Blog

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.

Different audiences, different reactions

Different audiences, different reactions

I have been going to events at the Edinburgh Jazz Festival. There seems to be a lot of overlap between the audiences, because I keep seeing the same faces. It's interesting to observe the effects that different performers have on the audiences. Some performers banter...

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!

Wimbledon fortnight improves my playing

Wimbledon fortnight improves my playing

Wimbledon Championship Fortnight is halfway through and I have spent quite a lot of time watching tennis, with occasional breaks for some piano practice. Whenever I watch a lot of tennis, or more particularly when I listen to a lot of expert commentary, I feel that my...

read more

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,...

read more

Reviews: how can we quote them if the press doesn’t print them?

Two recent topics of conversation have come together in my mind to prompt a question. Topic 1: the number of classical concert reviews is shrinking rapidly. Everyone in the profession has noticed it. Many newspapers are reducing the number of classical reviews they...

read more
Vigilance

Vigilance

We have a lovely cat, Daisy, whom we 'rescued' from a cat shelter. Shortly after she moved in, another cat got in through the catflap one evening. We were out and didn't see what happened, but the two cats had clearly had an epic struggle. Clumps of cat fur were on...

read more

A moment of visibility

At the weekend I had an unusual experience. Following the conclusion of BBC Young Musician and viewers' anger that the result was so under-reported, I wrote a letter to The Guardian about the wider issue. We've heard a lot recently about orchestras folding, opera...

read more

My letter in today’s Guardian

In today's Guardian I have a letter which aroused quite a lot of interest when it appeared online yesterday. Please share it if you agree. Here's what I said: 'Much of the recent discourse around classical music and its troubles has contained a subtext of glee at the...

read more

Battle of repertoire

BBC Young Musician came to a close last night with the wonderful young cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason being declared the winner after his remarkably mature and thoughtful performance of Shostakovich's first cello concerto.  His charming, modest response on being asked how...

read more

BBC Young Musician’s ‘accs’

BBC Young Musician is underway on BBC4, and once again the talent and accomplishment of the young players is absolutely admirable. To watch and listen to them is inspiring and gives one great hope for the next generation of classical musicians. Having said that, I am...

read more

Precision drifting

Last week I was in Rome, where I walked into a church one day to hear a group of about twenty nuns chanting an evening service. (I say 'chanting' because it wasn't exactly singing, nor was it exactly speaking, but some melodious hybrid of the two.) There was a small...

read more

‘Reflets dans l’Eau’ played in the BBC Studio

It's just a week now until my Queen's Hall solo recital on 25 April at 7.30pm. The programme is called 'Pioneers of the Piano' and celebrates some of the composers who wrote in new ways for the piano, or showed it in a different light. I played the programme at...

read more

How to listen to everything

I'm reading Ben Ratliff's 'Every Song Ever', an intriguing guide to how to get the most out of the huge range of recorded music now freely available. If I understand him correctly, he feels that there has been a shift from 'the composer' to 'the listener' at the top...

read more

Status, yes/no

In my travels as a guest tutor I come across post-grad and young professional musicians from lots of different countries. For some time now I've made it a habit to ask them how they're getting on with making their way in the classical music profession - easy or...

read more

Novelty and unusual locations

A young musician announced to me recently that the problem of classical music's dwindling audiences would be solved by moving concerts into exciting new locations not associated with classical performance. For example, she mentioned the MultiStory project, an...

read more
Playing at the Queen’s Hall

Playing at the Queen’s Hall

A wonderful night on Monday at the Queen's Hall playing Schubert with violinist Erich Höbarth (see photo). We were pleasantly surprised by the size of the audience and even more so by their warmth. After such a long build-up to this particular concert it felt very...

read more