By BBC Music Magazine

Published: Friday, 28 January 2022 at 12:00 am


Pianist Myra Hess garnered fame during the Second World War, when she organised nearly 2000 lunchtime concerts at the National Gallery – starting during the period of the Blitz. They continued for many years every week, from Monday to Friday, with Hess playing in many of them.

In later life, Myra Hess professed not to like her own recordings (like many other artists she detested the process). ‘They bore me to death,’ she said, admitting that if she heard one being played on the radio she ‘quite liked bits of Carnaval and Beethoven’s Op. 109’.