Three Exotic Trios

Press Release: Music for Three, 1, February 9, 2010

Who: Brightmusic Society of Oklahoma

 

What: “Music for Three I” – a chamber music concert presenting three piano trios, featuring violin, cello and piano

 

When: Tuesday, February 9th, 2010 at 7:30 p.m.

 

Where: Saint Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral, 127 NW 7th at Robinson, Oklahoma City

 

 

Brightmusic Presents “Music for Three I” – An Evening Featuring Three Piano Trios by Franz Josef Haydn, Eric Ewazen and Antonín Dvořák

 

Oklahoma City’s own chamber music ensemble – Brightmusic – will present its fourth concert of the 2009-10 season featuring piano trios from three different musical eras – a Classical trio by Austrian composer Franz Josef Haydn, a 20th Century trio by living American composer Eric Ewazen, and a Romantic trio by Czech composer Antonín Dvořák. This is the first of two Brightmusic concerts that will focus on piano trios, not only in the traditional combination with violin and cello, but also in combination with trumpet, clarinet, oboe, viola, double bass and a tenor vocalist.

 

The works on this program are Haydn’s Piano Trio No. 43 in C major for violin, cello and piano, Hob XV:27; Ewazen’s Trio for trumpet, violin and piano; and Dvořák’s Trio No. 4 in E minor, op. 90 (the “Dumky” Trio) for violin, cello and piano.

 

The Brightmusic musicians who will appear are: Gregory Lee (violin), Tomasz Zieba (cello), Michael Anderson (trumpet) and Amy I-Lin Cheng (piano.)

 

The concert will take place on Tuesday, February 9th, 2010 at 7:30 pm at St. Paul’s Episcopal Cathedral, 127 NW 7th at Robinson. Admission is free, although contributions are always appreciated. A reception with the musicians will follow the concert.

 

Supplemental Information concerning the February 9, 2010 Concert

 

Brightmusic Musicians Appearing:

 

Violin: Dr. Gregory Lee, concertmaster of the Oklahoma City Philharmonic and assistant professor of violin at the University of Oklahoma.
 

Cello: Tomasz Zieba, associate principal cellist of the Oklahoma City Philharmonic and an instructor of cello at Oklahoma City University.
 

Trumpet: Michael Anderson, a member of the Oklahoma City Philharmonic and the Oklahoma City Jazz Orchestra, and an associate professor of trumpet at Oklahoma City University.
 

Piano: Amy I-Lin Cheng, a concert pianist, formerly the head of the piano program at Oklahoma City University and a featured soloist with the Oklahoma City Philharmonic; Co-Artistic Director of Brightmusic.

 

Musical Works To Be Performed:

 

Franz Josef Haydn, Piano Trio No. 43 in C major for violin, cello and piano, Hob XV:27: Franz Josef Haydn (1732-1809) was an Austrian composer who epitomizes the Classical era of classical music. He was prolific, composing 104 symphonies, as well as hundreds of works of chamber music, choral music and piano music. He was a good friend of the younger Mozart; each of them regarded the other with esteem. He was also a teacher of Beethoven and he regarded the young Beethoven highly, although Beethoven did not always reciprocate that goodwill. Haydn wrote 45 trios for piano, violin and cello, 43 of which survive. One scholar has called Haydn’s late piano trios (including the C major trio that Brightmusic will perform) “along with the Mozart concertos, the most brilliant piano works before Beethoven.” Haydn wrote the C major trio in 1794-95 for one of Clementi’s virtuosic pupils and published it in 1797. It features three movements: Allegro in classic sonata form; Andante containing radiant harmonies in A major; and Presto full of pure joie de vivre.

 

Eric Ewazen, Trio for trumpet, violin and piano: Eric Ewazen is a living American composer, born in 1954, who received his B.M. at the Eastman School of Music and his M.M. and D.M.A. degrees at The Julliard School, where he has been a faculty member since 1980. His numerous works for soloists, chamber ensembles and orchestras have been performed around the world. The website ArkivMusic.com lists 57 different CDs on which Dr. Ewazen’s compositions appear. He composed his Trio for Trumpet, Violin and Piano in 1992. It has been recorded twice, once on Albany Records and once on Cala Records. For more information about Eric Ewazen, see www.ericewazen.com.

 

Antonín Dvořák, Trio No. 4 in E minor, op. 90 (the “Dumky” Trio): Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904) was a 19th Century Romantic and Czech nationalist composer. Although he is best known for his symphonies and his cello concerto, he displayed considerable skill in writing for chamber ensemble. The “Dumky” Trio, composed in 1890-91, is one of Dvořák’s most famous chamber music works. Its nickname is the plural of dumka, a Ukrainian lament; and dumka is a diminutive of duma, a Ukrainian epic or ballad. Dvořák combined various elements of the dumka or duma and produced a work that alternates slow, melancholy sections with vigorous Slavic folk dances. This trio features six dumky, each in a different key.

 

 

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