DMLab London: September Synth Special

DMLab London: September Synth Special

By Drake Music

Diving into the world of accessible synthesizers and instruments via talks and a performance.

Date and time

Location

Rich Mix

35-47 Bethnal Green Road London E1 6LA United Kingdom

Good to know

Highlights

  • 2 hours, 30 minutes
  • In person
  • Doors at 5:30 PM

About this event

Event overview

Doors open 6.30pm, with presentations starting at 7pm

DMLab is a space for Disabled and Non-Disabled musicians, technologists, and makers to exchange practices and explore new accessible instruments.

At this event, we’re excited to explore the world of accessible synthesizers and instruments, discovering the role they can play in inclusive performance.

Featuring presentations from:

  • Mat Dalgleish (he/him): A researcher, educator, artist-designer and congenitally one-handed musician working at the intersection of people, music and audiovisual technology, and accessibility. Mat will join us remotely.

  • Paulee Alex Bow (they/them): An autistic musician from Birmingham. Paulee's work explores themes of isolation, inequality and recovery via vocal-lead orchestral landscapes dotted with crumbling Synthwave, Industrial & Chiptune structures.

  • Hunaid Nagaira (he/him): A London-based designer, technologist and illustrator. Hunaid will present Midas, a brand new accessible instrument developed during our 2024-25 Accessible Instrument Development Fund programme.

More

The event will also include opportunities for networking and music making and testing a selection of instruments from Drake Music’s Accessible Musical Instrument Collection.

While this will be an in-person event, there will also be the opportunity to view the presentations online. Register for an online ticket to receive the YouTube link, which will be shared ahead of the event.

Access

  • Rich Mix, is wheelchair accessible, via a permanent entrance ramp and internal lifts.
  • The event will be held in The Studio, which is level throughout, located on the 4th floor.
  • There are accessible toilets (with RADAR locks) on the ground, 1st, 2nd and 4th floors.
  • We will have live captions and BSL interpreters at the session (also on the livestream).
  • There is a hearing loop in the Studio that can be used by switching most hearing aids to the ‘T’ position.
  • There is also an infrared system in The Studio which requires the use of headsets, provided by Rich Mix.
  • There will be a quiet space available.

Please let us know of any specific access requirements when registering for the event.

Find out more about accessibility at Rich Mix

About the speakers

Mat Dalgleish (he/him)

Image description: Close-up of the face of a man with short dark hair, trimmed facial hair, and a slight smile, looking directly at the camera under warm lighting. The background is a neutral light colour and slightly blurred.

Dr. Mat Dalgleish is a researcher, educator, and artist-designer working at the intersection of people, music and audiovisual technology, and accessibility. He is also a congenitally one-handed musician. Mat has previously worked at The OU Music Computing Lab and led postgraduate performing arts provision at the University of Wolverhampton. He is currently Senior Lecturer in Game Audio at the University of Staffordshire, a Leonardo CripTech AI Lab fellow, an Accessibility Chair of NIME 2026, and a trustee of The OHMI Trust.

Bending the Clock: Modular Synthesizers and Disabled Temporalities

The last two decades have seen a marked focus on the provision of accessible interfaces. This talk, illustrated with musical/practical examples, argues that, through their ability to “bend the clock” and reshape musical time to suit the needs of non-normative bodies, modular synthesizers offer a more radical model of accessibility.

Paulee Alex Bow (they/them)

Image description: Paulee Alex Bow performing in a black latex dress and thigh-high stockings whilst playing a Korg keyboard and singing into a microphone. Behind is colourful stage lighting and glowing rectangular panels.

Paulee Alex Bow is an autistic musician from Birmingham, UK. Their work wields dark themes of isolation, inequality and recovery set amongst the bright phosphors of vintage CRT's and computers.

Bow's vocal-lead orchestral landscapes are dotted with crumbling Synthwave, Industrial & Chiptune structures; art as therapy out of necessity. Paulee will be both performing and presenting at this event.

Hunaid Nagaira (he/him)

Image description: A man in his late twenties with short dark hair, glasses, and a white t-shirt, smiling slightly against a soft grey background.

Hunaid is a designer, technologist & illustrator based in London. He loves building things which improve how people go about their everyday lives. The challenges that excite Hunaid the most are where his contributions aren't limited to a singular discipline.

Hunaid's work has been supported/recognised by institutions such as the Mayor of London's office, IxDA, Ordnance Survey, Grantham Institute, All India Council for Technical Education, and the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851.

Midas

Hunaid will present Midas, an adaptive, wearable controller that transforms any object or surface into a uniquely calibrated musical interface. Born from a five-month co‑design journey, this project asked: how might we redefine access to recreational tech for people with muscle‑weakening conditions like Muscular Dystrophy?

Rather than treating control as something rigid and standardised, Midas brings interaction to the user’s fingertips—using soft, fabric-based force sensors to create a highly personal and flexible input system.

We can't wait to welcome you!

Organized by

Drake Music are leaders in music, disability and technology.

We are innovators, educators, curators and advocates. We believe everyone has the right to express themselves creatively through music. We use innovative technologies and ideas to open up access to music for all. Our vision is a world where disabled and non-disabled musicians work together as equals.

 

Free
Sep 22 · 6:30 PM GMT+1