

A fascinating new programme from Noah that he wanted to try out on his neighbours in Perivale. A programme that demonstrated his musicianship and transcendental mastery of the keyboard.

C.P.E. Bach was the fifth child and second surviving son of J.S. Bach sometimes known as the Berlin or Hamburg Bach to distinguish him from his younger brother J.C. Bach known as the ‘London’ Bach . He was an influential composer working at a time of transition between his father’s Baroque style and the Classical style that followed. He was the principal representative of the ‘sensitive style’ whose keyboard music is a forerunner of the expressiveness of Romantic music , in deliberate contrast to the statuesque forms of Baroque music. It was exactly this sense of style that Noah captured from the very first notes with a scintillating opening of cascade of brilliance. Playing with a pulsating energy and glowing mastery contrasting with the beauty of the ‘Adagio’ that was played with purity and simplicity, the long melodic lines allowed to flow with and architectural shape and refined musical line. A playful Allegro with deep notes adding an anchor to the scintillating streams of notes that flowed from Noah’s hands with masterly ease.

C.P.E Bach had been an influential pedagogue writing his “Essay on the true art of playing keyboard instruments”, which influenced Haydn,Mozart and Beethoven. So it was doubly interesting to hear Mozart’s C major Sonata K 333 played immediately afterwards . Mozart could say so much with so little as this sonata demonstrates with its refined elegance and subtle delicacy. Noah played the opening ‘Allegro’ with a crystalline beauty, the ornaments glowing like jewels as Noah’s superb fingers were like springs unwinding with brilliant clarity. An ‘Andante’ of flowing beauty of refined good taste and luminosity. The ‘Allegretto’ played with a delicacy and elegance where every note had a meaning and was part of a satisfying whole. Mozart may indeed have been influenced by C.P.E. Bach but added the refined invention of genial inspiration.

Noah brought the same simplicity and glowing beauty to ‘La Folia’ theme of Rachmaninov’s ‘Corelli’ Variations dedicated to Fritz Kreisler his violinist duo partner. ‘La Folia’, was inot composed by Arcangelo Corelli, but was used by him in 1700 as the basis for 23 variations in his Sonata for violin, violone, and harpsichord in D minor, Op. 5, No. 12. Hence the dedication to Kreisler. ‘La Folia’ was popularly used as the basis for variations in Baroque music and even Liszt used the same theme in his Rhapsodie Espagnole S. 254 (1863). Rachmaninov wrote to another friend, the composer Nikolai Medtner, in 1931: “I’ve played the Variations about fifteen times, but of these fifteen performances only one was good. The others were sloppy. I can’t play my own compositions! And it’s so boring! Not once have I played these all in continuity. I was guided by the coughing of the audience. Whenever the coughing would increase, I would skip the next variation. Whenever there was no coughing, I would play them in proper order. In one concert, I don’t remember where – some small town – the coughing was so violent that I played only ten variations (out of 20). My best record was set in New York, where I played 18 variations. However, I hope that you will play all of them, and won’t ‘cough’.”


Noah played all twenty variations today with poetic beauty and scintillating brilliance.There was no coughing in Perivale and Noah could allow us to hear his first outing of this work with playing of great precision and rhythmic drive. Immediately emerging himself into the brooding character of the ‘Minuet’ third variation, before the beautifully sung fourth , with its etherial comments played with simple knowing ease by Noah. A dynamic drive to the fifth lead straight into the intricate knotty twine of the sixth and the majestic explosion of sounds, on the pedal note of D, in the seventh .The eighth was even more agitated and played with a Rachmaninovian sumptuous brilliance ending with cascades of notes sweeping across the keys. Capricious meanderings of the ‘Adagio misterioso’ and the radiant harmonies of the ninth were played with languid beauty spread over the entire keyboard. A pulsating rhythmic energy to the tenth with typical vituosistic Rachmaninovian embellishments of transcendental difficulty bringing savage rhythmic drive to the eleventh. A pulsating syncopated rhythmic energy to the twelfth before the chords of the thirteenth played with sumptuous full sounds by Noah . The improvised ‘Intermezzo’ was played with a ravishing palette of colour and masterly use of the pedal as it dissolved into ‘La Folia’ now in the major key of D flat. Noah played it with glowing simplicity as it unwound into the fifteenth with pastoral simplicity.Taking wing again with the sixteenth and swirls of notes leading into the calm of the seventeenth where the theme was floated on a gently moving bass. The last three variations were a ‘tour de force’ of dynamic drive and brilliance with Noah throwing himself into the fray with fearless abandon until arriving on the repeated bass ‘D”s as the theme was allowed to float magically on this wave of whispered beauty. A remarkable first outing for Noah of a work of transcendental difficulty where he can already steer us through such knotty twine with intelligence and poetic understanding.

Liszt’s sixth Hungarian Rhapsody has long been a warhorse for virtuosi with its infamous repeated octaves which Noah played with remarkable mastery and brilliance. Excitement and brilliance mounted to fever pitch when the octaves passed into the left hand with streams of notes shooting across the keys above. But Noah is a remarkable musician who could also bring ravishing beauty to the central episode and a rhythmic energy to the opening Hungarian dance rhythms. Creating a miniature tone poem and not just a showpiece of empty virtuosity .

Described as masterful, deeply emotional and dramatic in his pianistic style by BBC Radio, London based British-Chinese pianist Noah Zhou is the first ever British born Laureate of the Rachmaninoff International Piano Competition. Generously supported through his childhood by the Eileen Rowe Musical Trust, he has since graduated with 1st Class Honours from the Royal Academy of Music, where he was awarded the Sir Elton John Scholarship, and where he studied with the Emeritus Head of Keyboard, Christopher Elton. During his time as a student, Zhou was awarded multiple top scholarships and grants from The Hattori Foundation, Countess of Munster Trust and the Drake Calleja Trust.
Zhou has been a top prizewinner in over 15 national and international piano competitions, and first came to media attention when he was awarded the Royal Philharmonic Society of Great Britain’s Duet Prize for Best Young Instrumentalist in 2018. Since then he has frequently performed in concerts all across the world, and made his debut recital at London’s Wigmore Hall in January 2025. Just prior, towards the end of 2024, Zhou was invited to give the first international premiere of a new work by the celebrated South American female composer Angel Amparo, in Ibague, the musical capital of Colombia.
In past seasons, Zhou has collaborated with numerous orchestras, including the Phion Orchestra of the Netherlands; the National Philharmonic Orchestra of Ukraine; the Brazilian National Symphony Orchestra; the Orquestra do Algarve; the State Academic Symphony Orchestra of Russia (named after Evgeny Svetlanov); the Danube Symphony Orchestra; the Manchester Camerata; the Pazardzhik Symphony Orchestra; and the Malaga Symphony Orchestra, and has performed under the batons of conductors such as Antony Hermus; Douglas Bostock; Ivan Nikiforchin; Vitaliy Protasov; Roberto Tibiriçá; András Deák; Ronald Corp; Grigor Palikarov; Stephen Threlfall; and Victor Eloy Lopez Cerezo, amongst others.



















































































































