Key Pianists

Feb. 12: pianist Terry Eder performs music by Bartók and more

Key Pianists Concert Series continues 10th anniversary season at Carnegie Hall

Award-winning pianist Terry Eder, Key Pianists' founder, performs on February 12

Program features works by Bartók, Schubert, Debussy, and Beethoven

The award-winning pianist Terry Eder performs a solo recital presented by Key Pianists Concert Series on Thursday, February 12, 2026 at 7:30 pm at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall (154 West 57th Street in New York City). Her program includes music by Schubert, Debussy, Beethoven, and Bartók.

Eder is a specialist in Hungarian music, having studied with Zoltán Kocsis at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest in the 1980s. That experience transformed the young pianist. "It was the days of the cold war, when Americans simply did not go to Eastern Europe. The pervasiveness and pride in musical heritage was overwhelming," says Eder. "I became captivated with the uniqueness of the Hungarian language and sensibility, the rustic scenery, the beautiful old architecture, the delicious food, the Parliament still full of bullet holes from WWII, the Turkish baths, the feeling of being so foreign, so out of place." Program highlights include two seldom-programmed works by Bartók - the Sonatine and the Two Romanian Dances - alongside Beethoven's Sonata No. 15 and works by Schubert and Debussy. (Full program details below.)

The recital is part of the Key Pianists Concert Series' 10th anniversary season. Since Terry Eder founded the series in 2015, it has provided a platform for renowned pianists to perform at Carnegie Hall who otherwise might not have the opportunity to perform in New York City.

Tickets for Eder's February 12 recital start at $30 ($25 + $5 fee) and are available at CarnegieHall.org | 212-247-7800 | Box Office at 57th and Seventh Avenue.

Insider Interview with Key Pianists' Founder Terry Eder

Terry Eder is the founder of Key Pianists concert series, celebrating its 10th anniversary in the 2025-26 season. On February 12, 2026 Eder performs a recital of Bartók alongside music by Beethoven, Schubert and Debussy at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall (tickets available here). We spoke with her about Key Pianists’ mission, the upcoming recital, being one of the only Americans studying in Hungary in the 1980s, and more.

What made you want to start the Key Pianists series? Why Carnegie Hall?  

New Yorkers are extremely lucky to have the opportunity to hear the world’s most famous pianists from around the world with regularity. There are also concert series here in New York that specifically present opportunities to young professionals just starting their careers. I noticed that there were few opportunities for pianists who do not fall into one of those two categories. Certainly there are smaller, more informal venues where one can present or attend a concert. However, there are many wonderful pianists who deserve a more prominent platform. I felt that a series that presented significant and seldom-heard artists on the stage of Carnegie Hall would be welcome by those artists and by the pianophile audience found in NYC, who would otherwise not have a chance to hear them. Carnegie Hall is the pinnacle of achievement for any musician; the history, the acoustics, the beauty, the professionalism it represents. Weill Recital Hall has an intimacy that allows the audience to see and hear the artist up close, making a recital there a very special occasion.  

What criteria do you look for when considering which performers to present?  

First of all, I look for performers who match the reason I began the series. Carnegie Hall inspires a high level of engagement, and I seek an artist who will relish the opportunity by presenting an exceptional program.  I think programming is extremely important and I encourage pianists who perform unusual repertoire or who have acquired experience in a particular idiom or with a particular composer. The qualities of sensitivity, beauty, intelligence, communicativeness, and singularity are all important. Excellence is the real determining factor.  

You’re a pianist yourself. What made you choose the piano?  

I would say that the piano chose me. I grew up with 3 older sisters who were studying music, and my father who played jazz standards and ragtime every night after his work day as a dentist. At 4, my parents thought I was too young to study. After one of my sisters’ piano lessons ended, I would simply repeat the lesson by ear and show where the mistakes had been made. My parents learned I had perfect pitch as well, and allowed me lessons from then on. I never thought there would be a day when I stopped playing the piano.  

Tell us about the repertoire you have planned for your recital in February 2026.  

I wanted to include Bartók in this program because he is a favorite composer of mine, and also because people do not play Bartók very often despite the genius, uniqueness and beauty of his works. Two of the pieces I am programming, the Sonatine and the Two Romanian Dances, Op. 8/a, I have never heard performed by anyone else in the U.S. The Six Romanian Dances, which I am also playing, is heard and played quite often, also in a version for violin and piano. I also nearly always program Beethoven and will be playing the Sonata Op. 28. Schubert and Debussy round out the program with four of the Debussy Preludes, and a Schubert Impromptu and set of waltzes. There is a loose thread running through the program of an earthy, folk-like undercurrent in all of the works.  

You’re playing Bartók, one of your specialties, and you studied in Budapest. How does that experience enrich your interpretation of this music?  

Living in the 1980s behind the Iron Curtain was an affecting experience.  I was young and impressionable and had never been outside the U.S. other than for a 15th birthday dinner in Windsor, Ontario, across the bridge from my hometown Detroit. It was the days of the cold war, when Americans simply did not go to Eastern Europe. There were a few other American grant winners in Hungary that year, and we were the only Americans in the entire country. The man on the street had never heard American English or met an American. I felt so foreign. These days it seems hard to fathom.  

My mother was born in Romania so ancestry or genes may be a reason for my affinity with Eastern European music. But memories of my year in Hungary are incredibly vivid and no doubt have infiltrated my being. The pervasiveness and pride in musical heritage was overwhelming for someone coming from a culture where music was not considered a desirable profession. I became captivated with the uniqueness of the Hungarian language and sensibility, the rustic scenery outside the capital, the beautiful old architecture, the delicious food, the Parliament still full of bullet holes from WWII, the Turkish baths, the feeling of being so foreign, so out of place. I was immersed in all things Hungarian 24 hours a day, without English speakers around, without any westerners around, with the perfect opportunity to become part of that existence. I came away from it with what feels like an intense understanding of the Hungarian character.  

Key Pianists to present Alexander Kobrin at Carnegie

Key Pianists Concert Series marks 10 years of presenting top recitalists at Carnegie Hall

2025-26 season begins with Cliburn Gold Medal winner Alexander Kobrin

November 6 concert features Robert Schumann’s Kreisleriana and music by Haydn and Schubert

Presented by Key Pianists Concert Series

Since 2015, the Key Pianists Concert Series has brought some of the world’s most renowned recitalists to the stage at Carnegie Hall. Celebrating its 10th anniversary, the series launches its season with Alexander Kobrin on November 6. Kobrin, who won the Gold Medal at the Van Cliburn Competition in 2005, performs music by Haydn, Schubert and Robert Schumann. 

“I am thrilled to present Alexander Kobrin,” said Key Pianists founder Terry Eder. “He's emblematic of the gold standard of our concert series.” 

Since winning the gold medal at the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, Kobrin's star has been on a meteoric rise. He's performed with orchestras from the New York Philharmonic to the Russian National Orchestra, played recitals around the world and recorded over a half dozen critically acclaimed albums. His program features Robert Schumann's evocative Kreisleriana, the Four Impromptus op. 90 by Franz Schubert, Variations in F minor by Haydn and the beloved Arabesque by Schumann.

The concert on Thursday, November 6, 2025 at 7:30 pm is presented by Key Pianists Concert Series, at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall (154 West 57th Street in New York City). Tickets are $51 ($40 + $11 fee) and are available at CarnegieHall.org | 212-247-7800 | Box Office at 57th and Seventh Avenue.

Key Pianists Concert Series 10th season continues on February 12, 2026 with a recital by Terry Eder. Tickets available beginning in November.