of Play - Contact 06:15
11. Field Of Play - Seesaw B 01:02
In Stock, Not Yet Cataloged
May 2026
Compositional Forms
Large Ensembles
Ambient, Minimal, Reductionist, Onky Sound, &c.
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