The Conquest of Vienna
Sometime after settling permanently in Vienna in November 1792, Beethoven realized that in order to captivate the Viennese public he had not only to show himself as the skilled pianist he was but also as a composer, even if he was in his early stages –if that could be said of the twenty-two-year-old master. To this end, he had to gather a good number of compositions, either wholly new or unheard by a broad audience, to face the stage on which his debut before the Viennese public was to take place.
1795, the year of his debut
So along with his aspiration to become a master of counterpoint – for which he took classes with Haydn and other masters – Beethoven collected for three years his own works in various genres – solo piano, piano with accompaniment, strings, songs, and piano concertos – with the determination to approach the conquest of Vienna from all possible sides.
The maestro's debut took place one Easter weekend, on Sunday, March 29, 1795, at the Burgtheater in Vienna, which was available for instrumental concerts because the Catholic faith of the Habsburgs did not allow theatrical performances during Lent. On the occasion, he presented one of his Piano Concertos.
It is still debated today whether the "new concerto" presented on the occasion was No. 1 or No. 2, although most opinions are in favor of the latter, composed many years before the "first", between 1787 and 1789. At least this was the case with respect to its first two movements because for the 1795 performance Beethoven rewrote the final movement, a modification arising from his studies with Haydn. Three years later, for a performance in Prague, the composer revised the work again, writing another finale for the occasion, finally discarded because the version published in 1801 and the one that has come down to us is the one heard in Vienna in 1795, according to the most reliable testimonies.
Although considered by scholars (an opinion joined by Beethoven himself) as a rather weak and conventional work, clearly tributary of Haydn and Mozart, it contains as a whole a sense of drama and contrasts that clearly announces the magnificent master of the later concertos. Surely, its beautiful Adagio must have made a deep impression on the audience attending that Easter Sunday.
Movements:
00 Allegro con brio
15:28 Adagio
25:10 Rondo. Molto allegro
Encore:
(34:51 "Bailecito", from the pianist and composer Carlos Guastavino)