

Some extraordinary playing from Tom Kelly standing in at short notice for Filip Michelak who had badly damaged a finger packing his bags to fly to the UK ! As Tom told me ‘everything relearnt in a few days, hope it didn’t sound like it!’ Tom has now decided to concentrate on playing concerts, having been given precious performing opportunities by recognition in previous competitions in Hastings and Utrecht. Working now on repertoire rather than competing on the rather soul destroying International Competition circuit. As I told him competitions are for race horses not pedigree stallions like you!
An artist is known by his programmes and to look at the programmes of Claudio Arrau or Rudolf Serkin is to know immediately that these are real thinking artists that one can trust to shed new light on great works, bringing them to life with humility, integrity and intelligence. It was exactly his programme today that showed a fascinating mix of familiar and less familiar works placed together in a satisfying combination focused around Schumann’s First Sonata op 11.

The Fantasie-Impromptu was played with great style and timeless beauty. Notes that floated from his chubby fingers with limpet like certainty as they could delve deeply into the keys and find colours of fleeting beauty. The central episode was played with a deeply etched bel canto of great freedom anchored to the deep bass accompaniment of sumptuous rich sounds. Finding even more bewitching colours on the return of the opening by leaning slightly onto the thumb notes as he played with whispered beauty of passionate intensity.

The main work on the programme was the Sonata op 11 by Schumann. Showing a complete technical command but more importantly giving an architectural shape to a work that is so full of invention that it can sound rather fragmented. There was a poignant beauty to the long opening with an aristocratic sense of freedom played with poignant significance. A timeless outpouring where even the comments in the bass were given a leisurely place as it duetted with the treble, Tom’s beautifully natural arm movements like an artist painting on a canvas. The ‘Allegro vivace’ took wing with impish good humour as Schumann’s continual changes of character were incorporated into a whole of dynamic drive with a kaleidoscope of colours .The beautiful meno moss was played with radiant beauty before the vibrancy of Schumann’s genial invention took wing. The ‘Aria’ was played with glowing beauty and when the melody moved to the tenor register Tom created a magic halo of notes that caressed it with sumptuous beauty, with the Aria returning before closing with a whispered question mark.The ‘Scherzo’ erupted with rhythmic drive bursting into ‘più allegro’ where Tom was able to play the legato melody with staccato accompaniment with hurdy gurdy simplicity. He brought great authority to the ‘Finale’ with its majestic chordal outpouring interrupted by a recitativo as it moves inexorably to an ever move exhilarating end. A movement like the first that is made up of so many genial ideas but that Tom managed to combine into an overall architectural shape with masterly control and sumptuous sounds.

Radiant beauty and ravishing sounds reminded me of the magic that Gilels could bring to this Sonata with the same refined sense of balance and glowing beauty to the ‘Andante’ contrasted with the fleeting flights of virtuosity of the ‘Prestissimo’ before bursting into a climax of passionate intensity and sumptuous richness.

Medtner was a real discovery of a work I did not know. It was refreshing to hear just one short work of such beauty and brilliance especially when brought to life with the same pianism with which it was born.

Islamey has long been a show piece for pianists, notorious for its technical difficulty it even inspired Ravel to write his own ‘Scarbo’, with the intention of writing a work with even more technical challenges. Tom started with a very deliberate subdued clarity, gradually adding more and more notes with a range of colours and a sense of style that was astonishing. Not only for the technical mastery but for the colour and excitement he could bring to a work often considered only for its technical difficulty, but as Tom showed us today it is a tone poem of great allure.
I have heard Tom on many occasions but today I saw the birth of a great artist where his musical and technical mastery have combined with a perfection that marks him out in my mind as one of the finest pianists of his generation.


Thomas Kelly is a British pianist, and an alumnus of the Royal College of Music where he currently holds the Benjamin Britten Fellowship. In January 2026 Thomas won the 2nd prize at the Liszt Utrecht competition where he performed Liszt’s 2nd Piano Concerto with Stephane Deneve and the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra.
In the next season, international performances will include Seoul Arts Centre, the Baerum Kulturhus in Oslo, Washington Opera House in Maysville USA, EuroLiszt Festival in Lithuania and the Fazioli Hall in Sacile, Italy. Recent debuts include a solo recital at Wigmore Hall, London and a performance of Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No.5 at the Philharmonie Berlin, Kammermusiksaal. He has also appeared as soloist in Messiaen’s Turangalila-Symphonie with the RCM Symphony Orchestra at London’s Royal Festival Hall, conducted by Jac van Steen. Domestic highlights of the coming season include an album release of virtuosic organ transcriptions with Rubicon Classics, a residency at Music on the Burnhams in Norfolk featuring a concerto performance with Christopher Warren-Green, continued collaboration with JAM on the Marsh and concerto appearances with a range of orchestras throughtout the UK.
Between 2015 and 2021 Thomas studied with Professor Andrew Ball and more recently he has worked intensively with Professors Dmitri Alexeev and Vanessa Latarche. Thomas has been amongst the top prizewinners in a wide range of international competitions including 5th prize at the 2021 Leeds International Piano Competition, 2nd prize at the 2022 Hastings International Piano Competition – where he also won the award for best semi-final concerto performance – and 1st prizes including the Pianale International Competition 2017, Lucca Virtuoso e Bel Canto Festival 2018, RCM Joan Chissell Schumann competition 2019, BPSE Intercollegiate Beethoven competition 2019, and the Sheepdrove Intercollegiate Piano Competition 2022. In 2024 Thomas was awarded the Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother Rose Bowl upon graduation from the Royal College of Music, London.



















































































































































