'Concerts' Blog Post Archive
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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London Piano Festival this weekend

London Piano Festival this weekend

On Sunday of this week I'll be playing a programme of piano music by historical women pianists at the London International Piano Festival at King's Place. Mine is the closing concert of the festival, at 3pm on 6th October. If you live in or near London, please...

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Competitions then and now

Competitions then and now

I've been watching the BBC Young Musician competition on television for many years now. Slowly, the competition has slipped from the major channels and is now shown on BBC4, whose output currently seems to consist of repeats, archive material and cultural things that...

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Cobbett Medal presentation

Cobbett Medal presentation

Here I am in Stationers' Hall, one of the beautiful old Guild Halls in the City of London, on the evening of the Cobbett Medal presentation. It was a slightly dreamlike experience, to be ushered into a solemn and formal room in which the 'Court' of the Worshipful...

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Billy Mayerl and the Savoy Hotel

Billy Mayerl and the Savoy Hotel

A chance encounter after a recent concert gave me the chance to visit the beautifully refurbished Savoy Hotel at the invitation of Jon Nickoll, the pianist in the famous American Bar. I've long wanted to visit the Savoy, where Billy Mayerl made his name as the young...

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Herald arts news

A nice surprise this morning - my Cobbett Medal (to be presented next week at a dinner of the Worshipful Company of Musicians) is mentioned in the Herald newspaper. I was re-reading a chapter from my first book the other day, in preparation for yesterday's event at...

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Fidelio in Vienna

Fidelio in Vienna

We have been in snowy Vienna, where we were invited to hear a performance of Beethoven's opera 'Fidelio' in the very theatre where it was premiered (see photo). We were sitting right behind Nikolaus Harnoncourt, the conductor. It was thrilling to be in the Theater an...

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The soft-closing piano lid

I have had a delightful letter from a piano trio in Tokyo, asking for advice about how to perform Judith Weir's first Piano Trio. The work ends with the pianist banging shut the lid over the piano keyboard, dryly snapping everyone out of the realm of music and back...

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Brahms’s early thoughts

Yesterday I gave some coaching to the Minerva Piano Trio, who had brought the first version of Brahms's B major Trio opus 8. He composed it around 1853-54, at the time when he first got to know the Schumanns, Clara and Robert. It's well known that he became very close...

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The 2013 Cobbett Medal

The 2013 Cobbett Medal

Out of the blue has come a letter from the Worshipful Company of Musicians, telling me that I have been awarded the 2013 Walter Wilson Cobbett Medal for distinguished services to chamber music. WW Cobbett was a successful businessman whose true passion was chamber...

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Residency at King’s College, Cambridge

Residency at King’s College, Cambridge

This week also sees my mini-residency at King's College, Cambridge. On Friday 22 Feb I'm giving a pre-concert talk at 7pm and a solo recital at 9pm - music by Haydn, Schumann and Billy Mayerl. On the morning of Saturday 23 Feb I'm giving a three-hour masterclass for...

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This week’s masterclasses

This week’s masterclasses

It's time once more for my own London masterclasses. This Thursday and Friday, Feb 14 and 15, I'll be teaching four young professional chamber groups (see my Concerts and Events page for details). We'll be working on Beethoven (a piano trio and a cello/piano sonata),...

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Radio 4 ‘Today’ programme, Tuesday

Radio 4 ‘Today’ programme, Tuesday

Tune in to Radio 4's 'Today' programme at 8.35am this morning, Tuesday 29 January, when I'll be taking part in a short discussion about coughing in concerts. We'll be discussing the research of Professor Andreas Wagener, who believes that coughing in concerts is both...

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When snow stops play

When snow stops play

The snow is causing all sorts of disruption. On Friday I went into town to meet someone who didn't arrive because his flight from Austria was cancelled. On Saturday morning, I was supposed to be coaching a young German group, but their violinist was stuck in Germany...

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‘Classics’ and the brain

Yesterday I heard on the news that a Liverpool University study had shown the power of literature to boost brain activity. 'Classic texts' such as Shakespeare and Wordsworth appear to catch the reader's attention more than ordinary texts, triggering heightened...

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