About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 40. Chapters: Joyce Hatto, Harriet Cohen, Leslie Howard, Marie Novello, Mark Gasser, Stephen Hough, Mark Hambourg, Heather Slade-Lipkin, Graham Johnson, Maurice Cole, Solomon, Peter Seivewright, Benno Moiseiwitsch, Roger Smalley, Maria Hester Park, Lance Dossor, Howard Shelley, Matthew Schellhorn, Clive Lythgoe, Antonio Pappano, Simon Proctor, David Wickham, Freddy Kempf, John Lenehan, Ronald Cavaye, Julius Drake, Antony Peebles, Myra Hess, Ronan Magill, Margaret Fingerhut, Alfred Nieman, Vivienne Olive, Louis Kentner, Christine Croshaw, Simon Over, Harold Bauer, Peter Stadlen, Paul Hamburger, Thomas Fielden, Peter Frankl, Andrew Zolinsky, Robert Keeley, Kit Armstrong, David Owen Norris, Roger Vignoles, Melvyn Tan, Marion Stein, Kathleen Long, Christopher Elton, Jonathan Plowright, Alan Hazeldine, Leon McCawley, Bruno Siegfried Huhn, Simon Lepper, Ryszard Bakst, Steven Osborne, Joan Mary Last, Richard McMahon, Edith Vogel, Margaret Kitchin, Benjamin Frith, Peter Hill, Hamish Milne, Louis Demetrius Alvanis. Excerpt: Joyce Hatto (5 September 1928 - 29 June 2006) was a British pianist and piano teacher. She became famous late in life, when unauthorised copies of commercial recordings made by other pianists were released under her name, earning her high praise from critics. The fraud did not come to light until a few months after her death. Joyce Hatto was born in London, England. As a promising young professional, she played at a large number of concerts in London and throughout Britain and Europe, beginning in the 1950s. There were concertos (accompanied by the Boyd Neel, Haydn and London Symphony Orchestras and many others), solo recitals at the Wigmore and Queen Elizabeth Halls and elsewhere, as well as (in the late 1960s and early 1970s) concerts by "pupils of Joyce Hatto" she supplemented her earnings with work as a repetiteur...