Wednesday, July 15, 2026

The Dangers of being a Musical Prodigy Vanessa Mae: Slapped around by Tiger Mum

  

Vanessa Mae

Vanessa Mae

The “Tiger mom phenomenon,” a term coined by Yale law professor Amy Chua in 2011, describes an age-old system of strict authoritarian motherly control that is supposed to propel children towards excellence. Advocates suggest that it produces an exceptionally high proportion of top performers in a variety of academic and musical areas. Skeptics blame the system for inflicting a host of chronic mental health and psychiatric problems, including a high suicide rate amongst Asian children aged 5 to 12! As you might well imagine, the musical universe is full of ambitious parents who will do whatever it takes to see their sons or daughters succeed. But you don’t have to take my word, just ask Singaporean-born British violinist and alpine skier Vanessa-Mae, who openly confessed that her mother Pamela Tan-Nicholson frequently used serious physical violence and humiliation to improve her violin playing. “She regularly hits me violently across the face and body for less than perfect performances. Everything was geared towards focusing me on my violin career,” Mae has said. “If I didn’t play a piece perfectly, my mother–and often my music teacher also—would resort to slapping me.”  

Vanessa-Mae-Cover-1Vanessa also revealed that she was tightly controlled, and not permitted to leave her house unchaperoned until the age of 20. “I had faced thousands of people on stage and millions on TV, but I didn’t know how to cross the road,” said Vanessa. Physical force was looked upon as a reflection of parental devotion, and little Vanessa spent a good amount of time kneeling on the floor and asking for forgiveness, while her mom kept pulling her ears. Unashamedly, one could say almost proudly, Pamela Tan-Nicholson told a newspaper reporter, “I hit her often to instill discipline and restricted her life outside of music. Maybe some would say she would have done better with an even stricter mum who didn’t give her so much freedom. Perhaps others would consider Mae lucky she had a Tiger Mum, everything is relative.” Vanessa does credit her strict upbringing with her ability to freely speak her mind. However, mother and daughter have not spoken in person since Vanessa sacked her as her manager, a day before her 21st birthday, in 1999!

The Insecurity of Love: Carmen 1875

 by Maureen Buja  May 12th, 2026


Georges Bizet, 1875 (Photo by Étienne Carjat)

Étienne Carjat: Georges Bizet, 1875

And then there was Carmen. Initially delayed in its premiere because of fears about the themes of betrayal and murder, it was given its premiere on 3 March 1875. Bizet died three months later, at age 36, convinced it, too, had failed. As predicted, audiences were shocked and scandalised, but fascinated. Carmen has continued as a staple on the stage and, more to the point, songs from the opera have escaped into popular culture. Carmen’s Habanera, the Seguidilla from the first act, and the Toreador song in the second act continue to find fans.

Greek National Opera, in coordination with the Palazzetto Bru Zane, recently staged the Fondation’s 1875 Carmen. This is a historical staging of the opera as presented in 1875. There is ample documentation of the stage scenery, the costumes, and even the ‘staging manuals’ to enable a modern production to move back in time. But, as Alexandre Dratwicki, the Artistic Director of the Palazzetto Bru Zane, says in his notes in the programme book, this is not a slavish reconstruction: there’s no requirement for period instruments in the orchestra, the October 1875 version with recitatives is being used rather than the March 1875 one with spoken dialogue; some of the musical cuts made over time have been retained, etc. The point of this reconstruction is to show that even 150 years later, a modern opera house can use this version. Even if their house orchestra only knows the later versions or the singers only know the standard version, the Bru Zane version has relevance for a modern production.  

The key to the reconstruction of the past has been the staging manuals, or livret de mis-en-scène, which were initially designed to capture all the elements for the stage manager: who had entrances stage right or stage left, where the scenery was to be placed, etc. Not only a reminder for the current production, the livret was invaluable for any revivals. The researchers at Bru Zane found out that some of the original 1875 livrets were still being used as late as the 1930s.

Some elements of the opera at the premiere, such as the spoken dialogue, were dropped when the opera was staged later in 1875 outside France. It was feared by the French that foreign language speakers wouldn’t be able to speak the dialogue correctly, and so they were replaced by more standard recitatives (one can, of course, sing French, but speaking it was clearly a different thing entirely!).

The story started with a novella by Prosper Mérimée, Carmen, first published in the Revue des deux mondes in October 1845; parts 1-3 appeared in the magazine, a final part of scholarly remarks on the gypsies only appeared in the book version in 1846. The opera comes entirely from part III of the original story. This tale of the liar and thief, who was Carmen, was cleaned up to be the story of a free-spirited character who declares more than once in the opera that she never lies. Don José, in Mérimée’s story, is no good boy from the village either. He joined the Seville dragoons when he fled Navarre after having killed a man in a fight. Other murders he commits, such as of his lieutenant and later of her husband, are removed from the opera storyline. After he kills her husband, Carmen marries Don José – again, not in the opera. In the original story, the matador Escamillo is only the picador Lucas, much lower in the bullfighter ranks.

Carmen (Gaëlle Arquez) attracted by the uncaring José (Charles Castronovo) who is thinking of Michaëla, 2026 (Greek National Opera) (Photo by Giannis Antonoglou)

Carmen (Gaëlle Arquez) attracted by the uncaring José (Charles Castronovo) who is thinking of Michaëla, 2026 (Greek National Opera)
(Photo by Giannis Antonoglou)

No matter what was removed from the original story, the libretto created by Ludovic Halévy and Henri Meilhac was still going to be a difficult sell to the Opéra-Comique. Their chorus was used to standing still and singing, filling in the background. This opera required that they enter…gasp…smoking….and joking with the men in the square, and fight. They have to get physical with the dragoons in the square. And Carmen, who gets killed at the end, would be the first heroine to die on the Opéra-Comique stage. If you want to compare the two heroines, the Opéra-Comique would be Michaëla: innocent, chaste, and ignorant of the rougher ways of the world. Carmen, as a character, was the shocker. She changed lovers at will and was faithful only to herself.

One of the nice discoveries was the source of Bizet’s Habanera. The source was already known – the song El arreglito (The Little Arrangement) by Sebastián de Iradier – and Bizet thought it was a folksong, so he used it as the basis for his heroine’s song.

This song is a dialogue between Pepito and his girlfriend. She says she doesn’t trust him. He says, ‘If you want me, softly say it, and in a little while, I will be your little arrangement’. She responds that she will adore only him if he’s faithful. Which, of course, he swears to be.  

Once you hear where he started, it gives a new appreciation for what Bizet brought to the opera stage. The addition of the strong habanera rhythm, the change of direction of the song to be more direct, and it’s a statement and a warning from Carmen: L’amour est un oiseau rebelle / Love is a rebellious bird that cannot be tamed. She likes strong, silent men. Next, Love is a gypsy child who can be held to no laws. Her key line comes in here: If I love you, be on your guard!  

When Bizet learned that his claimed ‘folksong’ was actually written in 1863 by a composer who had died in 1865, he added a note about its source in the first edition of the vocal score. Although the libretto as a whole is credited to Meilhac and Halévy, the words for this song were written by Bizet.

The production at the Greek National Opera, with such an amazing amount of research and work behind it, was astonishing. In a sense, the audience didn’t quite know what to do with the amazing scenery and how the curtain comes up on a set piece, everyone in place, rather than a gradual buildup of people on stage. Unexpected elements were the use of footlights (lights placed on the front edge of the stage to cast light back), as they would have had in the 19th century. At times, this had the effect of lighting everyone in front from below, so it looked quite like a melodrama at some points.

The role of Carmen on opening night was taken by Gaëlle Arquez (Anita Rachvelishvili and Marina Viotti have it on other nights). Her Carmen wasn’t high-spirited as much as vicious. She seemed to enjoy picking on the men in the first scene too much. This made it difficult to see why Don José was willing to throw over everything for her. She was mean! When the final act arrives, however, the character goes from strength to someone who’s powerless. She awaits her fate, rather than fighting it as she has through the entire opera, and it was a disappointing come-down.

The role of Michaëla was sung by Vassiliki Karayanni as a lovely ingenue (Maria Mitsopoulou sang it later). She was particularly effective in the third act, when she ventures up into the mountains to tell José that his mother was not only mourning his departure from the straight life, but (shades of melodrama again) was dying and wanted to see her boy one last time. Michaëla wears her pretty light coloured best village clothes while surrounded by the rough and ready smugglers, and the contrast between the life José could have had and the one he chose couldn’t be more evident.

Don José always has a hard character to define. He has to be adamant and changeable, desired and reviled, desirous and murderous all over the course of the opera. The role was sung by Charles Castronovo (Andrea Carè later) who put all the inconsistencies of the character to fine show. In the final act, when he decides to demand Carmen return to him, he has to have an uncharacteristic strength we haven’t seen before.

The toreador, Escamillo, played by Dionysios Sourbis on opening night and by Tassos Apostolou and Nikos Kotenidis on other nights, also carried off the role well. On two different occasions, he has to insert himself into the middle of the bad guys to get Carmen’s attention, and both times he is successful. In his final appearance before the bullfight, he’s triumphant. He’s gotten the girl, and his boys will help him get the bull. As played on a different night by one of GNO’s leading stars, the bass Tassos Apostolou, he was even more triumphant. Apostolou stands a good head and shoulders above the rest of the cast and, from that vantage point, carries a greater presence and sense of command.  

The children’s choir had two appearances, in the first and fourth acts, and was just the perfect noisy, imitative, annoying presence.

Carmen, Act I: Children’s chorus teasing a dragoon, 2026 (Greek National Opera) (Photo by Giannis Antonoglou)

Carmen, Act I: Children’s chorus teasing a dragoon, 2026 (Greek National Opera) (Photo by Giannis Antonoglou)

The pieces you didn’t expect were the funny business that has largely been cut from or downplayed in modern productions. In the first act, the dragoons comment on the problems of an old man with a young wife, and we watch the notes her young lover passes to her, and it’s like a whole commentary on love going on through the whole act.

In the second act, there’s a scene with Carmen and her two girls, Frasquita and Mercedes, with Le Remendado and Le Dancaïre of the smugglers about the indispensability of women when planning deceitful acts. This comes back again in the third act in the smuggler’s hideout when some sentries need to be seduced away from their posts, and the women smugglers say, in essence, ‘leave them to us’.

Carmen, Act I:’Women are indispensable’ with Le Remendado and Le Dancaïre and the innkeeper, and Carmen (centre front) with Frasquita and Mercedes, 2026 (Greek National Opera) (Photo by Giannis Antonoglou)

Carmen, Act I:’Women are indispensable’ with Le Remendado and Le Dancaïre and the innkeeper, and Carmen (centre front) with Frasquita and Mercedes, 2026 (Greek National Opera) (Photo by Giannis Antonoglou)

The final scene is, of course, where all the drama, melodrama, and action come together. A point is made in the notes by Étienne Jardin (Director of Research and Publications, Palazzetto Bru Zane) that the imagery of that last scene was always regarded as important.  

In the black and white poster created by Prudent-Louis Leray for the premiere, Carmen lies dead in Don José’s arms while Escamillo approaches from the bull ring. The fatal knife lies on the ground.

Prudent-Louis Leray: Carmen. Opéra-comique en quatre actes de H. Meilhac et L. Halévy. Musique de Georges Bizet (Gallica: btv1b53187276q)

Prudent-Louis Leray: Carmen. Opéra-comique en quatre actes de H. Meilhac et L. Halévy. Musique de Georges Bizet (Gallica: btv1b53187276q)

Matching this image with what happen on stage is interesting.

Carmen, Act IV, final scene: Carmen (Gaëlle Arquez) lies dead in the arms of José (Charles Castronovo) while Escamillo (Dionysios Sourbis) approaches, 2026 (Greek National Opera) (Photo by Giannis Antonoglou)

Carmen, Act IV, final scene: Carmen (Gaëlle Arquez) lies dead in the arms of José (Charles Castronovo) while Escamillo (Dionysios Sourbis) approaches, 2026 (Greek National Opera) (Photo by Giannis Antonoglou)

When we return to the concept of the livret, we discover that all of this is choreographed.

Carmen, frightened, takes a few steps backwards and rushes towards the entrance to the bullring. José seizes her on the steps and stabs her, with his back to the audience, and she falls close to the curtain, her head stage right. José kneels beside her.

At the end of the offstage reprise of the chorus, the curtains of the bullring open again, and the crowd rushes onto the stage, mostly going stage right.

Since the chorus is singing at this point, this last entrance is only made by the minor characters and extras.

The dragoons line the back of the stage, and the Alcade and his two alguazils are on the steps.

Escamillo enters last.

And so, the audience of the Opéra-Comique had their nice middle-class ending. The bad girl gets hers in the end, and the man she’s led astray will die for her murder (José’s prison story formed parts I and II of Prosper Mérimée’s original Carmen novella). But yet we know that with the death of Carmen, all life has gone out of the world.

Throughout the whole opera, characters are concerned with Love – do you love me? Do I love you? I don’t love you! Or even, how can you love him when you said you loved me? For everyone, it seems to have a different meaning. Michaëla’s caught by José in a fervent kiss, and then he’s pursuing Carmen. If you fall in love with Carmen, it will be the death of you. José’s last words couldn’t be more ironic: ‘Ah! Carmen! My beloved Carmen!’

Difficult Trombone Positions

July 13th, 2026



Credit: NPR Classical on Facebook

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

If Dogs and Cats Ran the World: John Carbon’s Astro series

 by Maureen Buja  April 25th, 2026


This led to a request for Astro Dogs, which Carbon composed in 2019. This time, he not only specified the Zodiac sign but also the specific dog:

  1. Beagle (Aquarius)
  2. Basset Hound (Taurus)
  3. Bichon Frise (Gemini)
  4. Saint Bernard (Leo)
  5. Standard Poodle (Libra)
  6. Presa Canario (Scorpio)
  7. Labrador Retriever (Sagittarius)
  8. Chihuahua (Pisces)
  9. Toy Boston Bull Terrier (Virgo)
  10. Pekingese (Cancer)
  11. Werewolf (Capricorn)
  12. Irish Wolfhound (Aries).

The characters of the dogs come through clearly. The solemn Saint Bernard (tasked with rescue duties) versus the tiny prancing Pekingese.

Saint Bernard

Saint Bernard


Pekingese

Pekingese


Or the meaty solidity of the Presa Canario versus the hornpipe of the giant Irish Wolfhound.

Presa Canario

Presa Canario

JIrish Wolfhound

Irish Wolfhound


All kinds of dogs are in Carbon’s zodiac list: toy dogs, fluffy dogs (the Bichon Frisé), tiny dogs (chihuahua), and even dogs of our nightmares (the werewolf).

Feeling that in his first cat collection for guitar, he hadn’t paid them the same attention that he’d given to the dogs, Carbon wrote a new set of Zodiac Cats in 2023, which later took the title of Astro Cats to match the Astro Dogs.

Now he wandered the world for his cats: all continents have a representative, including the world of literature, for a truly famous cat.

No. 1. Saharan Cheetah: Sagittarius
No. 10. Snow Leopard: Scorpio
No. 11. Spotted Hyena: Gemini
No. 12. American Shorthair: Aquarius
No. 2. South African Lion: Leo
No. 3. Peruvian Pampas Cat: Aries
No. 4. Maine Coon Cat: Taurus
No. 5. Bengal Tiger: Virgo
No. 6. Cheshire Cat: Libra
No. 7. Siberian Lynx: Capricorn
No. 8. North American Panther: Cancer
No. 9. Siamese Cat: Pisces


Both wild cats (cheetahs and leopards) and domestic cats (Maine Coon and Siamese) have a place. That’s not to say that the wild cats are the biggest….

Peruvian Pampas Cat

Peruvian Pampas Cat

Maine Coon Cat and owner Yulia Minina

Maine Coon Cat and owner Yulia Minina

In his cat music, Carbon captures their actions: ‘pouncing, crouching, sprinting, as well as elements of the hunt and their mysterious, crafty nature’, as the composer says. He was also inspired in his music by friends who also had the same sign. The Siamese cat, for example, was a favourite of the composer’s mother, who was also a Pisces.

You might notice No. 11, the Spotted Hyena: Gemini, and wonder if a dog has crept into our cat list. According to the latest research, hyenas are more closely related to cats than to dogs; they look so much like.

If you have both a piano and a cat, you might find something familiar in No. 12, American Shorthair: Aquarius. It takes its ascending theme from Domenico Scarlatti’s Fuga del gatto (Sonata in G minor, K. 30), supposedly inspired by Scarlatti’s cat Pulcinella walking across his keyboard. Scarlatti used the cat’s notes for the fugal exposition theme in his 1739 piece.

The steep terrain where the Snow Leopard: Scorpio lives inspires an agile piece with interesting figuration.

Snow Leopard (photo by Bernard Landgraf)

Snow Leopard (photo by Bernard Landgraf)

With something for both dog-lovers and cat-lovers, John Carbon’s Astro series also gives us room to think about the animals we share our lives with. They bring love and humour into all they do, and everyone benefits.

The Strangest Deaths of Famous Composers: Part 2

 by Emily E. Hogstad  July 15th, 2026



In Part 2 of our series on strange composer deaths, we move into the twentieth century – an era shaped by modern medicine, world wars, and rapidly changing artistic worlds.

Ravel on his deathbed © Lebrecht Music & Arts

Ravel on his deathbed © Lebrecht Music & Arts

These composers did not die quietly or predictably. Instead, their final days were marked by misdiagnosed illnesses, institutionalisation, sudden accidents, wartime chaos, or shocking medical failures.

Today, we’re looking at some of the strangest deaths of famous composers.

Hugo Wolf (1903)  

In 1897, composer Hugo Wolf was entering the final stages of a syphilis infection.

At the time, he was suffering from delusions that he was the intendant of the Vienna Opera. His friends only succeeded in sending him to an asylum by telling him it was the Emperor’s home, where he would sign the paperwork to finalise his new position.

He was in and out of institutions over the following years. At one point, he attempted suicide by jumping into a lake, but he survived – and then was committed for the rest of his life.

In early 1902, doctors determined he’d have just a few days of suffering left. But he survived for a full year more, only dying of a pulmonary infection in February 1903.

Enrique Granados (1916) 

Spanish composer Enrique Granados died a tragic hero’s death.

In 1916, in the middle of World War I, he was touring America. Toward the end of that tour, he accepted one last recital invitation and postponed his passage.

It was a fateful decision. Crossing the English Channel, his British vessel was torpedoed by a German U-boat.

In the chaos, Granados found a spot on a lifeboat…but then he saw his wife in the water and jumped into the ocean to save her. (Women of the 1910s, who usually dressed in heavy and restrictive clothing, were especially prone to drowning.)

Both died.

Alexander Scriabin (1915)  

Russian composer Alexander Scriabin had an active creative imagination.

In the 1910s, he conceived a multimedia extravaganza called Mysterium, to last seven days and be performed in the Himalayas.

While he was working on this project, a boil on his lip – possibly originating from shaving – became infected.

He began running a high fever and developed septicemia. Nine days later, he was dead, along with his dreams for Mysterium.


Engelbert Humperdinck (1921)  

In September 1921, composer Engelbert Humperdinck attended a performance of the opera Der Freischütz. His son was serving as the stage director of the production.

During the performance, Engelbert suffered a heart attack. He died the following day from a second heart attack.

Wolfram would go on to make a career in opera and write a biography of his father.

Alban Berg (1935)  

In 1935, composer Alban Berg set aside his demanding opera Lulu to work on a violin concerto, which he wrote quickly over the summer.

The death of Alma Mahler‘s daughter Manon at the age of 18 inspired him to subtitle the magical, melancholy work “To the memory of an angel”: a subtitle that would prove to be prophetic.

Berg returned to Lulu, hoping to finish it, but in November 1935, he was bitten by an insect. A boil developed on his back and became infected. He ended up developing sepsis and dying on Christmas Eve.

Lulu remained unfinished, although portions would be presented in the years to come.

After the death of Alban’s widow, Lulu was finished in the 1970s by composer and conductor Friedrich Cerha.

Louis Vierne (1937)  

On 2 June 1937, blind composer and organist Louis Vierne played a fateful organ recital at Notre-Dame Cathedral. It would be his 1,750th – and final – one.

He had finished the main body of his program and was just about to begin improvising from themes submitted to him in Braille.

Louis Vierne at Notre Dame

Louis Vierne at Notre Dame © Rollin Smith

He pulled out a stop, had some kind of cardiac event, and then fell off the bench. His foot was stuck on the low E-pedal note. The note resonated through the cathedral.

Amazingly, he had always expressed a wish to die while playing at the organ.


George Gershwin (1937)  

In 1937, composer George Gershwin began experiencing an array of concerning symptoms: headaches, coordination issues, and mood swings. He even started smelling burning rubber.

However, doctors chalked it up to stress and his workaholic tendencies.

But on 9 July 1937, he collapsed, and doctors realised he might have a brain tumour.

He had emergency surgery, and a large tumour (now believed to be a glioblastoma) was removed from his skull.

Tragically, he did not survive. He was just 38 years old.


Maurice Ravel (1937)  

Composer Maurice Ravel suffered a similar fate to Gershwin the same year.

In October 1932, he was in a taxi accident. It was originally thought that Ravel’s injuries were minor, but in retrospect, it seems like he never quite recovered. He began forgetting things like his address and even his music.

He began suffering from head pain in 1937. That December, he underwent experimental brain surgery in the hope of diagnosing his condition. No solid diagnosis was made, but no tumour was found.

Ravel never really gained lucidity and became unable to swallow. He died on 28 December 1937.


Anton Webern (1945)   

Composer Anton Webern died in a tragic accident in the chaos of post-WWII Mittersill, Austria.

One night after dinner, he stepped outside his house to smoke a cigar: a much-appreciated gift from his son-in-law, who was active in the wartime black market.

At the same time, that same son-in-law welcomed two Americans…who, it turns out, were actually soldiers visiting to question him. Webern’s son-in-law was arrested.

In the hubbub, one of the soldiers rushed outdoors and – inexplicably and indefensibly – shot Webern three times.

His family moved the composer to a bed and called the doctor, but his injuries were too grave to survive.

Conclusion

Every death is a tragedy, but when a composer’s life ends suddenly, violently, or under deeply unsettling circumstances, the loss can feel especially acute.

Many of these composers died in the midst of active careers, leaving behind unfinished works and unanswered artistic questions. It’s impossible not to wonder what music was lost along with them.

At the same time, they remind us that behind even the most sophisticated music were fragile human lives, shaped by historical forces beyond their control.

Knowing their stories deepens our understanding of their music and sharpens the sense of urgency, vulnerability, and humanity that still resonates in their works today.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

The Best Classical Music for Working From Home (Matched to Your Task)

  

Today, we’re looking at the best classical music to listen to while working from home, organised by the kind of work you’re trying to do.

For Deep Focus: Analysis, Writing, and Complex Problem-Solving

When work demands your full cognitive attention – whether you’re untangling a complex coding problem, drafting a complicated document, or analysing spreadsheets – you need music that is complicated to mask distractions, but structured enough not to surprise you.

These three pieces are especially reliable for jump starting sustained concentration.

Person working from home on laptop

© longevity.technology

Bach’s Goldberg Variations  

Bach wrote the Goldberg Variations for a harpsichordist employed by an insomniac count who wanted something to occupy his sleepless nights.

The thirty variations share an underlying harmonic structure but never get repetitive, offering just enough variety to keep the mind gently engaged without ever demanding its full attention.

Bach’s The Well-Tempered Clavier  

Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier consists of two volumes of preludes and fugues for solo keyboard, each in a different key.

This is Bach that is both systematic and meditative. The voices enter, answer, and interweave in patterns that feel inevitable – your brain tracks them just enough to stay calm, but not enough to be pulled away from your work.

Haydn’s String Quartets   

Between 1755 and 1799, Classical-era composer Joseph Haydn wrote nearly 70 string quartets. In fact, he came to be known as the “father of the string quartet.”

By and large, they lack the drama or cutting-edge dissonance of Beethoven’s, and are generally more genial: two traits that make these pieces especially intriguing for those working at home.

Any of the quartets will work, but try the Op. 76 set of six, which includes two nicknamed “Emperor” and “Sunrise.”

For Repetitive Tasks: Email, Data Entry, Administrative Work

Thankfully, not all work-from-home demands the full weight of your concentration.

For the kind of tasks that are necessary but not particularly demanding – things like working on your inbox, updating a spreadsheet, filling in a form, etc. – you want music that is a little more energising: something with momentum and a clear pulse that carries you forward without interrupting your train of thought.

Vivaldi’s Four Seasons  

Nowadays, this is the most famous Baroque-era work ever written, and for good reason: its rhythmic energy, combined with its evocative melodies, is infectious.

Each of the four concertos has its own character, but they share a forward motion and a brightness that makes them excellent companions for ploughing through the less glamorous parts of the working day.

If you get tired of the Four Seasons, you can always try out Vivaldi’s other concertos. He wrote over five hundred!

Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos   

Bach’s Brandenburg concertos consist of six concertos, each scored differently, all sharing the same irresistible buoyancy.

The third concerto in particular – scored for strings and continuo – has a relentless, joyful energy.

The Brandenburg concertos are also a convenient length: at around ninety minutes for the complete set, they can be scheduled for any mid-afternoon slump.

Mozart’s Divertimenti   

Mozart’s divertimenti were written for entertainment: light, cheerful, undemanding music for social occasions.

That makes them ideal for the workday: they are all pleasant company that never overstay their welcome or require all of your attention to enjoy.

The Divertimento in D major, K. 136, is a perennial favourite of musicians and music-lovers – for good reason, given its cheer and bustle.

For Creative Work: Writing, Design, or Anything Requiring Inspiration

Creative work is in a strange middle ground when it comes to creating work playlists: you need enough mental quiet to let ideas surface and your internal monologue to run, but silence on its own can feel oppressive.

Music that is slightly impressionistic – that suggests moods and atmospheres, rather than the Baroque era drive and structure – tends to work best for this purpose.

Satie’s Gymnopédies  

Erik Satie’s most famous works are so spacious and unhurried that they seem to exist outside of time itself.

The Gymnopédies – three short piano pieces written when Satie was a twentysomething composer in 1888 – are almost weightless, hovering in a kind of gentle ambiguity.

For creative work where you need your own thoughts to surface, this music is ideal.

Debussy’s Préludes   

Debussy’s piano music is incredibly evocative with its impressions of water, mist, moonlight, and even submerged cathedrals.

The two books of Préludes are particularly good background music – each piece is short and varied, so the collection offers gentle change without jarring interruption.

Chopin’s Nocturnes  

Chopin’s nocturnes occupy a very particular emotional territory: pensive, lyrical, occasionally melancholy, but never overwrought.

The later nocturnes – Op. 55, No. 1 in F minor and Op. 62, No. 1 in B major – have an especially ruminative quality that is great background music for sustained creative effort.

Final Thoughts

Here are a few suggestions as you put together your work-from-home classical music playlist.

Avoid music with vocals in a language you understand. Your brain’s language centers will process the words whether you want them to or not, and that can impact your ability to write or read. We wrote about that here: https://interlude.hk/8-surprising-ways-classical-music-can-help-you-focus-and-study/.

Watch out for dramatic dynamic contrasts – sudden fortes after a quiet passage are the enemy of concentration. Baroque music and minimalism tend to be the safest choices for this reason.

Familiarity helps! Classical music that you already know well is less likely to demand your attention than something you’re hearing for the first time. The first time you hear the Goldberg Variations, you will probably be listening to every note. The fifteenth time? You’ll go the whole morning without being distracted by it – and just comforted instead.

Friday, July 10, 2026

Creating Your Own Schubertiade: George Fu’s Solitude with Schubert

Rising young American pianist George Xiaoyuan Fu releases his third album, Solitude with Schubert, in the form of an evening of Franz Schubert (1797–1828). Just as in Schubert’s time, when the eponymous ‘Schubertiade’ hosted by the composer for his friends was an evening of piano music and song, Fu has created a similar collection on his debut Schubert album.

Gábor Melegh: Franz Schubert, 1827 (Budapest: Hungarian National Gallery)

Gábor Melegh: Franz Schubert, 1827 (Budapest: Hungarian National Gallery)


George Fu (Photo by Raphael Neal)

George Xiaoyuan Fu (Photo by Raphael Neal)

The project began during COVID when Fu was drawn to Schubert’s late works, filled with the anxieties of the composer’s final year. Following the death of his father, Fu connected with a bereavement group in London and created a recital for them based on Schubert’s last works, and this album is the result of that recital. Fu found the switches between music filled with ‘bleakness and despair, which is bewilderingly followed by sunniness and hope’, and its juxtaposition of light and dark, to be something he was feeling in his own life.

Fu opens and closes the album with two short pieces, the Allegretto in C minor, D. 915, and the Hungarian Melody, D. 817, that bookend the entire collection. What Fu regards as Schubert’s most ‘Beethovenian essay’, the Piano Sonata No. 19 in C minor, D. 958, forms the core of the recording. Fu notes the work’s structure, key, and thematic elements can be traced to two works by Beethoven32 Variations in c minor, WoO 80, and the Pathétique Sonata, Op. 13, Schubert adds his own unique sound to the final movement, which the pianist declares gives anyone a workout similar to the demands of Erlkönig.  

No Schubert evening would be complete without a song. Schubert had the baritone Johann Michael Vogl (1768–1840) as his close collaborator. Fu brings Australian mezzo-soprano Lotte Betts-Dean to perform 2 songs (Liebesbotschaft and Die Taubenpost) from Schubert’s final printed collection, Schwanengesang, D. 957, and a six-verse song, Einsamkeit (Solitude), D. 620. The latter song was set to a text by Johann Baptist Mayrhofer (1787–1836). Each verse takes us through the life of a young man, with each new phase asking for a new action: ‘Give me my fill of solitude’, ‘Give me my fill of action’, ‘Give me the pleasure of company!’, ‘Give me my fill of bliss’, ‘Give me my fill of gloom’, and at the end of his life, ‘Give me the consecration of solitude.’ Fu sees it as a parallel with Beethoven’s An die ferne geliebte, Op. 98, which came out two years before Schubert’s work.

Lotte Betts-Dean

Lotte Betts-Dean


Just like his hero Schubert, Fu moves seamlessly from soloist to accompanist and gives us an album that would make an evening of beauty in piano music and song.

The album is scheduled to be released on 10 July and on 13 July in conjunction with Fu’s recital at Wigmore Hall.

solitude with schubert george fu album cover


Schubert: Solitude with Schubert

George Xiaoyuan Fu, piano; Lotte Betts-Dean, mezzo-soprano
Platoon PLAT 31197
Release date: 10 July 2026
www.georgefupiano.com

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