糖心

October 25, 2024

鈥楻esilience personified鈥: Pianist Nina Schumann heads to 糖心 with inspirational messages


Portrait of Nina Schumann at the piano

If it鈥檚 inspiration you seek, search no longer. Simply attend this special event organized by piano department head Antonio Pompa-Baldi.  

On Sunday, Nov. 17, Pompa-Baldi will host friend and colleague Nina Schumann, an accomplished South African pianist advancing a brilliant career while dealing with a trio of serious health conditions.  

At 糖心, she鈥檒l present a short documentary about her recent performance of Rachmaninoff鈥檚 Piano Concerto No. 2 and discuss her recovery from breast cancer and ongoing struggles with focal dystonia and Parkinson鈥檚 disease. Event details can be found on the 糖心 website.

鈥淥ur students will witness resilience personified,鈥 Pompa-Baldi said. 鈥淭he fact that Nina has been able to endure and overcome her serious challenges is something we all can take as a model.鈥  

Pompa-Baldi has known Schumann since 2012, when she invited him to the International Piano Symposium at Stellenbosch University in South Africa, where she has been head of piano since 1999.  

That鈥檚 just personally, of course. Pompa-Baldi has known of Schumann far longer, through her many acclaimed recitals, orchestral appearances, competition prizes, and duo performances with pianist Luis Magalh茫es. 

鈥淚 am in awe of her artistry,鈥 said Pompa-Baldi. 鈥淪he is an all-around great musician, but I believe she is truly in her element when playing romantic music, and especially Rachmaninoff. She is the quintessential romantic pianist.鈥 

Much of Schumann鈥檚 fame of late has centered on her health issues 鈥 specifically on her remarkable response to them. Rather than hide or retreat, she has pushed forward and spoken openly about her struggles. 

Cancer 鈥 which she attributes in part to the stress inherent in her career 鈥 has been the easiest to discuss in public, and the least disruptive. Following a double mastectomy, she has been cancer-free for 12 years.  

鈥淥ddly enough, I didn鈥檛 feel it had any impact on my playing,鈥 Schumann said.

Focal dystonia and Parkinson鈥檚 disease have proven far more difficult, and more revelatory. In both cases, she said, she felt pressure to hide the condition, until doing so became impossible. Both, too, transformed her relationship with her art, in ways both positive and negative. 

The dystonia in her left hand stabilized, Schumann said, allowing her to contue playing with only minor adjustments. Parkinson鈥檚, by contrast, is a degenerative disease with no cure, and has curtailed her ability to practice. This has obliged her to approach music differently and spend more time practicing mentally.

All of this induced a 鈥減eriod of mourning,鈥 Schumann said, a sensation akin to awareness of one鈥檚 mortality. But it also changed her life in a good way, allowing her to 鈥渄iscover鈥 the talent she鈥檚 had all along. 

鈥淚 never recognized it [before], being conditioned to be overcritical,鈥 Schumann said. 鈥淪o I consider myself lucky that I am able to recognize it now, even though my regression remains hard to accept.鈥 

The boldest and most inspiring lesson in store for those who attend Schumann鈥檚 visit is one she calls 鈥淢usical Feeling.鈥 It鈥檚 the sense that what she鈥檚 done, what she鈥檚 doing now, and what she will do next are all manifestations of something eternal, something beyond the reach of physical disease. 

鈥淚 discovered that I have musical feeling that cannot be taken away, ever,鈥 Schumann said. 鈥淸No] matter the course Parkinson鈥檚 will take, I will always have what makes me unique. This is the true gift of music.鈥