Daniel Kidane: N’dehou
Don’t miss the London premiere of celebrated composer Daniel Kidane’s choral work ‘N’dehou’, performed by The Carice Singers.
The Carice Singers perform N’dehou, a new choral work they have commissioned from acclaimed British composer Daniel Kidane for the 2025 New Music Biennial.
N’dehou takes its name from a Central African bamboo flute which was brought to the attention of a wider audience by the Cameroonian musicologist Francis Bebey (1929 – 2001).
N’dehou will be broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and available for download from NMC Recordings.
Daniel Kidane‘s music has been performed extensively across the UK and abroad as well as being broadcast on BBC Radio 3, described by the Financial Times as ‘quietly impressive’ and by The Times as ‘tautly constructed’ and ‘vibrantly imagined’. He teaches composition at the RNCM and Cambridge University.
Recent highlights include the world premieres of ‘Sun Poem’, premiered by the London Symphony Orchestra and Sir Simon Rattle, and a Violin Concerto, premiered by Julia Fischer.
The Carice Singers and their director George Parris are known for their ‘exquisite, bold programming’ (Royal Philharmonic Society) in a wide variety of music. They regularly perform at many of the UK’s top venues and festivals, and since 2021 have been involved in summer composer academies for Cheltenham Music Festival, the Three Choirs Festival and Spitalfields Music.
Part of New Music Biennial, this event includes two performances of the same work and a short interview with the creative team in between the two, enabling audiences to experience the second performance with greater insight into the creative process.
Performers
The Carice Singers
George Parris conductor
Repertoire
Daniel Kidane: N'dehou for chorus (London premiere)
Need to know
This event is free, but ticketed. Seating is unallocated and tickets don’t guarantee entry: admission is on a first-come, first-served basis for those with tickets. Please arrive early to avoid disappointment.
Tickets may be available on the day on a first-come, first-served basis from the venue.
For your visit
This event is held at the Queen Elizabeth Hall Southbank Centre
The Queen Elizabeth Hall is open from 90 minutes before events start until they finish. It’s closed at all other times.
Plan your visit
The Queen Elizabeth Hall is home to both our second-largest auditorium and the Purcell Room.
Getting here
Our address is Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London, SE1 8XX.
The nearest tube stations to us are Waterloo and Embankment; Waterloo is also the nearest train station. And more than 20 different London bus routes pass within 500 metres of our venues. More information on getting here by rail, road or river is available on our Getting here page.
We’re cash-free
Please note that we’re unable to accept cash payments across our venues.
Access
We’re working hard to remove barriers, so that our facilities and events can be accessible to as many people as possible.
All help points, toilets, performance and exhibition spaces at the Southbank Centre are accessible to all, as are the cafes, bars and restaurants. We also have excellent public transport links with step-free access.
All information about booking wheelchair spaces, step-free access, blue badge parking, access maps and guides and other help available whilst you’re here, including details about our Access Scheme, can be found on our Access page.
Food & drink
From coffee to cocktails, filling favourites to fine dining, plus some of London’s best street food – it’s all here at the Southbank Centre.