'Concerts' Blog Post Archive
Keeping the score

Keeping the score

There was an article in the paper the other day about the sale of a valuable private collection of art works, some of which hadn't come onto the art market for a long time. It got me thinking about art and how a collector can buy a painting and keep it somewhere...

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Review of my book on Presto Music

Review of my book on Presto Music

I was on my way to Wigmore Hall in London for my recital a few days ago when this very pleasing review of my Nocturne book popped up on Presto Music. I think reviews are a new kind of offering on Presto Music, so in case readers haven't come across it, I thought I'd...

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Thinking back to my first time at Wigmore Hall

Thinking back to my first time at Wigmore Hall

Preparations are going well for my recital at London's Wigmore Hall on 17 April at 1pm. If you live near London, I hope you might come along. I can't remember if I've told this story before, but I can't track it down in a previous blog post, so here it is, with...

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A travelling force

A travelling force

I've been reading An Angel at my Table, the autobiography of New Zealand writer Janet Frame. It's an unusual and absorbing read. Janet Frame grew up without much access to music, but when she first came across classical music she loved it. Gradually she gathered some...

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Tickets go on sale for my Wigmore recital in April

Tickets go on sale for my Wigmore recital in April

Tickets have just gone on sale for my lunchtime recital at Wigmore Hall in London on Friday April 17. Click here for booking information. As you'll read on the Wigmore Hall website, the concert marks the publication of my book on the history of the nocturne. To give a...

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Take 1, 13, 21, 47, 109, 205

Take 1, 13, 21, 47, 109, 205

I've returned from London, where I recorded an album for Hyperion of piano music by some of the women featured in my book. I had a wonderful recording team. Incredibly, it's now 40 years since I first recorded an album with producer Andrew Keener, now a doyen of the...

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Unyoking the horses

Unyoking the horses

Today's blog post is on quite a niche subject. When I was writing a short biography of pianist Sophie Menter (1846-1912) for Women and the Piano, I mentioned some of the extravagant things her fans used to do to show their adoration. When she played in Copenhagen in...

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‘… a mad attack upon your hands’

‘… a mad attack upon your hands’

When I was playing in Birmingham a couple of weeks ago, I had an interesting conversation with a student there. (Birmingham University is rightly protective of its students' identities, so I won't name her.)  She was studying aspects of the history of women playing...

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A nice memory of Prunella Scales

A nice memory of Prunella Scales

News of the death of the wonderful comic actress Prunella Scales at the age of 93 has reminded me of a little anecdote in my first book, Beyond the Notes, in the section about touring Japan with the Florestan Trio in 2000. Twenty-five years ago! For context, I should...

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Wordsworth windows

On Wednesday I played a solo recital in Ambleside Church as part of the Lake District Summer Music festival. My programme contained six pieces by the female pianist-composers whose work I have been performing in the past couple of years. In the context, I was touched...

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Look, no hands

Look, no hands

I've been remembering a little conversation which happened years ago when a fellow musician was giving me a lift to the Tube station in London. I was on my way to play a concert. As I was getting out of the car, he said to me: 'Have you got your music?' 'Yes.' 'Have...

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Different audiences, different reactions

Different audiences, different reactions

I have been going to events at the Edinburgh Jazz Festival. There seems to be a lot of overlap between the audiences, because I keep seeing the same faces. It's interesting to observe the effects that different performers have on the audiences. Some performers banter...

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The imaginary concert hall at the end of the street

The imaginary concert hall at the end of the street

A friend and I have been discussing the career of a mutual friend who died recently. He was a fabulous musician who wasn't as well known as he should have been. Writers and visual artists can stay put in the place where they choose to live, and create their work...

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Watching the Van Cliburn piano competition

Watching the Van Cliburn piano competition

I have been keeping half an eye on the 2025 Van Cliburn piano competition in Texas, partly because when I was writing Women and the Piano I did a fair amount of research into the gender disparity one can see in the lists of piano competition prizewinners around the...

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Back story? A new weapon in career-building

Back story? A new weapon in career-building

A new series of Channel 4's 'The Piano' has begun. Judge Mika is still there, but Lang Lang has left the show and in his place is the multi-talented American musician Jon Batiste. For anyone who isn't familiar with the show, this is the concept: an upright piano is...

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