'Inspirations' Blog Post Archive
The Gaudier Ensemble’s festival

The Gaudier Ensemble’s festival

Last week I took part in the Cerne Abbas Music Festival, held by the Gaudier Ensemble in rural Dorset. For the past thirty-two years, the same group of musicians has been gathering in Cerne for a week in the summer, to present a series of chamber music concerts in the...

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My old friend Gerald

My old friend Gerald

This weekend I heard that my old friend Gerald Pointon had died. I felt like writing this little reminiscence. Gerald was a high-powered lawyer in Paris, specialising in arbitration. As a graduate student at Cambridge University he had sung in the famous choir of...

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Channel 4’s ‘The Piano’

Channel 4’s ‘The Piano’

I've been watching Channel 4's new series, 'The Piano', in which amateur piano-playing members of the public put themselves forward to come and play an upright piano in the foyer of one of Britain's main railway stations. Unknown to them, watching behind the scenes...

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A fine insult learned from a piper

I have been reading an enthralling book, 'A Hundred Years in the Highlands', written in 1921 by Osgood Mackenzie. He was the founder and owner of the famous gardens at Inverewe. Osgood Mackenzie was an elderly man when he wrote the book and could recall childhood...

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Thoughts at the end of the year

I haven't written much on my blog recently, for two reasons: 1. My website was hacked (aargh), and I have been struggling to deal with the technical issues that resulted. 2. I have been working on a new book. More of that in the new year! As we come to the end of the...

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Feeling the tempo before you begin

I did a piano workshop recently at which a number of different people played. One of our topics was tempo. How do you decide at what speeed to play something, especially if the composer gives no indication? Even written instructions such as Andante or Adagio are...

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Cardiff Singer of the World

I've been a keen follower of the BBC Cardiff Singer of the World competition for many years. This year it seems even more appealing  as a distraction from what's going on with the Tory leadership contest and all the rest of it. It's remarkable to see how the twenty...

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40 years of women in mixed Cambridge colleges

40 years of women in mixed Cambridge colleges

Last weekend I was at a dinner in Christ's College, Cambridge to celebrate 40 years of women in the college (founded 1505). Women have only been allowed to study at the University of Cambridge since 1869, when Girton College was founded. Newnham followed in 1872, but...

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A calendar of marmalades

A calendar of marmalades

The season of Seville oranges has come to an end and with it the chance to make Seville marmalade, by general consensus the tastiest of all marmalades. We have tried making others with 'ordinary' oranges combined with lemon, grapefruit or lime, but nothing quite...

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Donald Tovey’s piano playing is brought to life

Donald Tovey’s piano playing is brought to life

One of my Christmas presents was a memoir, 'Divided Loyalties - a Scotswoman in occupied France' by Janet Teissier du Cros. It was written by an Edinburgh-born woman who married a Frenchman and spent the years of the Second World War in the Cévennes region of France...

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A New Year wish for musicians everywhere

A New Year wish for musicians everywhere

The last live music I heard in 2018, outside my home, was some excellent jazz in a city bar (pianist Brian Kellock and bassist Kenny Ellis). The bar was buzzing with people enjoying long lunches and toasting the end of the year. Crockery clattered and the coffee...

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Robert Philip’s ‘Companion to Orchestral Music’

Robert Philip’s ‘Companion to Orchestral Music’

It's a great moment in our household because my husband Robert Philip's epic study of orchestral music is about to be published by Yale University Press. Pre-ordered copies have started to land on people's doormats, probably with a thud. The Classical Music Lover's...

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The ‘heavenly length’ of Schubert’s late works

This week I'm preparing for the last of my lecture-recital series in The Brunton Theatre in Musselburgh. On Saturday afternoon I'll be speaking about - and performing - Schubert's late A major piano sonata, one of the masterpieces of his last year. These...

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Ice dancing

On a walk today I found myself passing the ice skating rink ('the coolest place in town!') where my late father was a devoted member of the skating club for about fifty years. He went every Saturday evening and every Sunday afternoon. We children tried ice skating as...

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‘Speaking the Piano’ – my new book, due out in June

I have a new book, Speaking the Piano, due out in June from Boydell Press. My previous four books are about performance. This new one is about my experiences of learning and teaching (though performance sneaks in too). The title was inspired by a remark of Artur...

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