'Musings' Blog Post Archive
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...

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!

The difficulty of ending in tempo and without a pause

The difficulty of ending in tempo and without a pause

When you play a lot of Romantic piano music, you get used to the final notes being extended by a written pause. Composers like Chopin and Schumann often wanted the last chord to ring on gently (or triumphantly) while the mood of the piece hung in the air. We pianists...

read more
When is a theme a melody?

When is a theme a melody?

I've now finished working my way through the volume of Mozart piano sonatas (a sonata a day keeps the doctor away) and have started playing through Beethoven's again. The early Beethoven sonatas have made me think about what makes the difference between a theme and a...

read more

OK to play from music if gadget involved

Yesterday BBC Music Magazine tweeted that pianist Artur Pizarro had played a concert in which he read from the music, using an iPad to display the notes. It's one of several recent reports about classical musicians using the score, reading from an electronic gadget of...

read more

The Guardian Guide to Festivals

".... your ultimate companion to a summer of music", says today's Guardian Guide to Festivals. But is it? Not if classical music is your thing. I subscribe to the Guardian, look forward to reading it every day and love it to bits, but every year when they publish...

read more
I have joined Twitter

I have joined Twitter

I've just signed up for Twitter.  My Twitter username is @susantomespiano and there's a 'follow me on Twitter' button on the left-hand side of this page. It's daunting, because I already feel I'm drowning in email. But the younger generation keeps telling me I really...

read more
Saturday Classics

Saturday Classics

I'm going to the BBC tomorrow to record an episode of 'Saturday Classics', which I'm presenting on Saturday 11 May from 3-5pm on Radio 3. Each week a different presenter chooses two hours' worth of classical recordings and chats about their selections. The presenter...

read more
Cobbett Medal presentation

Cobbett Medal presentation

Here I am in Stationers' Hall, one of the beautiful old Guild Halls in the City of London, on the evening of the Cobbett Medal presentation. It was a slightly dreamlike experience, to be ushered into a solemn and formal room in which the 'Court' of the Worshipful...

read more

Mozart’s ‘lyrics’

I've been leaping boldly into the world of new media by uploading an audio file to one of the new online music distributors which helps artists to get their music directly to new audiences. (Details to follow when I've got to the end of the process). It's instrumental...

read more

The soft-closing piano lid

I have had a delightful letter from a piano trio in Tokyo, asking for advice about how to perform Judith Weir's first Piano Trio. The work ends with the pianist banging shut the lid over the piano keyboard, dryly snapping everyone out of the realm of music and back...

read more
Front and back

Front and back

Which is the front of a church? At the weekend we had a disagreement about it. We were talking about somewhere we'd been on holiday. I referred to a certain road as 'the one that goes past the back of the church'. Bob's response puzzled me. From his description, he...

read more
When snow stops play

When snow stops play

The snow is causing all sorts of disruption. On Friday I went into town to meet someone who didn't arrive because his flight from Austria was cancelled. On Saturday morning, I was supposed to be coaching a young German group, but their violinist was stuck in Germany...

read more

‘Classics’ and the brain

Yesterday I heard on the news that a Liverpool University study had shown the power of literature to boost brain activity. 'Classic texts' such as Shakespeare and Wordsworth appear to catch the reader's attention more than ordinary texts, triggering heightened...

read more

What we call ‘music’

Melvyn Bragg's excellent Radio 4 Series on 'culture' has been a thought-provoking companion every morning this week. Various guests on the programme, talking about 'high art', have commented that older forms of music have been overtaken and overshadowed by the vast...

read more
Winter sausages

Winter sausages

I always rather dread this time of year, when cold weather makes my hands feel stiff. Before sitting down to play the piano, I often have to run a basin of warm water and stand with my hands in the water for a few minutes. My piano stands next to an unused fireplace....

read more