For 
                  Children is a fascinating document. Its value transcends pedagogy or ethnomusicology, 
                  for the composer sets about documenting his own very personal 
                  responses to the folk melodies, without changing their basic 
                  simplicity. Repeated verses enable Bartók to set a different 
                  slant on the various tunes by a variety of methods. Markings 
                  such as rubato and parlando enable a sense of freedom to speak.
                Pianist 
                  Dezsö Ránki is fully equipped for the task of realising the 
                  elusive nature of these pieces. While able to project the simplicity 
                  so often found here - try the very first piece of Volume 1 – 
                  there are four volumes by the way - his variety of touch is 
                  such that boredom is forever kept away. His 'hard' staccato 
                  is exactly that without being hammered – try track 55, an Allegro 
                  from Volume 3. Rhythm, so vital in this composer's music, becomes 
                  its very life-pulse. Importantly, also, Ranki is able to inject 
                  real light and shade into these infinitely varied little pieces. 
                  Repeated listening reveals their simplicity to be deceptive. 
                  As in the case of fairy tales, the surface charm conceals deeper 
                  truths.
                As 
                  a method of combining primitive melody with more modern harmony, 
                  these pieces are textbook examples. The composer wrote in 1931: 
                  'the more primitive the melody, the more idiosyncratic can be 
                  the harmonisation or accompaniment'. I would suggest that it 
                  is the universe of possibilities that gives the individual works 
                  their infectious exuberance – a spirit of discovery shared fully 
                  by the pianist-interpreter here. The composer's achievement 
                  is all the more remarkable because the folkish character of 
                  the pieces is not only honoured but positively enhanced.
                Peter 
                  Cahn's booklet notes refer to a 'playful immediacy' which is 
                  'a natural element of both folk music and of children'. It is 
                  everywhere to be found here.
                The 
                  analogue recording is excellent, with great sense of presence. 
                  Warner Apex has done Bartók a great service in reissuing these 
                  performances, each one a little jewel.
                Colin Clarke