'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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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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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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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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‘Con accuratezza’

‘Con accuratezza’

Tomorrow I'm playing a solo recital at the Lammermuir Festival, a lovely festival which takes place in various locations, sacred and secular, across the beautiful county of East Lothian in Scotland. I have practised my programme to the point of feeling a keen desire...

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The Pianoforte Recital – then and now

The Pianoforte Recital – then and now

The other day I came across an article called 'The Pianoforte Recital'. It was published in The Musical Times in 1911 - over a century ago. The author, Frederick Kitchener (himself a pianist), complained that piano recitals had become far too numerous, and that...

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Keyboards for smaller hands

Keyboards for smaller hands

Last night I appeared at the Edinburgh International Book Festival, discussing my latest book with broadcaster Kate Molleson (see picture of me turning away from the piano after playing one of the pieces we were talking about). Conversation turned to the idea of...

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Risk assessments

Risk assessments

The other day I was part of a coffee gathering where people from various lines of work were talking about their experiences of writing 'risk assessments'. They described the complicated forms that had to be filled in and the efforts to explain what preventive measures...

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Getting ready to play at Wigmore Hall on March 12

Getting ready to play at Wigmore Hall on March 12

Two weeks today I'll be playing a recital at London's Wigmore Hall to mark the launch of my new book about the history of women playing the piano. My programme consists of music by some of the historical women featured in the book. I've been wondering how many of...

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Concertos from long ago

Concertos from long ago

I was looking through the list of candidates for a concerto competition recently and was struck by the list of pieces they were playing. Mozart (lots), Haydn (several), Beethoven (several), Mendelssohn (several), Schumann (several), Chopin, Brahms (several), Grieg,...

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