Archive for May 2010

A tour of living-rooms?

Posted by Susan Tomes on 29 May 2010 under Concerts, Daily Life, Musings  •  2 Comments

This is my 200th blog post! Here’s a photo of me playing for an invited audience recently in someone’s private home. I really like playing (and also going to hear) house concerts, which feel like a variant on the ‘salons’ of previous centuries.
Understandably, such house concerts are usually a money-free zone for all concerned. But since I enjoy playing [...]

Better than it sounds

Posted by Susan Tomes on 27 May 2010 under Daily Life, Musings  •  Leave a comment

Our cat’s preferred brand of catfood has a disarming slogan: ‘As good as it looks’.  The layers of meaning quiver in front of your eyes almost as much as the meaty jelly does when you spoon it out. Obviously, ‘as good as it looks’ is meant to put positive thoughts in your head about the catfood, but it has [...]

Isabella Plantation, Richmond Park

Posted by Susan Tomes on 24 May 2010 under Daily Life, Inspirations  •  Leave a comment

Once again this year the azaleas of the Isabella Plantation, the botanical garden in the middle of Richmond Park, have all come out at once. In previous years they tactfully staggered their weeks of blooming so that different bits of the park came to life at different times, but last year and this year the azaleas co-ordinated [...]

Eurovision Young Musicians 2010

Posted by Susan Tomes on 21 May 2010 under Concerts, Daily Life, Musings  •  Leave a comment

After rejoicing that the BBC had improved its ‘Young Musician of the Year’ coverage so markedly in 2010, I had to grind my teeth with annoyance as I watched the ‘Eurovision Young Musicians 2010’ competition on BBC4 this evening. The young musicians were tremendous, but the presentation was horribly bland. Fifteen semi-finalists were whittled down to seven [...]

The Abbey of Silvacane

Posted by Susan Tomes on 19 May 2010 under Daily Life, Inspirations, Musings  •  Leave a comment

I was in Provence in the south of France last week and visited the Abbey of Silvacane, founded by the Cistercians in the late 12th century but long since abandoned. I thought it one of the loveliest churches I’ve seen. The  church, cloister, garden, chapter house, refectory, dormitory, scriptorium and so on presented one delightful prospect after [...]