Daniel Asia

Piano Trio

Scoring

violin, cello, piano

Duration 30 Minutes

Commissioned by

Philip Vance, in memory of Jeannette Vance

Performances

STOWE, VT
Elan Music Festival
Stowe VT

WORLD PREMIERE
Meadowmount Trio
Program Notes

Piano Trio is a work in three movements. Each has its own distinct shape, materials, and atmosphere, yet various motives, as well as textural ideas, create interlocking relationships between the first and last movements. The entire work lasts approximately thirty minutes, and was commissioned by Philip Vance in memory of his wife, Jeannette Mahoney Vance.

The first movement is a set of variations with a contrasting section. Starting rather tamely, the movement quickly turns more angular and rambunctious, yet always retaining a sense of playfulness. The two string instruments often work in tandem, either creating a single line between the two of them, or playing in similar rhythms. The rhythms are generally highly syncopated, dynamics change abruptly, and the sound is dry and clean.

The second movement is the heart of the work. In time-honored tradition, it takes the letters of Jeannette’s name, and creates a melody based on them. There are also allusions to folk songs, without any single tune ever quite becoming clear. There are also allusions to birdsongs (Jeannette was enamored of birds and nature) and older music. Also heard is a gentle melody over sliding chords, that has no final destination, but rather has a feeling of hovering. A catharsis does occur, but it is quickly folded back into the relative calm of gentle undulating stasis. The movement ends with a chorale and a brief coda, with the latter overlaying fragments of the movement with bell-like attacks in the piano, all receding in the distance.

The third movement is marked “Allegro energico”, and is appropriately quick-paced and light of texture. Like the first movement it is a set of variations with alternating sections, in this case of dance-like material, heard in the violin and cello, with piquant punctuation provided by the piano, and short lyrical sections with the violin and cello singing away. A brief coda brings the work to a quiet and delicate close.

Reviews

K. KEUFFEL JR., ARIZONA DAILY STAR
This century has given birth to only a handful of great piano trios. University of Arizona professor Daniel Asia’s may be one of them.

D. BUCKLEY, TUCSON CITIZEN
It was akin to the work of impressionist painters – the individual dots and fine strokes generated a sense of light, air, form, and space…