There is something quietly fitting about spending 1 May — Workers’ Day — in a concert hall. Not in abstraction, but in the company of people whose work quite literally unfolds in front of you, in real time. Jeanne and I spent the evening at DR Koncerthuset with Anne and Michael, listening to Beethoven performed by the DR Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Antonello Manacorda, with Leif Ove Andsnes at the piano. The programme moved through Beethoven’s musical landscape, but the centre of gravity was unmistakable: the Piano Concerto No. 3. A work that feels almost architectural in its construction, yet intensely human in its expression. Andsnes played it with a kind of clarity and restraint that made the piece unfold rather than announce itself — controlled, precise, and quietly powerful. It is easy to forget, sitting in a concert hall, how much work lies behind such an evening. Not just practice, but coordination, listening, adjustment — a collective discipline that is both visible and invisible at the same time. Perhaps that is what made it feel like an appropriate way to mark the day. A room full of people listening. And a group of musicians working — at a level where work becomes something else entirely. Yes, I am aware of the irony of capturing the moment on a smartphone. But perhaps that tension remains: between documenting and experiencing. And the question, still, of whether we know when to do which.

05/03/2026 18:12:28


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