She was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts in 1987 and an annual award presented by the Quebec Music Teachers' Association was named for her.
[2] In 1918, Goldblatt commenced piano studies under Boris Dunev and Arthur Letondal at Montreal's Canadian Academy of Music.
[1] Her European concert debut came at the Royal College of Music in London in June 1935,[2][3] and also performed in the ballroom of the Ritz-Carlton Montreal that October.
[1] Goldblatt introduced many Canadian music and works to audiences in North America such as Violet Archer, István Anhalt, Wolfgang Bottenberg, Alexander Brott, Albertine Caron-Legris, Maurice Dela, Marvin Duchow, George Fiala and Hector Gratton.
She performed Josef Fiala's Concertino, with Roland Leduc conducting the CBC Montreal string orchestra, Louis Charbonneau at timpani and Jacques LeComte at trumpet.
She was featured on Radio-Canada's recording Fantasy on a Hebrew Theme, performing Joseph Joachim's Éclosion and the title selection by Oskar Morawetz.
She consulted the Quebec Music Festivals, served as Canadian correspondent for the European Piano Teacher's Association and was Canada's representative for the International Society for the Study of Tension in Performance.