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             Johannes BRAHMS (1833-1897)  
               
              Piano Concerto no.3 in D major, after Violin Concerto op.77 (1879/2008) 
              arr. Lazić [39:03]  
              Two Rhapsodies, op.79 (1879): No.1 in B minor [9:02]; No.2 in G 
              minor [6:17]  
              Scherzo in E-flat minor, op.4 (1851) [10:58]  
                
              Dejan Lazić (piano)  
              Atlanta Symphony Orchestra/Robert Spano  
              rec. Symphony Hall, Woodruff Arts Center, Atlanta, USA (concerto) 
              and Frits Philips Muziekcentrum, Eindhoven, The Netherlands (solo 
              pieces); October 2009  
                
              CHANNEL CLASSICS CCS SA 29410 [66:10]   
                
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                In the long-forgotten 1946 Hollywood movie Humoresque, 
                  Joan Crawford plays a rich patroness of the arts - and of attractive 
                  young men. When asked about her taste in classical music, she 
                  offers – with a completely straight face - the immortally daft 
                  response that she likes “some symphonies ... most concertos”. 
                  Just think about it ...  
                   
                  That throw-away line neatly encapsulates a - thankfully not 
                  very widely shared - view that concertos are pretty well interchangeable. 
                  “Don’t like that one done on the violin? OK, we’ll change it 
                  to a piano ...” But, ridiculous idea though it seems when put 
                  in that way, that was, after all, exactly what no less a figure 
                  than Beethoven did when, frustrated by the relative commercial 
                  failure of his op.61 violin concerto, he turned it into an op.61a 
                  concerto for piano.  
                   
                  It doesn’t seem too long ago that I was enjoying an even more 
                  radical “new” piano concerto – a Rachmaninoff fifth that has 
                  been constructed from themes taken from his second symphony 
                  (see 
                  here). But the creative process on this new disc is not 
                  quite so unconventional, turning, as it does, Brahms’s well-loved 
                  violin concerto into a third piano concerto.  
                   
                  The soloist on this disc, 32 years old Croatian-born Dejan Lazić, 
                  was himself responsible for the transformation, taking five 
                  years over the project before its eventual completion in 2008. 
                  As he writes in the booklet notes, “I was intrigued by the idea 
                  of rendering it [the concerto] in an idiomatic version for piano 
                  and orchestra. The ultimate aim was clear: I wanted to perform 
                  it myself!”  
                   
                  Understandable though such a desire might be in its own terms, 
                  Lazić tries to justify his aim with a little pseudo-historical 
                  speculation. He tentatively suggests that the spark for Brahms’s 
                  music was less a desire to write a concerto specifically for 
                  the violin than a wish to write one for his close friend Joseph 
                  Joachim – who just happened to be a violinist but who might 
                  equally have been “a cellist or a clarinettist, or even ... 
                  a pianist!” Hence, argues our soloist, the music itself is more 
                  important than the solo instrument that happens to play it. 
                  Moreover, with Brahms’s own track record of re-arranging and 
                  transcribing compositions such as his G major violin sonata 
                  (for cello) or his clarinet sonatas (for viola), Lazić 
                  ventures to hope that the composer himself “would not have anything 
                  against my idea.” And so - voila! - here we have the 
                  “new” Brahms/Lazić piano concerto...  
                   
                  The result is a surprisingly convincing piece of rescoring that 
                  is oddly enough, to my ears at least, more reminiscent of Brahms’s 
                  first piano concerto of 1858 than that of his second of 1881, 
                  even though the 1878 violin concerto is far closer in its period 
                  of composition to the latter rather than to the former.  
                   
                  As you might expect, the very different inherent characteristics 
                  of the solo instruments do make a significant difference to 
                  the overall tone of the rescored piece. Thus the piano creates 
                  a sense of greater drama in the opening movement while in succeeding 
                  adagio its more limpid qualities are unable to match 
                  the singing lyricism of the violin.  
                   
                  As Constable Dogberry wisely observes in Much ado about nothing, 
                  however, “comparisons are odorous [sic.]” and this disc is certainly 
                  one that is best enjoyed entirely on its own terms. Dejan Lazić 
                  has, not surprisingly, the full mastery of the work and the 
                  support he receives from Robert Spano and the Atlanta Symphony 
                  Orchestra is wholehearted and exemplary. The separately-tracked 
                  audience applause is indicative of the pleasurable surprise 
                  and sheer enjoyment that the general listener is likely to derive 
                  from this disc.  
                   
                  Let’s give the final thoughts to Dejan Lazić himself: “... Throughout 
                  the piece ... my thought [was] to imagine what Brahms would 
                  do ... to translate [his] unique musical language into a new 
                  setting without losing any of its original musical value and, 
                  in addition, to give pianists an equal chance to perform and 
                  enjoy this wonderful music the same way violinists do for exactly 
                  130 years now.”  
                   
                  Certainly, on the basis of this highly successful disc, he has 
                  succeeded.  
                   
                  Rob Maynard 
                see also review by James 
                  L. Zychowicz 
                  
               
             
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