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Pianist Tom Borrow: ‘Having Ravel deep in my bones is good’

The young Israeli musician makes his debut at the proms on Sunday

July 28, 2022 09:07
Tom Borrow 0322
4 min read

Tom Borrow makes his debut at the BBC Proms on Sunday playing the Ravel Piano Concerto in G major. This is the work that marked the extraordinary moment, in January 2019, when he was 18 years old and was asked, with only 36 hours’ notice, to replace the indisposed Khatia Buniatishvili and play the concerto with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra. He not only did so, to sensational public and critical acclaim, but went on to play in a series of 12 more concerts.
“I suppose it does have a special significance,” he says, over the telephone from Israel, “because it’s part of a major twist in my life, but I love it anyway. It’s always been significant and it’s a work with which I’ve had a long relationship — it’s been with me at so many different times in my life and to have that music deep in my bones is good.”


Born in Tel Aviv in 2000, Borrow began playing the piano as a small child and studied at the Buchmann-Mehta School of Music, with regular mentoring from the pianist Murray Perahia, who has been an important influence. “He comes to visit a few times a year and has a class at the Jerusalem Music Centre, a series of workshops. My first encounter with him was when I was 15 and there were six or seven of us invited to participate. He has this unique approach to music by using Schenker theory and analysis, which he encourages us to use as well. It takes a lot of study but it’s amazing, it changes your mental approach and makes you more aware of the bigger picture, giving you a sort of grand view from above rather than being overwhelmed by the detail. I find that it helps enormously with focus and learning, towards reaching a coherent interpretation.”
That 2019 jump-in catapulted Borrow into an international career. He was building his way up to this, winning numerous competitions and prizes in Israel, giving recitals and performing in concerts but all of a sudden he was being invited to play with the Cleveland Orchestra, the Santa Cecilia Orchestra, Rome, the Czech Philharmonic, the London Philharmonic and the BBC Symphony Orchestra, and in recital in Verbier and Toulouse, Aldeburgh and Cheltenham.
“It was quite a drastic change, going from building up a career in one place to travelling a huge amount but I haven’t really changed the structure of the way I work. I’m still learning, working on pieces, practising, building my repertoire. Nobody really wants to spend hours on a plane but it can be useful switch-off time. Of course I quite often use the time to go over the score yet again but actually just reading a novel can in some way help my Ravel — the learning continues at a subconscious level. I can become very obsessive when I’m working on a piece, trying to crack those nuts that composers have left us. On a long journey the fact that there is no choice but to sit in your seat and let yourself be carried along can be very helpful. You can get closer to what Perahia teaches — if you’re paying close attention to absolutely everything, then you’re not really paying attention to anything properly.’

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Music