Piano and patterns
5 PM, 13 Feb 2026
The Grynyuk brothers perform piano music for four hands by Brahms and Schubert, with a mathematical interlude by LIMS Fellow Yang-Hui He.
The London Institute welcomes invited guests to an evening of piano music for four hands with the Ukrainian brothers Alexei and Sasha Grynyuk, acclaimed concert pianists whose close partnership brings this repertoire vividly to life. During the interval, Prof. Yang-Hui He offers a short mathematical interlude, reflecting on pattern and variation in music.
Johannes Brahms’ Variations on a Theme by Robert Schumann arise from one of the most human stories of the Romantic era. Welcomed by Robert and Clara Schumann in the early 1850s, Brahms was profoundly shaped by their circle. The variations carry something of that private world into the concert hall.
Franz Schubert’s Variations on an Original Theme in A-flat Major come from Vienna’s rich culture of domestic music-making. Heard together, the works trace a Romantic fascination with how a single idea can be transformed. The antique Steinway & Sons grand piano heard this evening is generously on loan from Sasha Grynyuk.
Event information
The event takes place on Friday 13 February at the London Institute for Mathematical Sciences, which is on the second floor of the Royal Institution. Attendance is by invitation only. Arrival is from 5 pm in the Old Post Room. The concert, which will be held in Faraday’s Study, begins at 6 pm and will be followed by drinks with the musicians into the evening.
















Performers

Alexei Grynyuk is an internationally acclaimed pianist who performs regularly at major concert halls and festivals worldwide. An Associate of the Royal Academy of Music, he is a member of a renowned trio with Nicola Benedetti and Leonard Elschenbroich, with whom he tours widely.

Sasha Grynyuk is an award-winning pianist and Gold Medal recipient of the Guildhall School of Music. Named a BBC Music Magazine “Rising Star”, he performs internationally, records widely, and serves as a Trustee of the Keyboard Trust and Ambassador of the London Music Fund.

As well as a Fellow at LIMS, mathematician Prof. Yang-Hui He is a violinist and choral tenor. He played in the Princeton University Orchestra, sang with the chapel choirs of St Catherine’s College, Cambridge and Merton College, Oxford and co-founded the early music Saville Consort.