Olga Bobrovnikova: Extra Show Added
Piano star launches global assault on MS awareness with NZ tour
Extra Show Added
Due to popular demand, Russian piano star Olga Bobrovnikova has added an extra concert performance to her New Zealand tour.
In addition to performances in Whangarei, Auckland, Hamilton, Palmerston North, Blenheim and Dunedin, she will now also perform in Tauranga on Saturday, March 10.
Born into privilege in the USSR, this young Jewish dissident became embroiled in a scandal that saw her ejected from CONSOMOL (the Soviet Youth Organization), she then married and divorced an internationally known violinist, remarried and suddenly became widowed around the same time as being diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis.
But life is strange, from that disastrous period has come a new life. Instead of being a victim, this accomplished piano star now travels the world playing and fundraising exclusively for Multiple Sclerosis awareness. She has established – with the help of her partner Paul Mossman (NB: has NZ relatives) – Mu-Sic www.mu-sic.org, a symbol and non profit organisation.
Olga will launch the global activities of her Mu-Sic Foundation by playing six New Zealand concerts in support of regional Multiple Sclerosis Societies. The Foundation donates all funds raised, directly to the registered local MS Society.
http://www.bobrovnikova.com/
"Olga is a Pianist
who plays in the 'Old Romantic Style' with a unique talent
to play multi voices.
She also has a very wide repetoire
from Bach to Rachmaninoff. She plays to entertain her
audience."
WHERE & WHEN
Tickets are on sale now. See
price and booking details below:
1. Whangarei 4th March
2007 - 2pm. Tickets from Ticketek. Phone Whangarei 09
430-4244. Price $17 or Adults 65+ and children under 15years
$12. A booking fee may apply. Venue: Capitaine Bougainville
Theatre -Forum North - Northland MS Society
2.
Auckland 8th March 2007 – 7.30pm. Price: $25. Bookings:
(09) 8455921. email: info@msakl.org.nz. Venue: Holy Trinity
Cathedral, Parnell - MS Auckland & MS North Shore
3.
Tauranga 10th March 2007 – 7.30pm. Price: $20. Bookings:
Dianne Boyle on 07 5752308 or 07 5439488. Venue: The
Village Hall, Historic Village Complex, 17th Ave, Tauranga
4. Hamilton 13th March 2007 - 7.30pm. Price $20.
Tickets available at Ticket Direct 0800 4 TICKET, local
libraries, and at the Waikato MS office 07 834 4740 or email
_mswaikato@mswaikato.org.nz. A booking fee may apply. Venue:
Gallagher Concert Chamber. WEL Energy Trust - Academy of
Performing Arts, Gallagher Concert Chamber, University of
Waikato – MS Waikato
5. Blenheim - 15th March 2007-
6pm. Price: $25. Bookings Essential......Phone
03-577-5775. Venue: Montana Brancott Winery State Highway 1
Blenheim - Marlborough MS Society
6. Palmerston North -
18th March 2007 (with Amy Hunt & Danny Goodman) – 4pm.
Price $20 and ($15 group and under 16 years.) Tickets
available at Ticket Direct 06 357 9740. Venue: Regent
Theatre on Broadway – Manawatu Multiple Sclerosis Society
7. Dunedin - 1st April 2007 (2 Piano Concert - with
Terence Dennis) Booking details to come. Venue: Otago
University - Marama Hall – Otago MS Society
The
concert programmes will consist of popular classics by Bach,
Beethoven, Chopin, Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky, Debussy and
the exceptional rediscovered works of Paul Pabst
(1854-97).
--
OLGA BOBROVNIKOVA
www.bobrovnikova.com
As a Multiple Sclerosis patient Olga Bobrovnikova is exceptional!
Although her first neurological symptoms of MS appeared in Moscow in 1985, it was not until December 2000 in Brussels, that a diagnosis of Relapsing Remitting MS was confirmed by MRI scan. Since this date she says, her life took a positive turn and she is now working full time as a solo concert pianist, become the leading expert and exponent on the life and works of the lost Russian musician called Paul Pabst, who Olga says was the virtuoso that Tchaikovsky admitted (but never named) had assisted him to complete his most famous, first piano concerto.
In the course of her disease Olga has had five recognisable MS flares each associated with stress and emotional events, including the break-up of her first real love affair, the break up of her first marriage and with it, her Piano Trio and the tragic sudden death of her second husband.
Through these events she found therapy in her music, not surprising as she has a postgraduate diploma in Musical Therapy from the Gnessin Institute in Moscow which she completed after graduating from the Moscow Conservatoire.
Fortunately the permanent neurological damage from these events has been limited to a severe weakening of one leg and a poor sense of balance. Although Olga says she experienced problems with her concentration, sight and coordination, she was lucky that these were temporary.
After her diagnosis in 2000 Olga has been on weekly interferon treatment which, although it can have some short lived, unpleasant side effects, allows her to live a busy life, teaching, researching, writing and playing an international concert schedule.
After her diagnosis, like all patients Olga was faced with the “tell” “no tell” decision not knowing how it might affect her career prospects. The decision to tell was forced by the coincidence of a Concert Date and a European MS Platform Symposium, both in Malta in May 2001 – Having taken the decision to “tell” Olga made an impromptu lunchtime recital to delegates and has, since that day, dedicated all her musical talents to the world wide fight against MS. Her dedication and activities in this field were recognised by the NMSS of America at their Atlanta Conference in November 2005 where Olga was given an award alongside Neil Cavuto, Fox News anchor and business editor, David Lander, Hollywood and TV actor and Rain Pryor daughter of the recently deceased Richard Pryor.
Olga has particular interest in promoting the right to diagnosis and treatment and research into childhood incidence of MS.
She has just completed books on Piano Performance and Paul Pabst the Lost Virtuoso.
MS SUPPORT ACTIVITIES
Two years
after her MS diagnosis Olga was playing a concert in Malta
when she discovered that the “European Union MS
Platform” were holding a symposium the very same day. Olga
offered to play for the delegates and this was the beginning
of her new career in Support of Multiple Sclerosis. Since
her diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis Olga has dedicated her
music performance and recording effort entirely to the cause
of raising awareness and funds in the fight against the
disease.
Since May 2003 in Malta Olga has played for MS
audiences in
Namur
Belgium
Brussels (3)
Belgium
Montreal
Canada
Prague Czech
Republic
Oxford
England (Jaqueline Du Pre Centre)
London
England
Manchester
England
Tallin
Estonia
Paris
France
Megeve
France
Grenoble
France
Athens
Greece
Amsterdam
Holland
Vlissingen
Holland
Keurkenfof
Holland
St Julians
Malta
Bratislava Slovakia
Moscow (3)
Russia
Grangemeouth
Scotland
Cambridge MA
USA
Atlanta GA
USA
Philadelphia USA
Le
Havre France
Dieppe
France
Rouen
France
Livorno
Italy
Vienna
Austria
Bratislava
Slovakia
Olga’s current focus in support of the Multiple
Sclerosis International Federation’s “Quality of Life
Principles” is to play for patient groups, to highlight,
two basic principles:
The right to Diagnosis
The
right to Treatment
At the same time Olga has a
particular interest in the awareness and treatment of
Childhood MS
MUSIC HISTORY AND INTERESTS
Olga was trained as a pianist in the Gnessin Music School moving on to gain a degree in Piano Performance at the Moscow Conservatoire. Returning to the Gnessin as Assistant Class Master Olga studied for a Post Graduate Diploma in Musical Therapy – being one of the first students of Professor Riker.
Olga has performed solo concerts and recitals throughout her musical career, touring the former eastern block States in her late teens playing piano solo and duo (4 hand and 2 piano).
Marriage to violinist Mikael Bezevehrkny took Olga into Chamber performance with the formation of the Shostakovich Trio – She toured in USA and South America and throughout Europe. When the trio broke up, Olga played solo concerts but concentrated on musical therapy and teaching, giving Master Class in Piano Performance at Moscow Conservatoire in 2004
The accidental discovery of the works of a lost pianist – Paul Pabst changed Olga’s musical life. She found in Pabst the ultimate challenge of the Romantic Virtuoso genre, music more difficult and more rich than that of Franz Lizst.
The
CD of Paul Pabst Concert Paraphrases of Tchaikovsky Opera
was her final commercial recording but it marked the
beginning of a period of research during which time Olga
uncovered a number of musical mysteries.
o That
Pabst was the virtuoso hand behind the Tchaikovsky B flat
Piano Concerto
o That Paul Pabst was the appointed
editor of Tchaikovsky Piano works
o That a several
hundred historic recording from 1882-95 including ones of
Paul Pabst, lost in WW ll are still secretly held in
Russia
o That Rachmaninoff breakdown occurred on
the day of Pabst death
o That Rachmaninoff 2nd
Piano Concerto appears to be about the circumstances of the
death and funeral of Pabst
o That there was an
active anti-Semitic campaign to alter the course of piano
performance by killing the true romantic style as
un-Christian.
Olga has, from her work in musical therapy created a new approach to performance - The Performance Triangle – which radically simplifies the elements of performance to allow the creation of images which support the memorization and interpretation of particularly the romantic works.
MU-SIC FOUNDATION
www.mu-sic.org
In 2004 Olga was seeking a logo for her DVDs and CDs and quite simply the use of her music in the cause of MS became Mu Sic. After two years of playing at MS events Olga decided to be more proactive and plan he own events to raise funds for local MS Societies. This led to the foundation of her Mu Sic Foundation a non-profit organization that supports Olga’s performance and travel costs. This enables Olga to offer her performances free to any Registered MS Charity. It also led to the design of the Mu Sic lapel pins, which Olga gives free to be sold as a fundraising token. The longer term aims of Mu Sic are to involve the music and entertainment industries in MS Awareness and ultimately to establish a music download site for MS fund raising.
PERSONAL LIFE
Olga was a strong minded child and this and her Jewish religion created difficulty for her in the Soviet musical education system.
Constantly criticised for her free musicality and dynamic style Olga fought her way to graduation by achieving constantly high marks – She is amused by the first subject on her degree citation “Scientific Communism”.
A scandal in the final months of her degree course led to her being ejected from CONSOMOL (Soviet Youth Organization). This misjudgement (an affair with her Professor Eugene Malinin) gave opportunity to the system to seek retribution and Olga was prevented from following the High Degree course at the conservatoire. Only intervention of her Grandmother, a war hero of the Soviet Union allowed Olga to gain a place in the Gnessin Institute to study for a Post Graduate Diploma in Musical Therapy. This proved invaluable and Olga still provided lessons to Children with behavioural and learning difficulties. The loss of training in the High degree she looks on as a blessing as she retains her individual style and is in good company – Serge Rachmaninoff also left before the high degree!
Olga married International Violinist Mikael Bezverhkny in 1988 shortly after the qualification for her Post Graduate Diploma. They left the Soviet Union in 1990 claiming asylum in Belgium – given refugee status by the UN – Olga became a Belgian Citizen in 1996.
The strain of two strong minded musicians living and playing together proved to be too difficult and Olga was separated in 1996. Working as an accredited Court Interpreter, Music Sales Consultant as well a part time pianist and teacher Olga continued to raise her young son on her own. Another marriage followed in 1999, which was tragically ended by the sudden death of her second husband.
Olga still lives in Belgium with her son Leon and dog Gypsy in a cottage in Alsemberg. She speaks fluent Russian, English, French some Flemish (Dutch) and is learning German.
CLINICAL STORY
Olga had her first “neurological event” at the age of 20 in 1985 when she collapsed in the street in Moscow. After lumbar puncture and heavy treatment and considerable physio therapy in the National Neurological Institute under Professor Zavalishin. Olga returned to normal life with slight impairment to her left leg.
Two further neurological events of weakness and loss of balance occurred at about 5 year intervals, both associated, like the first, with stressful emotional periods of her life – These were not diagnosed as Multiple Sclerosis as Olga refused further lumbar punctures and cortisone treatment as no other treatment was available.
A fourth event occurred in December 2000 when Olga suffered with some loss of memory function, dizziness and loss of co-ordination, causing the cancellation of a concert date. In some distress Olga was recommended to Profussor Pierre Noel at St Lukes Hospital in Brussels where Olga was finally diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis following an MRI scan.
Since May of 2001 Olga has been on weekly Interferon treatment. She manages her injection cycle in a variable window of 6-9 days, planning performances for days 5-7 of the cycle. Olga also manages a 3-4 hour daily practice schedule.
Olga also suffers from an asthmatic condition for which she constantly carries medication.
In spite of these limitations Olga plays concert piano to the highest levels of musical virtuosity, from memory. She has a unique talent and the ability to articulate three and sometimes four separate but simultaneous voice from the piano.
ENDS