In northern Holland there’s a bar that’s spooky as hell. You descend a flight of steps, beckoned from the street by the unearthly orange glow of a room lit only by flickering candles in orange flecked-glass orbs, which sit round the cavern and on the black marble bar. The bar itself is an enclosed section […]
Read MorePieces of Writing. All sorts here. Quite a few travel diaries, some articles, essays, a letter, a quiz, poetry, general fun with words...
School of Rock
Alexa misheard me. I was after ‘Scipio’, a gentle rock/classical track from Sky, but instead I got something a lot heavier, ‘Scorpio’, by someone I also misheard and straight away the track started, a solid heavy rock beat that had me hooked so quickly I left it on. And that’s how it’s been for 40 […]
Read MoreSeven Steps to Heaven
From the ground to the sky. Or, a quick trip down the Piccadilly Line. The Piccadilly Line is a ladder, with rungs all the way down from Cockfosters to Heathrow. You can set off high up in north London, a mile within the M25, dip down through the bustling labyrinth and dark tunnels of […]
Read MoreThe Giant Bunny Rabbit in the Sky.
Well, I couldn’t just call this piece ‘Politics’ could I, no-one would read it. They probably wouldn’t go near ‘Politicians’ either, as millions of words have been written about that subject already. But here are mine. I think I must be dismaying. People are dismayed with me. I’m sure that’s the word, and […]
Read MoreWhat a Wonderful World…
What a Wonderful World… …it would be without us. I watch a lot of nature and wildlife programmes. They’re real balm to the headlong madness of living as a human on this planet in 2024. I just watched a short series, following a presenter travelling round Argentina and Chile. Camera shots swooping down […]
Read MoreRipples
A couple of friends and I went hiking for a week, and covered quite a bit of the Lake District. We were 6th-formers, me at a school in Cumbria, the others friends from my old school in Jedburgh. We stayed in Youth Hostels, mucking in with the cooking, washing-up, cleaning, and general communal duties. […]
Read MoreThe Magic Carpet.
A short motivational tour. If students seem discouraged, I often tell them that playing an instrument can take you to amazing places all over the world, and that I never imagined when I took up the trombone that it would take me to The Great Wall of China. To me, the trombone was literally […]
Read MoreA Journey Home
Often the target is bed, or lunchtime. Bed, if I arrive home late from Heathrow and don’t even bother to do anything downstairs, but simply keep walking, through the door and straight up the stairs in front of me. From flight to flight. From landing to landing. Or lunchtime, if it’s been an early start, […]
Read MoreThe Dripping Field.
The rain pattered onto our rucksacks as we tramped around the fields that day. We walked through wet woods and along splashy paths. It wasn’t oppressive weather, but gloomy; gloomy enough to have darkened the sun, the swollen clouds hung low, and the trees wore sombre green. Crows cawed in the woods, the rain dropping […]
Read MoreThe Crash of ’79.
For football fans who love or hate Man United. Which is all of them. The Crash of ’79. Or was it a crush? It was certainly crushing, and as a 13 year-old, I could hardly take it in. Keep that fact in mind: I was 13, and my life’s priorities hadn’t sorted themselves […]
Read MorePlaying Second Fiddle
(BTS article 2023.) Dan Jenkins takes a light-hearted look at the role of Second Trombone. In June 2021, the excellent Radio 3 programme The Listening Service did a show called Playing Second Fiddle. This was all about the vital role of being in the middle of any section of the orchestra, be it violins, […]
Read MoreOne Red Shoe
Majdanek, pronounced Mydanek, is the concentration camp on the very outskirts of Lublin, in east Poland. The fact that it’s so near a city makes it unique, all the other such camps were in remote locations. You can look this place up on Wiki, and learn much more than this account, but I’m just going […]
Read MoreA Northumbrian at last.
This is a self-explanation, a discovery I’ve made in the last few years, and so is, there’s no getting away from it, of little general concern. It has its moments. I’d skip if I were you. Where is the heart? It’s home, of course, according to the well-known saying. Being well-known, it was […]
Read MoreUxbridgisms
A Aerobics. Chocolate pens. Arcadia. Idyllic area of slot machines. Alistair. Someone on the A-list. Aggregate. Farming scandal. Andante. Wife of the poet. Anagram. Like a strippergram but just a girl called Anna shows up. Agnus Dei. Plea to someone called Anya not to go. Alligator. One who makes allegations. B Blister. Someone on the […]
Read MoreLast Night of the Proms. A view from the stage.
Or rather not just from the stage, but a view of the whole day, as a performer involved from the rehearsal in the morning right through to Auld Lang Syne. 2015 will be my 15th LNOP as a trombonist with the BBC Symphony Orchestra, and I can honestly say I’ve loved every one of them. […]
Read MoreA few winter nights, 2020.
A few carols, Xmas 2020. By March 2020, Covid had well and truly reached Britain and figures were shooting up to a frightening degree every single day. Everyone was affected. In my small corner of London and the world, the Musician’s Union set up the Freelance Musician’s Hardship Fund, contributions welcome from […]
Read MoreTo The Times, 2008-ish
Letter following a Times review of a Philharmonia concert, Bolero was part of the programme. Oh dear, yet another music reviewer who thinks that the conductor is responsible for the music. Why do people dismiss the musicians, the people who actually produce the notes? In his review, GB says he “liked Salonen’s opening snare drum taps”. […]
Read MoreBeyond the squeaky gate.
The current BBCSO Trombone Section sprang into being on April 2nd, 2011, when Rob O’Neill joined us to fill our Bass Trombone vacancy. In those days we were a gang of five, one of the fortunate few orchestras to have two Principals, but Roger Harvey retired from the orchestra in December 2013. He selfishly left […]
Read MoreBTS article, 2018?
Article on Composition for the BTS, 2018? In 1972, the BBC held an Open Competition to write the theme tune for the forthcoming Winter Olympics. Age 5, I sent, in red felt pen, an attractive helter-skelter of hemidemisemiquavers, for no particular instrument, with the accidentals after the notes they referred to. So the creative bug […]
Read MoreTrial Tips
Having read Matt Gee’s excellent article on Audition Technique in the BTS summer issue, I thought I’d have a stab at writing a few words about the next stage: Trials. If you’ve followed Matt’s programme, or however else you’ve done it, and a Trial with an orchestra has come your way, here are just a […]
Read MoreAn Unsuccessful Morning.
So many pieces, from school essays onwards, have titles that have been encouraged to be positive, appealing, in-drawing for readers. But after my day in Zurich, I have no choice but to tell the truth. What I set out to do failed, entirely, and in so many ways. I have to say that for […]
Read MoreSuch Dutch Days
In 1988 my friend from college Dai Tyler got a job in north Holland. He and I had been students at Guildhall together, in the same year as the late Adrian ‘Benny’ Morris and Ed Tarrant, and quite a foursome we made. Ed and I had already spent 3 years there, and we were joined […]
Read MoreThe Lisbon Rainbow
The sun beams down on red-tiled rooves And bleached Belem stands like a galleon Yellow trams clang along the front Where custard tarts are served in mint-white chambers A tricolour cockerel stood in a tiny lane On our way up to the battlements in the trees To look out over gleaming squares And distant blue […]
Read MorePlumage
Plumage. A homage to Plum. Or an homage? He’s been called the greatest writer of English since Shakespeare. Of course it’s a different sort of English from Shakespeare’s Elizabethan genius. They also say that a sign of a great writer is that, if you come across a sentence they’ve written, and it doesn’t feel exactly […]
Read MoreSHETLAND 2008
Although we went to Orkney first for a couple of days, this story is only about Shetland and its various islands. It’s inexplicable, but both of us felt an instant connection to Shetland, which we hadn’t done on Orkney. It was to be a runaround five days, and this first day was the only time […]
Read MoreShetland 2011
And we’re off to see the puffins, the wonderful puffins of Unst… Helen Jenkins, June 2011. So… I’m in the privileged position this year of being allowed to keep the holiday diary. I’m starting early as we aren’t even out of Cambridgeshire yet, but it’s been a long rocky road to even get to this […]
Read MoreShetland 2016
The view coming into land at Sumburgh airport is one we always look forward to. On a clear day you can see at least as far as the top of the main island, about 40 miles away. I put my arm round Helen, surely pretty uncomfortable for her in a plane seat but a nice […]
Read MoreWhat is Shetland?
Shetland is an open paradise. A pattern of land and sea, of moors and lochs, of slopes and tarns, of green and blue, where you can see as far as you can see. It can be a landscape painted in sweeping strokes, or a jagged vista of chiselled rock and crashing waves. It’s a place […]
Read MoreFlaounes
Anyone can add to this, or correct it. If I’ve got something wrong, or particularly if you have beautiful words/dishes of your own, do contact me and I’ll add them. Thanks! Flaounes Or ‘What’s Wot?’ On the Food Channel, they started talking about these things called Flaounes (pronounced Fla-oo-nes) and that got me thinking of […]
Read MoreUS States quiz
20 US States Clooney, but more so. For what reason, O Merciless one? Barack’s scarfaced brother I, of cranial displacement, live here. “Does Derek know?” Bereft of mineral deposits. Trumpeter Armstrong’s memorabilia. Mary’s memorabilia. Where they keep 8. American boss fires you and me… …but 10. belongs to you and me. In the style of […]
Read MoreAzores Diary
On our way A Long Time Ago, we had no idea where the Azores were. But on the back of an exciting holiday in Shetland, where for the first time, we spent our time finding and admiring local wildlife, including otters, seals and a rare sighting of orcas, Helen discovered that the Azores were a […]
Read MoreYerevan
At the beginning of the year, if someone had showed me my diary for the 19th-22nd April 2012 and I’d seen the word Yerevan printed there, I wouldn’t have had a clue what that meant. Would I have even guessed that it was a place? A conductor, or composer maybe? Or a BBC project involving […]
Read MoreSingpaw
(This account, only scratching the surface of this marvellous city is a story based on two entirely separate trips, in 2002 and 2003.) That’s how it’s pronounced, when you’re there. Not the hard, three-syllabled western way, but with a much gentler, oriental seesaw. I first went there with the LPO in 2002, as the second […]
Read MoreAzerbaijan and Georgia.
Azerbaijan! What an exotic name that is! For weeks before going there I was almost boasting about it, as if the name itself would conjure remote possibilities, as it did for me. Maybe it was the word itself, a word with a Z and a J in it, like jazz, jalfrezi or Zildjian cymbals. And […]
Read MoreA morning in the sun.
I was in Yangon, capital of Myanmar, formerly known under British rule as Rangoon, capital of Burma. But today I left behind the gleaming pagodas and everyday city life, and crossed the river to the warren of slums and dusty lanes that form the vast multi-shanty towns of Dala. Yangon, the noisy, taxi-tootling sprawl that is the […]
Read MoreAn afternoon in the desert.
Dubai is dull. At least in March 2017 it was dull. It’s a building site. There are no pavements. As you tramp along the uneven boardwalks or even edge along by the traffic, all you can see are skyscrapers. And in between the skyscrapers are huge dusty red building sites that are soon to become […]
Read MoreJapan 2018
This was a biggie, one I’d been looking forward to with some excitement. Previous visits to Japan, four I think, had all been as part of more extensive far-East run-arounds, taking in places like Taiwan and South Korea before heading off down to Australia or round to the States.This trip was to be exclusively Japan, […]
Read MoreThe Diamond of Caucasia
“Wherever you are in Georgia, you can see the Caucasus”, said Lasha as we drove west. Looking left out of the car we could see the southern Caucasus mountains, and to the right, the more majestic northern peaks, a long snow-topped ridge in the distance. We were on the first day of three travelling […]
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