Background
Esther Allan was born Esther Boyarsky in Suwałki, Poland. Her father was a cantor. She began playing the piano when she was only five, and took her first piano lessons with her mother.
Esther Allan was born Esther Boyarsky in Suwałki, Poland. Her father was a cantor. She began playing the piano when she was only five, and took her first piano lessons with her mother.
The rest of this paragraph is untrue, but I am keeping it here, in case she studied music with these teachers in America ~ her granddaughter).
Her family moved to England when she was very young, and then to America. She began working in New York City, both as a "classical" pianist (for example she performed Brahms"s Piano Concerto Number 2 and Gershwin"s Concerto in F during a recital at Carnegie Hall) and as a "jazz" pianist, in the vein of the "classical jazz" initiated by George Gershwin and Dana Suesse. Once married, she used only her "American" name Allan, abandoning her maiden name.
She worked for a period of time as the pianist in Philosophy Spitalny"s all-girl orchestra "Hour of Charm Orchestra", as well as an affiliate pianist of Aileen Shirley"s all-girl orchestra, "The Minoco Maids Of Melody".
As a composer, aside from "the Norman Concerto", she wrote other short pieces for piano and orchestra: Ocean Rhapsody, Romantic Concerto.. described as being "an exact synthesis between Rachmaninov, Gershwin and the Warsaw Concerto", and Meditation for Piano, Harp and Strings, all homages to her native Poland. These works, as well as "the Norman Concerto", were regularly performed by Allan, accompanied by the Detroit Sinfonietta, conducted by Felix Resnick.
A vinyl album of their performances was published in the 1960s. She arranged for piano and orchestra several works, including classical hits as Chopin"s Nocturne in C minor, Operation
48, Number. 1 and Beethoven"s piano sonata Number.
17, "The Tempest", and variety songs as "Bethie"s Theme", "Enchantment", and "Freddie"s Running". She composed numerous short works for piano solo for her own recitals, around thirty songs, some chamber musics (including "Autumn Nocturne" for piano and harp) as well as some larger-scaled orchestral concert works. Allan performed with several local musical ensembles and hosted many classical piano performances.
She died on July 21, 1985 in Detroit, aged 7?, from heart failure.