The Carol Gould interview

HER love of music was nurtured on a Steinway piano.
From the age of 14, Carol Gould devoted hours to crafting her talent at its keyboard, even composing rhapsodies especially for the classic instrument.
In fact, so strong was the bond between the teenager and her favourite piano that she vowed to one day return and buy it. Now, three decades after she first set eyes on the instrument, she has kept her promise.
But her love affair with the concert grand cost her dear, and was only reignited thanks to a remarkable stroke of good fortune.
Carol was a pupil at the prestigious St Mary's Music School in Edinburgh when she first played the piano in the city's Queen's Hall.
She said: 'It was this brand new Steinway Concert Grand, fresh out of the factory in Hamburg, which would need some playing in before it really sounded its best.
'I was a 14-year-old piano pupil who was bonkers about Steinways.'
The headmistress of St Mary's and the Queen's Hall janitor agreed that Carol could play 'the big piano' on quiet Sunday mornings.
'In 1979, I had the first of many sessions, just me and my three legged friend,' she said. 'We all referred affectionately to the piano as the 805, after its frame number.' And as their 'relationship' grew Carol, wrote three rhapsodies for the 805. Their greatest moment came in 1982 when, a year after winning the Edinburgh Competition Festival Concerto class, she played Brahms's 2nd Concerto.
'I vowed then that, one day when I'd saved up, I'd come back to the Queen's Hall and buy the 805,' she said. 'It is a vow I never forgot.' In 1983, Carol Gould, who was raised in Glasgow and Edinburgh, left to study at London's Guildhall School of Music & Drama.
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From the age of 14, Carol Gould devoted hours to crafting her talent at its keyboard, even composing rhapsodies especially for the classic instrument.
In fact, so strong was the bond between the teenager and her favourite piano that she vowed to one day return and buy it. Now, three decades after she first set eyes on the instrument, she has kept her promise.
But her love affair with the concert grand cost her dear, and was only reignited thanks to a remarkable stroke of good fortune.
Carol was a pupil at the prestigious St Mary's Music School in Edinburgh when she first played the piano in the city's Queen's Hall.
She said: 'It was this brand new Steinway Concert Grand, fresh out of the factory in Hamburg, which would need some playing in before it really sounded its best.
'I was a 14-year-old piano pupil who was bonkers about Steinways.'
The headmistress of St Mary's and the Queen's Hall janitor agreed that Carol could play 'the big piano' on quiet Sunday mornings.
'In 1979, I had the first of many sessions, just me and my three legged friend,' she said. 'We all referred affectionately to the piano as the 805, after its frame number.' And as their 'relationship' grew Carol, wrote three rhapsodies for the 805. Their greatest moment came in 1982 when, a year after winning the Edinburgh Competition Festival Concerto class, she played Brahms's 2nd Concerto.
'I vowed then that, one day when I'd saved up, I'd come back to the Queen's Hall and buy the 805,' she said. 'It is a vow I never forgot.' In 1983, Carol Gould, who was raised in Glasgow and Edinburgh, left to study at London's Guildhall School of Music & Drama.
