ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 10 MARCH 2013
A dozen responses so far on Amazon.... leading to an average five star rating. Some extracts:
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ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 10 MARCH 2013
A dozen responses so far on Amazon.... leading to an average five star rating. Some extracts:
Read moreORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 30 JANUARY 2013
Play it Again only work as a book if you believe a) the G Minor Ballade is really quite hard, and b) I was really quite a bad pianist. "Good pianist tackles easy piece" is not such an interesting idea.
Read moreORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 29 JANUARY 2013
I'm the guest slot each day this week* with Radio 3's Essential Classics with the excellent @drsarahwalker - Sarah Walker - talking about assorted pieces of music with special meaning.
Read moreORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 28 JANUARY 2013
My favourite painting of a pianist. Not an amateur pianist, but - by all appearances - a contented one. It's of Geoffrey Bowyer, former musical director of the Teddington Choral Society, and a conductor and composer. The painting is by Phyllis Dupuy.
Read moreORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 25 JANUARY 2013
The Economist's Intelligent Life magazine commissioned Jasper Rees - who wrote his own book about returning to the French horn - to write down the rules for the genre of "quest books" - which he describes as the "literary arm of the self-help industry".
Read moreORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 24 JANUARY 2013
An interesting piece by Robert Skideslsky, the biographer of Maynard Keynes, on the nature-versus-nurture debate. It begins: "The editor of The Guardian, Alan Rusbridger, has written a book about how he decided to practice the piano 20 minutes a day. Eighteen months later, he played Chopin’s fearsomely difficult Ballade No. 1 in G Minor. Could anyone have done this? Or did it require special talent?"
Read moreORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 20 JANUARY 2013
Liked this comment underneath an extract from the book on the Guardian's book site.
John Gosling
Since the days of the Guardian's shameful hounding of Jonathan Aitken in 1995, I have held a particular prejudice against Alan Rushbridger and have resolutely avoided reading anything he has written since that time. However, as the topic of the present article is rather close to my heart, I decided to give it a read and am now finding my prejudices wilting. In my own case, I gave up piano lessons at age 12, having struggled to scrape the barest of passes at Grade 2, and for most of my life I was of the view that I was neurologically predisposed to fail at any attempt at musicianship. On several occasions since, I attempted to take up the piano again, but no matter how much I practiced, I seemed incapable of improvement. However, at the age of 60, and having bought a piano last year for my 10 year old daughter, I suddenly discovered that age had brought with it a new fluency and coordination in my fingers that, for whatever reason, had previously been missing. Six months further on, I'm getting close to being able to play the Prelude from Ravel's Tombeau de Couperin at full speed - something which previously I would never have dreamed was possible. But like Alan, I have to hold down a full-time job as well and it's taking 3 hours a day practice during weekdays and 9 hours a day at weekends to manage this. Maybe old age brings with it a determination to succeed and an ability to persevere against the odds which we lack when we are younger. So well done Alan - I may be prepared to forgive you for the Aitken affair.
I think Aikten himself "forgave" me some time ago. A few Hay Festivals back the organisers (mischievously?) booked us into the same bed and breakfast together. We'd had no contact since Aitken had been to jail. But we ended up sipping tea in the sunshine making small talk like nothing had happened. And since then he's written a few good pieces on prison and rehabilitation for the paper.
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 20 JANUARY 2013
I have played the Ballade only twice in public. One, to a small group of teachers and friends just so I had witnesses that I could sort of play it. And once again at the excellent Chipping Camden literary/music festival because my fellow piano camper, Charlie Bennett (who runs the music festival) asked me. That was pretty frightening.
Read moreORIGINALLY PUBLISHED 14 JANUARY 2013
Each year for the past five or so years I’ve been going to a piano course in France, enticed in by another journalist, the former Times theatre critic, Irving Wardle – who’s still going strong on the keyboard at 83.
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