Archive for the ‘Musings’ Category

The strength of his up-bow

Posted by Susan Tomes on 5 January 2011 under Daily Life, Musings  •  1 Comment

I’ve been in Scotland, where I enjoyed seeing Raeburn’s portrait of the 18th-century Scottish fiddler Niel Gow in the Scottish National Gallery in Edinburgh. I was amused by the information beside the painting, which explained that ‘as a fiddler, Gow was especially acclaimed for the strength of his up-bow, or returning stroke.’ Never have I [...]

The baton and the jackboot

Posted by Susan Tomes on 1 January 2011 under Books, Concerts, Musings  •  Leave a comment

I’ve just finished reading a fascinating book published in 1944: The Baton and the Jackboot, by Berta Geissmar, the personal assistant of conductor Wilhelm Furtwangler during his great days in Germany. After Geissmar had been forced to leave Germany during the Hitler regime, she emigrated to London where she became the assistant of conductor Sir Thomas Beecham. [...]

Changes in the air

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

Went for dinner with a number of friends, some young, some older. As it was our last gathering before the New Year, we found ourselves asking one another how the old year had been, and whether we had any plans for the new one. This kind of discussion usually provokes a mixed response across a [...]

‘Of Gods and Men’

Posted by Susan Tomes on 13 December 2010 under Daily Life, Musings  •  Leave a comment

Went to a marvellous French film, ‘Of Gods and Men’. These days I’m often disappointed when I go to the cinema but this was an exception. The film tells the story of a group of Cistercian monks in a small monastery in the Atlas Mountains of Algeria at a time of religious and political upheaval [...]

Instant Commentary

Posted by Susan Tomes on 9 December 2010 under Concerts, Daily Life, Musings  •  1 Comment

Interesting article the other day in The Guardian about the fact that many people now chat online about what they’re watching on TV, while they’re watching it. They don’t wait for the end of the programme, but start commenting on Twitter right away about things that annoy them, please them, or make them laugh. TV [...]