Workshop for Piano Teachers with Graham Fitch, Tim Barratt and Frances Wilson.

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There are just a few places left for our Workshop for Piano Teachers this Sunday.

Register your interest in our next 2016 workshop by sending us an email to londonpianoevents [at] gmail.com

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Date: Sunday 23 November 2014
Timings: 9.45am arrival for 10am start.
Venue: Cecil Sharp House, 2 Regent’s Park Rd, London NW1 7AY
Nearest Tube: Camden Town or Chalk Farm
Transport Guide: http://www.cecilsharphouse.org/csh-contact-and-visit-us/how-to-get-here

Please note that lunch is not provided but the cafe is open. You are welcome to bring a packed lunch.

Free copies of Pianist magazine will be available on arrival.

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Harpsichord Competition at the Horniman Museum and Gardens: Dulwich Piano Festival 2014/2015

We were delighted that the Horniman Museum and Gardens hosted the Dulwich Piano Festival’s Harpsichord Competition on their beautiful 1772 Kirckman competition. Steven Devine adjudicated the competition and performed a short recital of music by Handel.

Steven Devine has performed all over the world as a harpsichord soloist (his recent Chandos recording of the Goldberg Variations was described by Gramophone Magazine as “one of the best”), he is a highly sought-after continuo player with permanent positions with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Classical Opera and London Baroque and directs repertoire with a wide range of groups with repertoire from 16th century polyphony to new commissions.

Thank you to Mimi Waitzman and the team and the museum for help making the event possible. We look forward to returning in 2015 and introducing this wonderful instrument to young musicians.

Entries are now open for the 2015 Dulwich Piano Festival:
http://dulwichpianofestival.co.uk

Help Fund a Haydn Plaque in London

Many of our students are learning pieces by Haydn at the moment, particularly students working on Grade 4 ABRSM Piano Exams. Hannah will be playing a Haydn piece on the Kirckman Harpsichord at the Horniman Museum and Gardens on Sunday 16 November as part of the Dulwich Piano Festival harpsichord competition. Haydn’s music and influence are still all around us and a Blue Plaque in Soho would be a fitting tribute to this great composer. You can donate as little as £1 towards commissioning a blue plaque for Haydn. This is an independent project by the Haydn Society and will be funded through Kickstarter. Donate now!


The Haydn Society of Great Britain is putting up the first commemorative plaque in London to the composer Franz Joseph Haydn.

There have been a number of attempts over the past fifty years to put up a plaque to Haydn in London but none has succeeded, perhaps because there are no original buildings left with which he is associated. However, the Haydn Society of Great Britainhas been granted permission to put a plaque on the building occupying the site of 18, Great Pulteney Street in Soho.

We know from Haydn’s letters and diaries that he lived in a house on this spot when he first arrived in 1791, in rooms arranged for him by his promoter, Salomon. We also know he found 18th-century Soho very noisy, just as it still is today! But don’t just take our word for it – below is part of a BBC documentary on Haydn from 2009 presented by Charles Hazlewood.

It’s hard to over-estimate the importance of Haydn to the development of classical music. Often referred to as “the Father of the Symphony” for the contribution he made to the development of that genre, ‘Papa’ Haydn is equally remembered for his influence on the development of the string quartet. Haydn’s music forms the the foundations on which Mozart and Beethoven built their greatest work. Here’s a 2011 BBC documentary on the development of the symphony, which starts with Haydn and his visit to London, ‘the first ever bona-fide musical superstar’

The Haydn Society will commission a plaque from Ned Heywood MBE, a respected manufacturer responsible for many similar plaques across London (and all the square plaques in the City of London). We have discussed the design at great length and arrived at the following which is in keeping with guidelines suggested by English Heritage(though this plaque will not be an EH-affiliated memorial) and in common with the majority of comparable plaques in London. It will look something like this:

We are doing this independently of any official plaque scheme and so we need to raise all the money ourselves. This will be the first permanent commemoration of Haydn’s presence in London and his huge contribution to the cultural life of the city. The original subscribers to his Hanover Square Rooms concerts were attracted equally by his reputation and his musical genius – we want to acknowledge both of these in a lasting memorial. We invite you to help us make it a reality.

Discover more about the project here.


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