Written by Robert Saxton in 1988 for piano left hand only.'The Chacony was commissioned by the Aldeburgh Festival and first performed there in 1988 by the American pianist Leon Fleisher. In rising to the challenge ofwriting for left hand alone Saxton has reduced the basic material (the underlying ground bass theme) to the simplest element: a whole tone scale. Thus the opening section gradually reveals via a clear indication that D major isthe central tonality of the work the scale through a series of hesitant gestures the main body of the piece bursting out of the tensions created in the intervals of the scale especially the tritone (which plays an importantpart in the melodic version throughout).As with say the finest variation sets or grounds of a composer like Byrd the considerable virtuosity of the keyboard writing always stems from the musical or intellectual stimulus andis never mere empty show. This is a virtuosic response to the challenge of the imposed limitations beautifully written for piano and culminating in a final section in which D is once more resoundingly affirmed as the centre ofthe work though with equal resonance the tritone has the last word.Duration c. 6mins.