Robert Laidlow - Composer

Territories - General Management, Worldwide (including Publishing)

Robert Laidlow is a composer and researcher based in the UK. His “gigantically imaginative” (BBC Radio 3) music is concerned with developing new forms of creative expression through the relationship between music, advanced technology, and scientific research.

Photograph by Tom Haniff

Robert’s music investigating the intersection of classical music, artificial intelligence, and creativity includes a number of orchestral, chamber, and solo works. ‘Silicon’ (2022), a symphonic-length work for the BBC Philharmonic and artificial intelligence, explores human music-making in the age of AI and has been featured in the New York Times, the New Scientist, Sky News, Bachtrack, BBC Radio, and international television. ‘Post-Singularity Songs’ (2023) for soprano Stephanie Lamprea, uses AI to invent creation myths and love songs, situating this technology as oracle and worldbuilder. ‘Tui’ (2024), for International Contemporary Ensemble, examines AI in relation to other non-human intelligence.

Robert’s creative process also frequently involves collaborations with scientists. He is currently beginning work on ‘Exoplanets’, a set of orchestral movements developed through conversation with astrophysicists working with NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. He is midway through a long-term project translating each of the four fundamental forces into music, having composed ‘Gravity’ (2020) for the Echea Quartet and ‘Chromodynamics’ (2021) for the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra.

Compositional projects in 24-25 include the premiere of ‘content’, music about the Internet for saxophonist David Zucchi and electronics, ‘PLAY’, a partnership transforming video game controllers into expressive musical instruments, and ‘TECHNO-UTOPIA’, a concerto for AI-powered digital instruments and orchestra.

Robert’s work has been performed by leading musicians in the UK, including the Riot Ensemble, Psappha, the Britten Sinfonia, the Elias Quartet, Chineke!, and Joseph Havlat. He has been awarded a Royal Philharmonic Society Composer’s Prize, an Ivan Juritz Prize, and been nominated for two Ivor Novello Composers Awards along with the RMA Tippett Medal.

Photograph by Jonathan Slater

Born in London in 1994, he read Music at Cambridge University before studying Composition with David Sawer at the Royal Academy of Music. From 2018-22 he was the RNCM PRiSM (Centre for Practice & Research in Science & Music) PhD Researcher in Artificial Intelligence with the BBC Philharmonic. This resulted in a number of orchestral and ensemble works, including ‘Warp’ for piano and orchestra and ‘Three Entistatios’ for chamber ensemble. He is currently a Fellow at Jesus College, Oxford University. Recent publications have focussed on notions of truth, authenticity, fakeness, bias, and structuralism in technology and music. He also lectures in Composition at the Faculty of Music, Oxford, is an Associate of RNCM PRiSM, and is a member of the Governing Body of the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.