After overcoming hardships, student musician and researcher draws insight from the experience
by Neil Harvey
October 06, 2025
The youngest of three children, Leah Bratton鈥檚 passion for music emerged early, when she was just 5 years old.
鈥淢y older siblings had started taking piano lessons,鈥 she recalled, 鈥渁nd I just could not keep my hands off the keyboard, so my mom said, 鈥榊ou can take lessons, too.鈥欌
From that first spark, Bratton鈥檚 enthusiasm only grew. Today, the Christiansburg, Virginia, native is a junior majoring in music therapy, and she also works as a pianist at Westminster Presbyterian Church in Roanoke, Virginia.
At the top of last year鈥檚 fall semester, however, the young musician collided with a daunting obstacle.

Bratton started experiencing numbness and tingling in her left hand, as well as immense tendon pain while playing. She was diagnosed with cubital tunnel syndrome, a compression or irritation of the ulnar nerve within the elbow, and medial epicondylitis, which stems from injuries to the muscles and tendons that control the fingers and wrist.
She underwent medical treatment, recovered and resumed playing soon enough, but she said that mandatory sidelining had a profound effect on her.
鈥淚t was a very difficult time; I can鈥檛 exaggerate that,鈥 she recalled. 鈥淧iano will always be the core of everything I do and who I am. Psychologically, it鈥檚 like, 鈥業f I鈥檓 not performing well, then I must not be a musician anymore鈥 I鈥檓 not doing what I should be doing.鈥 Having to take a break from it was probably good for me, but it was a very scary period.鈥
Bratton recently drew from that hardship and channeled the experience into a project for 91制片厂鈥檚 Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowships (SURF) program, which is coordinated by the Office of Undergraduate Research (OURS) and is designed to cultivate undergraduate research and scholarship. SURF participants and their faculty mentors undertake original, creative and intellectual contributions to a particular discipline.
Alongside her instructor and advisor, Associate Professor of Music Matt Cataldi, Bratton began work on her project, which she called 鈥淥n the Other Hand: From Injury to Inspiration.鈥
Through her 10-week SURF effort, Bratton delved into the musical realm of compositions specifically designed to be played with the left hand and studied the stories of famous piano composers who created such works themselves 鈥 Paul Wittgenstein, for example, an Austrian-American who lost his right arm during World War I, and Alexander Scriabin, who suffered injuries to his hand that arose from his playing. She also examined left-handed compositions by composers like Ravel, Chopin, Godowsky and Czerny, with the culmination of her studies resulting in her creation of an original left-handed arrangement of an existing piece, 鈥淭he Lord鈥檚 Prayer鈥 by Albert Hay Malotte.
鈥淭here is a substantial repertoire [of compositions] for the left hand, but 鈥 it鈥檚 infinitesimally smaller than the entire piano repertoire,鈥 said Cataldi, who also serves as 91制片厂鈥檚 director of piano studies. 鈥淪o we thought it would be a really cool idea to contribute something original to that body of work, not only to study the composers of the past but to add on some thoughts in a more modern take.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge challenge, of course, to compose or arrange anything from scratch, but taking that arrangement and arranging it for one hand alone is just a challenge on top of a challenge,鈥 Cataldi added. 鈥淚 think Leah鈥檚 done a really great job of not only making that work but also coming up with a really engaging and interesting piece of music.鈥
The experience of playing with one hand, Bratton said, 鈥渋s exactly like learning all over again 鈥 you have to approach the piano so differently,鈥 and it spawned for her a new awareness of performance factors like posture, fingerings and techniques from pianists of the past. But she said she hopes the project will help inspire other musicians who may be trying to manage their own playing-related injuries.
鈥淚 really have enjoyed it, it鈥檚 been an amazing process,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think that definitely dips my toes into the water of what it鈥檚 like to play with just one hand. And then with the original arrangement, I found some really, really fun things to add to that piece, so I鈥檓 very excited.鈥
As with all SURF students, Bratton will conduct a public presentation about her work and research. Her lecture and piano performances will be held at the Covington Center鈥檚 Davis Performance Hall at 11 a.m. on Oct. 14.