I'm young and working hard to fulfill my aspiration to be a professional. I was thinking that if I ever recorded and/or performed the Rachmaninoff's Third Piano Concerto I'd use the small cadenza as a commercial tactic. The thing is, in my proposed theory, the ossia cadenza is associated with mediocre, obscure pianists and their mediocre renditions of the concerto and the little one is associated with the legends (Horowitz, Gilels, Rachmaninoff himself, etc. all used the little one) and those who care about the music rather than being a showman (Rachmaninoff wrote the little one to replace the ossia which he thought didn't fit (I only partially agree with him there)).Even if you are playing the ossia just because you like it, there's always going to be the people who are thinking, "Ugh, he's so overblown and disregarding of Rachmaninoff's wishes!" And if you do the little one there will be the ones who think you're a wimp but also the ones who are thinking that you care more about the music than showing off. Note that this is just my theory supported with only some evidence. So do you think this is a valid commercial tactic? Or just useless due to how much audiences seem to love the ossia?