Date:
Friday 23 May 2025
Time:
6:00pm for 6:30pm
Venue:
The CHR’s Iyatsiba Lab,
66 Greatmore Street, Woodstock
(enter via Regents Road)
This solo multimedia concert by Angolan composer and performer Victor Gama forms part of a long-term project responding to the unfinished research of anthropologist Augusto Zita N’Gonguenho. In the 1980s, Zita conducted fieldwork on Angola’s southwest coast using both scientific and divinatory methods rooted in local knowledge systems.
His work was abruptly halted by disappearance in 1987, later linked to covert operations by apartheid South Africa’s National Intelligence Service. Drawing on Zita’s partially recovered notes, Gama has developed a body of work that engages sound as a mode of historical recovery.
Performed on the acrux and toha – two original instruments he designed – this concert combines acoustic innovation with digital media, and reflects Gama’s ongoing exploration of the intersections between tradition, technology, and memory. Developed as part of his long-term INSTRMNTS project, Gama combines polyrhythmic patterns from Southern Africa, electronic music, and contemporary composition to explore new sonic possibilities. This performance continues a touring history that includes venues such as Carnegie Hall, Philharmonie Luxembourg, and Stanford University.
Speaker Bio

Victor Gama
Born in Angola, Victor Gama is a composer whose creative process began with the development of an entirely new series of musical instruments known as INSTRMNTS. The core idea behind these instruments is that their design evolves in direct relation to the conceptual framework of a composition or series of compositions intended for their use. As such, they act as guiding interfaces, or mediators, between the composer and the symbolic material he gathers to shape a particular musical lexicon. The instrument is understood as a form of writing, generating new variables that have the potential to influence the written score. Gama holds a BSc in Electronics Engineering and an MA in Music Technology from the Faculty of Art, Architecture and Design at London Metropolitan University. He is currently a guest researcher through a PhD in the Arts at Ghent University and KASK & Conservatorium