'Concerts' Blog Post Archive
Growing up without live music

Growing up without live music

Recently I visited my old college in Cambridge to give a recital. While I was there, I took the opportunity to attend two services of Evensong in the college chapel. As always, hearing sacred music sung in those glorious surroundings (see photo) was a striking...

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A competition for concertos

A competition for concertos

I spent the past couple of days popping in and out of the first round of the Concerto Class held each year by the Edinburgh Music Competition Festival. The Concerto Class is strictly for amateurs; those who get to the final are given the opportunity to play their...

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Listening bars

Listening bars

In today's Guardian I was reading about the Japanese tradition of 'listening bars', where customers have 'a deep, beautiful, reverential attitude to listening to music'. High-end sound systems, sometimes dominating a whole wall, convey every layer of a recorded album...

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Another dose of Prussia Cove

Another dose of Prussia Cove

I'm looking forward to another visit to the International Musicians' Seminar 'Open Chamber Music' at Prussia Cove in Cornwall, where a large group of musicians (mostly string players, but also some pianists) gathers to play chamber music. At this time of year I always...

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Trifonov at Edinburgh Festival

This morning I went to hear Daniil Trifonov's piano recital at the Edinburgh Festival. Normally wild horses wouldn't drag me to hear all twelve of Liszt's 'Transcendental Studies'. With very few exceptions, I've always found them musically rather dull,  and can never...

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‘Lost arts’

This morning I listened to a longish discussion on Radio 4's 'Today' programme about the technique of singing with a microphone.  Many singers today use headsets rather than microphones when they perform, because headsets allow them to have their hands free. To my...

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Playing two instruments at once

I wrote recently about the piano duets played every night at piano camp in France - not just two people at one piano, but sometimes three people at one piano, or four people at two pianos. Famous works of music arranged for multiple hands, with one or two piano...

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Saturday Classics repeat, 19 July

I've just been alerted to the fact that on Saturday 19 July, from 2-4pm, Radio 3 is repeating my episode of 'Saturday Classics', in which I choose music of personal significance and talk about the reasons for my selections before they're played. I seem to remember...

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Seeing the ball

Although I take no interest in tennis the rest of the year, when this time of year rolls around I suddenly get very involved in watching tennis from the Wimbledon Championships. I become so interested that I wonder why I don't continue to follow the fortunes of these...

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Schumann and his favourite novelist

Now back from the Gaudier Ensemble's festival, I'm preparing an all-Schumann recital programme for the Aspect Foundation at Leighton House in London on June 25. The Aspect Foundation aims to expand listeners' experience of concerts by inviting historians and...

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The instruments for the job

The instruments for the job

We're now at Concert 2 in the annual Cerne Abbas Music Festival in Dorset, a feast of known and unknown chamber music, and a showcase for the Gaudier Ensemble, whose 24th festival it is. As time has gone by, and the players have moved further and further afield and...

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Battle of repertoire

I was fortunate to be in the audience at the Finals of BBC Young Musician in the Usher Hall yesterday. What a treat! All three finalists showed a remarkable degree of poise, as well as a superb level of musicianship and skill. I was amazed by their calmness on the...

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BBC Young Musician

Here it is again, the heart-warming parade of talented young musicians competing to be BBC Young Musician of the Year. With every passing year it seems more remarkable that there is such a wellspring of young talent directed at classical music. It's tremendously...

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Luxury

A young musician friend has been telling me about a fully-funded chamber music group based in Denmark. Each member of the group, which is supported by the Danish Government to expand the reach of chamber music across the country, is paid a full salary and has...

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Louise Farrenc’s piano music

I've been learning the piano part of the first piano quintet by Louise Farrenc, a 19th-century French woman composer who enjoyed a fine reputation in her day as a concert pianist and teacher as well as a composer. Unfortunately, at a time when the French music-loving...

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