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"The World of Boris Pasternak" with Pianist Hannah-Elizabeth Teoh

A unique opportunity to hear the only surviving compositions of Boris Pasternak, author of Doctor Zhivago, alongside the music of his world.

Part of the Kettner Concerts in Manchester - 2026 Series

Add to my Calendar 19-03-2026 19:00 19-03-2026 21:00 36 "The World of Boris Pasternak" with Pianist Hannah-Elizabeth Teoh Celebrated as the Nobel Prize awarded author of Doctor Zhivago and one of Russia's most beloved poets, Boris Pasternak's first love was music. Raised amongst the Russian elite, his mother was a renowned concert pianist, and Scriabin and Rachmaninoff were regular household visitors. As a teenager Pasternak was an accomplished pianist with aspirations to become a composer; this concert provides a rare opportunity to hear his only surviving works. In 1945 Boris Pasternak wrote an essay on Chopin who, he contended, “is a realist in just the same sense as Lev Tolstoy.” “Their (Chopin and Bach's) music abounds in details and gives the impression of being a chronicle of their lives.” A great realist, autobiographical, is what Pasternak himself aspired to be in his novel Doctor Zhivago, on which he would begin intensive work a year later. Pasternak's parents were both friends and followers of Leo Tolstoy, and tonight Hannah performs a Waltz attributed to Tolstoy himself.   New Zealand born Hannah-Elizabeth Teoh studied at the Royal Academy of Music, the Ecole Normale de Musique de Paris and the Royal College of Music, and has won numerous awards including the Harold Samuel Prize, the Florence Murray Award, the Lesley Holland Scholarship and the Ivy Corkill Recital Award. As a concerto soloist she has performed around the world, including a premiere recording of Ross Harris’ Concertina for Piano and Orchestra with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, and most recently making her Italian debut with the Master Orchestra in Brescia playing Saint-Saëns’ second piano concerto. Supporting her musical life, Hannah draws inspiration from literature and art and has a Masters in Philosophy from Birkbeck University. International Anthony Burgess Foundation, Manchester DD/MM/YYYY

Details

International Anthony Burgess Foundation
3 Cambridge Street
Manchester
M1 5BY
England


Programme

Boris PasternakPrelude no.2 in G sharp minor
Aleksandr ScriabinMazurka in C sharp minor, Op.3 no.6
Aleksandr ScriabinPrelude in D flat major, Op.11 no.15
Boris PasternakPrelude no.1 in E flat minor
Aleksandr ScriabinEtude in C sharp minor, Op.42 no.5 (1903)
Boris PasternakPiano Sonata in B minor
Frédéric ChopinFantasy in F minor, Op.49
~ Interval ~
Sergei RachmaninovWaltz in A major, Op.10 no.2
Sergei RachmaninovRomance in F minor, Op.10 no.6
Leo TolstoyWaltz in F major
Aleksandr ScriabinPiano Sonata no.3, Op.23
Maurice JarreDoctor Zhivago: Lara's Theme

Performers

Hannah-Elizabeth Teoh – piano

Other concerts in this Series (+)

Programme Note

Celebrated as the Nobel Prize awarded author of Doctor Zhivago and one of Russia's most beloved poets, Boris Pasternak's first love was music. Raised amongst the Russian elite, his mother was a renowned concert pianist, and Scriabin and Rachmaninoff were regular household visitors. As a teenager Pasternak was an accomplished pianist with aspirations to become a composer; this concert provides a rare opportunity to hear his only surviving works.

In 1945 Boris Pasternak wrote an essay on Chopin who, he contended, “is a realist in just the same sense as Lev Tolstoy.” “Their (Chopin and Bach's) music abounds in details and gives the impression of being a chronicle of their lives.” A great realist, autobiographical, is what Pasternak himself aspired to be in his novel Doctor Zhivago, on which he would begin intensive work a year later.

Pasternak's parents were both friends and followers of Leo Tolstoy, and tonight Hannah performs a Waltz attributed to Tolstoy himself.

 

New Zealand born Hannah-Elizabeth Teoh studied at the Royal Academy of Music, the Ecole Normale de Musique de Paris and the Royal College of Music, and has won numerous awards including the Harold Samuel Prize, the Florence Murray Award, the Lesley Holland Scholarship and the Ivy Corkill Recital Award. As a concerto soloist she has performed around the world, including a premiere recording of Ross Harris’ Concertina for Piano and Orchestra with the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, and most recently making her Italian debut with the Master Orchestra in Brescia playing Saint-Saëns’ second piano concerto. Supporting her musical life, Hannah draws inspiration from literature and art and has a Masters in Philosophy from Birkbeck University.

"The World of Boris Pasternak" with Pianist Hannah-Elizabeth Teoh

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