'Musings' Blog Post Archive
Tasting notes

Tasting notes

Bob went to the wine shop and returned with a few bottles and a page of 'tasting notes' supplied by the shop. As usual I was charmed by the poetic way that wine producers describe their products. 'Notes of ripe, dark fruit, tobacco, chocolate and spice'. 'Delicate...

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!

Playing music in a cherry tree

Playing music in a cherry tree

An old friend of mine, a fellow musician, wrote to tell me about a lovely dream he had had. He, I and another musician friend were sitting in the branches of a cherry tree playing music together. 'The cherries were the notes!' he said. He didn't say what instrument I...

read more
Look, no hands

Look, no hands

I've been remembering a little conversation which happened years ago when a fellow musician was giving me a lift to the Tube station in London. I was on my way to play a concert. As I was getting out of the car, he said to me: 'Have you got your music?' 'Yes.' 'Have...

read more

Supplying the scenery from your own imagination

Interesting discussions with friends about 'concert performances' of operas they've attended at this year's Edinburgh Festival. I have been to two: Wagner's 'Die Walküre' and Monteverdi's 'L'Incoronazione di Poppea', both excellent, and I've been told that Britten's...

read more
A five-hour opportunity to ponder audience concentration

A five-hour opportunity to ponder audience concentration

Last night I went to a stupendous concert performance of Wagner's 'Die Walküre' at the Edinburgh International Festival. (Thank you, Amber Wagner, Simon O'Neill, Christine Guerke, Bryn Terfel, Karen Cargill, Matthew Rose, conductor Sir Andrew Davis and the RSNO!) The...

read more

Publicity shots

The Edinburgh Festival and 'Fringe' begin this week and the city is plastered with publicity posters. The trend towards anti-glamour continues. Even if a performer wants to look glamorous, they are portrayed in a jarring context. Someone in a beautiful suit lounges in...

read more

The €23 violin

A friend told me a tale of a violinist friend of his who came across a mass-produced violin for sale on eBay for €23. It was even cheaper than it sounds because the price included the violin, a bow, and a case. He bought the violin, which arrived with a set of...

read more

‘Animato’

For various reasons I've been to quite a few amateur performances recently. All were enjoyable, but I noticed something that was common to them all. It puzzled me, but I am not sure if I have simply forgotten what it is like to be a beginner or a non-professional....

read more

Adjusting the piano stool for a concert

Adjusting the piano stool to the right height for a concert may seem the simplest thing. When I finish rehearsing in a concert hall, I always leave the piano stool adjusted to the right height. The more old-fashioned piano stools have wooden handles that are quite...

read more

Major-key music for sad lyrics

Last night I watched a very interesting episode of a BBC Arena series about 'American Epic' music, beginning with music from the Appalachian region, featuring the Carter Family from West Virginia who in the late 1920s brought the folk music of the remote hills to the...

read more

An afternoon of piano duets

Bob and I went to a big book sale today and came home with lots of 'four hand' duets to be played by two people sitting at one piano. We spent a chunk of the afternoon going through volumes of Dvorak Slavonic Dances, Brahms Hungarian Dances, and eventually a mad set...

read more

EU music students still waiting for clarity on Brexit

In the course of my teaching and coaching activities I meet lots of young musicians who have come from other European countries to study in the UK. Britain's excellent music colleges and universities are extremely popular with Europeans, who often fund their studies...

read more

Restless audiences vs acoustic instruments

This morning I was making soup and listening to Stephen Jardine's phone-in programme on BBC Radio Scotland, as I often do on a Friday morning. They were discussing whether parents should restrain their children from behaving badly in public places such as cinemas,...

read more

Embarking on Beethoven’s opus 111 Sonata

It's been on my mind recently that I never properly learned Beethoven's final piano sonata. I've been performing and lecturing about the two penultimate sonatas, opus 109 and 110, but when someone asked if I'd like to do opus 111 as well, I had to admit that it isn't...

read more

Seeking a female word for ‘virtuoso’

Yesterday we had a meeting of my piano club, a group of adult amateur pianists interested in developing their playing. The subject of 'virtuosos' and 'virtuoso technique' came up in relation to a piano piece with some fast, technically difficult 'show-off' passages....

read more