
What a surprise to find Adam Heron on my doorstep in the centre of Richmond, in the beautiful church of St Mary Magdalene. I had not heard Adam for three years since a concert at the National Liberal Club promoted by the Keyboard Trust and the Asia Circle at the NLC of Yisha Xue.

A magnificent Steinway D concert grand stood proudly in this church which was frequented by Richard Attenborough and his family who lived on the Green opposite and who are now permanent residents within its hallowed walls.

A piano that belongs to the church bequeathed by generous sponsors in what is sure to become a major classical musical venue in this beautiful riverside town just twenty minutes from the centre of London and the inevitable hussle and bussle of tourists in a major metropolis.



A very imposing poster was a great draw for an enthusiastic audience that was greeted by an even more authoritative Adam Heron.
I had written ‘An eclectic musician of refined taste and eloquence’ quoted in the programme but three years on I would add :’ with a commanding authority and musical curiosity that illuminates his whole being.’

A graduate from the class of Christopher Elton at the Royal Academy with a postgraduate degree from Cambridge University. And now a Ph D research scholarship at Glasgow University to delve into the world of the little known Franco- Caribbean composer Chevalier de Saint-Georges whose Sonata in C was to open his recital today.

A sonata in C that has yet to be published! Playing of brilliance, finesse and rhythmic energy, Adam imbuing the knotty twine with a ‘joie de vivre’ of hypnotic drive. A clarity to his playing, where seated at the piano he immediately established an authority and extraordinary mastery with playing almost without pedal but imbuing the music with style and a great sense of communication. Adam tells me he returns to Glasgow to begin a recording project of some of the chamber works of this composer in the hope that he will once again gain the same recognition with which he was held in the time of Mozart! Certainly this one work was enough to want to hear more works that are in the style of the period but with a unique voice of its own.

Adam’s own composition ‘Wistful Dawn’ revealed many of the sumptuous sounds of this magnificent piano, in an outpouring of Rachmaninov type finesse. Washes of sounds, where single notes were absorbed with masterly pedaling into a radiance and beauty of subtle colours.
Handel’s Suite n 3 in D minor HWV 428 is one of 8 suites that are rarely heard in the concert hall on the piano . But Adam made a very persuasive case with playing of absolute clarity and rhythmic drive, from the continuous outpouring of scales of the ‘Präludium’ to the final decisive ‘Presto.’ A fugue played without pedal with clarity and refined stylistic shape and an Air and variations each played with extraordinary character and sense of architectural shape.

Adam had even more surprises for us after the interval on a voyage of discovery that he introduced with such enticing scholarship. A suite of Four Rags by William Bolcom under the title of ‘The Garden of Eden’ . A composer who must be the Scott Joplin of our time . Four movements played with beguiling character, with the Serpent’s Kiss the most elaborate, incorporating rhythmic knocking on the wood of the piano which Adam did with great respect for this wonderful instrument. Chopin wrote ‘con legno’ in his second piano concerto and you can see violinist tapping very gently and respectfully the strings with the back of the bow. I had the answer ready when Stockhausen asked me if he could use our Steinway D in Rome rather than the piano that had been hired for the occasion . How could one turn down Stockhausen and I agreed so long as he would use it in the traditional manner with two hands and two feet!
An interesting suite of four contrasting pieces but I must say that I would have preferred to have less Balcom and more Saint-Georges.


But it was in Chopin that Adam could show us his sense of style and colour with an ‘Andante Spianato’ of refined good taste, but above all of a radiance and a sense of balance that could allow Chopin’s most beautiful Bel Canto to sing with glowing beauty. Embellishments thrown off with featherlight ease as a gentle Mazurka rhythm took over. An imposing introduction to the Grande Polonaise which Adam played not only with grandeur but also brilliant jeu perlé playing, producing streams of notes that undulated with teasing insinuation before bursting into moments of commanding authority and showmanship. This was one of the early works of Chopin that took the Parisian salons by storm.Not the barnstorming showmanship of Liszt or Thalberg but the innovative genius who could create a new world for an instrument that now had a sustaining pedal. Adam played with commanding authority but above all with musical intelligence and poetic understanding.








25 December 1745 Guadelupe,French West Indies. 9 June 1799 (aged 53) Paris
When it comes to composers of the Classical era (c.1730-1820) the names of Mozart, Bach, Schubert, Beethoven and Haydn spring to mind. However, the name of Joseph Bologne, le Chevalier de St-Georges is criminally missing from that list.
During his life, the French composer of mixed race was more famous than Mozart and so talented that the young Austrian prodigy even borrowed lines from one of his concertos. So for Chevalier to often be remembered as ‘Le Mozart Noir’ (‘The Black Mozart) is rather unfair and some argue it is Mozart who should be known as ‘The White Chevalier’.
Whilst Hollywood has recently looked to address this imbalance by giving Chevalier the limelight in a biopic about his life, few people still know of the man and his many remarkable achievements.
Chevalier de Saint-Georges – Wikipedia

He joined the faculty of the University of Michigan’s School of Music in 1973, was named the Ross Lee Finney Distinguished University Professor of Composition in 1994, and retired in 2008 after 35 years. Bolcom won the Pulitzer Prize for music in 1988 for 12 New Etudes for Piano, and his setting of William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience on the Naxos label won four Grammy Awards in 2005.
As a pianist Bolcom has performed and recorded his own work frequently in collaboration with his wife and musical partner, mezzo-soprano Joan Morris . Cabaret songs, show tunes, and American popular songs of the 20th century have been their primary specialties in both concerts and recordings. Their 25th album, “Autumn Leaves,” was released in 2015.
In 2018, nine world premieres of Bolcom works commemorated William Bolcom’s 80th birthday.




























































































































