National Post

Renowned pianist broke barriers

- Jake offenhartz

• Byron Janis, a renowned American concert pianist and composer who broke barriers as a Cold War era culture ambassador and later overcame severe arthritis that nearly robbed him of his playing abilities, has died. He was 95.

Janis died Thursday evening at a hospital in New York City, according to his wife, Maria Cooper Janis. In a statement, she described her husband as “an exceptiona­l human being who took his talents to their highest pinnacle.”

A childhood prodigy who studied under Vladimir Horowitz, Janis emerged in the late 1940s as one of the most celebrated virtuosos of a new generation of talented American pianists.

In 1960, he was selected as the first musician to tour the then-soviet Union as part of a cultural exchange program organized by the U.S. State Department. His recitals of Chopin and Mozart awed Russian audiences and were described by the New York Times as helping to break “the musical Iron Curtain.”

Seven years later, while visiting a friend in France, Janis discovered a pair of long-lost Chopin scores in a trunk of old clothing.

He performed the waltzes frequently over the ensuing years, eventually releasing a widely hailed compilatio­n featuring those performanc­es.

But his storied career, which spanned more than eight decades, was also marked by physical adversity, including a freak childhood accident that left his left pinky permanentl­y numb and convinced doctors he would never play again.

He suffered an even greater setback as an adult.

At age 45, he was diagnosed with a severe form of psoriatic arthritis in his hands and wrists. Janis kept the condition secret for more than a decade, often playing through excruciati­ng pain.

“It was a life-and-death struggle for me every day for years,” Janis later told the Chicago Tribune.

“At every point, I thought of not being able to continue performing, and it terrified me. Music, after all, was my life, my world, my passion.”

He revealed his diagnosis publicly in 1985 following a performanc­e at the Reagan White House, where he was announced as a spokespers­on for the Arthritis Foundation.

The condition required multiple surgeries and temporaril­y slowed his career. However, he was able to resume performing after making adjustment­s to his playing technique that eased pressure on his swollen fingers.

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Byron Janis

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