We would like to inform our audience that according to the government decision effective from 11 November 2020, no public events can be held, so we are unable to hold concerts at the Liszt Academy with an audience. However, our audience will not be left without a concert experience, as most of our performances will be held and broadcast online in our Digital Concert Hall, and most of the concerts of the orchestras organizing concert series at the Liszt Academy will also be available online.

25 April 2020, 15.00-18.00
Grand Hall
Concerto Budapest / Várjon, Perényi, Keller, Hungarian Quartet
Beethoven Days in Honour of Annie Fischer
Cancelled
Beethoven: Piano Trio No. 5 in D major, Op. 70/1 (ʻGhostʼ)
Beethoven: String Quartet No. 16 in F major, Op. 135
INTERMISSION
Beethoven: Piano Trio No. 6 in E-flat major, Op. 70/2
András Keller (violin), Miklós Perényi (cello), Dénes Várjon (piano)
Hungarian Quartet: András Keller, János Pilz (violin), Gábor Homoki (viola), László Fenyő (cello)
Intimate, suggestive, familiar – these words effectively join together the individual works of this matinee concert, and indeed they really are the most personal confessions of Beethoven. The two piano trios that begin and end the concert were written during the months the composer spent as a guest of Anna Mária Erdődy, and they are both dedicated to the countess for her hospitality. The Piano Trio in D major was dubbed ‘Ghost’ after an observation by the composer’s student, Carl Czerny, who said the slow movement reminded him of the opening scene of Shakespeare’s Hamlet. The String Quartet in F major inserted between the two trios is Beethoven’s last completed major work. Music historians were long puzzled by the inscription to the fourth movement – The difficult decision – and on the first score written for vocal part and not intended for performance – Must it be? It must be! They believed that Beethoven had a premonition of his death, yet the explanation was far more banal than this: he was quoting the words of an amateur cellist who did not want to pay for a concert ticket, and an earlier witty canon written to these words. The piano part of the trios is taken by Dénes Várjon, one of the world’s most sought-after pianists applauded for his down-to-earth and yet emotionally rich technique. He is joined by two peers: András Keller and Miklós Perényi, while the string quartet is performed by Hungarian Quartet who debuted (with great success) early in the year.
Presented by
Concerto Budapest
Tickets:
HUF 2 500, 3 500, 4 500