Archive for the ‘Musings’ Category

Wrong notes versus wrong words

Posted by Susan Tomes on 23 April 2010 under Daily Life, Musings  •  3 Comments

We attended a funeral in a small church this week. As we sat waiting for the service to begin, an organist was stumbling through some well-known hymns, their outlines blurred by a haze of wrong notes. Though I tell myself to lighten up, I find I’m very impatient with this kind of stumbling. I can’t ignore it and tell myself [...]

Look, no planes

Posted by Susan Tomes on 17 April 2010 under Daily Life, Musings  •  Leave a comment

Like most other people in Britain I’ve been relishing the sudden quietness resulting from the closure of our airspace because of a drifting cloud of volcanic ash from Iceland. On Saturday I sat in the garden for ages, because it felt so special to be sitting  under the Heathrow flightpath with a totally silent sky (see photo). Well, [...]

Pitch Inflation

Posted by Susan Tomes on 12 April 2010 under Concerts, Daily Life, Musings  •  Leave a comment

My piano tuner asks whether I’m happy to keep my piano at the usual pitch, A=440. Yes. Why wouldn’t I be? Well, he says, some British orchestras are now asking for pianos to be tuned at A=442 Hz. Now that there’s so much musical traffic between countries, we’re under pressure to adopt ‘European’ tuning, and [...]

Updating golden oldies

Posted by Susan Tomes on 10 April 2010 under Concerts, Daily Life, Musings  •  Leave a comment

Last night we watched an enjoyable BBC4 programme, ‘The Great American Songbook’. Various artists such as Paolo Nutini, Melody Gardot, Krystle Warren, Gwyneth Herbert, José James and my own personal favourite, Claire Martin gave us their own, updated versions of classic songs from the 1920s onwards. I love the ‘golden age’ of American musicals (Gershwin, [...]

Changing attitudes to recording

Posted by Susan Tomes on 8 April 2010 under Concerts, Daily Life, Musings  •  Leave a comment

At the moment I have seven or eight new pieces on the music desk of my piano. I have to learn them all by the summer. Some are works I’ve never heard played, and in such cases I find it helpful to listen to a recording before I start work. The internet has made things far [...]