“The perfection of the Steinway piano is a major contributing factor to the success of any artist.”
Constance Keene
Constance Keene (1921-2005) was an American pianist, who attracted great praise for her 1964 recording of Sergei Rachmaninoff's Preludes, as well as his complete Études Tableaux.
She was raised in Brooklyn, New York City. One of her teachers was Abram Chasins. She won the Naumburg Piano Competition in 1943. In 1946, she stood in for Vladimir Horowitz when he was unavailable for a concert, and she claimed she was the only female pianist ever to have been given this honor. She also appeared with Benny Goodman and his Orchestra in a performance of Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue. In 1949 she married Chasins, who died in 1987. They performed and recorded music for piano duo.
Through her husband, who had himself studied with the great pianist Josef Hofmann, she became personally acquainted with many great pianists, including Vladimir Horowitz. She and Chasins regularly socialized and played bridge with Horowitz and his wife during Horowitz's 12-year retirement from the concert stage. As a teen she met Hofmann, Godowski, and Rachmaninoff; later on she and Chasins helped Van Cliburn before his meteoric rise to fame. Later in life she continued to be an important member of New York's piano community, often hosting rising young pianists such as Evgeny Kissin and Lang Lang at her Upper West Side home.
She later became an accomplished teacher herself. Her pupils included the children of Arthur Rubinstein, who said her performances of Rachmaninoff's Preludes had him "flabbergasted by the colour, sweep and imagination and ... incredible technique. I cannot imagine anybody, including Rachmaninoff, playing the piano so beautifully".
For many years, she was on the faculty of the Manhattan School of Music, served as the Chair of the Piano Department, and was a member of its Board of Trustees. She was also sought out as a piano competition adjudicator.