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I’ve been writing this blog since 2009, but there still seem to be plenty of interesting topics to mull over. You can subscribe (it’s free) to follow the blog by email – each new post will pop into your inbox.
Hallucinations
Historian Tom Holland was guest-editing the 'Today' programme on BBC Radio 4 recently. He spoke about his experience of AI 'hallucinations', that now increasingly well-known phenomenon whereby Artifical Intelligence makes up information in response to a question. Tom...
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My top books of the year 2025
I seem to have read an unusually high number of books this year - surprising, because it was a unusually busy year. Looking back, I realise that long train journeys provided hours of reading time. I often took two books with me on a trip in order not to run out of...
Words stamped into icing
Today I've been icing my home-made Christmas cake. It's taken months to reach this point. I made the cake in October and fed it with malt whisky through holes made in the cake with uncooked sticks of spaghetti. I wrapped the cake in tinfoil and stored it away. Each...
Edinburgh without its festivals
At this time in Edinburgh we're usually starting to experience the surge of visitors arriving for the city's festivals - the Edinburgh International Festival, the Fringe and the Book Festival (plus a host of minor festivalettes). But all have been cancelled, or at...
Remembering an old college friend
Today is a melancholy day, the funeral of one of my first college friends. He had battled for years with depression, anxiety and a cascade of associated health problems. His passing led to a burst of correspondence between those of us in his circle in those university...
Lockdown practice insights
During lockdown I have had plenty of time to practise slowly. Normally, I practise things because I'm getting ready to perform them. But with all concerts cancelled, there was no reason to prepare in the usual way - that is to say, securing things in a way that I knew...
Exploring the Shelves, 20: Bach’s first Invention
Most people who learn piano will have come across Bach's Two-Part Inventions, but their eyes may not have alighted on his Foreword. Mine hadn't until the other day. 'Forthright instruction, wherewith lovers of the clavier, especially those eager to learn, are shown in...
Exploring the Shelves, 19: Gershwin’s Three Preludes
This is probably the penultimate in my lockdown series about neglected music on my shelves. It has been a helpful focus for me during a phase when more people had time to read. As we start to come out of lockdown, it seems right to wrap it up. I'll try to get to...
Exploring the Shelves, 18: Antonio Soler’s Fandango
Here's a curious piece from the late Baroque, composed by an 18th century Spanish priest who was a contemporary of Scarlatti. Padre Antonio Soler began studying music at his local monastery when he was only six, and by 14 had his first appointment as a cathedral...
Exploring the Shelves, 17: Samuel Coleridge-Taylor’s ‘Petite Suite de Concert’
Recently, at a Zoom meeting of my piano club, one of our members played Samuel Coleridge-Taylor's Petite Suite de Concert. It was new to most of us, but we were all struck by its charm. I remember being puzzled when I first heard of a composer called Samuel Coleridge...
Zoom music-making and chamber music
Zoom music-making has been a feature of lockdown. Hardly a week passes without someone sending me a link to a recording: Zoom choirs, Zoom orchestras and ensembles, each performer singing or playing away in their own home and on their own little screen. To create a...
Exploring the Shelves, 16: Poulenc’s Novelettes
Francis Poulenc is one of those composers whose personality shows very clearly in his music. Some composers, you sense, enjoy the process of creating a pure compositional line swept clean of their personal feelings. We may know from reading their biographies that they...
Could classical musicians be ‘radically local’?
We're hearing a lot about the days of heedless international travel being over for classical musicians. In today's Guardian, Charlotte Higgins does an admirable job of summing up some aspects of the situation. It's worth remembering that darting about to play in San...
Exploring the Shelves, 15: ‘Rustle of Spring’ by Christian Sinding
Here's a neglected piece! Years ago, 'Rustle of Spring' was a favourite with amateur pianists, often of the older generation - 'Uncle So-and-So's party piece', to be trotted out (possibly in abridged form) at parties. But I haven't seen it on a concert programme for...
Why pianists don’t like being called accompanists
The other night, after watching the last in the category finals of 'BBC Young Musician', I tweeted that I had now watched the wind, brass and string finals and had not once heard them mention the name of any of the pianists who played with the young competitors. My...







