Piano Dance - A 20th Century
	Portrait
	
 Gloria Cheng
	(piano)
	
 TELARC
	CD-80549
	[72:07]
	Crotchet  
	
	
	
	
	
	
	Here's an engaging programme of 23 pieces for piano to entertain and intrigue
	the ear.
	
	Commencing with the glittering but acerbic Red Ribbon Dance by Joan
	Huong, powerful and forcefully driven, Cheng moves on to the William Albright's
	relaxed and slinky music with Sleepwalker's Shuffle from Dream
	Rags. Then comes another syncopated classic - Debussy's Golliwog's
	Cakewalk from Children's Corner.
	
	Cheng demonstrates an impressive technical and expressive capability but
	always concentrates on making the music dance, concerned with flow and rhythm.
	The programming is as unorthodox as it is imaginative. For instance, there
	is a group of three contrasting tangos: Stravinsky's somewhat sombrely
	introspective Tango; Samuel Barber's tentative and dreamy
	Hesitation-Tango from Souvenirs; and Per Norgard's strangely
	accented and slow and deliberate A Tortoise Tango (Without
	Jealousy).
	
	There are some familiar pieces (by tune if not by name) such as Poulenc's
	sophisticated and flighty Valse-Improvisations sur le nom de BACH;
	Ravel's elegant Waltz IV from Valses nobles and sentimentales;
	and Mompou's colourful Cancion y Danza No. 6.  But there are many
	more, not so well-known that nonetheless captivate the ear like: Paul Hindemith's
	teasing Shimmy from Suite 1922, Martinu's folkdance-like Polka
	in E major, Ligetti's quirky, quicksilver Hungarian Rock for harpsichord
	(Chaccone) in this arrangement for piano and synthesised piano; plus Scriabin's
	early rather formal Mazurka in D flat major, and George Antheil's
	wild Percussion Dance from La Femme de 100 Tétes.
	
	An intriguing and entertaining collection 
	
	Ian Lace