Wednesday, February 08, 2012
A spark has been lost from the world of opera
Wednesday, February 01, 2012
Exciting British Music
There is so much inspiring new music around but it is not always that easy to know where to begin.
All of the compositions for the British Composer Awards had to have a performance in the UK in the year before the Awards take place.
Have a look at some of these extracts by winning composers not of the winning works themselves, apart from the Sorensen which is the actual winning composition. I think there is some really exciting music here.
Outreach category won by Graham Fitkin
An extract from Log for 6 electric pianos
Vocal category won by Huw Watkins
An extract from his Violin Concert - a stunning performance by Alina Ibragimova
International category won by Bent Sorensen
An extract from the Piano Concerto, La Mattina
Wind Band or Brass Band won by Lucy Pankhurst
An extract from Wired for Brass Band
Stage Works won by Orlando Gough
An extract from Ariel Songs performed by Shout
tutti has CDs of music by many past and present British Composer Awards winners including from the above, Huw Watkins and Graham Fitkin. Well worth hearing more of. Hope you like them as much as we do.
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Remembering a great clarinet player
Geraldine Allen
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Purcell's Own Pipes
Saturday, November 12, 2011
More about Purcell
Friday, November 11, 2011
Kapustin Piano Music for PlayStation
This is now being picked up by musicians all over world and there are some really terrific performances. The Toccatina from one of the Etudes has even just been released as the sound track for the latest PlayStation Gran Turismo 5. Now I know absolutely nothing about PlayStation but listen to the track http://www.tutti.co.uk/featured-sheet-music/music-from-gran-turismo-5 and you can hear how fantastic the music is. To play the music you need at least 12 fingers(!) and there are some great performances out there. Look out for Kapustin, it is really terrific music.
Thursday, March 05, 2009
Wow!!!!
My name is Rodgers, my Mother's maiden name is Broadwood and her Mother's maiden name is Purcell. It was always a generally accepted belief in our family that we were descendants of English composer, Henry Purcell. It was not until my good friend, composer Judith Bingham, who between commissions likes to indulge her interest in genealogy, took on the scraps of paper that thus far had formed our family history, that the truth has actually emerged! And, yes, she has been able to trace my ancestry directly back to Henry Purcell who it would seem is a many times great Uncle. The book Judith has produced is a fascinating read back to Sir Richard Purcell (b.1455) and on to Henry Purcell (the elder, d. 1664) and to his sons Daniel, Henry (himself) and Edward, and to Henry Purcell the elder's brother, Thomas. Coming down the centuries we also encounter William Purcell who was a carpenter on the Bounty in 1788-89 at the time of the great Mutiny. He is listed in the ship's log as being 'loyal', so that is one black sheep averted!
I'm having a wonderful time reading up on all these fascinating characters so am probably likely to bore you to death abut it all!
More about me here!
Sarah
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Time for Music
Tuesday, February 05, 2008
Is playing music fun?
Playing is exhilerating and liberating and creative and challenging and I love it to bits because it is, or was fundamentally the way that I expressed myself. I went on to be a professional performer in the same way as I continued to breathe, it was not a choice, it was just what I had to do. When I had an accident which gave me a whip lash injury which meant that I could no longer hold the instrument for more than 20 minutes without being in a huge amount of pain what I missed was not fun, what I had lost was my voice. Sometimes, just sometimes I get a glimmer of that back when I play but mainly now I get the chance to hear it in the playing of others particularly in the groups that I coach. I also get a little of it back in the work that I am still writing for tutti.co.uk about wind playing. It is aimed particularly at adult players and I should have completed it in August had not our whole lives been disrupted by builders and I really do intend to finish it soon after the next event and after - oh well, hopefully in the summer at the very latest - I will keep you posted! Until then - have fun!
Friday, August 24, 2007
Composer's Legacy
Hearing that Graham had died brought an era to a close but as his widow Janet said to me - he has left his music legacy for us to enjoy. Try listening to Caroline Clemmow and Anthony Goldstone in their recordings of Graham Whettam's music for solo piano and piano duet for sale on tutti.co.uk.
Thursday, August 16, 2007
passionate about singing
Back soon, Sarah
Monday, August 06, 2007
passionately preparing
Now I absolutely cannot write today without referring to an experience about which I feel intensely passionate - last night's Prom concert. Anybody out there hear it? A chunky programme full of promise with Brahms, Elgar and Strauss (Richard) on offer. The band was the RPO, but I cannot believe what was done to them in rehearsal to produce such extraordinarily inappropriate interpretations. The playing was fine and heartfelt but to my ears, completely off the interpretative radar: Brahms, whimsical and over-sweetly full of vibrato and this was the St Anthony Variations for goodness sake - variations on a theme by Haydn. I hoped for better in the Enigma Variations, but the performance was so precious and placed and saccharine, I could barely listen; as well as the tempi being up the shoot - Nimrod was so slow I thought he'd fallen asleep - so much for the mighty hunter. Regrettably, so much of this had stuck in the craw to the extent that I couldn't hang in there to listen to the Strauss Oboe Concerto - my loss I fear. I'll make myself feel better by giving you a link to all the oboe music we have on tutti.
Sorry to moan, but really, Brahms and Elgar are Saxons, not Siamese (no offence to anyone oriental intended!) I'll let you know how I get on with the Islington bunch, but not 'til Wednesday.
Cheers!
Sarah
Thursday, August 02, 2007
no pain, no passion
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
passionately successful weekend
We have 10 coming for dinner this evening so this will have to be a short post. Actually we have 4 dinners in the next 6 days, so if it weren't for music, food would be the abiding passion in this house, not forgetting drink as well.
Cheers!
Sarah
Friday, July 27, 2007
passionate preparations
Thursday, July 26, 2007
passionate about composers (2)
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
passions for wednesday written on tuesday
passionate confession
My problem is too much, too big, too often - rather like over-eating, but in this case the bites are chunks of work that are demanding to chew. Take a typical day: start at 7.00am with a quick round of emails for overnight sales from around the world on tutti and then crosscheck these with transaction reports and backing; deal with customer queries and problems (not many of those thankfully!); pick up threads of unfinished items from yesterday or even the day before or even the week before, or in this case, 6 months before! - brief pause for sigh on passing thought that I will probably never catch up - yes that happens EVERY day - and then brighten up at thought that I can cross a few items off the 'to do' list. Most days there is a meeting to attend or to prepare for and this can range from a Board meeting at the mcps-prs-alliance (I'm a writer director on that one) to the management group at local church for community centre project (I'm chair of that one!) Spend some time updating pages on Impulse - hundreds of marketing and promotion-hungry composers and performers! Dash out to get to meeting - probably late (but only five minutes. Would love to stay for lunch, but, 'no', dash back to pick up some more threads. Prepare contract for latest commission - lovely opportunity to compose a new work for thriving choral society - chorus, string quartet and harp - can't wait to get started on that one (been saying that for a few months now, but have promised myself to get going in August - not too far around the corner!) Have a big think about developing tutti to include itunes - really important step for classical CD suppliers - talking of which, there is a brilliant Szymanowski (that's shoe-man-of-ski)on the tutti homepage at the moment - here it is: Complete Piano Music
Oops! have I remembered to eat today? and so it goes on. Anyway, I'm not asking for your sympathy, just a bit of slack in the fall off from blogging. Am now going to work this into the early morning routine. I know, you'll believe it when you see it. Well I always did like a challenge - passionate about it you might say! More tomorrow.
Sarah
Monday, January 29, 2007
passionate about tchaikovsky
Cheers Tchaikovsky!
Sarah
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
Apologies, promises and passions in 2007
Sarah