RichmondRound

The busker who made you stop

You were rushing somewhere. Late, probably. Then a voice cut through the traffic noise on George Street and you stopped.

Street performers are part of Richmond’s texture. Most afternoons, someone with a guitar or a violin stakes out a spot near the station or along the towpath. You pass them without really hearing them. Background music for a borough that moves quickly.

But every so often, one makes you pause. A cellist playing Bach outside the theatre. A saxophonist whose notes seem to know exactly what the river looks like at dusk. A singer whose voice is so raw and true that you forget you were meant to be somewhere else five minutes ago.

You stand there. Others stop too. A small crowd forms without anyone deciding to form it. For three minutes, maybe four, you are all listening to the same thing at the same time. No phones. No talking. Just the music and the street and the awareness that this moment will not come again.

Then it ends. You drop a coin in the open case and walk on. The day closes back over the gap, but something stays with you.

That voice. That song.

Which Richmond street performer stopped you in your tracks?

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When the music carries across the river

On certain summer evenings, you can hear it from streets you would never expect. A bassline from Orleans House. A string section from Marble Hill. The music from outdoor performances drifts surprisingly far when the wind is right. Sound moves differently over water. The Thames acts as a corridor, carrying melody and rhythm downstream and […]

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The bandstand when summer arrives

You hear it first. The brass slides into tune, the cymbals tap. A bandstand on a summer afternoon is one of those things Richmond does without fuss. The deckchairs face forward. People settle in with books or ice cream. The music starts: marches, show tunes, something from the 1940s. It carries across the grass, past […]

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The sound that stopped you on King Street

You were walking past the open window of a practice room, perhaps, or the door of a cafe propped wide in the heat. A few bars of something reached you and you paused. Not long, just a moment. Long enough to recognise it or wonder what it was. Music in passing has a strange power. […]

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The sound of summer evenings

Walk along the towpath near Richmond Bridge at dusk and you will hear it. A piano somewhere upstairs. Laughter and a guitar from a riverside garden. A pub door propped open, letting out the thump of a bass line and the clink of glasses. Sound travels differently in summer. Windows stay open. Conversations drift across […]

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The musician on Richmond Bridge knows something about sound

Stand halfway across Richmond Bridge on a still morning and you will hear what the musician already knows. The stone arches cup sound and send it upward. A violin note rises, doubles back, lingers. The river below swallows nothing. Buskers choose their pitches carefully. Some want the echo of a Tube tunnel. Others want open […]

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The Bench

A different conversation about Richmond, every day.