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Highly acclaimed author Susan Tomes takes up various topics of
perennial interest: how music awakens and even creates memories,
what 'interpretation' really means, what effect daily practice has
on the character, whether playing from memory is a burden or a
liberation, and why the piano is the right tool for the job. In
several decades as a distinguished classical pianist, Susan Tomes
has found that there are some issues which never go away. Here she
takes up various topics of perennial interest: how music awakens
and even creates memories, what "interpretation" really means, what
effect daily practice has on the character, whether playing from
memory is a burden or a liberation, and why the piano is the right
tool for the job. She pays homage to the influence of remarkable
teachers, asks what it takes for long-term chamber groups to
survive the strains of professional life, and explores the link
between music and health. Once again, her aim is to provide insight
into the motives and experiences of classical performers. In this
fourth book she also describes some of the challenges facing
classical musicians in today's society, and considers why this kind
of long-form music means so much to those who love it. SUSAN TOMES
has won a number of international awards as a performer and
recording artist, and in 2013 was awarded the Cobbett Medal for
distinguished services to chamber music. For fifteen years she was
the pianist of Domus, and for seventeen years she was the pianist
of the Florestan Trio, one of the world's leading piano trios. She
is the author of three previous books: Beyond the Notes (2004) and
Out of Silence (2010), both published by Boydell, and A Musician's
Alphabet (2006). She gives masterclasses, writes and presents radio
programmes on music, and sits on international competition juries.
Her blog on www.susantomes.com has a loyal following.
The author of Beyond the Notes demonstrates how a working musician
draws energy from the events of daily life, and sometimes seeks a
refuge from them in music. Out of Silence is a diary of a year in
Susan Tomes's life as a performer. Taking as its inspiration
Schumann's remark that 'I am affected by everything that goes on in
the world, and I think it all over in my own way', it aims to show
how a working musician mulls over and draws energy from the events
of everyday life. We follow this internationally renowned pianist
as she prepares for concerts and performs, both as a soloist and as
part of a chamber ensemble; we experience the highs and lows of
practising and the challenges of live performance, we see her
planning masterclasses and interacting with both musicians and
audiences. She casts her mind back to her childhood - practicing
before school on cold Edinburgh mornings, playing 'Danny Boy' for a
relative - and reflects on paintings, dance, books, sport and
gardening. 'A delight and a revelation...She writes with
Schubertian intimacy, modesty and grace,' said the Independent of
her first book, Beyond the Notes. Here Susan Tomes strives to
unlock the secrets of great music and to understand its place in
the wider world. SUSAN TOMES has won a number of awards for her
recordings of chamber music. For fifteen years she was the pianist
of Domus, and for another fifteen she has been the pianist of the
Florestan Trio, one of the world's leading piano trios. She is the
author of Beyond the Notes and A Musician's Alphabet. She writes
occasionally for the Guardian and on a blog on her own website,
www.susantomes.com.
This is a book to appeal to a wide range of readers - pianists of
every level from beginner to professional, piano teachers,
musicians of all kinds, and the broader community of music-lovers.
In Speaking the Piano, renowned pianist Susan Tomes turns her
attention to teaching and learning. Teaching music encompasses
everything from putting a drum in a child's hands to helping an
accomplished musician unlock the meaning and spirit of the
classics. At every stage, some fundamental issues keep surfacing.
In this wide-ranging book, Susan Tomes reflects on how her own
experience as a learner, in different genres from classical to
jazz, hasinfluenced her approach to teaching. She tells us how her
performing career has given her insight into what young performers
need to know, and how discussions with students have fed into her
own practice. She describes the brilliant and intriguing teachers
whose masterclasses opened her ears to the many ways in which music
can be brought alive and communicated. This is a book to appeal to
a wide range of readers - pianists of every level from beginnerto
professional, piano teachers, musicians of all kinds, and the
broader community of music-lovers. In a passionate contribution to
the ongoing debate about the place of music in education, Susan
Tomes argues that this most inspiring of arts can play a unique
role in personal development. This is a lovely, wise, elegantly
written book, filled with tips and anecdotes which could be helpful
and encouraging for any pianist, whether a beginner or
aprofessional. Above all it is a book in which one senses
constantly the deep love the author has for music itself, for its
ability to inspire, touch and, indeed, change lives. STEPHEN HOUGH
SUSAN TOMES is a multi-award-winning pianist whose career
encompasses solo, duo and chamber music playing; she has been at
the heart of the internationally admired ensembles Domus, the
Gaudier Ensemble and the Florestan Trio. Her lecture-recitals have
enabled many listeners to engage with the classics on a new level.
She is the author of four acclaimed books about performance: Beyond
the Notes (Boydell Press 2004), A Musician's Alphabet (Faber,
2006), Out of Silence (Boydell Press, 2010), and Sleeping in
Temples (Boydell Press, 2014).
We knew from her recordings that Susan Tomes is a superb chamber
player; now we know that she's a superb writer too. Michael Church,
INDEPENDENT In this widely acclaimed volume, Susan Tomes, a rare
example of a leading musicianwho writes about the craft of
performance, describes her experience of twenty years of rehearsal,
concerts and recording. We knew from her recordings that Susan
Tomes is a superb chamber player; now we know that she's a superb
writer too. Michael Church, INDEPENDENT She is as sensitive an
observer and as subtle a writer as she is one of our finest chamber
musicians...This is a book that should be read by practising
musicians and music-lovers alike: here's one performer who really
can communicate in words as well as music. JAMES JOLLY, GRAMOPHONE
Susan Tomes's bookgives you an intensely illuminating picture of
the life of a pianist...she is a brilliant writer...Just as she
magnetises with her playing, so too with her words. EDWARD
GREENFIELD, GUARDIAN In this widely acclaimed volume, Susan Tomes,
a rare example of a leading musician who writes about the craft of
performance, describes her experience of twenty years of rehearsal,
concerts and recording. Her performing life has been centred on
chamber music and the need to communicate it fully to an audience
hungry for meaningful musical experience. She was a founder member
and the pianist of both Domus and the Florestan Trio, award-winning
groups at the top of their field. Part One is a series of diaries
describing their travels and performances: Domus in the 1980s with
its own portable concert hall, struggling to create the conditions
for informal but intense concert performances, and the Florestan
Trio, currently one of the world's finest piano trios. Part Two is
a collection of thought-provoking essays about teachers, making
records, practising and rehearsing, audiences, earning a living,
and the particular challenges of being a concert pianist. Beyond
the Notes gives an unusually candid view of the complexities of a
life in music. SUSAN TOMES, alongside her packed concert schedule,
is a frequent contributor, on music and other subjects, to a number
of publications.
A fascinating history of the piano explored through 100 pieces
chosen by one of the UK's most renowned concert pianists "Tomes . .
. casts her net widely, taking in chamber music and concertos,
knotty avant-garde masterworks and (most welcome) jazz."-Richard
Fairman, Financial Times, "Best Books of 2021: Classical Music"
"[One of] the most beautiful books I got my hands on this year. . .
. About the shaping of this maddening, glorious, unconquerable
instrument."-Jenny Colgan, Spectator, "Books of the Year" An
astonishingly versatile instrument, the piano allows just two hands
to play music of great complexity and subtlety. For more than two
hundred years, it has brought solo and collaborative music into
homes and concert halls and has inspired composers in every musical
genre-from classical to jazz and light music. Charting the
development of the piano from the late eighteenth century to the
present day, pianist and writer Susan Tomes takes the reader with
her on a personal journey through 100 pieces including solo works,
chamber music, concertos, and jazz. Her choices include composers
such as Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Robert Schumann, Tchaikovsky,
Debussy, Gershwin, and Philip Glass. Looking at this history from a
modern performer's perspective, she acknowledges neglected women
composers and players including Fanny Mendelssohn, Maria
Szymanowska, Clara Schumann, and Amy Beach.
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