'Musings' Blog Post Archive
Fractions of a second apart

Fractions of a second apart

I've been watching some of the Winter Olympics on TV and marvelling at the way that the top competitors all seem to achieve times which are within a fraction of a second of one another's. Time and again the commentators point out that the winning margin is...

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Every part of the brain

Every part of the brain

This morning I listened to a pleasing report on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, about a neuro-scientific experiment to observe a pianist's brain activity while he played the piano. The leader of the 'Glass Brain' study commented that playing the piano is one of the...

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Measuring-sticks and ‘the canon’

I learned something the other day when visiting the Hunterian Art Gallery in Glasgow. In one of the rooms, there was an explanatory sign (see photo) about the word 'canon', meaning a collection of works recognised as being of enduring value and importance. I had never...

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Picking blackberries

Picking blackberries

Several times recently I have been out blackberry picking on the hills around Edinburgh. I've gone at different times of day, mostly at weekends. Each time I've met other people picking blackberries too. We've swapped ideas about what to do with them. Blackberry...

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Sempé, au revoir

Sempé, au revoir

It was sad to read that the French cartoonist Jean-Jacques Sempé has died at the age of 89. I first came across his drawings when my French class at school studied Le Petit Nicolas, the delightful adventures of a little French boy in an idealised 1950s world. It was...

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Limelight review of ‘The Piano’

Limelight review of ‘The Piano’

Limelight, Australia's leading arts magazine, has reviewed my book The Piano - a History in 100 Pieces. The book came out a year ago, so I was surprised to learn about a new review. You can only read the whole review online if you're a subscriber, but here's an...

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An old Scottish lullaby

An old Scottish lullaby

There's news today of an important new women's health strategy in England. 'Ministers have vowed to tackle decades of “systemic” and “entrenched” gender health inequality in England with plans to introduce compulsory women’s health training for doctors, more cancer...

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Mozart’s A major piano concerto K488 in chamber format

Mozart’s A major piano concerto K488 in chamber format

Last week I was in Cerne Abbas, Dorset, for the Gaudier Ensemble's annual festival of chamber music in the village church. I think I have played in 27 of the festivals. Of course, the pandemic blew a two-year hole in proceedings and this was my first visit since 2019....

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The diary of Liszt’s pupil Lina Schmalhausen

The diary of Liszt’s pupil Lina Schmalhausen

I have just been reading an astonishing little book which a friend lent me  -  The Death of Franz Liszt, based on the unpublished diary of his pupil Lina Schmalhausen (Cornell University Press, 2002). The distinguished Liszt biographer Alan Walker came across Lina's...

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The Van Cliburn competition 2022

The Van Cliburn competition 2022

I have been following - online - the Van Cliburn piano competition which takes place every four years in Fort Worth, Texas. As well as being one of the world's most prestigious it must be the most generous, with an array of prizes and offers of management, concert...

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Tempo and how we judge it

Tempo and how we judge it

I have been listening to various recordings of Mozart's K488 piano concerto made by pianists in the 1940s, 50s and 60s. In all of them, as if by some strange consensus, the slow movement is taken very slowly. It seems to have been a fashion back then to treat Mozart...

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Mozart K488 on the turntable

Mozart K488 on the turntable

I'm currently practising Mozart's Piano Concerto in A major K488 for a performance with the New Edinburgh Orchestra on June 25 (please come along if you live nearby!) Mozart's glorious A major concerto is still probably my favourite (apart from all my other favourite...

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Round stones

Round stones

The other week I was visiting relatives in the south of England, and we went to the coast for an outing. The beach was covered in stones of attractive pink, white and russet colours, and as usual I found myself searching among the stones for examples of rounded ones....

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More about Radu Lupu

More about Radu Lupu

A couple of readers said they'd like to hear more about Radu Lupu. I only met him a few times and didn't know him well, but I vividly remember the impression he made. When I went for my lessons, I was probably focusing on trying to play each phrase as beautifully as I...

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Playing along with someone else’s recording

Playing along with someone else’s recording

On Saturday, I shall be playing Mozart's last piano concerto  - the B flat major, K595 - with the Meadows Chamber Orchestra in Edinburgh. Since I don't have an in-house orchestra, I have been preparing by playing along with a recording. We have three CDs in the house...

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