1, "Hungarian Dance"
"Hungarian Dance" is initially a collection of 21 pieces for piano four-hands, although the melody and style of each piece is not the same, but are mixed with the characteristics of Hungarian folk music and Gypsy folk music.
The rhythms are free, the melodies have a variety of decorations, the tempo changes are intense, with a certain degree of improvisation; the form, although there is no uniformity, but the three-part body is the most.
2, "Turkish March"
The Turkish March, for the Austrian musician Mozart's piano sonata No. 11 in A major (KV.331) of the third movement, also known as Alla Turca (Turkish Wind Rondo). Written in Munich or Vienna between 1781-1783.
3, "Bolero"
"Bolero" was composed in 1928, is Ravel's last dance work, is one of his best works of dance music, but also a masterpiece of twentieth-century French symphonic music.
The instruments needed for the performance are alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, piccolo, horn, organ, lap steel, oboe, English horn and clarinet.
4, No. 5 "Hungarian Dance"
No. 5 "Hungarian Dance", free rhythm, melody with a variety of decorations, tempo changes are intense, with a certain degree of improvisation, is Brahms's all works of the world's most widely known piece of music, at that time, he was in Vienna on the gypsy music of the place was quite interested in the gypsy music, and so he wrote down a lot of gypsy music melody.
In 1869, he began to publish a collection of "Hungarian Dances", in fact, most of the melodies were borrowed from gypsy music, edited and organized.
5, "Sicilian Dance"
"Sicilian Dance" (Sicilienne, for cello & piano, op. 78) is a kind of ancient dance music originated in Sicily, Italy in the 17th and 18th centuries. It is a slow, lyrical tune in 6/8 or 12/8 time, with a dotted rhythm, accompanied by a lot of broken chords, in a style similar to an idyll.