I'm always thinking about infinity and how to respond to it in music. Infinity is such an interesting area, and I have a few examples of that in anti sphere. There are lots of ways that you can think about infinity, so you can start with,. as we've said, a sequence of doubles and doubles and doubles. That can give you an idea of how you might approach infinity, but there are in writing and in music as well. And Emily also, you know, the whole idea that it's about math, but also you can pause music based on poetry which has another rhythm to it. Lots of rhythms. Yes.
Kirsty Wark celebrates the artistry of numbers with three mathematicians Eugenia Cheng, Sarah Hart and Emily Howard.
Eugenia Cheng asks Is Maths Real? in her new book, which offers a new way to look at the subject by focusing on the questions, rather than the answers. She explores how asking the simplest of questions – ‘why does 1 + 1 = 2?’ – can get to the very heart of the search for mathematical truth.
Sarah Hart wants to break down the perceived barriers between mathematics and the creative arts. In Once Upon a Prime: The Wondrous Connections Between Mathematics and Literature she reveals the geometry lurking in Moby-Dick, George Eliot’s obsession with statistics, and Jurassic Park’s fractal patterns.
Emily Howard has a dual passion for maths and music. In her compositions she plays with mathematical shapes and processes. Her new record Torus, released on NMC Recordings in April, brings together works including sphere and Compass.
Producer: Katy Hickman