'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...

read more

Get The Latest Posts

Interested in what Susan has to say about all things classical music? Subscribe below and whenever Susan writes a new blog post you will be notified by email. Simple!

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...

read more
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...

read more

City Music Society on 16 Oct

City Music Society, which holds its concerts at Bishopsgate Institute near Liverpool St Station in London, is starting its 'early evening' autumn series on Wednesday night, 16 October, with a piano recital by me. Tickets are free for students under 25 with valid ID....

read more
Ragtime piano hands

Ragtime piano hands

I'm preparing an interesting recital programme at the moment for a concert in Salzburg on October 23. Tomorrow I'm trying it out for an invited audience in London. The programme focuses on Billy Mayerl and his favourite composers. Billy Mayerl, the pianist at the...

read more

Cognitive advantage

A doctor friend has sent me an excerpt from the current edition of the British Medical Journal in which their writer 'Minerva' reports: 'Great composers have tended to die young, but great performing musicians often carry on getting better as they get older. An...

read more

Munich competition afterthoughts

Since the end of the ARD Competition in Munich I have been mulling over the concept of competitions. Of course we all understand the point of competitions, and many are prepared to put up with the negative aspects in the hope of benefitting from the positive ones....

read more
Munich competition ends

Munich competition ends

The ARD-Competition in Munich ended with three out of the four categories (violin, viola, bassoon, piano trio) awarding no first prize. Only Yura Lee won a first prize in the viola category. I wonder if it is generally realised by the public that the rules in Munich...

read more

Tools of the trade

I am still working on the jury of the ARD Competition in Munich, which reaches the Final of the piano trio competition on Saturday. Obviously I can't write anything about the competitors, but I can say how interesting it has been to hear so many different groups...

read more
The Cerne Abbas Festival comes to an end

The Cerne Abbas Festival comes to an end

Another Cerne Abbas festival has come to an end. Remembering last year's dreadful weather, during which one of the group had to drive to Dorchester to buy some thermal undergarments, I had packed some rather warm concert clothes, which I regretted as soon as I...

read more

Reminiscing about Billy Mayerl

Someone has drawn my attention to the fact that last Saturday, in the Family section of the Guardian, a reader submitted a favourite recipe along with a recollection of her childhood, in which her late mother played the piano music of Billy Mayerl on the family's...

read more
Off to a summer festival (fingers crossed)

Off to a summer festival (fingers crossed)

I'm off to Cerne Abbas in Dorset for another of the lovely chamber music festivals run very successfully each year by the Gaudier Ensemble. Concerts are on 8-11 August inclusive. As far as I know, most concerts are sold out, but if you live nearby it's always worth...

read more
ECMA in Florence

ECMA in Florence

I'm off to Italy to teach for a week on the European Chamber Music Academy course. ECMA is an unusual organisation which moves around during the year, holding courses at a number of 'host institutions' in different parts of Europe. It offers high-level coaching to...

read more

My Mozart on ‘Summer CD Review’ this Sat

This Saturday, BBC Radio 3's 'Summer CD Review' has selected my Mozart piano and violin sonatas e-album, made with violinist Erich Höbarth, as one of their summer recommendations. You can see Saturday's playlist for the programme here. The recordings were made live at...

read more

The piano on which John Lennon recorded…

Sad news this week that Steinway Pianos is to be sold to a private equity company. What does this mean for pianists? On the face of it, nothing; it's just a change of owner for the firm. But a friend writes from New York that the Steinway showroom on Manhattan's 57th...

read more