Myra Hess
National Treasure
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Kahn & Averill
Published:21st Feb '25
Should be back in stock very soon

28-31 May: Matthay Piano Festival. Celebrating 100 years of Matthay in America, the American Matthay Association has invited Jessica Duchen as keynote speaker on the topic Myra Hess in America. Nazareth University, Rochester, New York, USA
Saturday, 28 June: Felixstowe Book Festival - Book Signing, 2.30pm.
This biography follows Hess's transformation from rebellious young musician to national heroine. With previously unpublished material, it explores her struggles for recognition, her beloved transcription of Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring, her collaborations with the musicians of her day and extracts from her postwar American diaries.
I loved reading this affectionate, elegant and informative biography of one of the greatest figures in British musical history. - Sir Stephen Hough
Throughout World War II, Dame Myra Hess, Britain's greatest concert pianist, ran lunchtime concerts at London's National Gallery. They became the stuff of legend, proving music's power to support the human spirit in the darkest of times. This biography, the first in nearly five decades, follows Hess's transformation from rebellious young musician into inimitably powerful woman and national heroine. She was born into a religious Jewish family in Victorian north London and studied at the Royal Academy of Music with the renowned pedagogue Tobias Matthay. Nevertheless, as a woman seeking to build a performing career before World War I, she faced a struggle for recognition. At home, a clash with her father led her to seek alternative ways of building a substitute family of friends.
Stardom ensued when she reached the US in 1922. Soon, with America at her feet from coast to coast, her beloved transcription of Bach's Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring capturing public imagination, and British artistic luminaries, politicians and royalty flocking to her UK performances, Hess seemed unstoppable. During the war and through the National Gallery concerts, she became an unsung activist, helping refugee musicians from Nazi-occupied countries to find their feet in Britain and personally endeavouring to aid young British musicians faced with wartime deprivations.
Myra Hess - National Treasure offers previously unpublished extracts from her correspondence and postwar American tour diaries, full of insights into her collaborations with towering musicians of her day, including Arturo Toscanini, Pablo Casals, Bruno Walter and Kathleen Ferrier. Interviews with her former pupils shed light on Hess's rigour, intensity and warmth, her dislike of recording and her special way of building her connection with her audience when on stage.
Hess encountered innumerable personal challenges nonetheless, including some disastrous medical misdiagnoses. A sociable woman who disliked being alone, she sacrificed her personal life in her determination to dedicate herself entirely to...
One can safely say that Duchen’s new volume is the definitive biography... Taking into account much newly uncovered documentation, Duchen offers a frank, superbly detailed, meticulously researched and thoroughly sourced portrait of Hess that is sympathetic without being gushing. As a historian, Duchen leaves nearly no stone unturned... Her clear, fluid and informative prose vividly draws one into Hess’s milieu… Piano mavens, music lovers and history buffs alike will find Duchen’s biography most compelling. Once you start reading this book, it’ll be hard to put down.
International Piano
Duchen’s passion for her remarkable subject shines though this superbly researched book, not only recreating Hess’s life but evoking the social milieu in which she lived.
The Jewish Chronicle
Duchen thoroughly immerses us in Myra’s world… There are two earlier books about Hess but none for half a century. This one is definitive. Duchen is a seasoned music journalist who is able to turn what is perhaps a niche subject into one of general interest. Assiduously researched and sourced by someone with a profound knowledge of pianists and the piano… The book is beautifully designed and produced… This is a highly desirable biography that honours a great musician.
Jeremy Nicholas - Gramophone
Duchen’s book is fascinating on many levels. It offers a rich slice of music history, showing how the pianistic scene developed, chronicling British and American concert-going in the First and Second World Wars, and revealing the important part Jewish musicians played in those times.
But the book is also a colourful piece of 20s social history, covering everything from fashionable intellectual Bohemianism (Myra seemed to know everybody who was anybody), to the wartime campaign in support of Jewish refugees (for whom Myra was a lobbyist).
Yet this is at the same time an energetically researched biography of a remarkable woman who single-handedly changed Britain’s musical landscape. Jessica’s Duchen’s great achievement is to have woven all these elements into a very entertaining narrative.
Michael Church - Music and Literary Critic
Duchen puts her finger on one of Hess’s special gifts – ‘a singerly technique that not all actual singers master’. It’s heard to bewitching effect in the recordings she made for Columbia in the late 1920s, when her command of the keyboard was at its peak.
Damian Thompson - The Spectator
An energetically researched biography of a remarkable woman who single-handedly changed Britain’s musical landscape. Jessica’s Duchen’s great achievement is to have woven all these elements into a very entertaining narrative.
Camden New Journal
This new biography, the first for nearly 50 years, is meticulously researched and richly illustrated: Jessica Duchen brings to her task not just the biographer’s curious eye but a music critic’s ear and discernment.
Bernard Hughes – theartsdesk.com.
Duchen’s latest offering continues her unbroken run of elegant and winning music writing, celebrating a legend of British musicmaking, Dame Myra Hess. … As with the best music books, there’s the perfect synthesis here between a celebration of the music that defined Hess’s career (notably her beloved Beethoven) and her generous, sometimes unpredictable personality.
Barry Forshaw – Classical CD Choice.
I loved reading this affectionate, elegant and informative biography of one of the greatest figures in British musical history.
Sir Stephen Hough
Myra Hess was not only a major artist and a riveting personality; she also lived through uniquely fascinating times. In this eminently readable biography, Jessica Duchen brilliantly evokes both a powerful and attractive character, and the eras she inhabited. A sympathetic and thoroughly researched study of a musical legend.
Steven Isserlis
An engrossing read bringing fresh perspectives on a remarkable musician and on the 20th century cultural backdrop from which she emerged.
Fiona Maddocks - Author and Music Critic
Packed with colourful anecdotes and musical insight, this biography is a tour-de-force, revealing the real Myra Hess beyond the myths
Tasmin Little
Jessica Duchen writes with a great depth of musical understanding and genuine empathy for the neglected National Treasure that is Myra Hess. At last here is the biography she so richly deserves as Jessica Duchen gives Myra Hess a concert platform for a new audience. It’s a terrific achievement. Surely Hess, who did so much in wartime London to bolster courage and culture by giving concerts at the National Gallery, should now be on the fourth plinth opposite the Gallery?
Anne Sebba - Author, presenter & lecturer
Jessica Duchen's biography of Myra Hess restores to us a great pianist in all her complex glory, complete with her dedication, her struggles with nerves, her probing musicianship, her personal courage in the face of illness, her gift for friendship, and her sense of fun. A sympathetic, balanced and rounded portrait.
Susan Tomes - Pianist, writer and educator
ISBN: 9781068776205
Dimensions: 234mm x 156mm x 36mm
Weight: 840g
380 pages