<![CDATA[Newsroom University of ԰]]> /about/news/ en Tue, 14 Jul 2026 16:52:51 +0200 Fri, 03 Jul 2026 10:26:30 +0200 <![CDATA[Newsroom University of ԰]]> https://content.presspage.com/clients/150_1369.jpg /about/news/ 144 Reimagining opera in Greater ԰: human–AI collaboration and the future of performance /about/news/reimagining-opera-in-greater-manchester-humanai-collaboration-and-the-future-of-performance/ /about/news/reimagining-opera-in-greater-manchester-humanai-collaboration-and-the-future-of-performance/761660What does it mean to build a national opera presence in Greater ԰ today – and for the future? This is the question at the heart of , a collaborative research and engagement initiative between (ENO) and The University of ԰, which Dr Kamila Rymajdo is leading as Research Associate.

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As ENO establishes a second base in the region, this project brings together stakeholders to explore what opera could – and should – become in Greater ԰.

Running from 2025 to 2027, Tuning into Opera is exploring four research themes:

  • Opera in Greater ԰: History, perceptions and visibility
  • Place-making and storytelling: Reflecting local identity through opera
  • Inclusion and accessibility: Breaking down barriers and opening doors
  • Innovation and technology: Imagining the future of opera-making

The project takes a mixed-methods approach, combining surveys, interviews, workshops and creative collaborations. So far, this has included public surveys exploring perceptions of opera and career accessibility, artist and researcher roundtables and stakeholder interviews across the region’s cultural sector. Together, these activities are helping to build a nuanced understanding of opera’s current position in Greater ԰ and its future potential. At its core, this is a project about listening: listening to audiences, to those who feel excluded from opera, and to those already reimagining what it can be.

The project’s themes came into particularly sharp focus at a recent public workshop: Future of Opera: Human–AI Improvisation, held at the International Anthony Burgess Foundation in May. The event formed part of both Tuning into Opera and the series and explored how digital technologies might reshape opera as a more participatory artform.

Opera meets AI: experimentation and participation

The workshop featured a live demonstration of scenes from an immersive sci‑fi opera developed by Dr Alexandra Huang-Kokina, Bicentenary Fellow in Music at the University of ԰ and.

Audience members were not passive observers. Asked to become Yōkai – playful spirits influencing events – they used their smartphones to submit emoji-based emotional responses and vote on key narrative decisions. This input was aggregated through an ‘emotion engine’, which shaped the performance in real time, affecting scenography, timbre shifts and even the fate of characters within the story. For performers, this created a responsive and partially improvised environment, where they adapted not only to each other, but to audience input mediated through AI.

In conversation: AI, creativity and the future of opera

The performance was followed by a panel discussion to reflect on the broader implications of AI for opera. The conversation featured Dr Alexandra Huang-Kokina, Bob Holland, Executive Producer at English National Opera, Dr Jennifer Cearns, Lecturer in AI at The University of ԰, and Cliona Cassidy, one of the event’s performers, a soprano, composer and experimental vocalist. It was chaired by Lauren Monaghan-Pisano, Director of Strategy and Partnerships at ENO.

Dr Alexandra Huang-Kokina framed the workshop’s performance as a cultural intervention: opera was used as a medium through which to explore and communicate the role of AI in society. She emphasised that this is particularly important given that public discourse often positions AI as inherently threatening. By embedding AI within an artistic context, she suggested, we can create a platform for more nuanced and imaginative engagement.

Another key theme was the move from linear narrative structures to interactive ‘storyworlds’, which Alexandra likened to gaming environments. The panel reflected on how this approach can reposition opera as an immersive and participatory experience, where meaning is co-produced rather than delivered. They noted that such an approach opens up new possibilities for audience engagement, while also prompting important questions about how creative control is balanced and how authorship is remunerated within more collaborative forms.

The discussion also touched on the practicalities of integrating AI into live performance. The use of mobile phones, for example, enables real-time interaction and participation, while also introducing considerations around audience focus.

The panel also reflected on the wider implications of applying technologies such as emotion recognition and data aggregation in live performance contexts. In particular, they reflected on how audience responses – such as emoji inputs – are translated into collective datasets that shape the performance, raising questions about how individual emotions are represented within aggregated data. The discussion also looked ahead to more advanced forms of audience sensing, including biometric tracking and facial recognition, highlighting the importance of consent and critical reflection when incorporating these technologies into live cultural experiences.

Questions of access and inclusion – central to Tuning into Opera – also formed an important part of the discussion. AI and digital technologies can be seen as offering new pathways into opera, particularly for younger audiences and those with limited prior exposure. At the same time, the panel recognised that not all audiences will have equal access to or feel comfortable with digital participation.

Continuing the conversation

As Tuning into Opera moves forward, these questions will remain central to the initiative’s research and engagement work. Over the coming year, Tuning into Opera will continue to develop workshops, consultations and collaborations across Greater ԰, working with communities and partners to explore how opera can become more inclusive, responsive and relevant.

The Human–AI Improvisation workshop offered one possible vision of opera’s future. More importantly, it demonstrated the value of bringing research, creative practice and public engagement into dialogue.

If you are interested in being part of this conversation, we would love to hear from you. Get in touch by emailing tuningintoopera@eno.org.

About the Author

Dr Kamila Rymajdo is a writer and academic. She is an Honorary Research Fellow within the Music Department at University of ԰ and works as a Research Associate for English National Opera. She is also Leader in Residence at the University of Lancashire for her contribution to music journalism. Previously, she was a Research Fellow at University of Lodz.

About ENO

English National Opera are the national opera company dedicated to creating extraordinary encounters with opera, on stage and beyond. Founded in 1931 as Sadler’s Wells Opera to make opera accessible to all, we continue that mission today by presenting opera that’s different, creatively daring and inclusive. From performances at the London Coliseum and in Greater ԰, to work in schools, communities and public spaces across the country, we are committed to reaching and reflecting the full diversity of our nation.

About Creative ԰

is an interdisciplinary platform based at The University of ԰. The platform champions research in creativity and creative practice, bringing together research communities with external stakeholders to explore new research areas and address strategic opportunities. Please visit the for more information.

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Mon, 29 Jun 2026 12:46:26 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8bbe0988-4477-488d-8f82-255ec8db1995/500_tioblog.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/8bbe0988-4477-488d-8f82-255ec8db1995/tioblog.jpg?10000
Artist Provenance expert and CTO of Massive Attack visits University for collaborative activities exploring AI, copyright and creative authorship /about/news/artist-provenance-expert-and-cto-of-massive-attack-visits-university-for-collaborative-activities-exploring-ai-copyright-and-creative-authorship/ /about/news/artist-provenance-expert-and-cto-of-massive-attack-visits-university-for-collaborative-activities-exploring-ai-copyright-and-creative-authorship/746667Creative ԰ were delighted to welcome internationally renowned composer, producer and creative technologist  to The University of ԰’s School of Arts, Languages and Cultures for a two-day programme of activities from 18–19 May 2026. The visit brought together students, academics, policymakers, and the public to explore questions with the founder of artist provenance organisation  around the future of creative authorship, copyright and musicmaking in the age of artificial intelligence.

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Occurring at a pivotal moment in the debates around AI and intellectual property, the visit also highlights a number of timely developments in the artist provenance sphere. These include the appointment of Sir Robin Jacob, former Lord Justice of Appeal in Intellectual Property, to the Genotone Ltd. advisory board, a significant endorsement of artist provenance infrastructure. 

 is a British-German creative technologist with over 25 years at the intersection of music, technology, and art. As CTO of and founder of , he has spent his career building the infrastructure that connects creative practice to emerging technology, from pioneering work on one of the world's first artist websites with David Bowie in 1999 to encoding Massive Attack's Mezzanine into synthetic DNA with ETH Zürich. 

Andrew advises the UK government's Department for Culture, Media and Sport and Department for Science, Innovation and Technology’s Working Groups on AI and copyright, representing coalitions of over 30,000 artists through the Music Managers Forum, Featured Artists Coalition, and AFEM. He is a leading voice on artist provenance, AI transparency, and the future of creative rights in the age of generative AI. 

At the heart of the visit was the major public lecture Proof of Human: AI, Copyright, and the Fight for Creative Authorship, which took place at the heart of the Innovation District at SISTER. 

In this special lecture and discussion, Andrew Melchior presented a compelling case for strengthening creative authorship in the era of generative AI. 

Drawing on his experience advising UK government technical working groups on AI and copyright, Melchior explored how large-scale AI systems trained on vast datasets of copyrighted material, often without consent or compensation are disrupting established frameworks for protecting creative work. He argued that the challenge facing artists today is not only legal but infrastructural: without reliable systems to verify authorship and trace creative lineage, existing rights regimes cannot be effectively enforced. 

Following the lecture, he was joined in conversation by John McGrath, Artistic Director and Chief Executive of Factory International, and responded to audience questions. 

Earlier in the day, Melchior lead an interactive masterclass for undergraduate and postgraduate music and composition students. 

The session focussed on practical workflows for producing and releasing music while maintaining provenance and control of intellectual property in a rapidly evolving AI landscape. Students engaged directly with Melchior and explored the real-world implications of emerging technologies on their creative practice. 

The visit also included a roundtable discussion bringing together academic experts and policymakers. They examined the relationship between music, culture, technology, and ԰’s creative heritage; the impact of AI and other technologies on the creative industries and mechanisms to protect the rights and livelihoods of creative practitioners. 

This visit was part of Creative ԰’s ongoing commitment to fostering interdisciplinary collaboration and critical debate at the intersection of culture, technology, and society.

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Thu, 21 May 2026 11:02:14 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5b3be520-35d4-48a9-8cab-bef5604547a5/500_amvisit.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5b3be520-35d4-48a9-8cab-bef5604547a5/amvisit.jpg?10000
Music student wins 2026 Stuart Hall Essay Prize /about/news/music-student-wins-2026-stuart-hall-essay-prize/ /about/news/music-student-wins-2026-stuart-hall-essay-prize/741851Harriet Hillier, a second-year undergraduate student in Music at the University of ԰, has been awarded the Stuart Hall Essay Prize for 2026. The prize, worth £2,000, is open to UK-based academics, students, journalists and other writers aged 18-30. Harriet’s essay, ‘Choosing a Nation: Identity, Belonging, and Representation in International Sport’, will be published by the Stuart Hall Foundation.

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Harriet Hillier, a second-year undergraduate student in Music at the University of ԰, has been awarded the Stuart Hall Essay Prize for 2026. The prize, worth £2,000, is open to UK-based academics, students, journalists and other writers aged 18-30, and aims to stimulate new contributions to the areas of political, cultural and educational research pioneered by the Jamaican-British cultural theorist and sociologist Stuart Hall.

Harriet’s essay, ‘Choosing a Nation: Identity, Belonging, and Representation in International Sport’, was the unanimous choice of the judging panel. The essay focuses in particular on fencing, a sport at which Harriet has represented Great Britain in international competitions.

The judges, Professor Catherine Hall, Professor Jo Littler and Professor Kennetta Hammond Perry, gave the following comments on the prize-winning essay: “This essay applies Hall’s conjunctural method to read culture at the intersection of political, economic and ideological forces. The case study is of fencing as an international sport and the author applies their experience of it as a participant to discuss what it means to represent a nation at this time, in a post-Brexit world in which borders have become ever more problematic, where sport is transnational yet aims to figure as a key symbol of national unity, and athletes adopt strategic nationalities in order to gain funding enabling them to compete. The essay is beautifully written and engages throughout with different aspects of Hall’s thinking – put to work in relation to the specificity of now. The moment – it is argued – is one of both crisis and opportunity: it raises the question as to what kind of nation we want to be, and insists that the nation’s story can be retold. We appreciated its extrapolation of the hybrid histories of the sport, its grasp of the neoliberal dynamics shaping its present, and its deft threading through of personal experience to tell the story on multiple levels”.

The winning essay has been published on the .

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Mon, 13 Apr 2026 09:52:02 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/71a5521b-6fac-4622-87f1-d395dbacd6a9/500_harriethillier.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/71a5521b-6fac-4622-87f1-d395dbacd6a9/harriethillier.jpg?10000
You Ought To Know: Simon Industrial Fellow Karen Gabay releases podcast series about Black British music histories /about/news/simon-industrial-fellow-karen-gabay-releases-podcast-series-about-black-british-music-histories/ /about/news/simon-industrial-fellow-karen-gabay-releases-podcast-series-about-black-british-music-histories/739813The Fellowship ‘This is our Story – Reclaiming Black British music’s his- and herstories’ builds on Karen’s experience working in broadcast media including the BBC and ITV, and as an independent filmmaker, to document the lived experiences of those working within the Black British and ԰ music scenes.

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From January to July 2025 broadcaster and producer Karen Gabay carried out research as part of a Simon Industrial Fellowship with the  and the   at The University of ԰. 

As part of the fellowship Karen Gabay produced a podcast series entitled ‘You Ought To Know’ that will be published across various platforms, with the first episode premiering on 23 March 2026. Each podcast captures a conversation with musicians that have had and continue to have a significant impact on British popular music. These conversations were recorded at public engagement events as well as in intimate one-on-one settings across ԰.

You can listen to and watch the podcast episodes on various platforms. To be notified of new episodes subscribe to Karen Gabay’s  and the School of Arts, Languages and Cultures’  channel.

 

The first podcast is a recording of Karen Gabay’s panel event on Reggae and Dub-Poetry in the UK with Lovers Rock legend , Dub Poetry great  and Reggae and Hip Hop artist  in the ԰ Museum in June 2025. This episode will premiere on 23 March 2026 at 3pm. 

 

The second episode explores the history of Black British Gospel Music and was recorded in  in Deansgate in May 2025. ԰ musician , gospel pioneer , Mancunian vocalist  and Kingdom Choir member and founder of ԰ Inspirational Voices  star in this episode to be released a few weeks later.

 

The third podcast episode features a conversation with renowned Soul singer-songwriter and former Ikette  known for her work with Paul Weller, Peter Gabriel, and Jimmy Cliff. The recording took place across three sessions at The University of ԰ and , the iconic home of Granada Television in July 2025.  

 

The final episode of this series was recorded in July 2025 and features ԰ singer-songwriter  It explores how the musician’s alternative soul and R&B sound is influenced by Black British musicians and led him to pursue collaborations with soul great Jill Scott and UK artist Marsha Ambrosius of Floetry.

These episodes form the beginning of a series of conversations around the unsung legends and influential artists in the UK music industry. Future episodes will be released on Karen Gabay’s channels in the coming months. This bonus content includes in-depth conversations with the Queen of Northern Soul  (Tainted Love) and earlier podcast guests Sylvia Tella and Luke Smith on their lives and work in the Black British music industry. It also features an intimate one-on-one discussion with  who is considered a musician’s favourite and trailblazer in redefining Soul for British audiences.

Throughout her fellowship, Karen was able to build on her interest in uncovering and showcasing forgotten artefacts of Black music history and gained access the  in the  for further archival research. This allowed her to amplify the voices of those working within the UK music sector, in particular Black vocalists, and industry professionals, who have heavily impacted popular music in the UK and globally. She explored how different cultural spaces in ԰ have played a significant role in the lives of these musicians and their path in the music industry over the decades. 

Secondary outputs of the project include Karen Gabay’s reading list and a playlist providing the musical soundtrack for exploring the recent past and present of Black British music and its influences, which can be accessed .

This Simon Industrial Fellowship laid the foundations for documenting alternative music histories in the UK. It explored and applied ethical and collaborative methods of archiving personal stories of a demographic, who have suffered from experiences of institutional exclusion, absence of fair accreditation and missing commercial opportunities due to their race or geographical location. It is taking steps towards righting wrongs of the recent past and gives talented but previously overlooked creatives a platform to tell their stories on their own terms. 

As such it reasserts the relevance and significance of the John Rylands’ British Pop Archive and is adding more diverse and nonetheless equally relevant archival artefacts to its catalogue. This work aligns with the University’s renewed strategic focus on archives and just archival practices to celebrate, document and bring to the fore the stories that make ԰ the city we know today. 

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Thu, 19 Mar 2026 17:09:24 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/53cd4eb8-5881-4fad-8251-3375af0b8324/500_podcastseriescoveryououghttoknowdesktopwallpaper1.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/53cd4eb8-5881-4fad-8251-3375af0b8324/podcastseriescoveryououghttoknowdesktopwallpaper1.png?10000
New Music Takes Centre Stage as Sir John Tomlinson Performs with Hallé Youth Orchestra and Choir /about/news/new-music-takes-centre-stage-as-sir-john-tomlinson-performs-with-halle-youth-orchestra-and-choir/ /about/news/new-music-takes-centre-stage-as-sir-john-tomlinson-performs-with-halle-youth-orchestra-and-choir/739571Sir John Tomlinson, together with the Hallé Youth Orchestra and Choir, will premiere Joshua Brown’s The Wanderer this month.

 and , Lecturer in Composition at the University of ԰, both spent their formative years in rural East Lancashire, Oswaldtwistle and Bacup respectively, and their shared Lancastrian heritage and dialect inspired them to work together on new music that celebrates this region. The Wanderer – the commissioning of which was funded by the Vaughan Williams Foundation – is a song cycle for bass soloist, orchestra, and choir setting four poems by 19th century writer Edwin Waugh, who was often referred to as the .

Edwin Waugh wrote poetry in the distinct dialect of East Lancashire. Each song paints a picture of a wandering figure reflecting on first love, city versus rural life, the pain of loss, and the healing power of nature.

Sir John Tomlinson and the Hallé Youth Orchestra and Choir, conducted by Euan Shields, will premiere The Wanderer at Bridgewater Hall in ԰ on Sunday 22 March.

Information about the upcoming premiere can be found here: 

  

Find out more about Josh Brown’s works here: 

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Tue, 17 Mar 2026 18:15:43 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e50b5cb4-65a5-4b7e-84ce-71056e2fa7c8/500_joshuabrown.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e50b5cb4-65a5-4b7e-84ce-71056e2fa7c8/joshuabrown.jpg?10000
Music Department hosts 'Re:locating the Arts' event with researchers and leading industry partners /about/news/music-department-hosts-relocating-the-arts-event-with-researchers-and-leading-industry-partners/ /about/news/music-department-hosts-relocating-the-arts-event-with-researchers-and-leading-industry-partners/733454The symposium explored research and current practice in the arts with leading industry partner ԰ Camerata. The third in a series of Think Tank events discussed themes emerging from ‘location’ as interrogated by a diverse range of voices and disciplines.

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On 4th November, the University’s Music Department hosted Re:locating the Arts, a symposium which explored research and current practice on themes of location in the output of arts organisations, co-organised with partner organisation ԰ Camerata. With contributions from academia, postgraduate researchers, and professionals working in industry, the event provided an opportunity for a disciplinary diverse range of voices to interrogate current thinking around the role of geographical location in designing and delivering effective arts programmes. 

With representatives from theatre, music, orchestral production, and music education, the event began with a roundtable discussion that examined routes to finding a home within a community. Presentations covered a breadth of topics spotlighting current initiatives and relocations in arts organisations; experimental AI in collective practice; festival partnerships; the positioning of the arts within (and by) universities; civic capital in classical music outreach projects; ethics, rights, and regulations in the University of Sheffield’s Access Folk’s participant-led research; and preliminary findings from the University’s research partnership with English National Opera. 

This symposium was the third in an ongoing series of Think Tank events, in which themes emerging from a collaborative PhD project are discussed and interrogated by a diverse range of voices and disciplines. The Think Tank series will continue in 2026 with an event focusing on the theme which was considered the most urgent for further interrogation: community. 

This event was funded by the North West Consortium Doctoral Training Partnership, part of the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Thanks also to Creative ԰ for their generous support. 

For more information on the Think Tank series, please email Rebecca.parnell@manchester.ac.uk

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Thu, 15 Jan 2026 11:43:24 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e62d30d3-d603-439b-a2e5-e3645aadf251/500_music2.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e62d30d3-d603-439b-a2e5-e3645aadf251/music2.jpeg?10000
Creative ԰ Showcases Student Research and Celebrates University Collaboration at BEYOND Conference 2025 /about/news/creative-manchester-showcases-student-research-and-celebrates-university-collaboration-at-beyond-conference-2025/ /about/news/creative-manchester-showcases-student-research-and-celebrates-university-collaboration-at-beyond-conference-2025/730675For the second-year running, Creative ԰ was one of the partners for the BEYOND Conference, engaging with industry leaders, researchers and artists from across the creative sector.For the second-year running,  was one of the partners for the , engaging with industry leaders, researchers and artists from across the creative sector. The conference provided an opportunity to explore applications of and research into CreaTech and build collaborative links across the UK. 

One of the highlights was Professor John McAuliffe, Creative ԰’s Platform Director, taking part in the panel discussion “Civic, Creative and Cultural: University Collaboration”. The session brought together members of the , including Professor Kirsty Fairclough (School of Digital Arts, ԰ Metropolitan University), Dr Sam Ingleson (University of Salford) and Professor Wiebke Thormählen (Royal Northern College of Music). Together, they demonstrated how universities are helping to create a more connected, creative and equitable city-region through strategic partnerships and cultural engagement.

Creative ԰ also invited three PhD students and their supervisors along to BEYOND for their CreaTech Student Research Showcase. The showcase, located among many other exciting product and research demos in the Immersive Futures Lab, featured the students’ PhD research and celebrated the University of ԰’s vibrant postgraduate research community. These projects show how creative technology can tackle real-world challenges across diverse industries:

  •  - PhD in Electroacoustic Music Composition
    Stream of Strings explores embodied music cognition, blending cultural heritage with creative technology to create motion-responsive performances and visual works. The project reimagines the ancient Chinese Guqin as an interactive instrument for live performance and public engagement. She is supervised by .

  •  - PhD in Electroacoustic Music Composition
    Data Sonification for Algorithm Behaviour uses sonification, the mapping of non-auditory data into sound, to better understand how optimisation algorithms work. This approach advances mathematical research while inspiring educational tools and musical compositions. He is also supervised by Professor Ricardo Climent.

  •  - PhD in Computer Science
    ReflectanceFusion is a neural text-to-texture model that generates editable, relightable materials from text prompts. It enables precise control of physical attributes, producing highly accurate textures for rendering and material design. He is supervised by 

The showcase sparked lively conversations among attendees, with many playing the Guqin virtually via a Leap Motion Controller and others listening to the beats generated by algorithms being solved in real time. Not only did the students get to practise their pitching skills, but they also found partners for onward collaboration and learning. It was great to see how the next generation of researchers and business partners can come together and seize opportunities for R&D.

More content from BEYOND 2025 will be shared soon, but  to get an idea of the atmosphere at this special conference. 

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Fri, 05 Dec 2025 15:18:30 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b9108249-8442-413d-af56-d9e4a47e8d6a/500_creativemanchesteratthebeyondconference.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b9108249-8442-413d-af56-d9e4a47e8d6a/creativemanchesteratthebeyondconference.jpeg?10000
University of ԰ hosts unveiling of 2026 BRIT Awards Trophy /about/news/university-of-manchester-hosts-unveiling-of-2026-brit-awards-trophy/ /about/news/university-of-manchester-hosts-unveiling-of-2026-brit-awards-trophy/729192The University of ԰ proudly hosted the unveiling of the official 2026 BRIT Awards trophy design at the University’s , marking a major cultural moment as the BRITs prepare to be hosted in ԰ for the first time in their history.

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The University of ԰ proudly hosted the unveiling of the official 2026 BRIT Awards trophy design at the University’s , marking a major cultural moment as the BRITs prepare to be hosted in ԰ for the first time in their history. 

The trophy, designed by internationally acclaimed ԰-born designer was unveiled during a special event celebrating both the city’s creative heritage and the University’s role as a hub for arts, design, music and performance. The University of ԰’s , home to the renowned - the UK’s first large-scale, dedicated collection for the preservation and study of popular, counter- and youth culture - helped frame the significance of the occasion. 

At the event, attended by fashion, music and drama students from across the University, guests witnessed the first public reveal of the iconic trophy and took part in an in-depth Q&A with Williamson. The conversation, led by , Head of Collections, Teaching and Research at the John Rylands Library, offered students and attendees unique insight into the designer’s creative process, his career journey, and what it means to see the BRITs come to his home city. 

Williamson’s design draws deeply from ԰’s identity. Crafted in amber-toned resin reminiscent of the golden honey of the worker bee, the city’s enduring symbol of resilience, the trophy sits atop a globe representing the global reach and influence of British music. 

Heather Cole from the John Rylands Research Institute and Library added: “It was a privilege to host Matthew Williamson and introduce our students to the creative thinking behind this year’s BRITs trophy.  

At the John Rylands Library, and through the British Pop Archive, we are committed to preserving and celebrating the cultural movements that shape British identity. Seeing a ԰-born designer lead this new chapter of the BRIT Awards resonates strongly with our mission, and it was inspiring to give students direct access to such an influential figure.” 

, taking place on Saturday 28th February at ԰’s , marks the first time the ceremony will be hosted outside London. This year’s trophy places ԰ and the University, firmly at the centre of the BRITs’ new era. 

Matthew Williamson joins a distinguished list of creatives who have shaped the BRITs trophy, including , , , , , , , . Each year, the BRITs commission a leading artist to reinterpret the iconic statue, ensuring it remains a dynamic symbol of British creativity. 

As the BRIT Awards begin their first-ever chapter in ԰, the University’s involvement underscores its commitment to celebrating and fostering the city’s rich cultural landscape while offering transformative experiences for its students. 

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Thu, 20 Nov 2025 13:28:59 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6ded6eca-b0a0-45e5-a2e7-be0e960cc66d/500_britstrophylaunch-03.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6ded6eca-b0a0-45e5-a2e7-be0e960cc66d/britstrophylaunch-03.jpg?10000
Professor delivers keynote at landmark conference on AI in Music and the Digital Humanities /about/news/ai-in-music-and-the-digital-humanities/ /about/news/ai-in-music-and-the-digital-humanities/692289Ricardo Climent gave a keynote address in Edinburgh on transformative uses and implications of AI in Music, Gaming and Geolocation. The event also featured an immersive sci-fi opera, and Climent's interactive installation 'AI Beatboxer’.On Friday, 7 March 2025, delivered a compelling keynote speech at 'Creative Dynamics II: AI & Digital Innovations for Voice and Vocal Music', a one-day conference hosted by the .

The event, supported by the (IASH) brought together leading experts to explore cutting-edge advancements in AI-driven composition, voice synthesis, and the evolving legal, ethical, and economic landscape of AI-generated music.

His talk explored 30 years of practice-led research, from dataset sonification for composition to disruptive technologies shaping the University of ԰'s – including geolocative tech, game engines, and AI in music – culminating in works like his concert piece and interactive installation AI Beatboxer (Noh Virtual).

Another highlight of the conference was the UK première of AI Opera ū (Ghost) – an immersive Japanese sci-fi opera that captivated a packed audience of 200 attendees. Designed, produced, and directed by , postdoctoral scholar in Intermediality & Digital Humanities at the University of Edinburgh and Lund University, the opera showcased AI’s potential in reshaping vocal performance and storytelling.

This landmark event underscored the transformative role of artificial intelligence in vocal music, setting the stage for further innovation in the field.

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