Cookie Consent by Free Privacy Policy Generator Update cookies preferences

Contact Us

Featured Listings

  • Barry Caradine Piano Specialist

    Unit 3C
    Bull Lane Industrial Estate
    Sudbury, Suffolk CO10 OBD
    England

  • Miss Christina Barrie

    Hampstead, London
    England

    Experienced piano teacher and accompanist

  • Bernadette Charnley

    Great Harwood, Lancashire
    England

    I teach piano & violin from my own home in Great

  • Gordon Bell Pianos Ltd

    45 Rosemount Viaduct
    Rosemount
    Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire AB251NQ
    Scotland

    Kemble Centre of Excellence other leading brands

  • Key Player

    98 Canongate
    The Royal Mile
    City of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 8DD
    Scotland

    For over 40 years we have been known as Edinburgh

Featured Classifieds

No featured classifieds

Blog Categories

Recent Blog Posts

No new blog posts

Recent Classifieds

No featured classifieds

New Events




Did You Know Music Facts

Accompanist
An accompanist is a musician who plays an accompaniment part. Accompanists often play keyboard instruments (e.g., piano, pipe organ, synthesizer or, in folk music and traditional styles, a guitar. A number of classical pianists have found success as accompanists rather than soloists; arguably the best known example is Gerald Moore, well known as a Lieder accompanist. In some American schools, the title "collaborative pianist" (or collaborative artist) is replacing the title accompanist, because in many art songs and contemporary classical music songs, the piano part is complex and demands an advanced level of musicianship and technique. The term accompanist also refers to a musician typically a pianist who plays for singers, dancers, and other performers at an audition or rehearsal, but who does not necessarily participate in the ensemble that plays for the final performance which could be an orchestra or a big band.