I have not heard Ms. Wang’s playing before this CD. I 
                  have, in part, been skeptical about the new influx of younger 
                  players, each of them being promoted by their major record labels 
                  in superlative prose that I cannot imagine anyone could live 
                  up to. However, after listening to this recital I would wholeheartedly 
                  endorse most of what I have read about Ms. Wang: here is a fully-fledged 
                  artist, with technique to burn and a maturity well beyond her 
                  years. 
                    
                  The recital is a collection of shorter works that Ms. Wang often 
                  plays as encores in concert. It begins with four works by Rachmaninov. 
                  The first, Étude-tableau in A minor, is characterized 
                  by quick-silver mood changes and syncopated, sudden sforzandos, 
                  all beautifully realized in this performance. In this, and the 
                  following Étude, Wang’s rapid passage work is unfailingly 
                  even and crystal-clear, and there is admirable attention to 
                  inner voices within the overall texture. The third work, Élégy 
                  in E-flat minor, is Rachmaninov in his most melancholic 
                  mood, played here with an almost unbearable sadness. I daresay 
                  that if heard as an encore, this performance would hold the 
                  room utterly spellbound. 
                    
                  Wang’s Scarlatti is just right, a proper Allegro which 
                  avoids the temptation - to which I often expect younger players 
                  to succumb - to play it so fast it becomes a hectic virtuoso 
                  showpiece. Instead, Wang captures all of the music’s lighthearted 
                  wit and playfulness. The performance of Albeniz’s Triana 
                  is lush and seductive, the stylish rubato wholly evocative of 
                  Albeniz’s beloved Spain. A complete recording of Iberia 
                  by Wang is a tempting prospect!  
                  The beginning of the Variations on a Theme from Carmen 
                  brought a moment of disappointment. This is arguably Horowitz’s 
                  best known transcription, and his performances immediately grab 
                  the listener by the scruff of the neck, only letting go after 
                  the final fistful of notes. Wang is far more understated at 
                  the beginning, which at first listening I took as a lack of 
                  intensity. Yet as the music progresses, Wang generates ever-increasing 
                  tension, and the final moments are as intense and powerful as 
                  I have ever heard. 
                    
                  I was again impressed by Wang’s ability naturally to convey 
                  the Viennese lilt and rubato of the Tritsch-Tratsch-Polka 
                  in Cziffra’s note-filled transcription. After that, Chopin’s 
                  Valse in C-sharp minor featured beguiling sotto voce 
                  playing that was supremely touching. 
                    
                  Each of the five short works by Scriabin offer different technical 
                  challenges, which Wang has fully mastered: she makes these difficult 
                  pieces sound effortless! Moreover, each conveys a completely 
                  different mood and atmosphere, here most tellingly conveyed. 
                  I sometimes find Scriabin’s music off-putting, but Wang’s 
                  performances fully drew me into Scriabin’s complicated, 
                  and sometimes convoluted, spirit. 
                    
                  Wang’s performances of the two largest transcriptions, 
                  L’Apprenti sorcier and Danse macabre, left 
                  me grinning from ear to ear! Her technique is awesome, yet never 
                  displayed for its own sake, but rather in the service of the 
                  music. Not once did I miss the orchestral versions of these 
                  works, such is Ms. Wang’s ability to create different 
                  colors and textures. 
                    
                  As you can surely tell, I was very much taken by Ms. Wang’s 
                  playing. I gladly endorse everything I have read and heard about 
                  this artist. She is an extremely accomplished artist, and I 
                  look forward to hearing her work for many years to come. 
                    
                  David A. McConnell  
                Contents list
                Sergei RACHMANINOV (1873 
                  - 1943) 
                  Étude-tableau in A minor, op. 39, no. 6 [2.31] 
                  
                  Étude-tableau in B minor, op. 39, no. 4 [2.31] 
                  
                  Élégie in E-flat minor, op. 3, no. 1 [4.44] 
                  
                  Étude-tableau in E-flat minor, op. 39, no. 5 [4.37] 
                  
                  Domenico SCARLATTI (1685 
                  - 1757) Allegro from Sonata in E Major, K455 
                  [1.44]
                  Christoph Willibald GLUCK 
                  (1714 - 1787) arr. Giovanni SGAMBATI (1841-1914) 
                  
                  Mélodie from Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice 
                  [3.01]
                  Isaac ALBÉNIZ (1860-1909) 
                  
                  Triana from Iberia, Book II [5.25]
                  Georges BIZET (1838-1875), 
                  arr. Vladimir HOROWITZ (1903-1989) 
                  Variations on a Theme from Carmen(Gypsy 
                  Song, Act II/White House Version) [3.39] 
                  Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828), 
                  arr. Franz LISZT (1811-1886) 
                  Gretchen am Spinnrade, D 118 [3.36] 
                  Johann STRAUSS (1825-1899), 
                  arr. György CZIFFRA 
                  (1921-1994) 
                  Tritsch-Tratsch-Polka, op. 214 [3.20] 
                  Frédéric CHOPIN 
                  (1810-1849) 
                  Valse in C-sharp minor, op. 64, no. 2 [3.49] 
                  Paul DUKAS (1865-1935), 
                  arr. Victor STAUB (1872-1953) 
                  
                  L’Apprenti sorcier [9.49] 
                  Alexander SCRIABIN (1872-1915) 
                  
                  Prélude in B major, op. 11, no. 11 [1.31] 
                  Prélude in B minor, op. 13, no. 6 [1.18] 
                  Prélude in G-sharp minor, op. 11, no. 12 [1.30] 
                  
                  Étude in G-sharp minor, op. 8, no. 9 [4.31] 
                  Poème in F-sharp major, op. 32, no. 1 [3.23] 
                  Camille SAINT-SAËNS 
                  (1835-1921), arr. Franz Liszt/Vladimir Horowitz 
                   
                  Dance macabre [7.52]