| Programme to include: | |
|---|---|
| Luke Lewis | O Dreamland |
| Louis Andriessen | Worker’s Union |
| Steve Martland | Drill |
| Joseph Havlat | piano |
|---|---|
| GBSR Duo: | |
| George Barton | percussion |
| Siwan Rhys | piano |
At the centre of this programme are two landmark works by Steve Martland and his mentor Louis Andriessen, composers who fearlessly challenged musical and political convention. Martland’s Drill and Andriessen’s Worker’s Union are fierce, percussive and unapologetically direct, embodying their shared belief in music as a vehicle for social comment and collective energy.
Luke Lewis’ O Dreamland, was written in response to the parallel anniversaries of Martland and filmmaker Lindsay Anderson. Drawing on Anderson’s realist portrait of seaside Britain, Martland’s Liverpool roots and the maritime thread of his Sea Songs, Lewis folds historic recordings and Martland’s own voice into a vivid, time-bending soundscape.
Together, these works celebrate two visionary composers and the artistic legacies they continue to inspire.
This event will last approximately 1 hour and 50 minutes, including an interval.
Kings Place Concessions Tickets
We want to ensure that people who may be struggling financially to purchase a ticket can still enjoy visiting Kings Place. A limited number of tickets are allocated for certain events (if the ticket type does not show in the booking pathway, it means they are not available for this event or have all been sold). Concessions tickets are accessible for people on the following criteria (for more information visit our FAQs)
£10 ‘Under 30s’ tickets
A limited number of £10 tickets for attendees aged under 30 are available for certain shows. To purchase an ‘Under 30s’ ticket, please choose the ‘Under 30s’ price type when selecting your ticket(s). If the option does not appear, this means all ‘Under 30s’ tickets have sold out or are not available for this performance. Please note that proof of age may be requested at the venue. The £10 offer does not apply to premium price categories.
Getting here
Kings Place is situated just a few minutes’ walk from King’s Cross and St Pancras stations, one of the most connected locations in London and now the biggest transport hub in Europe.
Our address is:
90 York Way, London, N1 9AG.
The Venue
Our performance spaces are situated on the lower ground floor. Hall One, Hall Two and St Pancras are located in level -2, reached by stairs, escalator and lift from the ground floor entrance level.
Event Times
Door times indicate auditorium entrance times only. Visitors are welcome to enjoy the Kings Place seating areas, gallery-level art, canal-side terrace, café, restaurant and bar throughout the day and evening.
We aim to make your visit to Kings Place as comfortable as possible. For more information about the accessibility of Kings Place, including details about our Access Scheme, please visit this page.
If you would like to discuss your access requirements with a member of our team, please get in touch with the Box Office team at info@kingsplace.co.uk.
Rotunda Bar & Restaurant
Rotunda, situated on the ground floor of Kings Place, offers a unique dining and drinking experience alongside Regent’s Canal. The concert bar in the venue foyer will also be open for select events.
Green & Fortune Café
Recently re-furbished and now open with a new look, the Green & Fortune Café is open for selected concerts. Serving hot and cold food and drinks, including sandwiches, salads, soup, stew and a pie of the day, alongside a choice of cakes made by the on-site bakery team. See here for selected concert dates and standard opening hours.

2026 Artists-in-Residence, GBSR Duo – George Barton (percussion) and Siwan Rhys (piano) – combines two of the UK’s finest young contemporary chamber instrumentalists. The duo has built its reputation on a combination of exceptional interpretations of the existing piano-percussion repertoire, committed performances of ambitious new commissions, and inventive collaborations.
Known for their fearless, intense and boundary-crossing performances, GBSR Duo’s work ranges from the twentieth-century modernism of Stockhausen and Ustvolskaya to music by Brian Eno and Aphex Twin; from the exquisite delicacy of composers like Morton Feldman, Eva-Maria Houben and Barbara Monk Feldman to the experimental and cross-genre work of Oliver Leith and CHAINES.
With an emphasis on commissioning and repertoire-building complemented by the respect and trust of composers, GBSR Duo’s recent world premieres include works from Eva-Maria Houben, CHAINES, Lawrence Dunn, Cassie Kinoshi, Alex Tay, Linda Catlin Smith, Julius Aglinskas, Tim Parkinson and many others.
Their freewheeling collaborations range from team-ups with leading musicians like the Heath Quartet, EXAUDI, 12 Ensemble, Sean Shibe, and the LA Philharmonic, to inventive cross-disciplinary pairings with artists like Angharad Davies, Dejan Mrdja and Cameron Graham.
GBSR Duo were the winners of the Royal Philharmonic Society 2025 Young Artist award, where the judges commended them for a “commitment to new music that’s thrilling in its fearlessness…their programmes and collaborations fizz with style, energy and invention”.
Recent performances include their US debut performing Oliver Leith at Walt Disney Hall with the LA Philharmonic and Thomas Adès, and their Lithuanian debut playing new works by Lawrence Dunn and Julius Aglinskas in Vilnius and Kaunas. Other recent premieres include Alex Tay, Cassie Kinoshi and Linda Catlin Smith at the Wigmore Hall; Joe Duddell and Luke Lewis at Three Choirs Festival; and the multimedia theatrical electronica of CHAINES at Spitalfields Music Festival.