2024 Harold Smart Memorial Composition Competition for Young Composers

The Royal School of Church Music (RSCM) has just launched the 2024 Harold Smart Memorial Composition Competition. This invites individuals 25 and under (as of 1 July 2024) to compose an original anthem – a fresh, innovative work that inspires and uplifts, suitable for performance in a church setting. 

For experienced and new composers alike, this is an excellent opportunity to showcase talent and make a significant contribution to sacred music. The text to be used has been written by Dr Canon Gordon Giles.

The winner will receive a cash prize of £300, as well as £200 of composition tuition (with an agreed tutor), with the possibility of publication by the RSCM.

Closing date for submissions: 31st October 2024

Full information, including submission guidelines and how to enter here

ABOUT THE ROYAL SCHOOL OF CHURCH MUSIC

The RSCM is the Salisbury-based, national, independent charity enabling the flourishing of church music. As the central  ‘home’ of church music, RSCM provides relevant education, training and resources to its membership, the wider church, and beyond. It is committed to encouraging the best of music in worship, and to advocating music as a tool for growth of the church.

The RSCM supports thousands of Affiliated churches across the UK and worldwide through its international partners. In addition, it also supports many schools and Individual members, and its work is sustained by thousands of Friends, Regular Givers and other donors.

The RSCM is an open, life-long learning organisation, offering face-to-face and distance education and training through its programmes, published resources, courses and activities.

Founded by Sir Sydney Nicholson in 1927, the RSCM’s original emphases were English and choral. Now, in a diverse international context, the RSCM’s work is far broader and more diverse, and aims to make all its work ecumenical in purpose, nature and content.

HM The King is the RSCM’S Royal Patron, and its president is The Most Revd and Rt Hon The Lord Archbishop of Canterbury. The organisation celebrates its centenary in 2027.

www.rscm.org.uk

Guest post by Clare Stevens

Have you ever heard a cembal d’amour? Have you even heard of it? I certainly hadn’t before attending this year’s Early Music Festival in Haapsalu, Estonia. One of the weekend’s concerts was a duo recital by keyboard players Taavi Kerikmäe and Anna-Liisa Eller. While Eller switched from the psaltery to its larger sibling the arpanetta – double-sided and chromatic, like a harpsichord standing vertically upright – to the Estonian kannel – a chromatic zither – and folk kannel, Kerikmäe played the cembal d’amour, a brand new instrument completed earlier this year by Latvian harpsichord maker Kaspars Putrinš.

As far as is possible it is a reproduction of a keyboard instrument invented by Gottfried Silbermann (1683–1753) of Freiburg. Silbermann’s work as an organ builder was highly regarded by J S Bach, and he was also well known for his clavichords, one of which was prized by C P E Bach. He created the cembal d’amour in 1721, to a commission from the Estonian composer, performer and poet Regina Gertrud König (née Schwartz), wife of Dresden’s court poet Ulrich König. It was a clavichord with strings of approximately twice the normal length, which were struck by their tangents at precisely their midpoint – it seems that what König was after was a louder sound than the traditionally very quiet clavichord.

(photos by SabineBurger)

Silbermann’s original instrument has not survived, but its invention was announced in the Leipzig-produced Sammlung von Natur-und Medicin-, wie auch Hierzu gehörigen Kunst-und Literatur- Geschisten (Catalogue of natural and medical, as well as related art and literary histories) for July 1721. It was pictured in the June 1723 edition of the same publication and in a coloured drawing among the papers of the composer and musicologist Johann Matheson, a contemporary of Silbermann. Another description and diagram can be found in J F Agricola’s annotations to Jacob Adlung’s Musica mechanica organoedi (1768).

Taavi Kerikmäe is best known as a composer and performer of contemporary and experimental music, both film scores and art music; he is Head of the Estonian Contemporary Music Centre, and has collaborated with composers such as Pierre Boulez, Kaaija Saariaho, Tristan Murail and Louis Andriessen. But he has recently been exploring early music, especially clavichords, in performance with his duo partner Anna-Liisa Eller (who is also his wife).

Their Haapsalu recital consisted entirely of music by David Kellner (?1670 –1748), a composer, organist, poet and musicologist who was also the stepfather of Regina Gertrud König, commissioner of the first cembal d’amour. Born in Germany, Kellner studied at Estonia’s University of Tartu from 1694 and married König’s mother Dorothea Schwartz, daughter of the city’s mayor. He is known to have applied for the position of organist in the Swedish church in Tartu, later worked for a short time as organist of St Nicholas Church in Tallinn, and in 1732 published a treatise on continuo-playing which was printed in Swedish, German, Dutch and Russian, and survives in numerous reprints. Unfortunately the only music by Kellner to have survived is a collection of sixteen lute pieces in tablature, published

in 1747. Eller and Kerikmäe have arranged these for the assortment of instruments that we heard in Haapsalu, adding a basso continuo to bring out the beauty of Kellner’s music, which they feel is a hidden treasure of Estonian baroque music, and deserves an audience beyond lute and guitar players. Taking place in the gorgeous sixteenth-century Lutheran Church of St John, the concert was one of the quietest I’ve ever attended – despite the cembalo d-amour’s additional power compared to a normal clavichord – but the beauty of the different instrumental timbres repaid the intensity of the listening experience as these skilled musicians presented a sequence of elegant dance movements, taken mainly from Kellner’s Fantasias in different keys.

The day after the showcase concert Kerikmäe and Kaspars Putrinš set up the cembal d’amour in the salon of the Lahe Guest House for an afternoon lecture-demonstration that allowed audience members to experience the sound in a more intimate acoustic and find out more about the reconstruction project. Kerikmäe began by explaining for the non-specialists among us the crucial difference between a harpsichord, which has plucked strings, and a clavichord, where they are hit, and how this means that the harpsichord is louder, but the clavichord allows for more dynamic variation according to the pressure exerted by the player, so it is more subtle.

Silbermann’s concept for the cembal d’amore was not just to do with its extra long strings, but the fact that they vibrated independently from two bridges, one in the normal position to the right of the keyboard, and one behind and to the left of the keyboard, resonating from two soundboards on two sides of the irregularly-shaped instrument. We don’t know whether König wanted it to accompany herself singing or to use as part of a chamber ensemble, but the name is believed to derive from its suitability for performances alongside the viola d’amore.

Other contemporary makers did try to copy Silbermann’s idea, but he was very protective of his concept and sued them. Only one antique instrument survives, in a Helsinki museum, but it is much damaged. There were several twentieth-century versions, but most are now lost and they do not seem to have been designed to the same proportions as Silbermann’s. Putrinš explained that his new instrument is not a copy but a prototype, based primarily on the Matheson drawings. Building it was a challenge, but has provided a starting point for further exploration.

Kerikmäe and Eller are also keen to draw attention to the legacy of Regina Gertrud König, who was highly respected in her lifetime and can probably be considered as Estonia’s first female composer, but they are hampered by the fact that none of her music has yet been discovered. For now her influence is primarily represented by the instrument that she commissioned and its latest incarnation.

More information about the music of David Kellner and about the Kerikmäe Eller Duo: www.davidkellner.eu

(Photos by Clare Stevens)

Clare Stevens is a freelance writer, editor and publicist, specialising in classical music, choral music and music education. After 30 years living and working in London, she is now based in the Welsh Marches.


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Duncan Honeybourne (piano) & Leora Cohen (violin)

This interesting new release from British pianist Duncan Honeybourne, with British-American violinist Leora Cohen, introduces the hitherto little-known music of Jessy Reason, known somewhat cryptically during her lifetime as “J. L. Reason”.

A long-forgotten, enigmatic figure, Jessy Lilian Reason, née Wolton, was born in London in 1878, the daughter of a wealthy hop merchant. In 1902, in Cornwall, she married a gentleman of private means twenty years her senior, with whom she settled firstly in Devon and later in Tonbridge, Kent. In the late 1920s the couple made a final move, to Reading, where Jessy died in 1938.

In May 1992 a writer called Alan Poulton discovered a large stack of handwritten music manuscripts in a second-hand bookshop. He purchased the collection and during the 2020 Covid lockdown, now retired and with time on his hands, he set about exploring and cataloguing the manuscripts, and researching the life of the woman who had composed 70 handwritten works in the early decades of the twentieth century. The paperwork accompanying the collection reveals that Mrs Reason studied composition with the renowned composer and conductor Eugene Goossens; she was then in her mid-40s, her tutor some 15 years younger. How much of Reason’s music was performed during her lifetime remains unclear: all that has come to light so far is a performance of a single song at London’s Wigmore Hall and a song cycle given at a minor concert in West London, all in the early 1920s. (The current catalogue of Reason’s music, compiled by Alan Poulton, can be found on the British Music Society website.

Pianist Duncan Honeybourne is a passionate advocate for lesser-known and rarely-performed music, and this new release by Prima Facie Records reflects his unerring ability to unearth really fine music and bring it to a wider audience by recording and performing it (see also his release, also on the Prima Facie label, of piano music by William Baines). On this recording he is joined by young British-American violinist Leora Cohen. She brings a wonderful range of colours and nuance to the Three Poems for Violin and Piano, matching Honeybourne’s playing with a remarkable sure-footedness, sensitivity and musical maturity.

This disc presents Jessy Reason’s entire output for solo piano, together with the Three Poems, and as such is a wonderful introduction to Reason’s writing. She was clearly a highly-skilled yet largely self-taught composer and musician (her writing for piano reveals an intimate knowledge of the geography of the keyboard): in his biography of his mother, Richard Reason describes her as “an ardent musician, with a fiery style of violin-playing . . .teaching herself the whole technique of writing for full orchestra”. Her scores, some of which I have seen, thanks to Duncan Honeybourne, are elegantly crafted and neatly laid out.

By turns richly romantic, impressionistic, darkly lyrical, sensuous and harmonically complex, there are hints of late Brahms, Debussy, Ravel, even early Messiaen in Reason’s sophisticated, inventive music. This inspiring legacy of work is brought vividly to life by Duncan Honeybourne on a piano contemporaneous with the music, a 1922 Bösendorfer.

Piano and Chamber Music by Jessy Reason

Duncan Honeybourne (piano) with Leora Cohen (violin)

Prima Facie Records, July 2024

leoraviolin.com

duncanhoneybourne.com

Following one of those wonderfully serendipitous encounters on the internet, I am delighted to present “Notes from the Keyboard”, a series of articles for adult amateur pianists, by Dakota Gale, chronicling his own experiences of learning the piano as an adult.


Four years ago, my wife surprised me with a digital piano for my birthday. I’d mentioned my desire to learn a few times and, ever the muse, she called my bluff.

I couldn’t read music. Finding middle C was a quest. I was a B-E-G-I-N-N-E-R.

And yet…she was right. At 38 years old, I tumbled rapturously into the world of piano. 

Four years later, the honeymoon phase is over, and yet I remain motivated to play every day and am still loving the journey. (<–understatement: I’m head-over-heels for it.)

I even do stuff like learning to do portraits by drawing musicians! (My wife tells me that’s eccentric…) 

I’m playing pieces by Chopin, Debussy, Beethoven, Liszt, and other famous composers that I thought were a decade off. Even facing the inevitable frustrations of piano study, I’m finding joy in piano every.single.day.

Learning piano transcends fun – I feel like I’ve unearthed a gift, a path to access some of the most beautiful music ever written. Accessing the pieces revealed a fountain of satisfaction that isn’t tied to money or achievement, a much-needed oasis of play as an adult.

In fact, I’ll often drop into a flow state for 30 minutes and be surprised when my timer goes off. Where else do we get that feeling once we’re done playing with Legos or mud pies?

You, mega-savvy adult reader, can do it too!

Adults CAN learn to play piano

I share my achievements not to brag (many pianists young and old far outshine my abilities), but to offer hope to adult learners. If you’re telling yourself, “Oh, I could never learn to play” or “I’m not musical” or “only kids can learn piano,” let me persuade you otherwise.

I’m shocked how many people tell me only children can learn. Well, kids are “naturals” at learning because:

  1. They don’t over-complicate things, focusing on foundational blocks that are small and approachable. (Be it music, language, or other skills.)
  2. Kids are able to practice more undistracted hours because an adult provides housing, food, and does their laundry. Their job is to be curious sponges; our Adult Role is often yawn-tastic Tuesdays, repeated.

Adults lack those luxuries. We put pressure on ourselves, try to play songs that are too hard for us, question if the time investment is worth it, and simply don’t have as much time to practice.

I’m an adult. (It snuck up on me.) On top of all the typical adult stuff, I have far too many hobbies. Sometimes friends do annoying things like interrupt my piano reverie to invite me to dinner or on bike rides. *sigh* The inconsiderate louts, I must practice!

And yet by carving out time each day to study piano, in a few months I reached a deeply satisfying level of proficiency that kept me coming back. After four years, I’m frankly astonished sometimes at what my fingers can do.

As a bonus, it’s beautiful for people to listen to (or so they pretend). A skill I’ll enjoy and develop for a lifetime, long after I’m done taking irresponsible risks on my mountain bike.

Beyond that, I’m fired up! I look forward to enjoying creating music the rest of my life and only wish I’d started earlier.


Dear reader, welcome to “Notes from the Keyboard: Adult Piano Chronicles” on The Cross-Eyed Pianist. This will be an ongoing series about my journey learning piano as an adult. I’ll share my journey (ups and downs!) and headaches with pieces and how I resolve them. I promise to absolutely not take myself too seriously—after all this is a hobby, not a vocation.

If you have ideas for topics you’d like to hear about from a dedicated amateur student of classical piano such as myself, please don’t hesitate to reach out. I’m looking forward to sharing this journey with you!


Dakota Gale

When he isn’t playing piano, Dakota Gale enjoys learning languages (especially Italian) and drawing. He also writes about reclaiming creativity as an adult and ditching tired personal paradigms in his newsletter, Traipsing About. He can often be spotted camping and exploring mountain bike trails around the Pacific Northwest.


This site is free to access and ad-free, and takes many hours to research, write, and maintain. If you find joy and value in what I do, why not