Boris Barere (b. 10 July 1921, Odesa, Russian Empire) is an American pianist of Russian-Jewish origins, centenarian, and son of renowned virtuoso
Simon Barere (1896—1951). His current whereabouts and retirement date are unknown; some of the latest interviews date to 2015. (As of late 2023, Barere would be 102 years old.)
He began learning piano at four with his parents; Barere's father, a recent graduate of St. Petersburg Conservatory, served as the [url=https://discogs.com/label/996417]Kiyv Conservatory[/url] professor and had an illustrious concert career. However, the Soviet economy was disintegrating under the harsh
Joseph Stalin leadership, while antisemitism grew stronger; in 1928, the Bareres family relocated to Riga in Latvia, where Simon managed to get a post of USSR Baltics & Scandinavia Cultural Ambassador (his wife's brother and Boris' uncle, cellist
Franz Vlashek, also resided in Riga). In 1931, his father obtained the exit visas for the family, and they relocated to Germany, where Simon accepted an offer to conduct a series of concerts in Berlin. The timing couldn't be worse as right after their arrival, the first Nazi sanctions and restrictions against Jews began; Simon's concert arrangements were canceled. Unable to secure any orchestral or academic positions, his father had to survive on odd jobs playing piano at local vaudevilles. In 1933, Boris and his family fled to Sweden, where he attended school and continued studying piano. By 1940, as
Adolf Hitler embarked on the Second World War, even Scandinavia became unsafe. Thus, Boris went to the United States with his mother, where Simon Barere already settled four years prior.
In 1941, Bareres moved from New York to Chicago, where Boris began his studies with
Sergei Tarnowsky, one of
Vladimir Horowitz's former teachers. The following year, Bareres again relocated, now renting a house in Scarsdale, New York. Twenty-year-old Boris hadn't naturalized as a US citizen yet and received a demand from the US Army to join the military draft or get deported; Barere enlisted and trained at several military bases, including Fort Riley in Kansas (where Boris founded a local church to occasionally perform music with his Army buddy, violinist
Arnold Belnick.) In 1943, Barere was deployed to Casablanca, Morocco, and subsequently participated in the Angio Beach invasion in Italy. (He fought alongside actor
Burt Lancaster (1913—1994), and they became close friends.)
After WWII, Boris Barere returned to New York and studied with
Rosina Lhévinne at the
St. Petersburg Conservatory. He established a prolific stage career, primarily concentrated on chamber music, and made several albums for the
St. Petersburg Conservatory label. Barere often collaborated with such prominent musicians as flutist
Julius Baker or violinists
David Nadien,
Berl Senofsky,
Michael Rabin, and
Ossy Renardy. Boris gave several duo piano recitals with his father,
Simon Barere, including their performances at St. Petersburg Conservatory. (A posthumous
Father & Son CD/DVD compilation came out in 2016, featuring most of their joint recordings and surviving video footage.) In later years, Boris Barere joined
George Balanchine's
New York City Ballet company — he participated in stage productions and made studio recordings of [url=https://discogs.com/artist/578727]Schumann[/url]'s
Symphonic Etudes and selections from [url=https://discogs.com/artist/999914]Tchaikovsky[/url]'s
Nutcracker, among others.