'Musings' Blog Post Archive

Professions which have no amateur version

The other day I was talking about piano-playing with some very good amateur pianists. As it happens, they were all high-flyers in other professions. A surgeon was saying ruefully that people don't realise how much work it takes to be a very good amateur pianist,...

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The imaginary concert hall at the end of the street

The imaginary concert hall at the end of the street

A friend and I have been discussing the career of a mutual friend who died recently. He was a fabulous musician who wasn't as well known as he should have been. Writers and visual artists can stay put in the place where they choose to live, and create their work...

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Watching the Van Cliburn piano competition

Watching the Van Cliburn piano competition

I have been keeping half an eye on the 2025 Van Cliburn piano competition in Texas, partly because when I was writing Women and the Piano I did a fair amount of research into the gender disparity one can see in the lists of piano competition prizewinners around the...

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A visit to Basel

I'm getting ready for a trip to the Hochschule fuer Musik in Basel, where I'm giving three days of chamber music masterclasses on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. If you should be reading this in Basel, the classes are open to the public and take place from 10am-6pm each...

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The man in the street

Yesterday I listened to a BBC Radio 4 programme about Henry Cole, the founder of the splendid V&A Museum in South Kensington. They were talking to a curator of the David Bowie exhibition, one of the most successful of the V&A's recent exhibitions. The curator...

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Butterflies

Butterflies

I've been practising Schumann's 'Papillons', a cycle of piano pieces containing various motifs and references which reappear in his later piano music. It seems that for Schumann, butterflies were associated with the novels of Jean Paul, one of his favourite authors,...

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Unusual challenges on the platform

I was doing some teaching at Oxford University the other day, and we were discussing the challenges of making a good entrance on to the concert platform when giving a recital as part of your exams. I was discoursing on the need for calm or confidence, and trying to...

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Piano practice and neighbours

Several people including a lawyer have sent me a link to yesterday's BBC news story about a pianist in Spain whose neighbour took her to court over her piano practising, alleging 'psychological harm' from having to listen to it. Spanish prosecutors had initially...

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Messages out of the blue

Messages out of the blue

Here I am talking with a talented young pianist at the very enjoyable masterclass I gave at Bowdoin College in Maine a few days ago. It was enjoyable partly because of the students and partly because of the audience, which included some townsfolk not used to coming to...

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Outsider Art

Outsider Art

Here I am in conversation yesterday with Professor Mary Hunter in the Studzinski Recital Hall during the Klavierfest at Bowdoin College, Maine. We were billed to talk to the audience about various issues to do with performing, but as many conversations do these days,...

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One chord, two chords, three … or more

Lou Reed of the Velvet Underground, who died this week, famously said (tongue in cheek, I suppose) that when you're composing a song, 'one chord is fine, two chords are pushing it. Three chords and you're into jazz'. I had that quote in my mind last night as I...

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Ragtime piano hands

Ragtime piano hands

I'm preparing an interesting recital programme at the moment for a concert in Salzburg on October 23. Tomorrow I'm trying it out for an invited audience in London. The programme focuses on Billy Mayerl and his favourite composers. Billy Mayerl, the pianist at the...

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An open gate at Prussia Cove

An open gate at Prussia Cove

I have spent the week down at Prussia Cove in Cornwall at the autumn IMS chamber music seminar, together with 50 musicians from around the world. We battle up and down the cliff paths against the wind. Musicians and their instrument cases loom out of the mist in the...

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Munich competition afterthoughts

Since the end of the ARD Competition in Munich I have been mulling over the concept of competitions. Of course we all understand the point of competitions, and many are prepared to put up with the negative aspects in the hope of benefitting from the positive ones....

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Munich competition ends

Munich competition ends

The ARD-Competition in Munich ended with three out of the four categories (violin, viola, bassoon, piano trio) awarding no first prize. Only Yura Lee won a first prize in the viola category. I wonder if it is generally realised by the public that the rules in Munich...

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