The Elvish, or perhaps Pixie, Helen Schnabel plays Beethoven’s “6th piano concerto” (which is really his violin concerto transcribed by Beethoven for the piano) magically, softly, tenderly, sparkingly, with two gorgeous and entirely new (to me) cadenzas. (How wonderful to discover something completely new and beautiful). Listen especially to this; and this. She plays all this like she looks: like a magical creature from an enchanted forest, like an encounter in a fairy tale, a unicorn.
I have lived with this concerto since I was thirteen. One day, my father brought home a gramophone, and two records, and this was one of them, Henryk Szeryng playing Beethoven’s violin concerto. And through the narrow door of this concerto, as if pushing between grandma’s fur-coats in a Normandy armoire, I entered the world of classical music.
After he has composed and performed his 4th and 5th piano concertos — loud, fast, technically brilliant — Beethoven composed a violin concerto for someone else to play. He himself apparently was not a very good violinist, so, unfamiliar with what could be or could not be done, he composed a concerto which isn’t especially technically demanding. We are told the violinist was so disappointed with its lack of pizzazz that on the night of the world premiere, he played, in addition, his own composition, which required him to hold his instrument upside down. (Yo, duuude!)
Later, good old B transcribed this concerto for the piano, for himself to play — I suppose he must have liked it. And this transcription is sometimes called his 6th piano concerto. And is sometimes, very rarely, performed.
For its lack of flash, the concerto makes up by its meditative, dreamy beauty. And Helen, in this broadcast straight from Lothlórien, goes in that direction. And plays it in a way which I have not yet ever heard: today, at this moment, it is the most beautiful thing on earth.