The Deep Chemistry of Life and Death

November 15, 2025Den Grå Hal Copenhagen
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Doors open: 19:00
Start programme: 19:30
Den Grå Hal
Refshalevej 2
Copenhagen

Science & Cocktails is proud to announce an episode with biochemist Nick Lane, Professor of Evolutionary Biochemistry and Director of the Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE) at University College London and author of the book "The Deep Chemistry of Life and Death", who will tell you about what are the building blocks of life. All this after A PLANE TO CATCH plays salsa, afrobeat and fused sound.

Seated tickets are paid. Standing tickets are free and valid until 8pm. This means that you should enter before 8pm and can stay the entire event.After 8pm we let people in on a first come, first served basis.

How did life on Earth begin? Why did animals evolve so quickly in the ‘Cambrian explosion’? Why is the same biochemical cycle used to create and destroy? Can bacteria feel pain? What brings our own lives to an end?

What brings the Earth to life and our own lives to an end? The answer is not 42, but something equally anodyne – the Krebs cycle. Most people learn about the Krebs cycle in school as a simple set of reactions used to generate energy in cells. But we are not usually taught that it can also run backwards to turn simple gases into living matter. Or that this could be how life on Earth began. Or that this tension between creation and destruction – between burning organic molecules in respiration and forming them anew from gases – underpins ageing and diseases such as cancer. We are definitely not told that this tension might give rise to consciousness itself. Nick Lane will tell you about these things over a cocktail or two.

Event held in English and with the generous support of the Novo Nordisk Foundation.

Programme

  • 19:30–   20:15
    A PLANE TO CATCH– 
    stage
  • 20:45–   21:45
    Nick Lane– 
    stage
  • 21:45–   23:30
    DJ

Talk by

Nick Lane

Professor of Evolutionary Biochemistry and Director of the Centre for Life’s Origins and Evolution (CLOE) at University College London. His research is on how energy flow has shaped evolution from the origin of life to the evolution of complex eukaryotic cells and the emergence of traits such as sex, ageing and consciousness. Nick has published more than 130 papers in leading journals including Nature, Cell and Science, and written five award-winning books which have been translated into 30 languages. Bill Gates called Nick Lane's book The Vital Question “an amazing inquiry into the origins of life”. Photo by Philipp Ammon for Quanta Magazine.

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Music by

A PLANE TO CATCH

The band consists of some of Denmark's leading young Danish jazz musicians and plays exclusively original compositions. With inspiration from musicians such as Maceo Parker, Fela Kuti, Al Green, Eddie Harris, James Brown and many others, the band has found its very own funk, soul, latin, salsa, afrobeat, fused sound. And with extensive experience from the Danish and international music scene, this new orchestra delivers instrumental dance music in a class of its own.

A Plane To Catch
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