Classical Music | Piano Music

Johannes Brahms

Variations on a theme by Paganini, Op. 35, Book 1  Play

Mikayel Gabrielyan Piano

Recorded on 11/20/2000, uploaded on 09/01/2009

Musician's or Publisher's Notes

Variations on a Theme of Paganini        Johannes Brahms

Johannes Brahms' wrote the Variations on a Theme of Paganini in 1862-3 and it would be his last set of variations for the piano. Brahms actually titled the piece Studien (Studies) to emphasize that the work was an exploration of the technical possibilities of the piano. No doubt the work is extremely demanding of a performer's technique to say the least. Whereas, Brahms' prior set of variations on the theme by Handel was a great testament to tradition, the Paganini variations was, conversely, a bravura display of virtuosity as practiced by the "New German" school of composers (Franz Liszt being at the forefront of the group), with which Brahms was mostly in opposition.

The piece is based on the famous theme of Paganini's Caprice No. 24 in A minor. It has been the subject of variation sets many times since its composition. The most notable are those by Brahms, Liszt, and Rachmaninoff. Brahms' set is divided into two books each containing the theme, fourteen variations and a coda. To Brahms' friends, the piece was known as the "Hexenvariationen" or "Witchcraft Variations," because of the astonishing feats it required the performer to make. It was Clara Schumann that thus nicknamed the work.

The Paganini Variations was essentially Brahms' attempt to "out-Weimer the Weimarites," as Malcolm McDonald put it, on their own ground. This probably arose from his friendship with Carl Tausig, a student and ardent supporter of Liszt, and whose piano playing Brahms admired. The choice of the theme was also part of this gesture as Liszt himself had previously used the theme in his own set of variations.

The piece presents varying technical challenges to the pianists, including studies in double sixths, double thirds, wide leaps between hands or with only one hand, trills at the top of chords, polyrhythms, octaves, and the list goes on. Most of the strictly technical demands are made in Book I, in which this is the focus. Book II, on the other hand, is more concerned with the compositional development of the theme. While still challenging, technique recedes to the background allowing for Brahms' gift of melodic development to come to the fore.

Together with the Handel Variations, these two pieces established Brahms as the greatest composer of variations in his time. Together they are the perfect example of the "old" and "new" approach to piano composition in the Romantic era.

Joseph DuBose