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MUSIC, Worbey and Farrell: Deviations on the Piano, Assembly rooms (VENUE 20) ****Take two concert pianists and some of the finest music ever written, sprinkle with wit - and you have this classy entertainment.Steven Worbey and Kevin Farrell share "the finest piano" in Edinburgh, and possibly the smallest stool. They also share a passion for the instrument. Yes, they introduce numbers with humour and charm, and are as likely to play the Murder She Wrote theme as Saint-Saens' Carnival of the Animals. But they're serious musicians, able to make the most complex compositions sound easy.A keyboard cam's wall projection shows just how much work they're putting in, their flexible fingers flying up and down the piano, passing over and under one another to produce the richest of sounds.Worbey and Farrell wear their art lightly because they know their stuff - their joy is evident in the beatific concentration that overcame them when playing Widor's Toccata, usually heard only on organs at weddings. And Bach's Prelude in C had a crispness that cut through the room's rather sticky air.This show is educational too - who knew that Percy Grainger, composer of In An English Country Garden, was Australian (apart from an Australian in the audience)? Or that Fifties and Sixties piano megastar Russ Conway taught himself the piano during a stretch in borstal?Worbey and Farrell's latest work, and the source of the show's title, involves 24 variations on Paganini's Caprice. Sublime, sophisticated, surprising, they made the perfect capper to a superb show.Until 15 August. Today 2:45pm