Panos Karan is a pianist, conductor and humanitarian whose ideas are fast shaping the understanding of classical music in the 21st century. Born in Greece and educated at the Royal Academy of Music in London, Panos has taken music from the world’s top concert halls into the Amazon jungle, to the most impoverished districts of Kolkata, to prisons of war-torn Sierra Leone, and to the evacuation centers of post-tsunami Japan. Most recent performances include four solo recitals at Carnegie Hall, New York, Symphony Hall, Boston, Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, Suntory Hall, Tokyo, Sydney Opera House and Tokyo Opera City, at the presence of Empress Michiko of Japan. In September 2010 Panos founded the charity Keys of Change helping bring music to young people living under extraordinary circumstances around the world, and in 2014 he founded the Fukushima Youth Sinfonietta. He has recorded Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 3 and recently the 24 Chopin Etudes in live recital at London’s Cadogan Hall. Panos Karan has visited more than 130 countries, has lived in Barcelona, Buenos Aires, Athens, Tokyo and currently resides in London. He speaks six languages. Recent performances have included the Boston Symphony Hall, Vienna Konzerthaus, the Tokyo Suntory Hall, the Athens Megaron Hall, the St. Petersburg Hermitage Theatre, Queen Elizabeth Hall, Tokyo Opera City as well as three solo recitals at Carnegie Hall. In September 2010 Panos founded the charity Keys of Change with the aim of sharing classical music in the most remote areas of our planet. Projects have taken him to the Amazon, Japan, India, Siberia, Uganda, Bosnia and Sierra Leone. Panos Karan has visited more than 100 countries, has lived in Barcelona, Buenos Aires, Athens, Tokyo and London. He speaks six languages.