

I have listened to Sherri play over the past two years since she played at Steinway Hall for the Keyboard Trust, and each time I am astonished by her musical integrity and mastery. She has now added an authority and sense of weight that she has acquired from these extra years at the Royal Academy where she has gained in experience and maturity. Her impeccable playing today was that of a true artist who can now fly high and hold her own on the world stage. Not only was there a pianist who prepares her scores with scrupulous attention to the composer’s intentions but with a technical mastery and palette of colours she also has much to say as her musical personality shines through all she plays. Nowhere more than in her choice of programme that she very eloquently introduced as a programme that was based on works inspired by composers of the past.

Busoni’s wife was famously introduced as Mrs Bach-Busoni, so well known were the transcriptions of Bach that were responsible for bringing Bach into the concert hall with works that can these days seem excessive. His most often played transcription is the Bach Chaconne that Sherri included in her programme and unlike Brahms’s very faithful transcription for the left hand, Busoni reworks Bach’s genial work for solo violin turning it into a magnificent piece in it’s own right for solo piano. Sherri opened with one of Busoni’s most beautiful transcriptions of the chorale preludes: ‘ Ich Ruf zu dir ,Herr Jesu Christ’.There was a timeless beauty as her sumptuous sense of balance allowed the chorale melody to sing with angelic beauty but always anchored to a noble bass of sumptuous richness. A maturity and sense of control that allowed the work to unfold with natural flowing beauty with a whispered coda of poignant significance.

A completely different sound world opened up as Bach’s mighty ‘ Chaconne’ was played with strength and grandeur. An extraordinary technical mastery that allowed her to play with great fluidity with a kaleidoscopic palette of sounds. The same rock like solidity that I remember from Michelangeli who inspired me to learn it in my teens when I should have known better! After the haunting beauty of the ‘molto espressivo e legato’ the left hand octaves were played with lightweight brilliance, keeping a rock like tempo where Busoni warns ‘ non affrettare’ as she brought this opening to a brilliant conclusion.There was a poignant simplicity to the ‘sostenuto’ that followed building to a animated episode where Busoni does in some way imitate the solo violin with playing ‘con fuoco ed animato’. Sherri playing with crystalline clarity building in intensity to the triumphant declamation of the theme that she played with sumptuous full sounds of commanding authority. This was contrasted with the beautiful tenor melody that Busoni marks ‘quasi tromboni’ which are obviously trombones made in heaven. A great sense of control with a very deliberate Allegro moderato ma deciso and a gradual building in tension until the final overpowering declamation of this masterly chaconne.

The Ravel waltzes were a homage to Schubert who had written two sets with the same title. Ravel had prefaced his with a quotation from his friend, the poet Henri de Régnier : “…le plaisir délicieux et toujours nouveau d’une occupation inutile” (‘ the delicious and forever-new pleasure of a useless occupation’.) They are a series of eight waltzes written in 1911 in impressionistic and modernist style. Rubinstein had given one of the first performances in Spain that were famously booed, but that he deliberately played again as an encore ,much to the dismay of his adoring public! Sherri played them with fearless abandon and poetic intensity. The strident opening was played musically with insinuating counterpoints just adding a web of colour to this first waltz. She brought a beautiful luminosity to the second with a masterly use of the pedals creating a luxuriant sound where clashing harmonies were played with poetic intent.The third was of childlike simplicity of lilting beauty and the fourth was just a wave of sounds. She brought a sense of nostalgia to the fifth with insinuating French refinement as the sixth became a lumbering dance of awkward movements. The seventh is the longest and a miniature tone poem with it’s questioning opening before taking flight with Viennese delight, building to a passionate climax that immediately dissolved into a multicoloured whispered outpouring before the final explosive climax. The eighth is a magical ‘Épilogue’ that Sherri played with ravishing sounds of languid beauty.

The Brahms Handel Variations are often given to students to perfect technical mastery combined with musical understanding and it is a masterwork that Sherri revealed in all its glory today. A technical mastery that allowed Sherri to bring colour and shape to each of the twenty five variations with playing of fearless technical command but also of poetic beauty. A crystal clarity to Handel’s theme led to the first variation of dynamic drive and euphoric rhythmic energy. A flowing freedom to the second played with a seemless legato as she brought elegance and graceful playfulness to Brahms’s syncopations in the third. A crisp clarity to the outburst of octaves of the fourth as the change of key brought a beautifully expressive change of character to the fifth and the whispered conversing of overlapping octaves played with a beautiful horizontal legato. Great vitality to the seventh and eighth with its driving forward movement and an imperious authority to the ninth. A brilliant chase over the entire keyboard for the tenth and a beautiful flowing outpouring of the eleventh with some pointed harmonies just adding depth to the sound. The delicate left hand horn call of the twelfth was followed by the grandiloquence of the thirteenth. The treacherous sixths of the fourteenth were played with masterly ease and were followed by the fifteenth to seventeenth of capricious audacity. She brought a beautiful reawakening of improvised beauty to the eighteenth and a lilting rhythm to the elegant question and answer of the dance movement of the nineteenth. A quasi orchestral build up was interrupted by the unexpected eloquence and pastoral beauty of the twenty-first and second . At the twenty third variation Sherri started the impetuous build up to the mighty triumphant outpouring of the theme of the twenty fifth. The fugue with which this work ends was played with masterly authority and aristocratic control which brought this remarkable performance to an ending of great exultation.
Showing no sign of tiredness after such an imposing programme she was happy to play an encore of her own transcription of a song by Ponce : ‘Estrellita’ that she played with great abandon and beauty.

Sherri Lun, named ‘2020 Performing Artist of the Year’ by the South China Morning Post, has garnered acclaim for her “pinpoint clarity and convincing bravura” (Chicago Tribune). Selected as a 2025/26 Kirckman Artist, Sherri is also supported by the Keyboard Charitable Trust, Lang Lang International Music Foundation, and KNS Classical, with whom she released her debut CD album in 2023. Since making her concerto debut at the Ravinia Festival at age 10, she has performed in major venues including Wigmore Hall, Fondation Louis Vuitton, and Millennium Park. Having performed extensively across Europe, Asia, and the US, Sherri’s current 2026 season marks her solo debuts at Bridgewater Hall, Wigmore Hall, Kings Place, Brighton Festival, alongside concerto appearances in the UK and Italy. Sherri has appeared with ensembles such as the Salzburg Chamber Soloists, Munich Chamber Orchestra, Cologne Chamber Orchestra, and been broadcasted on Radio Television Hong Kong. In 2025, she was nominated by Dame Imogen Cooper to join the Lieven Piano Foundation.
Sherri won First and Audience Prizes at the 2024 Birmingham International Piano Competition, and is also a 2025 Royal Over-Seas League award winner, following top prizes at the Robert Schumann (Düsseldorf), Zhuhai Mozart, and Steinway & Sons Youth Piano Competitions. Most recently, she was awarded the Special Prize from the Mozart Society Munich at the ARD International Music Competition. At the Royal Academy, she won consecutively the Sterndale Bennett (2022), Chung Nung Lee (2023), and Harold Craxton (2024) Prizes.
Born in 2003, Sherri majored in piano and viola as a junior student at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts. She is currently pursuing her Master’s Degree with Prof. Christopher Elton as a Leverhulme Scholar while holding external scholarships from the Craxton Memorial Trust, Help Musicians UK Rupert Heggs Award, and the Countess of Munster Musical Trust.




























































































































































