She was educated at the Hoch Conservatory in
Frankfurt under
Iwan Knorr, and studied piano with
Fanny Davies and
Clara Schumann, whose work she championed for most of her life. She was close friends with
Johannes Brahms through her studies. As an adult, Adelina de Lara performed in public for the first time following her studies in 1891 and continued for over seventy years, making her final appearance on 15 June 1954 at the
Wigmore Hall London. She made many recordings for the
BBC and appeared on
BBC Television on her 82nd birthday. During
World War II she played for Dame
Myra Hess at the
National Gallery and later in life, Sir
Adrian Boult. In 1951 she was appointed an
Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE).
Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother was both an admirer and a friend and sent good wishes for concerts on many occasions. She also worked as a teacher, her students including
Eileen Joyce and many other distinguished pianists. She composed many pieces which have included ballads, song cycles, some larger-scaled works such as a symphony, a
Concerto for Strings (1938), and many works for piano including two concertos and a
Symphonic Danse Fantasy for piano and Strings. There were also two suites for strings, including
In The Forest, which was performed in 2005, in
Gloucester Cathedral by the Gloucester Academy of Music. Adelina de Lara's autobiography entitled
Finale was published in 1955 and she died at the age of 89 in
Woking, Surrey on 25 November 1961. ==Family==