The Piano Player of Budapest by Roxanne de Bastion audiobook review – music and survival

The Piano Player of Budapest by Roxanne de Bastion audiobook review – music and survival

The musician traces the story of her grandfather, from his life as a pianist and composer in Hungary to surviving the concentration camps in wartime Austria

Roxanne de Bastion’s family biography begins with a piano, old and weathered from decades of use. As a child, Roxanne knew it had been in the family for more than a century, but it wasn’t until her father died and she inherited the instrument – along with a treasure trove of old letters, photos, sheet music and cassette tapes – that she learned of its history. The piano, a baby grand Blüthner, had belonged to her late grandfather, a Hungarian Jew called Stephen de Bastion, who had worked as a composer and pianist in the 1930s. During the second world war, he was sent to a Russian labour camp, where he suffered horrifying abuse. From there, after being abandoned by his captors, he made the journey home on foot (of the 1,070 Jewish men sent there, eight made).

But that wasn’t the end of Stephen’s torment, since, after returning to Hungary, he was deported first to Mauthausen and later to Gunskirchen concentration camps. Against the odds, he survived and, years later, after moving to Britain with his wife, Edith, he recounted his wartime experiences in a series of taped recordings.

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