'Musings' Blog Post Archive
Schubert’s early piano sonatas

Schubert’s early piano sonatas

I've been playing through Schubert's piano sonatas, starting with the early ones, which I admit I don't know very well. Like most people, I'm much more familiar with the late sonatas, considered some of his finest works. The sonatas I've played so far were written in...

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Mr Woods, a friend of Burns

Mr Woods, a friend of Burns

The other day when I was a little early for a meeting I climbed the steps to the Old Calton Burial Ground (see photo) to go and look at the monument to the philosopher David Hume. It's a kind of empty stone cylinder into which the sunlight shines, and is always...

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Smetana’s piano music and the use of ‘vibrato’

Smetana’s piano music and the use of ‘vibrato’

A little while ago I wrote something about a piano piece by Robert Schumann, in which he had instructed the player to play 'con accurezza' - with accuracy. It still seems an amusing little moment because of the questions it raises. I came across another such moment...

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Exploring the Shelves, 4: Chopin’s ‘Minute’ Waltz

Exploring the Shelves, 4: Chopin’s ‘Minute’ Waltz

If you google the 'Minute' Waltz, you'll find that it is a 'song by Arthur Rubinstein', which would have come as a surprise to Frédéric Chopin. In the UK the waltz (in D flat, opus 64 no 1) is famous because it's the signature tune of the long-running BBC radio show...

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Exploring the shelves, 3: Albeniz ‘Suite Española’

Exploring the shelves, 3: Albeniz ‘Suite Española’

I asked my husband if he knew Albeniz's Suite Española. 'Some of it', he said. Well, exactly. Some of the pieces in this Suite are popular - in versions for guitar or orchestra as well as the piano originals - but some are much less well known, as I realised when I...

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Exploring the shelves, no 2: early Schubert sonatas

Exploring the shelves, no 2: early Schubert sonatas

This is the second in my series about exploring some of the piano music I have neglected on my shelves. Today's discovery is Schubert - in particular, the realisation that he wasn't always the effortless master he became! I sat down to play through his early piano...

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The impact of coronavirus on upcoming concerts

The coronavirus situation is constantly changing. Many people's plans have already been impacted by it, even though in Scotland, where I live, there are just a few cases at the moment. In the past few days I've had several worried concert promoters on the phone about...

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The impact of Brexit on musicians

Everyone sees Brexit through their own lens. This is mine. When I was small, playing the piano was my favourite thing. I had heard that Mozart and Schubert came from Austria. Bach and Beethoven and Schumann came from Germany. Debussy and Ravel came from France. And so...

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Bits of information needed to track down classical music

At a new year party I had an interesting chat with a young man who  likes music and likes to listen to it at university along with his friends. He himself likes classical music among other kinds. Many of his friends are not familiar with the world of classical music,...

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More on hand sizes

A little while ago I wrote about my sudden insight that most printed fingering in the scores of piano pieces was probably devised by men, and for male pianists. Yesterday I had some follow-up to that from a doctor who had done some further reading about male and...

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Programme notes – help or hindrance?

Yesterday I was at a concert where, just as I was thinking of reading the programme notes, the lights went down and I couldn't read them. Some concert halls don't put the lights down; others dim them slightly, and some put them down to 'theatre levels', just leaving...

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London Piano Festival pianists

London Piano Festival pianists

Phew! That was indeed a two-piano marathon at the London Piano Festival. Looking tired but happy after the three-hour concert last Saturday night in King's Place are, from left to right, Christian Ihle Hadland, Katya Apekisheva and Charles Owen (co-directors of the...

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The male hand as default …?

At the Edinburgh Book Festival I went to hear Caroline Criado Perez talk about her book 'Invisible Women: Exposing Data Bias in a World Designed for Men'. The book has just won the 2019 Royal Society Science Book Prize. The book's mission is simple but profoundly...

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London Piano Festival

I'm preparing for my two appearances at the London Piano Festival in King's Place on Saturday October 5.  At 2pm I have a solo lecture-recital on Schubert's A major Sonata D959. At 7pm I'll be joining the other festival pianists in a 'two-piano marathon' concert. Most...

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Sitting at a window, doing nothing

Sitting at a window, doing nothing

I've been on holiday in Italy and can feel that it has done me good. What can be more cheering than to start each day by opening the shutters to find a golden haze lying over the landscape (again), the hills receding in layers of paler and paler blue? It was very hot....

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