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.

Good wishes for Hogmanay

Good wishes for Hogmanay

At the end of December, I usually reflect on my favourite concerts of the year. This year however, as you will know all too well, we spent the entire year in a pandemic. Concert life is still badly impacted, and freelance musicians have been more impacted than most....

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Presto Music Awards 2021

Presto Music Awards 2021

Today I learned that my book The Piano - a History in 100 Pieces has been named as a Book of the Year 2021 in the Presto Music Awards. I feel very fortunate that it has now been chosen as a Book of the Year in The Spectator, the Financial Times and the Presto Music...

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Financial Times ‘Books of 2021’

Financial Times ‘Books of 2021’

The Financial Times has been publishing its 'Books of 2021', category by category across recent days, and now they have arrived at Classical Music. I'm proud to see that my piano book is one of their Books of 2021. This is the link, but unless you're a subscriber it...

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Nonfiction

I'm reading the American poet Mark Doty's memoir about his two beloved dogs. It's a charity shop find in a Large Print Edition, the oversize print giving me the impression that the author is talking to me slowly and in a loud voice. The sensation fades away as I get...

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Schubert’s biographer

Practising Schubert's E flat trio for a concert tonight, I remembered a delightful moment in a talk Bob gave about Schubert's chamber music at the Florestan Festival a couple of years ago. He told the audience about the earliest known biography of Schubert, written by...

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More on those disappearing reviews

Several people have got in touch about the difficulty of musicians getting their concerts reviewed by the press. They point out that where they live, newspapers are ‘letting go' of their classical music critics and shrinking the team of arts critics generally. The...

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A well-deserved award

Last night the Royal Philharmonic Society announced their 2009 awards for music. One result that I found particularly pleasing was the Creative Communication Award to Alex Ross for his book The Rest is Noise, which has already won the Guardian First Book Award. I gave...

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Silence in the Press (again)

Last week my trio played two concerts in Wigmore Hall, one of the world's premier venues for chamber music. Both concerts were sold out, with people standing at the back and people being turned away at the box office. Yet there was not a single review in any...

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The Stradivarius of Wine Glasses

Passing the time between a rehearsal and a concert, Bob and I walk along Wigmore Street. We spot a shop selling all kinds of accessories to do with wine drinking. We pop in for some vacuum corks. Inside the shop is a display of luxurious wine glasses: hand-blown,...

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Unsweet Dreams

This morning my trio had a Coffee Concert at the Wigmore Hall. It meant being in central London at 9am for our rehearsal, so  last night I went to bed quite early, in the hope of being well rested. But this strategy rarely works, and as well as sleeping badly, I had...

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Hushed by beauty

Hushed by beauty

Bob and I stopped work a bit early and drove to Richmond Park to walk in the Isabella Plantation, a large enclosed garden within the park. The first time I ever saw the Isabella Plantation in springtime, someone had tipped me off that I shouldn't miss the sight of it...

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Upon Westminster Bridge

The BBC's poetry season included a sweet programme last night about Wordsworth's poem ‘Lines Composed Upon Westminster Bridge'. Presenter and poet Owen Sheers shared his lovely insight that the poem has become more, not less resonant over the years. The surprise of...

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Pulses racing in Shostakovich

In my work as a classical performer, nothing beats the feeling of playing to a sold-out Wigmore Hall, with people standing at the back. That was my trio's fortunate experience in London last night. I had invited a friend who doesn't often go to concerts of this type....

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Vanishing Bowl

A few days ago I wrote about our cat dragging her water bowl around the kitchen floor. It's a topic I never thought I would mention again. However, last night when we were giving the cat a bit of supper, we suddenly noticed that her pottery drinking bowl had gone. It...

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Live on BBC radio this evening

If anyone would like to hear the Florestan Trio playing live on radio and chatting about its Wigmore Hall concerts this week, we'll be on BBC Radio 3's drive-time programme, In Tune, this evening between about 6.15-6.45pm. We'll be playing Beethoven, Shostakovich and...

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