Piano lessons Summary

  • Last updated on March 25, 2021
"Infobox Book"
namePiano Lessons: a memoir
title_origPiano Lessons
translator
image
image_captionAn American hardcover edition of Piano Lessons
authorAnna Goldsworthy
illustrator
cover_artist
countryUSA
languageEnglish
series
genreMemoir
publisherSt. Martin's Press
release_dateOctober 2010
media_type
pages256
isbnISBN 978-0-312-64628-8 (first edition, hardcover),
preceded_by
followed_by
Piano Lessons: a memoir Plot Summary

Australian pianist Goldsworthy was nine years old when she began instruction with the renowned Russian pianist Eleonora Sivan, now relocated to Adelaide. Their pupil-master relationship grew and deepened over the next decade. Goldsworthy, the child of two doctors and musicians, blossomed into a stunning stage force and a vessel of Sivan's deeply intuitive music instruction. Over her meticulous stages of instruction, Sivan took on each composer in turn--Bach was like God, she noted, offering "peace, of course, and bells," while Mozart was like Midas, "every sound he touches turns into song"--and Goldsworthy tidily arranges her memoir according to their embarking on these composers' works, from Shostakovich to Liszt. At first Sivan did not believe that Goldsworthy had the "emotional freedom" to be a concert pianist. However, the youth proved her wrong by incorporating her teacher's radiant artistry and coming to feel the joy of playing. Moreover, after earning top prizes and attaining her dream of playing a Shostakovich concerto with a full orchestra, Goldsworthy returned the gift of music by teaching, as per Sivan's ministrations.

External Links

:Memoir

:Published in 2010

Piano Lessons

Categories: Memoirs