Lucas Porter has been heralded as "a young lion of the keyboard" with "staggering virtuosity and some of the old-school pyrotechnics and unabashed romanticism of early 20th-century legends like Moiseiwitsch or even Sofronitsky" (Natasha Gauthier, Ottawa Citizen). In August of 2022, Lucas gave a solo recital at La Maison Trestler in Quebec. He also performed in the Musique Royale concert series in Mahone Bay, Nova Scotia, in July of 2022. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Lucas competed in the semi-finals of the Scriabin International Piano Competition in Italy.
In 2017, Lucas gave an "All Schubert" recital at Oberlin College, alongside several vocalists and string players. In 2016, Lucas performed Ravel’s G-Major Concerto with the Kamloops Symphony Orchestra. He also performed Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue with the Oakville Symphony in 2017. In 2014, he completed a tour of 21 concerts under management of Jeunesses Musicales of Eastern Canada. In 2013, he performed Frédéric Chopin's Concerto No. 2 with Symphony Nova Scotia at the Rebecca Cohn Theatre in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Lucas also performed Sergei Prokofiev's Concerto No. 3 with the "Mihail Jora" of Bacau Orchestra in Cantu, Italy, in 2013. Lucas was accepted into the International Mendelssohn Akademie that took place in Leipzig in 2014, studying with world-renowned pedagogues Jacques Rouvier and Arie Vardi.
A graduate of the Glenn Gould School’s Bachelors of Music Program, he is the youngest student to date to ever win the school’s Concerto Competition. His competition highlights include his success at the Montreal International Musical Competition, where he was an audience and media favourite. Montreal Gazette critic Robert Markow described his double octaves as being “the fastest since Horowitz, and even cleaner.”
He won the Canadian Music Competition in 2007 and 2010, as well as the Nova Scotia Youth Orchestra Concerto Competition in 2007. He had the pleasure of playing Gershwin’s Piano Concerto in F with the orchestra in a joint concert with Symphony Nova Scotia, with whom he made his orchestral debut in 2007 playing Shostakovich’s Concerto No. 2.
Chosen to represent Canada at Expo 2005 in Nagoya, Japan, he took part in a series of concerts along with Canadian soprano Measha Brueggergosman. At the invitation of the Honourable Peter McKay, he played for Condoleezza Rice at the Halifax 9/11 Ceremony in 2006. He also performed in the 2011 Canada Winter Games, which were held in Halifax, Nova Scotia. In 2013, Lucas won one of the 2011 Canada Games Young Artist of Excellence Awards from Nova Scotia Talent Trust. NSTT has been very supportive of Lucas and his musical career for many years.
Also a composer, Lucas has written for piano, orchestra, and film. Lucas won the Notions Realize Music Challenge, an international composing competition sponsored by Virtuoso Works. Inc., receiving first place in the 18-and-under category for best Orchestral Composition. The premiere performance of his Port Williams Overture was performed by the Nova Scotia Youth Orchestra. He also wrote the score for Canadian director Navin Ramaswaran’s short film A Fork in the Road which premiered at “MIFF” (Mississauga Independent Film Festival) in 2011.
Lucas' early piano instructors were Kurt van der Basch, Barbara Hansen, and John Hansen. He went on to study with world-renowned piano pedagogue Marc Durand for over a decade. He received a Master of Music from the University of Montreal in 2015 under the tutelage of Professor Durand before studying with Professor Dang Thai Son, the gold medallist of the International Chopin Piano Competition in 1980.
Lucas graduated with an Artist Diploma from the Oberlin/Lake Como Fellow Program in 2019. He studied with Professor Stanislav Ioudenitch, and had masterclasses and lessons with many renowned pianists and pedagogues, including William Grant Naboré, Dang Thai Son, Martino Tirimo, Peter Frankl, and Paul Badura-Skoda. Lucas began a Doctorate in Piano Performance at the University of Montreal in 2019 under the tutelage of Jimmy Brière and Jean Saulnier.