Rough Ideas
Page 41
Fantasie in C, op. 17
Five Pieces in Folkstyle, op. 102
Kinderszenen
Kreisleriana, op. 16
Märchenerzählungen, op. 132
Piano Concerto in A minor, op. 54
Schwartz-Bart, André: The Last of the Just
Science Spectra
scores
annotation of
editions
manuscript
urtext
two-piano reductions
Scriabin, Alexander
Piano Sonata no. 4 in F sharp, op. 30
Piano Sonata no. 5 in F sharp, op. 53
Searle, Adrian
Seattle
Selby, Hubert, Jr: Last Exit to Brooklyn
self-absorption
self-confidence
self-consciousness
self-expression
self-fulfilment
Serkin, Rudolf
Seville
Shakespeare, William
Henry V
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Shaw, George Bernard
Man and Superman
Sheed, Frank
Shining, The (film)
Shkolnik, Sheldon
Sonatina
Shostakovich, Dmitri
Shute, Nevil: A Town Like Alice
Sibelius, Jean
Symphony no. 4 in A minor, op. 63
Symphony no. 5 in E flat, op. 82
sight-reading
silence
‘Silent Night’
Siloti, Alexander
Sinatra, Frank
Sinding, Christian: Rustle of Spring, op. 32 no. 3
Singapore
Six, Les
Smith, Ronald
smoking, see tobacco
socialism
Sodom and Gomorrah
Solomon
sonata form
Sorabji, Kaikhosru
Mi contra Fa
Spain
sport
stage fright, see performance anxiety
standard repertoire
Stanford, Charles Villiers
Steele, Douglas
Steiner, George
Steinway, Henry
Steinway Hall, London
Steinway pianos
accelerated action
Capo d’Astro bar
CD-18
Duplex Scale system
cost
Still, Clyfford
Stockhausen, Karlheinz
Storgårds, John
Stradivarius
Strauss, Richard
Cello Sonata in F, op. 6
Enoch Arden
Stravinsky, Igor
string instruments: gut/steel
Stroganoff, General Sergei Grigoriyevich
Stuart & Sons pianos
suffering
suicide
assisted
Sullivan, Arthur: The Lost Chord
Swan Lake (ballet)
Switzerland
Sydney
Sydney Opera House
Sydney Symphony Orchestra
Szigeti, Joseph
Tablet magazine
Takács Quartet
Takács-Nagy, Gábor
Takemitsu, Toru
Tanquerey, Adolphe
Tapiola Sinfonietta
Tate Modern, London
Making Visible exhibition
Tatum, Art
Tauer, Andy
Tchaikovsky, Pyotr Ilich
death
sexuality
Concert Fantasia
The Nutcracker
Piano Concerto no. 1 in B flat minor, op. 23
Piano Concerto no. 2 in G, op. 44
Piano Concerto no. 3 in E flat, op 75
piano concertos
Symphony no. 6 in B minor, op. 74 (‘Pathétique’)
teaching
temperature
tempo
Terezín
Terfel, Bryn
terminal illness
terrorism
Tertis, Lionel
Thanksgiving Day
Thatcher, Margaret
Thelwall
Thérèse of Lisieux, St
Thibaud, Jacques
Third Man, The (film)
Thomson, Bryden
Times, The
Tippet Rose Art Center
Titian: Christ Carrying the Cross
tobacco
Today (radio programme)
Tokarev, Nikolai
tonal music
emotional impact
tonality
Toscanini, Arturo
touring
Tours
Trading with the Enemy Amendment Act 1916
tremolos
trills
Trimble, Constance
tritone
Tsontakis, George
Ghost Variations
Man of Sorrows
Turin, Luca
and Tania Sanchez: Perfumes: The A–Z Guide
Turner, Revd J. E.
Tutu, Archbishop Desmond
Tutzing
twelve-note system
Twitter
Tyrol and the Tyrolese (travel book)
Tyson, Andrew
Ubi caritas et amor, Deus ibi est
United Nations
Valéry, Paul
Van Doesburg, Theo
Composition XIII
Van Eyck, Jan: Arnolfini Wedding
Vänskä, Osmo
Vatican
Forbidden Books
Vatican Council, Second
Vaughan Williams, Ralph: Dona nobis pacem
Vermeer, Johannes
vibrato, orchestral
Victor Victrola
Victoria, Queen
Victoria, Tomás Luis de
Vienna: Mozart Festival 1855
Villa, Joseph
Viñao, Ezequiel
Virgin
Wagner, Richard
Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg
Tristan und Isolde
Wagner, Robert
Warhol, Andy
Warrington
Warrington Library
Watts, André
Weber, Ben
Webern, Anton
Piano Variations, op. 27
Weil, Simone
Weimar
Welles, Orson
Wesley, Charles
Westminster Cathedral, London
White, Robert
‘White Christmas’
Wiesel, Elie
Night
Wigglesworth, Mark
Wigmore Hall, London
The Soul of Music
Wigmore Street, London
Wilde, Oscar
William I, Emperor, of Prussia
Williams, James
Wolf, Hugo
‘Herr, was trägt der Boden hier’
Wood, Henry
Worcester
World War I
World War II
Wortley, Lady Alice Stuart
Wyndham, Derrick
Yakult Zaal, Amsterdam
Yamaha pianos
digital
youth orchestras
YouTube
Also by Stephen Hough
The Final Retreat
A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Stephen Hough, one of the most distinctive artists of his generation, performs with the world’s major orchestras and in recital at the most prestigious concert halls. He has made more than sixty CD recordings and has composed works ranging from solo piano to orchestral. He has written articles for The Guardian and The Times (London), and he wrote a blog for The Telegraph for seven years. His first novel, The Final Retreat, was published in 2018. You can sign up for email updates here.
Thank you for buying this
Farrar, Straus and Giroux ebook.
To receive special offers, bonus content,
and info on new releases and other great reads,
sign up for our newsle
tters.
Or visit us online at
us.macmillan.com/newslettersignup
For email updates on the author, click here.
Contents
Title Page
Copyright Notice
Dedication
Introduction
Forum
The Soul of Music
‘Our concert halls are like museums’ – Yes, isn’t that great!
Music in churches: magical ghosts or profane distractions?
Our wonderful, ageing audiences
Dumping the interval
Classical music – for everyone?
Poking bows and spitting mouthpieces
Can you be a musician and not write music?
Can you be a musician and not play or read music?
Hidden musicians, hidden talents
Don’t listen to recordings
Joyce Hatto and listening blind
Meaning what you sing
Old pianists
Gay pianists: can you tell?
Leaving politics out of concerts
Telling tails: do special clothes make a difference?
Stephen, that was really dreadful!
Stuck in a hole or building a tunnel?
Caruso’s garlic breath
Punctured rolls
Is there too much music?
Relics
Bechstein’s fall and rise
What kind of piano do you have at home?
Lonely on the road
When I don’t play the piano
Never mind the metronome, learn to use an alarm clock
Disgrace at a concert
Most of the strokes winners, none of them good enough
Staying power
The Russian crescendo
Fickleness of feelings
This one’s happy, this one’s sad
What music makes you cry?
Can atonal music make you cry?
Symphonies under ice
Clothing the naked melody
Two women, two songs: in and out of harmony
Is New Age thinking bad for musicians?
Memory clinic and Mozart
My terrible audition tape
Quaver or not: should orchestras use vibrato?
Parlour songs
Breaking the law: a short speech for the Middle Temple
The Proms
Stage
Once more onto the stage, dear friends, once more
Bored on stage
Neurotic on stage
Nervous on stage
Take a deep breath
Routine on a concert day
Flying glasses
Page-turning: part of the performance
As the page turns … or not
The musical page-turner
A crucial tip when playing with the score
Out of the cockpit
Humiliation and vomiting at the keyboard
Stage fright and playing from memory
Bad self-consciousness as the death of good self-confidence
Beautiful bloopers: the joy of making mistakes
Can wrong notes be right?
Clap between movements? Please!
Don’t feel you have to clap between movements
Ample amplification
PPProjection
Charismatic
Stanley Kubrick and recording
Red-light district I: the background
Red-light district II: frenzy
Red-light district III: solo lows and highs
Red-light district IV: live or alive?
Red-light district V: play it again (and again), Sergei
Red-light district VI: did I really play it like that?
A promiscuous weekend in Amsterdam
Ringtone in Padua
Hysterical laughter on stage
Studio
The practice of practising: for professionals
The practice of practising: for amateurs
Random practice tips
There’s no such thing as a difficult piece
Unfinished
Fingering
Remembering what watered our roots
A good edition
Where do you sit to play the piano?
Romantic in soul not body: sitting still at the piano
Depressed: the amazing world of the pedal
Depressed again: the (not so) soft pedal
Seldom depressed: the middle pedal
A different depression: finger pedal
Trills I: easy does it
Trills II: a good fingering but not with the fingers
Trills III: six random tricks
Up to speed
Agile wings not muscular legs
Beats and bleats
Those who do can’t necessarily teach
Masterclasses
Why don’t (music) students attend concerts?
What does the most talented young pianist need most?
Trying to practise away from the piano and trying to try to pray
People and Pieces
How much do we need to know about a composer?
Elgar the Roman Catholic
Tchaikovsky didn’t commit suicide
Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto
Tchaikovsky’s Second Piano Concerto: why I changed the second movement
Tchaikovsky’s Concert Fantasia
Artificial gushing tunes
Authenticity playing Rachmaninov
Recording Rachmaninov
The other Rach Three
How Beethoven redesigned the cadenza
Brahms First or Second?
Dvořák’s Concerto for Ten Thumbs
Schubert’s hurdy-gurdy man
Schubert and Simone Weil: a note for a CD
The shifting sandals of York Bowen: a note for a CD
Mompou and the music of evaporation: a note for a CD
I don’t love Bach
I don’t hate Bach
Liszt I: the man who invented concert life as we know it
Liszt II: the man who invented modern music
Liszt III: the man who broke pianos
Liszt’s abstract sonata
Both Liszt concertos in the same concert?
Why Chopin’s B minor Sonata is harder to play than Liszt’s
Why Liszt’s B minor Sonata is harder to record than Chopin’s
Chopin and the development of piano technique
Chopin, Rothko and the bowler hat
Debussy: piano music without hammers
Debussy and Ravel: chalk and cheese
The three faces of Francis Poulenc
My Mass and my tears of joy
My First Piano Sonata: fragments of fragility
My Second Piano Sonata: insomnia in a seedy bedsit
My Third Piano Sonata: tonality, dogma, modernism
Alfred Cortot: the poet speaks
Two formidable ladies
Josef Hofmann and Steinway: two greats in an era of greats
Glenn Gould and modern recording
Happy (un)together
Die Meistersinger: Terfel is Sachs
When Ernest twiddled the knobs
Douglas Steele’s repetition
RIP Joseph Villa
RIP Vlado Perlemuter
RIP Shura Cherkassky
RIP Lou Reed
Great Greens I: by way of an introduction
Great Greens II: Gordon and the smokescreen
Great Greens III: Maurus and the smile
Great Greens IV: Julien in the kitchen
… and More
What is your motto?
Rilke, and poetry as the root of everything
Beauty, beauty, beauty
No poetry after Auschwitz … but music
Beethoven is my religion
The expectation of change: dis-ease in twentieth-century art
Teju Cole and neutering poets
Architecture as eureka in S
ydney
Mastromatteo’s obsession
The ring of silence: the pots of Anna Paik
Paul Klee at Tate Modern
Almost the same: van Doesburg and Mondrian
Gerhard Richter not naked
Old Masters: either we kill them or let them die naturally
Maths and music: joined at the hip or walking down different paths?
Sport and music: on the same team?
The curse of the perfect number
The essence of underpants and the lap of luxury
Do musicians tend to be socialists?
The Final Retreat: my novel of desire and despair
If I ruled the world
Pleasure
Holy smoke
Beef Stroganoff and a bag of bones
Electronic books: the end of one kind of intellectual snobbery
Good Americans
Thanksgiving for Thanksgiving
Willa Cather, Thanksgiving, and the soul of America
Working hard by letting go
Pascal: the brilliant sun or a warm fire?
Monks do it best
Myself or my brain
Daring to hope in Alzheimer’s despairing inner world
Going gentle into that good night: the blessing of hospices
Suicide? Let me assist you
Dignity?
But on the other hand … some different thoughts on end-of-life issues
Encouragement, falsehood, and Auschwitz
… and Religion
Rock or tree?
Empty hands
I am not a Catholic pianist
Could God exist?
What if God doesn’t exist?
Religion’s moth-eaten tapestry
Do not touch me: the wisdom of Anglican thresholds
Heaven’s above
Becoming Jewish and staying Catholic
Is it Christian to single out the Christians?
Putting the ‘Mass’ back into Christmas
Christmas carols
Sacraments and the sugar-plum fairy
Reformation: the individual or the community?
Crack!
The ghastly story of Lazarus
Assumptions about the Assumption
The three greatest fears
Is he musical?
In earlier times …
Sodom and Gomorrah: straight, upside down, inside out
Abortion: can I go there?
A light that is so lovely
A Final Reflection
Stephen Hough: Discography 1985–2018
Piano Solo
Works for Piano and Orchestra
Chamber Music with Piano
Vocal and Choral Music
Acknowledgements
Index
Also by Stephen Hough
A Note About the Author
Copyright
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
120 Broadway, New York 10271
Copyright © 2019 by Stephen Hough
All rights reserved
Originally published in 2019 by Faber & Faber Ltd, Great Britain
Published in the United States by Farrar, Straus and Giroux