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A Stanford grad and onetime software engineer with Cisco Systems, Teng quit her job two years ago to tour in support of her full-length debut, Waking Hour. Her bright, airy, melodic pop recalls Paula Cole and Tori Amos, and is arrayed in lush, dramatic arrangements of horns, violins, and cellos. The 27-year-old Asian-American pianist, who began playing at the age of five, displays increasing lyrical sophistication on her latest album, Warm Strangers. While the first half is a little heavy on inspirational, hang-in-there-kitty pop ballads, she shows greater facility with the wistful, Chapin-style bird's-eye folkpop on the second half. Teng even takes intriguingly offbeat turns on the a cappella "Passage," which richly imagines the fading memory of an accident victim, and the album-closing "The Atheist Christmas Carol," venerating "the season of bowing our heads in the wind/And knowing we are not alone in fear/Not alone in the dark."