Skip to content

An intensely felt performance

The Guardian, Erica Jeal

Pianist, poet and polymath, at once one of music’s most rigorous intellectuals and most mischievous minds – Alfred Brendel, who died in June, was an artist of fruitful contradictions. This marathon concert, on what would have been his 95th birthday, celebrated them with warm affection.

The music reflected Brendel’s own passions, skewing towards the classical repertoire…

“… the music really did do the talking. So, too, did the presence of so many pianists who counted Brendel as a mentor…. Tim Horton duetted with Brendel’s cellist son Adrian in an intensely felt performance of Liszt’s Elégie No 2…”

Photo credit: Chris Christodoulou

Related Concert(s):
You may also like to see...
A terrific performance

ArtMuse, Karine Hetherington
Horton takes advice from the old Master and gets a standing ovation for his Chopin Scherzos

Sensitivity and insight

Musical Opinion, Paul Conway

A magisterial solo recital

The Arts Desk, Clare Stevens

The foot-stamping of the audience told its own story

Bachtrack, Phil Parker
Four Stars

This performance was thrilling

Bachtrack, Phil Parker
Four Stars

Stott and Horton deserved their standing ovation

Bachtrack, Phil Parker

Tim Horton deserves a special bouquet

BBC Music Magazine, Geoff Brown

Uniformly excellent

The Arts Desk, Graham Rickson

Tim Horton’s unaffected, heartfelt playing is perfectly judged

The Arts Desk, Graham Rickson

Raw noise and mixed emotions

The Times, Paul Driver

Superb light, dazzling backgrounds from Tim Horton

BBC Music Magazine, Jessica Duchen
Four Stars

Tim Horton shone

The Guardian, Alfred Hickling

Revelatory playing

The Observer, Stephen Pritchard

The excellent Tim Horton

The Strad, Carlos María Solare

Back To Top
29/04/2026