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Mika in UK and Ireland press - 2024


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1 hour ago, TinyLove_CJ said:

   Thanks for sharing @Kumazzz!!! I'm heading out today and will be buying physical copies of magazines, if there's any different ones I'll share them here too! 😊

Would you be able to send me physical copies too please? 

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On 4/23/2024 at 5:53 AM, Kumazzz said:

I'll get the DIGITAL issue as soon as possible, will post here :bye:

 

Radio Times

The most joyful show on TV

As The Piano makes a swift return, hosts Claudia Winkleman, Mika and Lang Lang reveal the secrets of the show’s success. No glitz, no make-up, no pathos, it’s all about the music…

 

 Central – a photographic studio in west London, where Claudia Winkleman and Mika are recovering from throwing shapes under strobe-esque lighting against a dazzling backdrop of blackand-white 1960s Op Art à la Bridget Riley.

 

There are a few serious moments but mostly it’s wise-cracking verbal ping-pong. Claudia, peering out from under what she calls her “Unapologetic Fringe”, is munching through two bags of crisps and a packet of mini-Oreos, for which she apologises quite often. Then, witnessing my fa¹ng with tape recorders while dealing poorly with a cup of tea (lack of spoon, saucer and so on) as Mika is talking, she quietly slips it away and dispatches the damp tea bag in what I suspect is a characteristically kind and unobtrusive intervention.

 

These are two of the three faces (I meet Lang Lang later in the week) of what is surely the most joy-filled television series of recent times: The Piano, the Channel 4 gem that went out early last year following a most unusual music competition between amateur piano players invited to perform on public pianos at major train station across the length of the country, from London’s St Pancras to Birmingham, Leeds and Glasgow.

 

The participants – of all ages and from all backgrounds, with the most tremendous back-stories, playing every genre of music from classical to pop and rap – were under the impression that they were being lmed for some kind of documentary presented by Claudia.

 

Unbeknownst to them, the world’s leading classical piano player, Lang Lang, was hidden away in a small room, usually next to the public toilet, alongside the beguiling performer and pop star Mika. Both men were judging their performances with a view to selecting one pianist from each location to appear in a concert at the Royal Festival Hall, where an overall winner would be announced.

 

Last year this was stand- out star, blind 13-year-old Lucy Illingworth from West Yorkshire, who is unable to communicate in conventional ways because of her autism and other conditions. Her transformation when she started playing the piano (Chopin’s Nocturne in B at Minor) with such tenderness and artistry was deeply aecting, moving viewers at home and in the station to tears, including the judges.

 

The rst series had the highest ratings for the channel since 2017, with three million viewers, and in July last year it was announced that the show had been recommissioned for both a second and third season, as well as a Christmas special and a documentary on what came next for Lucy ( The Incredibly Talented Lucy is coming soon to Channel 4).

 

Sitting across from me, Mika looks like the offspring of Stephen Mangan and Beatrice Dalle, while Claudia’s vibe is more Carine Roitfeld, the deliciously dishevelled and very rock ’n’ roll French fashion editor.

 

We talk a little about an old clip that has emerged, of Claudia looking very different in her 20s [she’s now very happy to be 52 – “I love being older”], without the famous fringe and tan, and with a dierent way of talking [she calls it her “university voice”, adding of her time at New Hall, Cambridge: “I did go to a quite fancy university”]. She looks quite Sloaney? “Very,” she agrees.

So when did she develop rock ’n’ roll Claudia? “Well, I don’t feel rock ’ n’ roll at all. I’m denitely not.”

It started with the fringe when she went to a hairdresser and said, at 28: “‘I think I’d like a fringe’ and he gave me – you’re both going to feel nauseous when I say this word – a wispy fringe and I said, ‘I think I need an unapologetic fringe.’ And once I had that, everything else followed.”

 

The black eyeliner? “I think I had that already but not in that clip because I was doing telly and I had no idea what I was doing and they said, ‘Let’s make you up like this’ and I was like, ‘OK,’ but I was always a bit Emo.”

Maybe a bit Goth, too? “Oh I was very Goth– even now, a pointy boot and a long duster coat...” she swoons.

W¦§¨ ©ª«¬ ¬¦« make of Nick Cave and his wife Susie Bick, who used to rock that Goth look. “Love. I met Susie once and I mounted her. I don’t think I’m allowed to meet her again. I also love Ozzy Osbourne and in the end, I just want to eat a bat.”

One of the reasons we love Claudia – apart from her sense of mischief, warmth and genuine curiosity – is that she is an original. I mean, honestly, who says the things she says routinely – particularly now – and gets away with it?

The journalist Stuart Heritage captured her presenting style brilliantly, writing that she is “the concept of free jazz made corporeal” and “has made a career of appearing to say whatever happens to be ambiently ¯oating through her head at any given moment”. I remind her that she actually said, “My ovaries just clacked” on The Piano when she spotted a baby. Mika is aghast: “Did she really say that? She does get very, very excited around babies. Honest l y, she’s the ▷

babysitter at the station.”

 

“I don’t remember that,” Claudia says. “We never watch it.”

Is she desperate to be a granny? Is she already encouraging her children (Jake, 21, Matilda, 17, and Arthur, 12) to become young parents? “Yes I am, and if they were here now they would be, like, ‘Please just tell her to relax!’”

She travels with her youngest on the Tube to school every day and this is when she listens to music – “and once I’ve kissed him and tried to lick his eyebrows in front of his friends – which by the way is not what one should do but it’s my job to be embarrassing – then I put my headphones on and listen to music very loud. I want Missy Elliott, I want Dr Dre and rap and – BOOM! – it wakes me up.

 

“At home, I’ll usually have Radio 4 or Radio 2 on if I’m cooking or just pottering around, but I don’t normally listen to music then because I’m usually pestering the kids. Am I being boring?”

 

This is typical of her. Claudia is self-deprecating to a fault. I was berating her about it when we met for an interview 14 years ago, but she’s even worse now.

S integral part of The Piano’s appeal (as she is in Strictly and that other successful series The Traitors, for which she won a Bafta last year), but she demurs. Isn’t it about time, dear Claudia, to own your success? “I’m super-happy and super-grateful, but I’m just the conduit who says, ‘Hello.’ The Piano is about these extraordinary people who come to play, it’s about the instrument and it’s about Mika and Lang Lang – [she turns and says to Mika] Don’t respond!”

“She knows me!” he laughs. “I love this conversation – I’m serious, I really mean it.” He clearly agrees about her tendency to put herself down.

“I feel quite secure in the stuff that I know I can do,” she responds. “Reading out loud on Strictly. Greeting a lovely person who’s come in and might be a bit nervous to play the piano. Walking around a round table. What I really can’t bear is ‘ Yeah, I’ve got this’. I’m allergic to any form of arrogance.

“I love a healthy bit of imposter syndrome and I am a big believer in being bad at things. When my kids were like, ‘Mum, shall I learn a musical instrument?’ I said, ‘I wouldn’t. Not unless you really want to.’ I want them to be bored and I just want to say aloud, ‘It’s OK not to be good at stuff.’ You know, I’m not good at parallel parking – ¥ne.”

We move on and touch on the wars raging around the world. Claudia’s response is to donate and keep informed: “Read about it from every angle so at least you feel informed, not ‘I just can’t look at it’.” Her personal solace to sorrow is to wrap herself around the people she loves, which is her family.

For Mika, it is music. “There has always been this association with processing the inexpressible through something that allows you to deal with it in a di¨erent way. There was this ¥ne line with my family between tears and joy, and music was always this form of poetic resistance, which can have huge and strong consequences.”

The bare bones of biography can mislead. Read that 40-year-old Mika was born in Beirut, moved to Paris, then Pimlico adjacent to London’s Chelsea, went to the famous Westminster School in London, with an American father in banking, and it paints a picture of gilded ease.

 

The reality was rather di¨erent.

In 1990, during the war in Kuwait, Mika’s father, Michael Holbrook Penniman, was trapped in the US embassy for seven months. He returned to his family a shell of a man: heavily bearded, gaunt and troubled.

Mika didn’t call him Dad again, I read? “I called him ‘Mike’ because I didn’t recognise him. It was hard to understand that he had trauma but then when everything fell apart and he lost his job...

 

“There were five of us children and we lost everything, then we started again. We knew every phrase to say to be within the law to make sure the bailiffs didn’t come into the house. At a certain point, it became too much and we kind of ran away from France and started again. We didn’t run away, sorry – we left. And then we lived in a bed and breakfast near Pimlico for two years.”

His parents managed to stabilise things, but it was still bumpy. Mika was suspended four times at Westminster, for quite long intervals, because his school fees couldn’t be paid. This led to almighty rows between his parents and he would tell his mother – American-born Lebanese-Syrian Joannie – that he would be happy at any school.

 

However, when the family first moved to London the nine-year-old Mika had attended the Lycée, where he was so badly bullied that he was home-schooled for a while by his mum, to whom he was particularly close and who sadly died three years ago.

“She was very eccentric,” he says, affectionately. “Home was music, colour and tears all mixed together. My father was an amazing partner to her... you can’t really speak about one without speaking about the other. There was turbulence but he was the perfect partner to her hurricane of colour.”

 

M¯ °±²³´ and as a child had reading and writing issues – but he speaks five languages and broadcasts regularly in at least three of them. He also has a wonderfully evocative turn of phrase. I am particularly taken by “the crutch of snobbery”.

But back then, life was more of a challenge. “I stopped communicating with the world around me. I was hardly speaking. I forgot how to read and write. My path out of it was music – it allowed me to start rebuilding and gave me another sense of value. I may have been failing

‘I’m a big believer in being bad at things... I can’t parallel park’

 

CLAUDIA WINKLEMAN

‘Mum was eccentric; home was music, colour and tears’

 

MIKA

◁ at the spelling exam and having a hard time, but I’m not worthless – ‘Look, I can do this!’”

To which Claudia is keen to point out: “Mika hid in the music room from the bullies.”

 

Music comforts him still. He suggests you give the same attention to it as you would reading a book or watching a film – one song and you absorb yourself in it totally. It could be Joni Mitchell’s A Case of You or Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique: “All those colours, all those textures – you can’t listen to that in the background while you’re making your tomato sauce!”

 

“Mika and I get on so brilliantly but you’re about to go off me!” Claudia announces. Addressing him she adds: “So this is how I listen to music... I don’t like anything new. I stopped listening to bands in probably 1995 and those are still my favourites. That period of Brit Pop with Oasis, Blur, Pulp. We would run around university singing Wonderwall at the top of our lungs and that is the music I revert to.”

T between Claudia and Mika is evident for all to see – but what of his relationship with his fellow judge, the renowned pianist Lang Lang? Initially he had seemed very reserved in contrast to Mika’s exuberant chattiness, his sherbet-coloured shirts and bold necklaces. But over the weeks it was clear that an endearing friendship had developed, almost a bromance.

“There are moments when Lang Lang is quite tactile and you wouldn’t expect that,” Mika says. “When he’s ¡nding something really funny he can’t control himself. He’ll laugh and he starts stroking my face and I’m, like, ‘Oh my God!’ There’s very few situations in my life where I’m having a nice time, especially with a man, and he just strokes your face out of a£ection.”

All three of them are clearly, and quite rightly, proud of the show: “We’re a beautiful little poetic success – there’s no big shiny floor, there’s no mechanic of pathos,” Mika says. “They haven’t had make-up or been zhuzhed,” Claudia adds. “There isn’t a floor manager saying, ‘Come in and please introduce yourself.’”

 

But now everyone knows how the The Piano works, did that change the dynamic for season two? “I was so worried that they’d come in a ballgown waving – ‘Lang Lang! Mika! I’m here!’” Claudia vamps. “But actually because you can’t see them, they’re sort of forgotten.’”

 

So the authenticity remains... “It’s beyond that,” Claudia says. “I’m holding their bags!” “And they’re sitting at the Costa co£ee shop or Greggs!” Mika adds. “But once they play,” Claudia chimes in, “it’s not humdrum.” Mika smiles: “Exactly. It’s magic.”

 

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Radio Times

 

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From the Editors

THE STORY OF HOW The Piano began life may be apocryphal, but it's worth repeating. A TV executive on his commute walked past an old piano, installed at St Pancras Station to amuse passing passengers, and found the sound of those brave enough to sit on the stool and start playing so uplifting, he decided it must make a television show.
That the show then became one of last year's most unlikely hits - and Channel 4's biggest ratings success of recent years - is testament to live music's power to move an audience. Not to mention our love of plucky amateurs ready to have a go at entertaining us that goes back long before TV talent shows such as The Voice and The X Factor.
But unlike those shows, the contestants in The Piano had no idea they were part of a competition. They thought they were merely playing for the hell of it, thinking they were being filmed for a documentary about people who play pianos in public spaces for the fleeting entertainment of passers-by.
What made the series such a success? In our interview on page 12 The Piano's trio of Claudia Winkleman, Lang Lang and Mika have their say. To their eyes - and ears - the show worked precisely because it didn't set out to entertain using all the usual props of TV entertainment: shiny floors and showbiz glitz twinned with fake pathos and jeopardy.
But there may have been another key to its success: the simple joy that music can bring, performed at the highest level or by a tinkler of the bar-room ivories. Last September C4 boss Ian Katz told RT that 2023 spelt the end of mean television. And that he was ready to pronounce a new era of Happy TV. Which may explain why The Piano is back for a second run – especially since he said all this before cycling off to attend a piano lesson. Once you have fallen for The Piano, it's hard to forget it.


Tom Loxley & Shem Law
Editors, Radio Times

 

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I need to do better'
Pianist Lang Lang on his work-life balance - and the magic of Mika

 

Born in China in 1982, Lang Lang started to
learn the piano just three years later - and it's been a part of his life ever since. Aged nine, he was dropped by his tutor for having "no talent" and his strict father advised that he take his own life. "We're very good friends now. I've forgiven him for many years already," he says today.
Instead of giving up, Lang Lang rose to great heights. Today he's probably the world's most famous pianist, a prodigy who has performed at the White House, the King's Coronation and concert halls
around the world. Now aged 41, many credit him with single-handedly creating a new generation of pianists in China, and with his International Music Foundation's Keys of Inspiration programme, he's trying to do the same in the UK and America. Assuming, of course, that he hasn't already found the next big thing while hiding in a train station for Channel 4...

 

THE OVERTURE
My first memory is of there being a piano in the house from when I was one. We listened to classical music and Chinese folk music on a videotape cassette and later CDs. My father plays the Chinese violin, which is called the erhu. When I was a kid, it was harder to make friends because I was always practising.

CHANGING MY TUNE
 My life has improved tremendously, which I do appreciate but, honestly, I don't have so much time to feel it. I'm always on the road and focused on how I'm going to get better as a pianist. But I think now that I'm married, with a baby, I have to fly back home more often [he has houses in New York, Paris and Shanghai. An artist's life is very hard to balance. I need to do better. I need to cut some activities.

 

STRIKING A CHORD
 I knew immediately that we needed The Piano. Shows like that are often core-classical and are very hard for people to watch on television - this is something for everybody. But being on The Piano is quite a different experience for me. I normally have to talk about my new recording or my foundation work, not as a judge, so I'm very happy that I have Mika and Claudia.

 

SINGING FROM THE SAME HYMN SHEET
 I really love what Mika does. He's a great musician and I have a huge respect for him. This guy is so knowledgeable, I really learnt a lot because his repertoire... honestly, I had no idea. And he's a very lovable person. We became very, very good friends in a short time and it has remained this wonderful friendship. This season the bonds are even closer. And Claudia, too, has this magic that, no matter who she is talking to, in five minutes she is getting that person's entire life story.

 

FACING THE MUSIC
 In this second series, there were more people sending in their videos and applying to be on it and the quality is very high. Of course, it's hard to match Lucy [who won the first series]. No one can compare to her. But we do have some different talent; some different stories; some different backgrounds. This is not like shooting some other talent competitions where you have to push them many times and re-film- even if we wanted to do a retake, it would not happen. Everything is "in the moment" and very authentic.

 

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TV Times

27 April/3 May , 2024

Page 1

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ENTERTAINMENT
The Piano
SUNDAY C4

 

Claudia Winkleman (left), along with Lang Lang and Mika, returns for a new series of The Piano.

And it kicks off at Manchester Piccadily Station.

So what music can we expect to hear?

You’ l have to tune in to find out but it is sure to make your day!
See page 12

 

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KEYS to success

Claudia Wincleman, Lang Lang and Mika on why their musical talent show hits all the right notes

 

THE PIANO

SUNDAY, 9PM, C4 ENTERTAINMENT

 

Liverpool Lime Street Station is bustling with harried commuters, who stop in their tracks when they hear the tinkle of a piano above the blaring tannoy. From the centre of a burgeoning crowd, a fast tempo jazz tune is being belted out and TV Times spots presenter Claudia Winkleman swishing her famous fringe to the beat. We’ve been invited to watch filming for the second series of C4’s hit show The Piano, which stole the nation’s hearts when it debuted last year as budding musicians showcased their skills in UK train stations, unaware that world renowned classical pianist Lang Lang and pop chart-topper Mika were secretly observing.

 

This week, the talent search returns to our screens for a seven-part run, which will see Lang Lang and Mika choose one lucky virtuoso from each station to perform in a special concert at Manchester’s Aviva Studios, with ticket sales helping to fund more pianos in stations across the UK. After a day of performances, we sat down with The Traitors host Claudia, 52, Chinese superstar Lang Lang, 41, and British Lebanese singer-songwriter Mika, 40, to chat about their eagerly-awaited encore…

 

The first outing was such a hit – how does it feel to be back filming the most uplifting programme on TV?

 

MIKA Incredible! We were amazed by the reaction to Manchester talent: Shaun (above) and Emma (right) Series 1, which was a beautiful little project that was shot as more of a documentary. The whole thing has been such an astounding, tender surprise.

 

LANG LANG I knew it was going to be different from other talent shows out there, but I didn’t expect it to be such a success!

 

CLAUDIA It’s just magical. For example, a girl played today and a man was in floods of tears. I assumed he was her dad, so I said, ‘You must be incredibly proud?’ He whispered back, ‘I’ve never met her.’ But she did something that really moved him, and that’s what the show’s about.

 

Now the pianists know that Lang Lang and Mika are watching, has it changed the show at all?

 

CLAUDIA The first series was created with this idea of, ‘What happens when people play the piano and they think no one is watching?’ It was so poetic. But now everyone knows the show, so I’ve been expecting people to turn up in ball gowns! However, they still can’t see Lang Lang and Mika, and the show is shot so subtly and beautifully that it doesn’t feel like a hoo-ha. They just chat to me, then play.

 

MIKA We were worried that something would change with the pianists’ intentions or ambitions because they now know we are hidden away, listening. But we are still seeing extraordinary people who have amazing stories.

 

LANG LANG And if somebody feels special, this time Mika and I can go out to see them to encourage them to do better.

 

Have you seen a higher standard of performances this time?

 

MIKA The standard has gone up, yes, but you never know what’s going to move you. Someone can play Chopin and technically it’s all there, but it might not provoke emotion in me nor in Lang Lang. Then someone can play the most simple triad chords and sing, and it makes people cry. You can’t put your finger on it, but it’s magic.

 

LANG LANG There’s more international music this time, and some places we visit have their traditions and types of music, like Cardiff, where we hear folk music. We see the whole world through the piano in this series.

 

What can you tell us about the final this year?

 

MIKA After the Series 1 final at the Royal Festival Hall in London, we wanted to do something different and more contemporary. Manchester’s Aviva Studios is a new, high-tech venue made for both classical and non-classical music. So we are putting on a real show and people have bought tickets.

 

That must be quite nerve-racking for the finalists…

 

MIKA Like last time, we do mentoring days and full rehearsal days. They’re not going into a brutal, gladiator-style situation. They’re going to do something beautiful, and I’m not allowed to say why, but that’s more important than ever this year.

 

CLAUDIA This will make you feel nauseous, but I’ll say it anyway: Once they join The Piano family, it’s our job to look after them. They all look after each other, which is my favourite thing, but our duty of care is really important because some haven’t even played in stations before, let alone on the stage. They have two of the greatest musicians to hold their hand, too.

 

Claudia, have you been tempted to take up the piano yet?

 

CLAUDIA Oh, I’m not allowed to touch a recorder. I know nothing, honestly.

 

MIKA Yes, she does! The worst singer you’ve ever heard, but…

 

CLAUDIA I’m not even allowed to sing Happy Birthday in my own house! No, I really do know nothing. Somebody played brilliantly the other day, and the crew and I were saying, ‘Yes! Smashed it!’ But Mika and Lang Lang said, ‘Good, but it was in the wrong key.’ So, we absolutely bow to them.

 

 

MEET THE MAESTROS

Four hopefuls to listen out for in the first episode…

 

In this new series, Claudia, Lang Lang and Mika visit busy concourses in Edinburgh, Cardiff, London and Liverpool, but they begin at Manchester Piccadilly, where a young boxer, Ellis, gives a knockout rendition of Chopin’s Ballade No. 4, while drum-and-bass DJ Salome belts out Nina Simone’s Feeling Good.

 

There’s also nine-year-old prodigy Ethan, who wows passers-by with Chopin’s Nocturne No. 20, and Duncan, 80, who is living with dementia and who plays a stunning ‘thank you’ song for his wife, Fran.

 

‘We’ve got everything this series,’ promises Mika. ‘We’ve got the crazy-young prodigies and players that make 500 people cry in London’s Victoria Station, of all places, and we still see that person who just adores music, shows up terrified, but plays and it’s like magic.’

 

 

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SUNDAY 28 APRIL

 

The search is on for undiscovered piano players

 

9PM, C4

Budding pianists are tickling the ivories at train stations across the UK once again as C4’s heart-warming show returns for a new seven part series. Claudia Winkleman is back on presenting duties, while adjudicating from a nearby secret location are world-renowned pianist Lang Lang and pop superstar Mika, who will choose their favourite virtuoso from each station to perform in a special concert at Manchester’s Aviva Studios. First up is Manchester Piccadilly, where nine-year-old Ethan stops commuters in their tracks with Chopin’s Nocturne No 20, and divorcee Emma puts her own spin on Abba’s The Winner Takes It All. There won’t be a dry eye in the house!

 

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What’s on TV

27 April/3 May, 2024

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Page 3

 

The Piano

Sunday, 9pm, C4 Entertainment

 

Claudia Winkleman hosts a second run of the moving talent show, which sees amateur pianists perform at UK train stations for a chance to play at Manchester’s Aviva studios. This first week, Claudia and judges Mika and Lang Lang are at Manchester Piccadilly Station, where they discover a classically trained boxer, a dance DJ with the voice of an angel, and an 80-year-old romantic who breaks their hearts. Who will tickle their ivories?

 

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Keys to success !

More amateur pianists showcase their musical skills as The Piano returns…

 

Budding pianists are limbering up to tickle the ivories at train stations across the UK as C4’s hit show The Piano returns for a seven-part series guaranteed to pull at our heartstrings. Claudia Winkleman presents once again, while adjudicating from a secret location are world-renowned pianist Lang Lang and pop superstar Mika, who’ll choose their favourite virtuoso from each station to perform in a special concert at Manchester’s Aviva Studios.

 

Magic moments

But unlike the first series, the pianists now know that Lang Lang and Mika are watching their performances. So will that make a difference? ‘All three of us were worried about returning because the first series was created with the idea of: what happens when people play the piano and they think no one’s watching?’ says Claudia. ‘It was so poetic, but now that everyone knows the show, I’ve been expecting people to turn up in ball gowns! ‘But they still can’t see Lang Lang and Mika, and the show is shot so subtly that it doesn’t feel like a hoo-ha. They just chat to me, then play.’ This new series visits train stations in Edinburgh, Cardiff, London and Liverpool, but begins in Manchester Piccadilly, where nine-year-old prodigy Ethan stops commuters in their tracks by playing Frédéric Chopin’s 19th-century piece Nocturne in C# Minor No.20, and 80-year-old Duncan, who is living with dementia, performs a stunning ‘thank you’ song for his wife, Fran. ‘You never know what’s going to move you,’ says Mika. ‘Someone can play simple chords and sing, and it just clicks and makes people cry. You can’t put your finger on it, but it’s magic.’ Lang Lang promises a wider range of music this time, too. ‘There’s more international music, and in Cardiff, we hear folk music,’ explains the Chinese superstar. ‘We get to see the whole world through The Piano.’

 

 

 

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Closer UK – Issue 1105,

27 April/3 May 2024

Closer-UK-Issue-1105-27-April-3-May-2024_p1The_Piano_p_17.jpg.25ff2382deccaa45e3b927779fce9910.jpg

 

Page 66

 

The Piano

REALITY SHOW RETURNS

 

SUN 28 APR, 9PM, C4

 

Claudia Winkleman is back with a second season of the talent show that sees some of the UK’s best amateur pianists battle it out at train stations across the country for a chance to perform at the Royal Festival Hall. The series has been called a “breath of fresh air” and there will be seven episodes this time (extended from five), with judges Mika and Lang Lang returning alongside Clauds. Competition is set to be tight, with the search beginning in Manchester Piccadilly station – where they discover a classically-trained boxer, a dance DJ, and an 80-year-old romantic…

 

FACTFILE:

Series one in February 2023 was won by Lucy Illingworth – a blind 13-year old who stole the nation’s hearts.

 

Closer_Issue_1105_2024_p66_The_Piano_page-0001.thumb.jpg.d621cf8ff2b1291b64d96b83e35923de.jpg

 

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   I didn't see any different magazines while I was out compared to the ones you shared @Kumazzz , I think you got them all! Thank you!

 

4 hours ago, crazyaboutmika said:

Would you be able to send me physical copies too please? 

   Would you just want the Radio Times one? It's the only one with Mika on the cover and out of all the magazines it has the best interview. Let me know 🙂

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Heat UK – Issue 1291,

27 April/3 May 2024

Heat_-_Issue_1291_2024-p1.jpg.ea897b47c14dfa72974148cdd3dcebd1.jpg

 

 

Page 69

 

The Piano

CHANNEL 4, SUNDAY 28 APRIL, 9PM

 

Claudia Winkleman meets more talented amateur pianists who are making commuters stop in their tracks playing in train stations. Listening in will be musicians Lang Lang and Mika. And Claudia, who says she’s not musical at all, admits she is still blown away by the reactions, saying, “As a musical outsider, it was amazing for me to watch everyone rushing through the stations, then stopping as soon as someone started playing the piano.” The opening ep takes place in Manchester Piccadilly Station.

 

Heat_-_Issue_1291_2024_p69_page-0001.thumb.jpg.7d8ca221d73beaf7b959fcba40ccb9ae.jpg

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TV & Satellite Week

27 April/3 May, 2024

TV_Satellite_Week_Apr_24_2024.jpg.4b9c08cfc119834a90bce9f695dc6cac.jpg

 

 

Page 8 + 9

 

TV WEEK

Keys, to success

Claudia Winkleman, Lang Lang and Mika are on the hunt for more amateur pianists as the talent show returns

 

In the centre of a crowd at Liverpool Lime Street Station, a fast-tempo jazz tune is being belted out on a piano and TV&Satellite Week spots Claudia Winkleman and her famous fringe swaying to the beat.

 

We’ve been invited to watch filming for C4’s ivory-tickling talent show The Piano, which stole the nation’s hearts when it first aired last year as budding musicians showcased their skills in UK train stations, unaware that world renowned classical pianist Lang Lang and pop superstar Mika were secretly watching.

 

In this new seven-part series, the talented virtuosos now know that Lang Lang and Mika are nearby, debating which performer to pick from each station to send through to the grand final. But now that there’s no big reveal, will it make a difference to the performances? ‘

 

All three of us were a little worried about returning because the first series was created around the idea of: what happens when people play the piano, and they think no one is watching?’ explains presenter Winkleman, 52, when we chat in a nearby hotel after a long day of performances.

 

'Now that everyone knows how the show works, I’ve been fully expecting people to turn up in ball gowns,. But Lang Lang and Mika are still hidden away, and the show is shot so subtly that it doesn’t feel like a hoo-ha. They just chat to me, then play.’

 

CONCOURSE CONCERTS

This new series also takes the trio to busy concourses in Edinburgh, Cardiff and London and kicks off this week in Manchester Piccadilly, where a young boxer, Ellis, gives a knockout rendition of Frédéric Chopin’s Ballade No.4, while drum- and-bass DJ Salome belts out the jazzy show tune Feeling Good, made famous by Nina Simone.

 

There’s also nine-year old prodigy Ethan, who stops commuters in their tracks with his take on Chopin’s Nocturne in C# Minor No.20, and 80-year-old Duncan, who is living with dementia and plays a stunning ‘thank you’ song for his wife, Fran.

 

‘The standard has gone up this year, but you never know what will move you,’ says Mika, 40. ‘Someone can play Chopin, and technically, it’s all there, but it might not provoke emotion in me or Lang Lang.

 

‘Then someone can play the most simple triad chords and sing, and it just clicks and makes people cry. You can’t put your finger on it, but it’s pure magic.’

 

The first run culminated in a concert at London’s Royal Festival Hall, where blind and neurodiverse 13-year-old Lucy was crowned with the winning performance. This time, the final will be at Manchester’s Aviva Studios, with ticket sales helping to fund more pianos in train stations across the UK.

 

A WORLD OF MUSIC

‘After the Royal Festival Hall, we wanted to do something different and more contemporary, so the final will be in a brand-new, high-tech venue that’s made for both classical and non-classical music,’ says Mika. ‘So we are putting on a real show.’

 

Lang Lang promises there’ll be a broader range of music, too. ‘It’s made me appreciate new types of music because this show is not only classical, it’s everything,’ says the 41-year-old superstar.

 

‘There’s more international music this time as well, and some places we visit have their own traditions and types of music, like Cardiff, where you’ll hear folk music. You’ll see the whole world through The Piano.

 

TV_Satellite_Week_Apr_24_2024_The_Piano.thumb.jpg.2694a9bbc1bb45b72dad3e9a9b360504.jpg

 

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Total TV Guide

27 April 2024_The_Piano

 

PDF file ( 2.4 MB ) Total TV Guide 27.04.2024_The_Piano_.pdf

 

total-tv-guide-27_04_2024.jpg.6df2ec1fea5f2f3e41126b6d5b46defb.jpg

 

TotalTVGuide27_04.2024_downmagaz.net-1_page-0001.thumb.jpg.127153a09e87fbe0a12a83f5f11bed6a.jpg

 

Page 4 + 5

 

In perfect harmony
Lang Lang and Mika on why they chime together...


Have you learnt anything from doing the first series that's been useful this time?


Lang Lang

I would love to say yes but the truth is, in the first season there were a lot of songs that I had no idea about and it was thanks to Mika's knowledge the show wasn't a disaster! This second season I thought I was going to be better, but in Liverpool I realised I'm not at all!

 

Mika

You never know what's going to move you. Sometimes a person will play something really complicated - some Chopin or something - and technically it's all there, but it doesn't provoke emotion in either of us. And then someone comes and plays something with the most simple chords, and maybe lyrics, and for whatever reason it clicks. Everything aligns and it makes people cry. It's magic. You can't quite put your finger on why it happens, you just have to be open to it.

 

LIFTING THE LID

 

 

 

 

TotalTVGuide-27-April2024_The_Piano_P45.thumb.jpg.10e02a540f29dc2a72d282d8560d7ed6.jpg

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5 hours ago, Kumazzz said:

 

Radio Times

 

RadioTimes-27May2024_The_Piano_p.1.thumb.jpg.612b55957efaff32f6c003c15bdac938.jpg

 

Page 3

From the Editors

THE STORY OF HOW The Piano began life may be apocryphal, but it's worth repeating. A TV executive on his commute walked past an old piano, installed at St Pancras Station to amuse passing passengers, and found the sound of those brave enough to sit on the stool and start playing so uplifting, he decided it must make a television show.
That the show then became one of last year's most unlikely hits - and Channel 4's biggest ratings success of recent years - is testament to live music's power to move an audience. Not to mention our love of plucky amateurs ready to have a go at entertaining us that goes back long before TV talent shows such as The Voice and The X Factor.
But unlike those shows, the contestants in The Piano had no idea they were part of a competition. They thought they were merely playing for the hell of it, thinking they were being filmed for a documentary about people who play pianos in public spaces for the fleeting entertainment of passers-by.
What made the series such a success? In our interview on page 12 The Piano's trio of Claudia Winkleman, Lang Lang and Mika have their say. To their eyes - and ears - the show worked precisely because it didn't set out to entertain using all the usual props of TV entertainment: shiny floors and showbiz glitz twinned with fake pathos and jeopardy.
But there may have been another key to its success: the simple joy that music can bring, performed at the highest level or by a tinkler of the bar-room ivories. Last September C4 boss Ian Katz told RT that 2023 spelt the end of mean television. And that he was ready to pronounce a new era of Happy TV. Which may explain why The Piano is back for a second run – especially since he said all this before cycling off to attend a piano lesson. Once you have fallen for The Piano, it's hard to forget it.


Tom Loxley & Shem Law
Editors, Radio Times

 

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Page 4 + 5

 

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Page 12 + 13

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Page 15

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Page 17

 

I need to do better'
Pianist Lang Lang on his work-life balance - and the magic of Mika

 

Born in China in 1982, Lang Lang started to
learn the piano just three years later - and it's been a part of his life ever since. Aged nine, he was dropped by his tutor for having "no talent" and his strict father advised that he take his own life. "We're very good friends now. I've forgiven him for many years already," he says today.
Instead of giving up, Lang Lang rose to great heights. Today he's probably the world's most famous pianist, a prodigy who has performed at the White House, the King's Coronation and concert halls
around the world. Now aged 41, many credit him with single-handedly creating a new generation of pianists in China, and with his International Music Foundation's Keys of Inspiration programme, he's trying to do the same in the UK and America. Assuming, of course, that he hasn't already found the next big thing while hiding in a train station for Channel 4...

 

THE OVERTURE
My first memory is of there being a piano in the house from when I was one. We listened to classical music and Chinese folk music on a videotape cassette and later CDs. My father plays the Chinese violin, which is called the erhu. When I was a kid, it was harder to make friends because I was always practising.

CHANGING MY TUNE
 My life has improved tremendously, which I do appreciate but, honestly, I don't have so much time to feel it. I'm always on the road and focused on how I'm going to get better as a pianist. But I think now that I'm married, with a baby, I have to fly back home more often [he has houses in New York, Paris and Shanghai. An artist's life is very hard to balance. I need to do better. I need to cut some activities.

 

STRIKING A CHORD
 I knew immediately that we needed The Piano. Shows like that are often core-classical and are very hard for people to watch on television - this is something for everybody. But being on The Piano is quite a different experience for me. I normally have to talk about my new recording or my foundation work, not as a judge, so I'm very happy that I have Mika and Claudia.

 

SINGING FROM THE SAME HYMN SHEET
 I really love what Mika does. He's a great musician and I have a huge respect for him. This guy is so knowledgeable, I really learnt a lot because his repertoire... honestly, I had no idea. And he's a very lovable person. We became very, very good friends in a short time and it has remained this wonderful friendship. This season the bonds are even closer. And Claudia, too, has this magic that, no matter who she is talking to, in five minutes she is getting that person's entire life story.

 

FACING THE MUSIC
 In this second series, there were more people sending in their videos and applying to be on it and the quality is very high. Of course, it's hard to match Lucy [who won the first series]. No one can compare to her. But we do have some different talent; some different stories; some different backgrounds. This is not like shooting some other talent competitions where you have to push them many times and re-film- even if we wanted to do a retake, it would not happen. Everything is "in the moment" and very authentic.

 

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Page 46

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Radio Times

 

Pop or classical? Concerts or festivals?

We challenged #ThePiano stars Claudia Winkleman and Mika to answer some quick-fire musical questions during our photoshoot for this week's issue of Radio Times - and this is what they said

 

YouTube

This or That with Claudia Winkleman and Mika

 

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4 minutes ago, Kumazzz said:

 

Radio Times

 

Pop or classical? Concerts or festivals?

We challenged #ThePiano stars Claudia Winkleman and Mika to answer some quick-fire musical questions during our photoshoot for this week's issue of Radio Times - and this is what they said

 

YouTube

This or That with Claudia Winkleman and Mika

 


This shouldn’t come as a surprise to me, yet every time I see him next to people who are similar in height to me I go „gosh is he TALL!“ 

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2 hours ago, holdingyourdrink said:

„gosh is he TALL!“ 

When he walked past me at the concert, and I was seated at the time, I thought exactly the same thing! :lmfao:

 

I mean, I KNOW he's tall, but when I was so close to him I didn't realise HOW tall! 😅

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2 hours ago, Kumazzz said:

Had to pause the video just while I was talking to my Mum and this has to be the perfect moment I paused it on! :lol:

 

20240423_170101.thumb.png.3467e1a743d5c5dd603cf159b5c2f279.png

This is right after he says the word "POP" too and look at his eyes! They are popping! :lol3:

 

8 hours ago, Kumazzz said:

“There are moments when Lang Lang is quite tactile and you wouldn’t expect that,” Mika says. “When he’s finding something really funny he can’t control himself. He’ll laugh and he starts stroking my face and I’m, like, ‘Oh my God!’ There’s very few situations in my life where I’m having a nice time, especially with a man, and he just strokes your face out of affection.”

Excuse me sir, but I think Andy may have something to say about this! 😅

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33 minutes ago, TinyLove_CJ said:

I mean, I KNOW he's tall, but when I was so close to him I didn't realise HOW tall! 😅


Don’t worry, this happens to me Every. Single. Time. I see him. And the funny part? I have a couple of friends his height, but for some reason he is just taller! :lol3:

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4 hours ago, Kumazzz said:

 

Radio Times

 

Pop or classical? Concerts or festivals?

We challenged #ThePiano stars Claudia Winkleman and Mika to answer some quick-fire musical questions during our photoshoot for this week's issue of Radio Times - and this is what they said

 

YouTube

This or That with Claudia Winkleman and Mika

 

 

Here is my edition

 

YouTube

 

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7 hours ago, TinyLove_CJ said:

   I didn't see any different magazines while I was out compared to the ones you shared @Kumazzz , I think you got them all! Thank you!

 

   Would you just want the Radio Times one? It's the only one with Mika on the cover and out of all the magazines it has the best interview. Let me know 🙂

All of them if it is not a problem for you 

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:thumb_yello: UPDATE !

 

Here is a TRUE PDF file !!! It's easy to read. :heart:

 

Radio Times

27 May 2024

Page 1

 

BRAVO! THE PIANO RETURNS

 

KEY PLAYERS

Claudia Winkleman, Lang Lang and Mika reveal the secrets of the most joyful show on TV

 

RadioTimes-27May2024_The_Piano_p.1.thumb.jpg.612b55957efaff32f6c003c15bdac938.jpg

 

Page 3

 

From the Editors

THE STORY OF HOW The Piano began life may be apocryphal, but it’s worth repeating. A TV executive on his commute walked past an old piano, installed at St Pancras Station to amuse passing passengers, and found the sound of those brave enough to sit on the stool and start playing so uplifting, he decided it must make a television show.

 

That the show then became one of last year’s most unlikely hits – and Channel 4’s biggest ratings success of recent years – is testament to live music’s power to move an audience. Not to mention our love of plucky amateurs ready to have a go at entertaining us that goes back long before TV talent shows such as The Voice and The X Factor.

 

But unlike those shows, the contestants in The Piano had no idea they were part of a competition. They thought they were merely playing for the hell of it, thinking they were being filmed for a documentary about people who play pianos in public spaces for the fleeting entertainment of passers-by.

 

What made the series such a success? In our interview on page 12 The Piano’s trio of Claudia Winkleman, Lang Lang and Mika have their say. To their eyes – and ears – the show worked precisely because it didn’t set out to entertain using all the usual props of TV entertainment: shiny floors and showbiz glitz twinned with fake pathos and jeopardy.

 

But there may have been another key to its success: the simple joy that music can bring, performed at the highest level or by a tinkler of the bar-room ivories. Last September C4 boss Ian Katz told RT that 2023 spelt the end of mean television. And that he was ready to pronounce a new era of Happy TV. Which may explain why The Piano is back for a second run – especially since he said all this before cycling off to attend a piano lesson. Once you have fallen for The Piano, it's hard to forget it.

 

Tom Loxley & Shem Law Editors, Radio Times

 

RadioTimes-27May2024_The_Piano_p.3.thumb.jpg.25ef6b84a0797b715ada7cafe0ae621d.jpg

 

Page 4

 

27 APRIL—3 MAY 2024 TV

 

The Piano

Sunday 9.00pm C4

It was a somewhat unlikely hit last year; now more of the nation’s train stations play host to talented ivory tinklers hoping to impress pop star Mika and virtuoso pianist Lang Lang. The brilliant Claudia Winkleman returns to present.

 

INTERVIEWS P12

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Page 12

 

‘What I can’t bear is “Yeah, I’ve got this”. I’m allergic to any form of arrogance’ CLAUDIA WINKLEMAN

 

PHOTOGRAPHED EXCLUSIVELY FOR RADIO TIMES BY ROBERT WILSON

 

 

Page 13, 15

 

The Piano

Sunday 9.00pm C4

𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝒎𝒐𝒔𝒕 𝒋𝒐𝒚𝒇𝒖𝒍 𝒔𝒉𝒐𝒘 𝒐𝒏 𝑻𝑽

 

As The Piano makes a swift return, hosts Claudia Winkleman, Mika and Lang Lang reveal the secrets of the show’s success. No glitz, no make-up, no pathos, it’s all about the music…

 

WELCOME TO BANTER Central – a photographic studio in west London, where Claudia Winkleman and Mika are recovering from throwing shapes under strobe-esque lighting against a dazzling backdrop of black and-white 1960s Op Art à la Bridget Riley.

 

There are a few serious moments but mostly it’s wise-cracking verbal ping-pong. Claudia, peering out from under what she calls her “Unapologetic Fringe”, is munching through two bags of crisps and a packet of mini-Oreos, for which she apologises quite often. Then, witness ing my faffing with tape recorders while dealing poorly with a cup of tea (lack of spoon, saucer and so on) as Mika is talking, she quietly slips it away and dispatches the damp tea bag in what I suspect is a characteristically kind and unob trusive intervention.

 

These are two of the three faces (I meet Lang Lang later in the week) of what is surely the most joy-filled television series of recent times: The Piano, the Channel 4 gem that went out early last year following a most unusual music competition between amateur piano players invited to perform on public pianos at major train station across the length of the country, from London’s St Pancras to Birmingham, Leeds and Glasgow.

 

The participants – of all ages and from all backgrounds, with the most tremendous back-stories, playing every genre of music from classical to pop and rap – were under the impression that they were being filmed for some kind of documentary presented by Claudia.

 

Unbeknownst to them, the world’s leading classical piano player, Lang Lang, was hidden away in a small room, usually next to the public toilet, alongside the beguiling performer and pop star Mika. Both men were judging their performances with a view to selecting one pianist from each location to appear in a concert at the Royal Festival Hall, where an overall winner would be announced.

 

Last year this was stand-out star, blind 13-year-old Lucy Illingworth from West York shire, who is unable to communicate in conven tional ways because of her autism and other conditions. Her transformation when she started playing the piano (Chopin’s Nocturne in B flat Minor) with such tenderness and artistry was deeply affecting, moving viewers at home and in the station to tears, including the judges.

 

The first series had the highest ratings for the channel since 2017, with three million viewers, and in July last year it was announced that the show had been recommissioned for both a second and third season, as well as a Christmas special and a documentary on what came next for Lucy (The Incredibly Talented Lucy is coming soon to Channel 4).

 

Sitting across from me, Mika looks like the offspring of Stephen Mangan and Beatrice Dalle, while Claudia’s vibe is more Carine Roitfeld, the deliciously dishevelled and very rock ’n’ roll French fashion editor.

 

We talk a little about an old clip that has emerged, of Claudia looking very different in her 20s [she’s now very happy to be 52 – “I love being older”], without the famous fringe and tan, and with a different way of talking [she calls it her “university voice”, adding of her time at New Hall, Cambridge: “I did go to a quite fancy university”]. She looks quite Sloaney? “Very,” she agrees.

 

So when did she develop rock ’n’ roll Claudia? “Well, I don’t feel rock ’n’ roll at all. I’m definitely not.”

It started with the fringe when she went to a hairdresser and said, at 28: “‘I think I’d like a fringe’ and he gave me – you’re both going to feel nauseous when I say this word – a wispy fringe and I said, ‘I think I need an unapologetic fringe.’ And once I had that, everything else followed.”

 

The black eyeliner? “I think I had that already but not in that clip because I was doing telly and I had no idea what I was doing and they said, ‘Let’s make you up like this’ and I was like, ‘OK,’ but I was always a bit Emo.”

Maybe a bit Goth, too? “Oh I was very Goth– even now, a pointy boot and a long duster coat...” she swoons.

 

WHAT DOES SHE make of Nick Cave and his wife Susie Bick, who used to rock that Goth look. “Love. I met Susie once and I mounted her. I don’t think I’m allowed to meet her again. I also love Ozzy Osbourne and in the end, I just want to eat a bat.”

 

One of the reasons we love Claudia – apart from her sense of mischief, warmth and genuine curiosity – is that she is an original. I mean, honestly, who says the things she says routinely – particularly now – and gets away with it?

 

The journalist Stuart Heritage captured her presenting style brilliantly, writing that she is “the concept of free jazz made corporeal” and “has made a career of appearing to say whatever happens to be ambiently floating through her head at any given moment”.

 

I remind her that she actually said, “My ovaries just clacked” on The Piano when she spotted a baby. Mika is aghast: “Did she really say that? She does get very, very excited around babies. Honestly, she’s the babysitter at the station.” “I don’t remember that,” Claudia says. “We never watch it.”

 

Is she desperate to be a granny? Is she already encouraging her children (Jake, 21, Matilda, 17, and Arthur, 12) to become young parents? “Yes I am, and if they were here now they would be, like, ‘Please just tell her to relax!’”

 

She travels with her youngest on the Tube to school every day and this is when she listens to music – “and once I’ve kissed him and tried to lick his eyebrows in front of his friends – which by the way is not what one should do but it’s my job to be embarrassing – then I put my headphones on and listen to music very loud. I want Missy Elliott, I want Dr Dre and rap and – BOOM! – it wakes me up.

“At home, I’ll usually have Radio 4 or Radio 2 on if I’m cooking or just pottering around, but I don’t normally listen to music then because I’m usually pestering the kids. Am I being boring?”

 

This is typical of her. Claudia is self-deprecat ing to a fault. I was berating her about it when we met for an interview 14 years ago, but she’s even worse now.

 

SHE IS AN integral part of The Piano’s appeal (as she is in Strictly and that other successful series The Traitors, for which she won a Bafta last year), but she demurs. Isn’t it about time, dear Claudia, to own your success? “I’m super-happy and super-grateful, but I’m just the conduit who says, ‘Hello.’ The Piano is about these extraordinary people who come to play, it’s about the instrument and it’s about Mika and Lang Lang – [she turns and says to Mika] Don’t respond!”

 

“She knows me!” he laughs. “I love this conversation – I’m serious, I really mean it.” He clearly agrees about her tendency to put herself down.

“I feel quite secure in the stuff that I know I can do,” she responds. “Reading out loud on Strictly. Greeting a lovely person who’s come in and might be a bit nervous to play the piano. Walking around a round table. What I really can’t bear is ‘Yeah, I’ve got this’. I’m allergic to any form of arrogance.

“I love a healthy bit of imposter syndrome and I am a big believer in being bad at things. When my kids were like, ‘Mum, shall I learn a musical instrument?’ I said, ‘I wouldn’t. Not unless you really want to.’ I want them to be bored and I just want to say aloud, ‘It’s OK not to be good at stuff.’ You know, I’m not good at parallel parking – fine.”

We move on and touch on the wars raging around the world. Claudia’s response is to donate and keep informed: “Read about it from every angle so at least you feel informed, not ‘I just can’t look at it’.” Her personal solace to sorrow is to wrap herself around the people she loves, which is her family.

 

For Mika, it is music. “There has always been this association with processing the inexpressible through something that allows you to deal with it in a different way. There was this fine line with my family between tears and joy, and music was always this form of poetic resistance, which can have huge and strong consequences.”

The bare bones of biography can mislead. Read that 40-year-old Mika was born in Beirut, moved to Paris, then Pimlico adjacent to London’s Chelsea, went to the famous Westminster School in London, with an American father in banking, and it paints a picture of gilded ease.

The reality was rather different.

In 1990, during the war in Kuwait, Mika’s father, Michael Holbrook Penniman, was trapped in the US embassy for seven months. He returned to his family a shell of a man: heavily bearded, gaunt and troubled.

Mika didn’t call him Dad again, I read? “I called him ‘Mike’ because I didn’t recognise him. It was hard to understand that he had trauma but then when everything fell apart and he lost his job...

 

“There were five of us children and we lost everything, then we started again. We knew every phrase to say to be within the law to make sure the bailiffs didn’t come into the house. At a certain point, it became too much and we kind of ran away from France and started again. We didn’t run away, sorry – we left. And then we lived in a bed and breakfast near Pimlico for two years.”

 

His parents managed to stabilise things, but it was still bumpy. Mika was suspended four times at Westminster, for quite long intervals, because his school fees couldn’t be paid. This led to almighty rows between his parents and he would tell his mother – American-born Lebanese-Syrian Joannie – that he would be happy at any school.

 

However, when the family first moved to London the nine-year-old Mika had attended the Lycée, where he was so badly bullied that he was home-schooled for a while by his mum, to whom he was particularly close and who sadly died three years ago.

“She was very eccentric,” he says, affection ately. “Home was music, colour and tears all mixed together. My father was an amazing part ner to her... you can’t really speak about one without speaking about the other. There was turbulence but he was the perfect partner to her hurricane of colour.”

 

MIKA IS DYSLEXIC and as a child had reading and writing issues – but he speaks five languages and broadcasts regularly in at least three of them. He also has a wonderfully evoca tive turn of phrase. I am particularly taken by “the crutch of snobbery”. But back then, life was more of a challenge. “I stopped communicating with the world around me. I was hardly speaking. I forgot how to read and write. My path out of it was music – it allowed me to start rebuilding and gave me another sense of value. I may have been failing at the spelling exam and having a hard time, but I’m not worthless – ‘Look, I can do this!’”

 

To which Claudia is keen to point out: “Mika hid in the music room from the bullies.”

 

Music comforts him still. He suggests you give the same attention to it as you would reading a book or watching a film – one song and you absorb yourself in it totally. It could be Joni Mitchell’s A Case of You or Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique: “All those colours, all those textures – you can’t listen to that in the background while you’re making your tomato sauce!”

 

“Mika and I get on so brilliantly but you’re about to go off me!” Claudia announces. Addressing him she adds: “So this is how I listen to music... I don’t like anything new. I stopped listening to bands in probably 1995 and those are still my favourites. That period of Brit Pop with Oasis, Blur, Pulp. We would run around university singing Wonderwall at the top of our lungs and that is the music I revert to.”

 

THE PLAYFUL BOND between Claudia and Mika is evident for all to see – but what of his relationship with his fellow judge, the renowned pianist Lang Lang? Initially he had seemed very reserved in contrast to Mika’s exuberant chattiness, his sherbet-coloured shirts and bold necklaces. But over the weeks it was clear that an endearing friendship had developed, almost a bromance.

 

“There are moments when Lang Lang is quite tactile and you wouldn’t expect that,” Mika says. “When he’s finding something really funny he can’t control himself. He’ll laugh and he starts stroking my face and I’m, like, ‘Oh my God!’ There’s very few situations in my life where I’m having a nice time, especially with a man, and he just strokes your face out of affection.”

 

All three of them are clearly, and quite rightly, proud of the show: “We’re a beautiful little poetic success – there’s no big shiny floor, there’s no mechanic of pathos,” Mika says. “They haven’t had make-up or been zhuzhed,” Claudia adds. “There isn’t a floor manager saying, ‘Come in and please introduce yourself.’”

But now everyone knows how the The Piano works, did that change the dynamic for season two? “I was so worried that they’d come in a ballgown waving – ‘Lang Lang! Mika! I’m here!’” Claudia vamps. “But actually because you can’t see them, they’re sort of forgotten.’”

 

So the authenticity remains... “It’s beyond that,” Claudia says. “I’m holding their bags!” “And they’re sitting at the Costa coffee shop or Greggs!” Mika adds. “But once they play,” Claudia chimes in, “it’s not humdrum.” Mika smiles: “Exactly. It’s magic.”

 

 

RadioTimes-27May2024_The_Piano_p_1213.thumb.jpg.130fa39379381c66fc1ba4d48bfdec3a.jpg

 

 

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Page 17

 

‘I need to do better’

Pianist Lang Lang on his work-life balance – and the magic of Mika

 

Born in China in 1982, Lang Lang started to
learn the piano just three years later - and it's been a part of his life ever since. Aged nine, he was dropped by his tutor for having "no talent" and his strict father advised that he take his own life. "We're very good friends now. I've forgiven him for many years already," he says today.
Instead of giving up, Lang Lang rose to great heights. Today he's probably the world's most famous pianist, a prodigy who has performed at the White House, the King's Coronation and concert halls
around the world. Now aged 41, many credit him with single-handedly creating a new generation of pianists in China, and with his International Music Foundation's Keys of Inspiration programme, he's trying to do the same in the UK and America. Assuming, of course, that he hasn't already found the next big thing while hiding in a train station for Channel 4...

 

THE OVERTURE
My first memory is of there being a piano in the house from when I was one. We listened to classical music and Chinese folk music on a videotape cassette and later CDs. My father plays the Chinese violin, which is called the erhu. When I was a kid, it was harder to make friends because I was always practicing.

 

CHANGING MY TUNE
 My life has improved tremendously, which I do appreciate but, honestly, I don't have so much time to feel it. I'm always on the road and focused on how I'm going to get better as a pianist. But I think now that I'm married, with a baby, I have to fly back home more often [he has houses in New York, Paris and Shanghai. An artist's life is very hard to balance. I need to do better. I need to cut some activities.

 

STRIKING A CHORD
 I knew immediately that we needed The Piano. Shows like that are often core-classical and are very hard for people to watch on television - this is something for everybody. But being on The Piano is quite a different experience for me. I normally have to talk about my new recording or my foundation work, not as a judge, so I'm very happy that I have Mika and Claudia.

 

SINGING FROM THE SAME HYMN SHEET
 I really love what Mika does. He's a great musician and I have a huge respect for him. This guy is so knowledgeable, I really learnt a lot because his repertoire... honestly, I had no idea. And he's a very lovable person. We became very, very good friends in a short time and it has remained this wonderful friendship. This season the bonds are even closer. And Claudia, too, has this magic that, no matter who she is talking to, in five minutes she is getting that person's entire life story.

 

FACING THE MUSIC
 In this second series, there were more people sending in their videos and applying to be on it and the quality is very high. Of course, it's hard to match Lucy [who won the first series]. No one can compare to her. But we do have some different talent; some different stories; some different backgrounds. This is not like shooting some other talent competitions where you have to push them many times and re-film- even if we wanted to do a retake, it would not happen. Everything is "in the moment" and very authentic.

 

RadioTimes-27May2024_The_Piano_p_17.thumb.jpg.d96fb751e68517397ee32dc65b586f22.jpg

 

Page 46

 

Sunday

TA-DAH!

Claudia Winkleman, Mika and Lang Lang seek Britain’s best pianists

 

REALITY

The Piano

It was an unlikely premise for a hit and yet the first series of this X Factor for pianists became something of a sleeper success when it debuted last year. Now it returns, as more train station concourses transform into a stage for talented musicians to tickle the ivories. Contestants of all ages and backgrounds take a seat, with moving personal stories and bewitching recitals flowing. The piano prowess is stunning; the fingerwork dizzying.

 

Claudia Winkleman returns as host — her sincere enthusiasm one of the major keys to this show’s success — with pop star Mika and virtuoso pianist Lang Lang in the wings. They eavesdrop on the performances and will decide which of the day’s players will play at the series’ finale concert.

Unlike before, though, the pair are able to break cover. One moment during their time at Manchester Piccadilly sees them personifying Simon Cowell when, after one performance, they ask to hear an alternative song. “Everything has gone rogue,” notes Claudia. “I loved it when they were next to the toilets.”

 

RadioTimes-27May2024_The_Piano_p46.thumb.jpg.899de294fcd249bf9cfda46bb144927a.jpg

 

10 hours ago, Kumazzz said:

 

Radio Times

Page 3

From the Editors

THE STORY OF HOW The Piano began life may be apocryphal, but it's worth repeating. A TV executive on his commute walked past an old piano, installed at St Pancras Station to amuse passing passengers, and found the sound of those brave enough to sit on the stool and start playing so uplifting, he decided it must make a television show.
That the show then became one of last year's most unlikely hits - and Channel 4's biggest ratings success of recent years - is testament to live music's power to move an audience. Not to mention our love of plucky amateurs ready to have a go at entertaining us that goes back long before TV talent shows such as The Voice and The X Factor.
But unlike those shows, the contestants in The Piano had no idea they were part of a competition. They thought they were merely playing for the hell of it, thinking they were being filmed for a documentary about people who play pianos in public spaces for the fleeting entertainment of passers-by.
What made the series such a success? In our interview on page 12 The Piano's trio of Claudia Winkleman, Lang Lang and Mika have their say. To their eyes - and ears - the show worked precisely because it didn't set out to entertain using all the usual props of TV entertainment: shiny floors and showbiz glitz twinned with fake pathos and jeopardy.
But there may have been another key to its success: the simple joy that music can bring, performed at the highest level or by a tinkler of the bar-room ivories. Last September C4 boss Ian Katz told RT that 2023 spelt the end of mean television. And that he was ready to pronounce a new era of Happy TV. Which may explain why The Piano is back for a second run – especially since he said all this before cycling off to attend a piano lesson. Once you have fallen for The Piano, it's hard to forget it.
Tom Loxley & Shem Law
Editors, Radio Times

 

Page 4 + 5

 

Page 12 + 13

 

Page 15

 

Page 17

 

I need to do better'
Pianist Lang Lang on his work-life balance - and the magic of Mika

 

Born in China in 1982, Lang Lang started to
learn the piano just three years later - and it's been a part of his life ever since. Aged nine, he was dropped by his tutor for having "no talent" and his strict father advised that he take his own life. "We're very good friends now. I've forgiven him for many years already," he says today.
Instead of giving up, Lang Lang rose to great heights. Today he's probably the world's most famous pianist, a prodigy who has performed at the White House, the King's Coronation and concert halls
around the world. Now aged 41, many credit him with single-handedly creating a new generation of pianists in China, and with his International Music Foundation's Keys of Inspiration programme, he's trying to do the same in the UK and America. Assuming, of course, that he hasn't already found the next big thing while hiding in a train station for Channel 4...

 

THE OVERTURE
My first memory is of there being a piano in the house from when I was one. We listened to classical music and Chinese folk music on a videotape cassette and later CDs. My father plays the Chinese violin, which is called the erhu. When I was a kid, it was harder to make friends because I was always practising.

 

CHANGING MY TUNE
 My life has improved tremendously, which I do appreciate but, honestly, I don't have so much time to feel it. I'm always on the road and focused on how I'm going to get better as a pianist. But I think now that I'm married, with a baby, I have to fly back home more often [he has houses in New York, Paris and Shanghai. An artist's life is very hard to balance. I need to do better. I need to cut some activities.

 

STRIKING A CHORD
 I knew immediately that we needed The Piano. Shows like that are often core-classical and are very hard for people to watch on television - this is something for everybody. But being on The Piano is quite a different experience for me. I normally have to talk about my new recording or my foundation work, not as a judge, so I'm very happy that I have Mika and Claudia.

 

SINGING FROM THE SAME HYMN SHEET
 I really love what Mika does. He's a great musician and I have a huge respect for him. This guy is so knowledgeable, I really learnt a lot because his repertoire... honestly, I had no idea. And he's a very lovable person. We became very, very good friends in a short time and it has remained this wonderful friendship. This season the bonds are even closer. And Claudia, too, has this magic that, no matter who she is talking to, in five minutes she is getting that person's entire life story.

 

FACING THE MUSIC
 In this second series, there were more people sending in their videos and applying to be on it and the quality is very high. Of course, it's hard to match Lucy [who won the first series]. No one can compare to her. But we do have some different talent; some different stories; some different backgrounds. This is not like shooting some other talent competitions where you have to push them many times and re-film- even if we wanted to do a retake, it would not happen. Everything is "in the moment" and very authentic.

 

Page 46

 

 

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Liverpool Echo

https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/tv/claudia-winklemans-visit-liverpool-airing

23 APR 2024

 

Claudia Winkleman's visit to Liverpool airing on Channel 4

 

Claudia Winkleman's adventures with Mika and Lang Lang airs on Sunday

 

Presenter Claudia Winkleman was spotted in Lime Street Station in February filming Channel 4's The Piano.

Film crews were present in the centre of the station while commuters made their journeys throughout the day. A small circle formed around Claudia while she stood beside a piano and welcomed people to step up to play one of their favourite songs. The sight was kept inconspicuous with only a small team present to not unnerve the pianists.

 

The scenes were a portion of Channel 4's The Piano which sees amateur pianists from all over the country show off their skills. Hidden away elsewhere was pop superstar Mika and the greatest pianist in the world, Lang Lang. Behind the scenes, the pair watched the amateur pianists performing before making the difficult decision on who will progress in the show.

 

Commuters will finally be able to catch a glimpse of themselves in the background as series two kicks off this weekend, Sunday, April 28, at 9pm, with Claudia, Mika and Lang Lang agreeing the talent is off the charts.

 

Local musicians of all ages stepped up to perform in Lime Street with Claudia, Mika and Lang Lang admitting they were blown away by how emotional this series is. Claudia told the ECHO: "There was a girl and she was so nervous because she'd never sung in public before and she played her own composition. I found it incredibly moving. She made people who were watching cry.

"Another amazing performer was Billy who's about to be 90 who brought his entire family and this was a song he wrote about his granddaughter. I'll look and there are people with tears streaming down their faces. There's so much emotion."

 

The Piano's grand prize is a performance spot at the end-of-series concert in London's prestigious Royal Festival Hall. Series one victor Lucy Illingworth, a talented, blind and neurodiverse 13-year-old from Yorkshire, stole the hearts of the nation for her beautiful rendition of Debussy’s Arabesque No.1.

The Piano stresses there is no "winner" as it opts to drop the competitive aspect in favour of highlighting the talents and stories of all involved. Series two kicks off this weekend, Sunday, April 28, at 9pm on Channel 4.

 

 

YouTube

We spoke to the stars of hit TV show The Piano

The hit Channel 4 show The Piano is returning to screens later this week on Sunday April 28.

Our reporter Christopher Megrath spoke to stars Claudia Winkleman, Mika and Lang Lang when they were filming in Liverpool in February, and they had a lot to say about the series and the city.

 

 

 

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What to Watch

https://www.whattowatch.com/watching-guides/the-piano-season-2-release-date-interviews-and-everything-we-know

 

The Piano season 2:

release date, interviews and everything we know

The Piano season 2 sees Claudia Winkleman, Lang Lang and Mika return to seek out more budding maestros.

 

Budding pianists are limbering up to tickle the ivories at train stations across the UK as Channel 4’s smash-hit show The Piano returns for a seven-part series, guaranteed to pull at our heartstrings.

Claudia Winkleman is presenting once again, while adjudicating from a secret location are world-renowned pianist Lang Lang and pop superstar Mika, who will choose their favourite virtuoso from each station to perform in a special concert at Manchester’s Aviva Studios. 

 

This series visits stations in Edinburgh, Cardiff, London and Liverpool, but begins in Manchester Piccadilly, where nine-year-old Ethan stops commuters in their tracks with Chopin’s Nocturne No. 20, and 80-year-old Duncan, who has dementia, plays a stunning ‘thank you’ song for his wife, Fran. Plus, boxer Ellis gives a knockout rendition of Chopin’s Ballade No. 4.  

But unlike series one, the players now know that Lang Lang and Mika will be watching their performances, does it make a difference?

What To Watch caught up with The Piano presenters Claudia Winkleman, Lang Lang and Mika during filming to find out why series two hits all the right notes...

 

The Piano season 2 release date

The Piano will air on Channel 4, Sunday 28 April at 9pm and will air weekly for seven weeks in the same slot. 

 

 

The Piano season 2 interview

 

How does it feel to be back filming the most heart-warming show on TV? 

 

Mika: "Incredible! We were amazed by the reaction to series one, which was a beautiful little project that was shot as more of a documentary. The whole thing has been such an astounding, tender surprise." 

 

Lang Lang: "I knew it was going to be something different from other talent shows out there, but I didn't expect it to be such a success!"

 

Claudia: "It’s just magical. For example, a girl played today and a man was in floods of tears. I assumed he was her dad, so I said, ‘You must be incredibly proud?’ He whispered back, ‘I've never met her’. But she did something that really moved him, and that’s what the show’s about."

 

Have things changed now the pianists know that Lang Lang and Mika are watching? 

 

Claudia: "All three of us were a little worried about returning because the first series was created with this idea of what happens when people play the piano and they think no one is watching? It was so poetic, but now everyone knows the show, I’ve been expecting people to turn up in ballgowns! However, they still can’t see Lang Lang and Mika, and the show is shot so subtly and beautifully that it doesn't feel like a hoo-ha. They just chat to me, then play."

 

Mika: "We were worried that something would change with the pianists’ intentions or ambitions because they now know we are hidden away, listening. But we are still seeing extraordinary people who have amazing stories." 

 

Lang Lang: "And if somebody feels special, this time Mika and I can go out to see them to encourage them to do better."

 

Have you seen a higher standard of performances?

 

Mika: "The standard has gone up, yes, but you never know what’s going to move you. Someone can play Chopin and technically it’s all there, but it might not provoke emotion in me nor in Lang Lang. Then someone can play the most simple triad chords and sing, and it makes people cry. You can’t put your finger on it, but it’s magic."

 

Lang Lang: "There’s more international music this time, and some places we visit have their traditions and types of music, like Cardiff, where we hear folk music. We see the whole world through the piano in this series."

 

What can you tell us about the final this year?

 

Mika: "After the series one final in London’s Royal Festival Hall, we wanted to do something different and more contemporary. Manchester’s Aviva Studios is a new, high-tech venue made for both classical and non-classical music. So we are putting on a real show and people have bought tickets."

 

That must be quite nerve-racking for the finalists?

 

Mika: "Like last time, we do mentoring days and full rehearsal days. They’re not going into a brutal gladiator-style situation, though. They’re just going to do something beautiful." 

 

Claudia: "This will make you feel nauseous, but I’ll say it anyway: once they join The Piano family, it’s our job to look after them. They all look after each other, which is my favourite thing, but our duty of care is really important because some haven’t even played in stations before let alone on the stage. They have two of the greatest musicians to hold their hand, too."

 

Have you been tempted to take up the piano yet, Claudia?

 

Claudia: "Oh, I’m not allowed to touch a recorder, or even sing Happy Birthday in my own house! I know nothing, honestly. Somebody played brilliantly the other day, and the crew and I were saying, ‘Yes! Smashed it!’ But Mika and Lang Lang said, ‘Good, but it was in the wrong key.’ So, we absolutely bow to them." 

 

Is there a trailer for The Piano season 2?

 

No yet, but as soon as one is released we will add it to this guide. 

 

k5xGoJJ2yQgXebpQ4d6yoP-1200-80.jpg.thumb.webp.70ee31d2ea75f7e24e84b83154aad15a.webp

Ellis chats to Claudia before playing Chopin at Manchester Piccadilly station.

(Image credit: Channel 4 / Nic Serpell-Rand)

 

md8B3DQfRMgoMPwDGjijYg-1200-80.jpg.thumb.webp.e015f9fe66ca905f05686f3ca18ec3e8.webp

Claudia meets nine-year-old pianist Ethan at Manchester Piccadilly station.

(Image credit: Channel 4 / Nic Serpell-Rand)

 

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Posted (edited)

UPDATE ! :thumb_yello:

 

Added PDF files !!

 

OK !

23 Apr 2024

ok-1.jpg.5cbe377cdb9b7c57b31209ad9de773b7.jpg

OK-27April2024_The_Piano-1.thumb.jpg.495c15ef00704b2d65a83979117cff05.jpg

 

OK-27April2024_The_Piano-2.thumb.jpg.fbe246ad64c28f4c3043e1d6dcf835b5.jpg

 

 

On 4/23/2024 at 2:39 PM, Kumazzz said:

OK !

23 Apr 2024

 

 

‘We were worried people would turn up in ballgowns’

 

Claudia Winkleman on making a second series of The Piano, being enthralled by “poetic” performances and why she’s not allowed to sing at home

 

Whether she’s covered in sequins does not object to. Lang, 41, attempts to soften the blow, on Strictly Come Dancing or hosting insisting that, while Claudia may not have much musical a funeral on The Traitors, Claudia talent, she does possess an “amazing sense of great music”. ndclaudia, Winkleman is the undisputed Mika and Lang are an unlikely trio, but it’s Queen of Television. clear they make a great team. The three stars bounce So it’s no surprise that Channel 4’s unassuming reality off one another while chatting away about The Piano, show The Piano became a huge success with Claude at which Mika brands a “beautiful little project”. And it’s the helm – even though she claims not to have a scintilla obvious they’ve had great fun ilming the second series of musical talent herself. together, which has seen

“I know nothing about them travel across the music,” she insists. “I’m country in search of not allowed to sing Happy Britain’s most talented

Birthday in my own house.” undiscovered pianists.

The first series of The The heart-warming show

Piano saw undiscovered irst aired in February 2023 pianists showcase their and proved to be a big hit talent on public pianos with viewers, who quickly in locations across the became invested in the UK, while Claudia looked talent search. The irst on – with virtuoso classical series averaged 2.7 million pianist Lang Lang and viewers per episode, musical whizz Mika judging making it Channel from behind the scenes. 4’s best-rating new

She’s the beating heart format since 2017. of the show but, for Claudia, It may seem like her skills start and end with it was a no-brainer to contestants and cameras. recommission The Piano

 

“I’m not allowed to touch for another series, but the a piano,” she says, much to Mika and Lang’s amusement. format of the show made it dif icult to replicate. In the

This doesn’t mean she hasn’t tried her hand at irst series, Mika and Lang judged the amateur pianists music in the past, though. Mum-of-three Claudia from a secret spot, eventually selecting one performer recalls, “I wanted to learn the trumpet because from each location to take to the stage in a concert at I thought it would be a good idea – but no.” the Royal Festival Hall. The competitive element was Mika, 40, agrees with Claudia’s claims that she is not kept entirely secret from the performers themselves – musically gifted. Laughing, he brands her “the worst they simply arrived at a UK train station and singer you’ve ever heard in your life” – a title Claudia performed a piece in front of Claudia and passers-by.

 

Creating a second season meant the surprise element would be completely eliminated, as pianists would know what they were getting into from the very start, which raised concerns.

 

“We were a little worried,” Claudia, 52, admits. “What was so beautiful about the show is seeing what happens when people are playing and they don’t know anyone’s watching. And that is just unbelievably poetic.”

She adds, “Then they knew so I was like, ‘Now they’re going to turn up in ballgowns and say under their breath, hey Mika.’”

However, the team put their doubts to one side and managed to replicate the magic of the irst season – with Mika and Lang still hidden away, allowing performers to forget they’re being watched.

 

Presenter Claudia heaps praise on the production team, who have helped to preserve the show’s charm. She says, “The whole way it’s shot and produced is so beautiful, so it doesn’t feel like a hoo-ha. They walk in, they chat to me, they play – and they forget.”

Claudia, Lang and Mika are full of stories from their travels across the UK. For the second series, they’ve visited stations in Liverpool, Edinburgh and Cardiff in their quest to ind the next piano-playing sensation. Every time, crowds gather without being prompted

– no doubt intrigued by the sight of Claudia and a grand piano in the centre of a railway station.

 

Mika recalls breaking cover to help a young boy in Edinburgh who needed some extra encouragement, while Claudia tells how, in one awkward moment, she mistook a man for a proud father.

 

“A girl played, and I could see a man in floods of tears and assumed it was her dad,” she recalls. “So I went up to him and I went, ‘You must be incredibly proud,’ and he went, ‘I’ve never met her in my life.’”

 

One thing Claudia has noticed, however, is that many of the pianists aren’t taking part in the show in the hope of changing the direction of their lives – something that makes it all the more special in the age of reality TV fame and influencers.

 

“This year, lots of them don’t want to continue with music professionally,” Claudia says. “I asked somebody who played really beautifully, ‘Do you want music to be part of your life?’ He said, ‘Music will always be part of my life, but I love working in insurance.’ That’s fair enough. He has a lovely life.

 

“So they’re not coming in order to change their lives. I think they want to feel proud of themselves, and they want to make their families and friends proud.”

 

Thirteen-year-old blind and neurodivergent pianist Lucy Illinworth won the irst series of The Piano, with her incredible performances stopping everyone in their tracks. She went on to perform at King Charles’ Coronation Concert and the Royal Variety Performance.

So, how exactly does the team plan to top Lucy’s win? Simply put, they don’t.

 

“We don’t need to,” Mika states, while Claudia adds, “That wouldn’t be fair on Lucy.”

 

The Piano returns on Sunday 28 April at 9pm on Channel 4

 

‘I KNOW NOTHING ABOUT MUSIC ndi’m NOT ALLOWED TO TOUCH A PIANO’

 

 

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Inside Soap

23 Apr 2024

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On 4/23/2024 at 2:55 PM, Kumazzz said:

Inside Soap

23 Apr 2024

 

Chopin list

Claudia, Mika and Lang Lang return to find more of the UK’s gifted pianists…

 

THE PIANO | Channel 4 SUNDAY

 

After the huge success of the first series of The Piano – in which winner Lucy Illingworth, a blind and neurodiverse teenager, blew us all away – host Claudia Winkleman is back to bring to light more amazing amateurs as they perform on street pianos at railway stations…

 

“We’re back on a quest to find more brilliantly talented musicians,” she explains in the opener.

“This year, our piano will travel to more train stations up and down the nation, celebrating more incredible undiscovered pianists than ever before. We’ll hear their music – and learn why they play.” Hit-maker Mika and worldrenowned pianist Lang Lang will once again observe the recitals from a nearby hideaway at each of the new locations, then select who’ll go through to the final – and later perform at a special end-of-series concert, this time at Manchester’s Aviva Studios. The search kicks off at Manchester Piccadilly, where the judging duo discover the ivory-tickling talents of a boxer, a drum-and-bass DJ, an 80-year-old with dementia, a 20-year-old law student, and a nine-year-old studying his GCSEs…

 

“I’ve loved Manchester,” shares Mika in the episode. “There were some real magical moments…”

“Yes – it was hard to make a choice,” adds Lang Lang.

“It has given us the best possible start,” confirms Mika. “Manchester isn’t what I expected – and that’s what I loved about it the most!”

 

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Edited by Kumazzz
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New! Magazine

29 April 2024

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KEYS TO SUCCESS
Who strikes a chord in the second series of The Piano?

Claudia Winkleman is reuniting with Mika and Lang Lang for another series of The Piano – Channel 4’s search for Britain’s next top pianist.

Placing pianos in train stations across the country, the trio are looking for new talent as they watch whoever tickles the ivories from a hidden spot. From a classically trained boxer to an 80-year-old romantic, amateur pianists from all over the UK compete for a place in the final concert.

 

The Piano, Sunday 28 April, 9pm, Channel 4

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17 hours ago, Kumazzz said:

 

Radio Times

 

Pop or classical? Concerts or festivals?

We challenged #ThePiano stars Claudia Winkleman and Mika to answer some quick-fire musical questions during our photoshoot for this week's issue of Radio Times - and this is what they said

 

YouTube

This or That with Claudia Winkleman and Mika

 

 

Radio Times

Come behind the scenes of our cover photoshoot with Mika, Claudia Winkleman and Lang Lang in celebration of 'the most joyful show on TV', #ThePiano

 

YouTube

 

 

TikTok

 

 

 

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