'Travel' Blog Post Archive
My old friend Gerald

My old friend Gerald

This weekend I heard that my old friend Gerald Pointon had died. I felt like writing this little reminiscence. Gerald was a high-powered lawyer in Paris, specialising in arbitration. As a graduate student at Cambridge University he had sung in the famous choir of...

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Posing on the steps of the Opera

Posing on the steps of the Opera

Last week I was in Vienna for a few days of Easter holiday.  We managed to pack in lots of music-related things: a concert at the Musikverein, an evening at the State Opera, a visit to one of Mozart's apartments, a visit to Haydn's house in what was the village of...

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Graz prizewinners

Graz prizewinners

Here are all the winners of the Graz Competition on stage at their Gala Concert on Thursday evening. Two piano trios, three Lieder partnerships of singer and pianist, and three string quartets (not all of whom are visible in the photo). For details of who won what,...

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Jury arithmetic

Jury arithmetic

The final of the Graz competition ended last night with no first prize being awarded. We had been following jury rules which obliged us to give our scores anonymously, and to refrain from discussing the competitors with one another. Consequently the result of every...

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Graz trio final tomorrow

Graz trio final tomorrow

We have now arrived at six finalists for the piano trio competition in Graz. Each group has to play a contemporary work, plus one of Schubert's late, great trios in the Final on Tuesday. This will be the first time I have ever had to sit and listen to six consecutive...

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Perth Advertiser review

Perth Advertiser review

I've only found one review of my concert last week in Perth with Erich Höbarth, but it's a lovely one, so I thought I would give the link.  Once again we were so grateful to the several people who travelled long distances to be there. 'In this second of the series,...

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November sun

November sun

To Cambridge for a dinner at my old college. In order to check what I wore last year at this event, I looked up some photos I'd taken at the time (just as well, as I was about to wear the same thing) and was surprised to see how much colder it was last year in...

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In Oxford

In Oxford

When I was in Oxford the other day to give a masterclass at the university, I visited a friend who lives and teaches in one of the Oxford colleges. To reach his rooms, I had to pass through several interlocking courtyards, or Quads as they're called in Oxford. Each...

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‘Mozart’s grave’

‘Mozart’s grave’

One afternoon in Vienna we went out to visit the place where Mozart was buried, in the Sankt Marx cemetery outside the old city walls. Today the burial ground, no longer used since the 1880s, lies forlornly in the midst of motorway flyovers, housing estates,...

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Differing tastes

Differing tastes

In the wake of the Trondheim competition, I’ve been thinking about the gap between the jury’s taste and the public’s taste in performers. Several times during the competition I happened to bump into members of the public in the coffee shop, or in the foyers of the...

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Norwegian Salmon

Norwegian Salmon

It's hard to imagine getting blasé about smoked salmon, but I have nearly managed it here in Trondheim. At the hotel's generous breakfast buffet there's a special stand, known to us musicians as 'the salmon station', where you can get smoked and cured salmon of...

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’12 angry men’

’12 angry men’

In Trondheim in Norway, where the chamber music festival this week is featuring the music of Australian composer Brett Dean. Stylish posters advertise the concerts around town, playing on the titles of works being performed in the festival, or on events associated...

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Instrumental music in Italy

Instrumental music in Italy

I’ve been in Italy for a few days. One evening I went to a concert in the courtyard of a lovely historic building in Bologna. The Italians are so lucky to have so many of these theatrical spaces and the climate which makes it possible to sit there, in the balmy air,...

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Peyro Clabado

Peyro Clabado

During lunch in a tiny village in the forests of Le Sidobre, in Languedoc, we got into conversation with an elderly lady who told us that she spoke Occitan as a child, before she was required to learn French. At our request, she spoke some Occitan to us, the only time...

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