Work samples

  • All in the Sound: II. The Poem
    All In The Sound, 2 Songs for Soprano and Piano (2017): II. The Poem Music by Peter Dayton, text by William Carlos Williams Katie Procell - Soprano, Valerie Hsu - Piano Program Notes: This song set was commissioned by soprano Katie Procell for a concert of American songs. Selected by Procell, these two concise poems sum up the nature of Williams's poetry: empathic, mystical descriptions of nature, a concern for the form and substance of poetry, an elevation of everyday objects, and a celebration of human sexuality. All of those aspects are present in these two small poems, a tiny window into Williams's vast world. This work is dedicated with gratitude to Katie. ''The Shadow'' By William Carlos Williams, from THE COLLECTED POEMS: VOLUME I, 1909-1939, copyright ©1938 by New Directions Publishing Corp. Reprinted by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp.
  • Fresh in the Triumph
    A performance of Fresh in the Triumphy (2018), after Virginia Woolf's "Mrs. Dalloway", at the album release concert for "All in the Sound: New Vocal Music by Peter Dayton" (Navona Records, 2023). This performance took place on Saturday, March 11, 2023 at Baltimore Civic Works Clifton Mansion. Learn more about the album here: https://www.navonarecords.com/catalog... This concert was supported by a grant from the Maryland State Arts Council https://msac.org. Ben Hawker -Tenor Aaron Thacker - Piano From the album liner notes by Dr. Ryan Koons: Following his 2022 release, Stories Out of Cherry Stems, this latest collection of vocal music by Baltimore-based composer Peter Dayton reinforces his establishment as a mature and formidable talent in the world of art song. ALL IN THE SOUND captures the heart of the genre: duet between voice and accompaniment.
  • Lost Daughter: Songs on the Myth of Persephone for Soprano, Flute, Viola, and Harp: IV. Demeter &
    A video of the world premiere performance of Lost Daughter, Songs on the Myth of Persephone (2020/2021) for Soprano, Flute, Viola, and Harp by Peter Dayton, texts by Oscar Wilde, Rita Dove, Edna St. Vincent-Millay, Alfred Lord Tennyson, and Louise Glück. Performed on Saturday, April 30, 2022 at Clifton Mansion in Baltimore, MD. This video records a performance of the fourth movement: IV. Demeter & (text by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. Text adapted and arranged by Peter Dayton) Katie Procell - Soprano Amanda Dame - Flute Eric D'Alessandro - Viola Erin Baker - Harp These artists recorded this piece on "Stories Out of Cherry Stems: Katie Procell sings works by Peter Dayton" (2022, Navona Records). Learn more about the album here: https://peterdaytonmusic.com/cherrystems Demeter and Persephone from “Demeter, and Other Poems” by Alfred Lord Tennyson (1889). This poem is in the Public Domain.
  • Music & Memory
    Music & Memory
    Music & Memory (2022) 12"x9" Tombow Water-based Dual-brushed Pens on Grumbacher Paper Tombow Superspectrum Series: Violet (Blue-Violet, Violet, Violet-Red) https://hoodleoos.com

About Peter

Baltimore City

Described by the Baltimore Sun as having “a refined sense of melodic arcs and harmonic motion,” Peter Dayton “continually creates fresh and interesting sounds” (Opera News) in his compositions. His works have been performed around the world, primarily in the Americas and Europe. He hopes to engage with his community through concertizing and… more

Concert: The Saunter into Autumn - New Songs for Fall (October 13, 2023)

A celebration of the change of season: a concert of songs on the autumn themes of transition, mortality, and nature. The Saunter into Autumn, which took place on Friday, October 13, 2023 at Area 405 in Baltimore, featured an eclectic program of contemporary art song sung by some of Baltimore's best and brightest artists: sopranos Katie Procell and Arianna Arnold sang works by Baltimore-based composers Peter Dayton and Michael Rickelton, as well as works by Tania León and Carl Smith. Baritone (and pianist) Aaron Thacker gave the world premiere of Dayton's "In the Desert" song cycle, setting poetry by Stephen Crane. Peter Dayton and established collaborative pianists Valerie Hsu and Aaron Thacker accompanied these brilliant singers.

This concert was supported by a grant from the Maryland State Arts Council. https://msac.org

 

Modernist Songs, for Soprano & Piano (2023)*                    Peter Dayton (b. 1990)

  1. Night                                                                                  Text by H.D. (1886-1961)
  2. Postscript                                                                   Text by Hart Crane (1899-1932)

Arianna Arnold – Soprano | Peter Dayton – Piano

Atwood Songs, for Soprano & Piano (2018)                                      Tania León (b. 1943)

  1. Notes towards a poem that can never be written     Texts by Margaret Atwood (b. 1939)
  2. Memory
  3. Eating Fire
  4. Habitation
  5. Four Evasions

Arianna Arnold – Soprano | Valerie Hsu – Piano

In the Desert, for Dramatic Baritone & Piano (2023)*                           Peter Dayton        

  1. Poem III (“In the desert…”)                                    Texts by Stephen Crane (1871-1900)
  2. Poem XXI (“There was, before me…”)
  3. Poem XLII (“I walked in a desert…”)
  4. Poem CXXV (“A row of thick pillars…”)                                                                                                           

Aaron Thacker – Bass-Baritone | Valerie Hsu – Piano

--Intermission--

Time & Memory: Suite for Voice & Piano (2012)                       Michael Rickelton (b.1983)

  1. Lulled by the Drift of Rain                                                                Texts by William S. Trout (1909-1980)
  2. Sic Transit
  3. Intermezzo (reflection on March)
  4. September Noon
  5. Intermezzo (reflection on Abendrot)
  6. Fourth Act
  7. In March                                                                                                                                             

Katie Procell – Soprano | Aaron Thacker – Piano

When Israel out of Egypt Came, for Voice & Keyboard (2015)              Carl Smith (b. 1949)

                                                                                Text by A.E. Housman (1859-1936)

Katie Procell – Soprano | Peter Dayton – Piano

(Encore: In a Landscape, for Piano (1948), by John Cage (1912-1992))

*Indicates a world premiere

  • Night, for Soprano & Piano (2023), text by H.D.
    A performance of Night (2023), music by Peter Dayton (b. 1990) text by H.D. (1886-1961), at "The Saunter in the Autumn: New Songs for Fall". This performance took place on Friday, October 13, 2023 at Area 405, Baltimore, MD. Arianna Arnold - Soprano Peter Dayton - Piano
  • Postscript, for Soprano & Piano (2013/2023), text by Hart Crane
    A performance of Postscript (2013/2023), music by Peter Dayton (b. 1990) text by Hart Crane (1899-1932), at "The Saunter in the Autumn: New Songs for Fall". This performance took place on Friday, October 13, 2023 at Area 405, Baltimore, MD. Arianna Arnold - Soprano Peter Dayton - Piano
  • Atwood Songs, for Soprano & Piano (2018) by Tania León, texts by Margaret Atwood
    A performance of Atwood Songs (2018), music by Taiania León (b. 1943) text by A. E. Housman (1859-1936), at "The Saunter in the Autumn: New Songs for Fall". This performance took place on Friday, October 13, 2023 at Area 405, Baltimore, MD. Arianna Arnold - Soprano Valerie Hsu - Piano 1. Notes towards a poem that can never be written 2. Memory 3. Eating Fire 4. Habitation 5. Four Evasions “Notes Towards a Poem That Can Never Be Written” by Margaret Atwood, from the collection Selected Poems II, 1976-1986 published by Houghton Mifflin. © 1987 by Magaret Atwood. “Memory” & “Four Evasions” by Margaret Atwood, from the collection You Are Happy originally published by Harper & Row © 1974 by Margaret Atwood. “Eating Fire” & “Habitation” by Margaret Atwood, from the collection Selected Poems I, 1965-1975 published by Houghton Mifflin. © 1976 by Magaret Atwood. All rights reserved.
  • In the Desert, for Baritone & Piano (2023), texts by Stephen Crane
    A performance of In the Desert (2023), music by Peter Dayton (b. 1990) text by Stephen Crane (1871-1900), at "The Saunter in the Autumn: New Songs for Fall". This performance took place on Friday, October 13, 2023 at Area 405, Baltimore, MD. Aaron Thacker - Baritone Valerie Hsu - Piano I. Poem III (“In the desert…”) II. Poem XXI (“There was, before me…”) III. Poem XLII (“I walked in a desert…”) IV. Poem CXXV (“A row of thick pillars…”)
  • Time & Memory: Suite for High Voice & Piano (2012), by Michael Rickelton, texts by William S. Trout
    A performance of Time & Memory: Suite for High Voice & Piano (2012), music by Michael Rickelton (b. 1983) texts by William S. Trout (1909-1980), at "The Saunter in the Autumn: New Songs for Fall". This performance took place on Friday, October 13, 2023 at Area 405, Baltimore, MD. Katie Procell - Soprano Aaron Thacker - Piano I. Lulled by the Drift of Rain II. Sic Transit III. Intermezzo (reflection on March) IV. September Noon V. Intermezzo (reflection on Abendrot) VI. Fourth Act VII. In March
  • When Israel out of Egypt came (2015) by Carl Smith for Soprano & Piano, text by A. E. Housman
    A performance of When Israel out of Egypt came (2015), music by Carl Smith (b. 1949) text by A. E. Housman (1859-1936), at "The Saunter in the Autumn: New Songs for Fall". This performance took place on Friday, October 13, 2023 at Area 405, Baltimore, MD. Katie Procell - Soprano Peter Dayton - Piano
  • Encore: In a Landscape (1948) by John Cage, performed by Peter Dayton
    An encore performance of In a Landscape (1948), by John Cage (1912-1992), at "The Saunter in the Autumn: New Songs for Fall". This performance took place on Friday, October 13, 2023 at Area 405, Baltimore, MD. Peter Dayton - Piano

Album: All in the Sound: New Vocal Music by Peter Dayton (2023, Navona Records)

Release Date: March 10, 2023

Following his 2022 release, STORIES OUT OF CHERRY STEMS, this latest collection of vocal music by Baltimore-based composer Peter Dayton reinforces his establishment as a mature and formidable talent in the world of art song. ALL IN THE SOUND captures the heart of the genre: duet between voice and accompaniment. Characteristically and integrally, Dayton’s songs exhibit internal compositional logics of pervasive rhythmic patterns and intervallic relationships that create music that still viscerally satisfies. The album takes listeners on a captivating journey through physical, emotional, and abstract imagery. Triumphantly, Dayton’s music realizes the poignancies possible in the duet that is art song.

"This collection of vocal music comes from the imaginative mind of composer Peter Dayton, who specializes in creating fresh contemporary repertoire for voice and accompaniment...the boldly innovative "The Second Coming," with text by Yeats... merited an instant replay... Dayton, a rugged individualist, proces he can also create a convincing genre composition, although it still bears his stamp of sophistication." - Joshua Rosenblum, Opera News October 2023

Liner Notes:

Hot on the heels of his 2021 Stories out of Cherry Stems, this latest vocal music album from Baltimore-based composer Peter Dayton continues to establish him as a mature and formidable talent in the art song world. All in the Sound drills down into the heart of the genre: duet between voice and accompaniment. Dayton’s music realizes the achingly poignant possibilities inherent in this duet.

The work of this album is made all the sweeter given its context. Every piece was recorded in summer 2021, shortly after vaccines for COVID-19 became widely accessible in the United States. For the featured musicians, this album was the first in-person recording project they were able to undertake in over a year. The joy of social reconnection and returning to communal musicmaking is palpable across the album. In addition to the communities established within the recording studio for this project, community resonates across the album in other ways. Many pieces have been commissioned by friends, such as the title song set “All in the Sound,” commissioned by the soprano Katie Procell who performs it; or “Fresh in the Triumph,” commissioned by the husband of a dear friend for his spouse’s birthday. Similarly, Dayton composed “A Red, Red Rose” as a meaningful gift for dear friends – an engaged couple geographically separated for months by the pandemic.​

Often in reaction to the text he has chosen to set, Dayton begins his compositional process by developing an internal logic for each composition. For example, “Evening,” the third movement from the cycle “Just a Leaf: Three Natural Songs,” rests on a foundation of continual expansion and collapse between the intervals of a fourth and a sixth, most audible in the accompaniment. From the germinative seed of these alternating intervals, the piece grows into an evocative depiction of a winter evening with trees singing in the wind. His approach echoes the way some poets find it easier to expand their creativity by using “restrictive” poetic forms defined by rhyming or metric conventions. 

This internal-logic approach also ensures that Dayton stays creatively fresh when composing accompaniment – especially for the piano. Perhaps because of his facility with improvisation, he finds it all too easy to fall into instinctual voicings, hand positions, or registrations when playing piano. In reaction, his compositional approach results in sometimes extremely challenging piano parts. Rejecting musical complacency, he writes for the piano in ways that are at once complex, technically challenging, and musically interesting. 

For Dayton, the technique of first establishing a piece’s internal logic is vital for musical success. He notes that he prefers not to compose exclusively using the metric of what he “likes” or what sounds “good” or “natural.” Were he to take this approach, he declares laughingly, his entire output would luxuriate in a “soup” of minor ninth chords. Instead, working within pre-established restrictions facilitates his creative decision-making. Inside the rules he sets for himself, he measures success when a piece also becomes viscerally satisfying to the senses. And this album does not disappoint. 

The care and attention that Dayton uses to craft each single movement can also be found in his organization of this album. Listeners will perceive several different trajectories or threads connecting the album together – for example, the trajectory of the poets whose texts Dayton sets. The first six songs and cycles feature American modernist poets, before transitioning in “Like a Red, Red Rose” to poets from the British Isles. Of particular note, Dayton himself wrote the text for the closing piece, “Fresh in the Triumph,” based on Virginia Woolf’s novel Mrs. Dalloway. Woolf’s novel establishes a pessimistic refrain, quoting a funereal song, “Fear no more…” from Shakespeare’s play Cymbeline, embodying the fatalistic notion that only death can be a release from care, toil, and fear. In his own words, Dayton rebuts this sentiment, emphasizing the transcendent quality our passing moments take on. Here, Ben Hawker’s soaring Broadway-style tenor suggests that we can instead survive in those instants forever.

Another trajectory is that of instrumentation. Dayton plays with our expectations as audiences of art song, juxtaposing the “traditional” instrumentation of voice and piano with other instrumentations: voice and violin, voice and harp, voice and guitar, and voice and celesta. Piano accompaniment bookends the album, and the other instrumental accompaniments lie at the album’s heart. The inclusion of the penultimate song cycle “The Second Coming,” a piece for horn and four low voices, augments this contrast. These comparisons collectively reveal the hallmark intimacy and community at the heart of Dayton’s music.​

If the poems and the instrumentation form the “warp” and “weft” of the tapestry that is All in the Sound, the route through the texts provides the tapestry with its “color.” For this album, Dayton presents a “color wheel” that contrasts the power, beauty, and rhetorical impact of the poetic imagery. “All in the Sound” and “Just a Leaf” evoke emotion using natural imagery. “Botticellian Trees,” with delicious text painting in the violin, continues in this nature image-based vein, before transitioning to the increasingly abstract “If They Delight” and “Beyond Dimension.” “Like a Red, Red Rose” features an almost perfect Venn diagram of physical, emotional, and abstract imagery. In contrast, the almost constant rhythmic churning of the celesta in “Wilde Colours” marries the physical senses with the emotions, and “The Second Coming” is literally occult. Dayton closes the album with the sharp, poignant, tear-inducing “Fresh in the Triumph,” which uses the language of 1990s folk-pop Broadway musicals to craft a clear counterargument to the fog-filled chromatic harmonies of “The Second Coming.” In this closing piece—and the album as a whole—Dayton has made robust, powerful contributions to the world of art song that will continue to inspire. 

-Dr. Ryan A. Koons

August, 2022

  • All in the Sound: I. The Shadow
    All in the Sound, two songs on texts by William Carlos Williams, for Soprano and Piano Total duration ca. 3’15” Published 2017 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Two movement work I. The Shadow II. The Poem This song set was commissioned by soprano Katie Procell for a concert of American songs. Selected by Procell, these two concise poems sum up the nature of Williams's poetry: empathic, mystical descriptions of nature, a concern for the form and substance of poetry, an elevation of everyday objects, and a celebration of human sexuality. All of those aspects are present in these two small poems, a tiny window into Williams's vast world. This work is dedicated with gratitude to Katie. ''The Shadow'' By William Carlos Williams, from THE COLLECTED POEMS: VOLUME I, 1909-1939, copyright ©1938 by New Directions Publishing Corp. Reprinted by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp.
  • Just a Leaf, Three Natural Songs for Tenor & Piano: I. Invitation Standing
    Just A Leaf, Three Natural Songs, for Tenor & Piano Total duration ca. 8’30 Published 2019 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Three-movement work I. Invitation Standing (text by Paul Blackburn) II. Winter Vocative (text by William Bronk) III. Evening (text – “To Praise the Music” – by William Bronk) This set of songs explore contrasting moods and emotions, using the imagery of leaves, trees, and branches as its conduit. In each of the songs, the natural vegetation is treated both literally and symbolically, reflecting and amplifying the emotions that the tone of each poem establishes. In the breathless excitement of Invitation Standing, the leaf becomes a kind of passkey, a necessary token of vitality and the entrance of spring (“an April leaf”) – to whom the invitation is addressed is ambiguous, possibly the reader, possibly the season of Spring itself, in either case the leaf is a symbol of joyous growth, no matter the conditions.
  • If They Delight: for Soprano & Piano: 2. Spacious ("in one direction there is the sun and the moon...")
    If They Delight, texts by Gertrude Stein from “Stanzas in Meditation” Total duration ca. 6’ Published 2017 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Three movement work 1. Brightly “Should they may be…” 2. Spacious “In one direction there is the sun…” 3. Playfully “Now only think three times roses green and blue…” The Stanzas in Meditation, a long multi-part poem, contains some of Stein’s clearest and most beautiful combinations of words in her hermetic style. This musical work sets Stanza XV from Part 2 of the Stanzas in Meditation, a text that dwells on “they,” on others, their delight, their contemplation, the way that they look and speak. The text is lovingly observational, and, like music, gestures at emotion through sound, symbol, and color, leaving the exact meaning to the listener alone.
  • Botticellian Trees, for Soprano & Violin: II. Botticellian Trees
    Botticellian Trees, four songs on texts by William Carlos Williams, for Soprano and Violin Total duration ca. 10’ Published 2015 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Four movement work I. The Locust Tree in Flower (First Version) II. The Botticellian Trees III. Winter Trees IV. The Locust Tree in Flower (Second Version) Premiered on Oct. 21, 2015 in Baltimore, MD By Sara Woodward and Ledah Finck I had long struggled to find poems by Williams that I felt could be musically set. Williams’ conversational tone makes his poetry generally better for speaking than singing. These pastoral poems, however, gave me an opening into Williams’s world. Not technically a four seasons piece, the text’s (and music’s) transformation between the first and last movements gives the group of songs both a cyclic sense, and a forward progression.
  • Hidden Texts, for Tenor & Guitar: 2. Do Not Be Ashamed
    Do Not Be Ashamed, text by Wendell Berry Total duration ca. 5’30” Published 2017 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Wendell Berry’s poem “Do Not Be Ashamed” is both illustrative and a didactic. It externalizes the psychological world, painting a nocturnal picture of the addressee’s privacy being intruded on by a hostile, vaguely panopticon-like outside force. It speaks to the experience of the socially rejected and disenfranchised, individuals whose lack of conformity, whose very identity is questioned. Against this bleak procrustean scenario, Berry offers that belief in oneself, truth, radical honesty, and determination overcome the malicious forces that seek to destroy us as unique individuals, ending the poem with a calmly breaking day. Text Copyright © 2012 by Wendell Berry, from New Collected Poems. Reprinted by permission of Counterpoint Press. All Rights Reserved.
  • Like a Red, Red Rose, for Soprano & Harp
    Like a Red, Red, Rose High Voice, Harp Total duration ca. 2’50” Published 2020 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work This short song is dedicated to my friends Jeffrey and Jane – Jeffrey, being one of my oldest friends and dating Jane, who has hosted an annual Burns Nicht for years. I was able to attend some of the Baltimore Burns Nichts and had the pleasure of reciting this poem. On the occasion of Jane moving away from Baltimore amid the COVID-19 crisis, I composed this as a small gift and a hope that these two remarkable people can be reunited in a better future. Like a Red, Red Rose by Robert Burns (1794) is a poem in the public domain.
  • Wilde Colours, for Soprano & Celesta: III. Blue, Gold, Grey, Ochre, Yellow
    Wilde Colours, texts by Oscar Wilde Soprano & Celesta (5-octave) Total duration ca. 9’45” Published 2020 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Three movement work I. Red, White, Yellow, Gold II. Grey, Black, Brown III. Blue, Gold, Grey, Ochre, Yellow After working with her on multiple projects, I was honored when soprano Arianna Arnold reached out to me about creating some new text settings for her to sing. Inclined towards Gothic poetry, she suggested several options of poems by Edgar Allan Poe. I began setting Poe’s The Valley of Unrest, but lost control of the piece and ended up composing a work for mixed chorus! While that work is also, rightfully dedicated to Arianna, I still had the mission of completing a solo text setting she could sing in front of me. Staying in a similar dramatic register, I decided on three Gothic, sensual, atmospheric poems by Oscar Wilde, that seemed to capture a similar ethos to Poe’s poems.
  • The Second Coming, for Vocal Quartet & Horn
    The Second Coming, text by William Butler Yeats for TTBB & Horn Total duration ca. 6’ Published 2018 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Nearly a century after The Second Coming was written, it seems as relevant as ever. Written in the context of the aftermath of the First World War and beginning of the Irish War of Independence, Yeats depicts a world in chaos, out of balance, where “things fall apart; the center cannot hold,” and where indifference overtakes the good and the evil among us are “filled with passionate intensity.” His apocalyptic vision, (“a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi”) draws on his lifelong relationship to mysticism, astrology, and the occult, to create a hybrid Sphinx and whore of Babylon creature, a symbol of the end-times Yeats seems to be preparing himself to witness.
  • Fresh in the Triumph, for Tenor & Piano
    Fresh in the Triumph (2018), for Tenor and Piano Text by Peter Dayton, after Virginia Woolf This song was a labor of love – commissioned by the husband of a dear friend of mine for that friend’s birthday, Fresh In The Triumph is a song inspired by Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway, my friend Yancey’s favorite book. A refrain throughout the book is a section from a song in Shakespeare’s Cymbelline: Fear no more the heat o’the sun, Nor the furious winter’s rages; Thou they worldly task hast done, Home art gone, and ta’en thy wages: Golden lads and girls all must, As chimney-sweepers, come to dust. It is a funereal song that suggests that the dead fear nothing, that death is a release from care, toil, and fear. Against that fatalistic notion (and more appropriately celebratory for a birthday), Fresh In The Triumph emphasizes the transcendent quality that our passing moments take on and how we survive in those instants forever.
  • All in the Sound Album Cover
    All in the Sound Album Cover
    Release date: March 10, 2023

Album: Stories Out of Cherry Stems: Katie Procell sings works by Peter Dayton (2022, Navona Records)

Release Date: May 13, 2022

Composer Peter Dayton and Navona Records present STORIES OUT OF CHERRY STEMS, an album of original vocal chamber music with carefully curated texts spanning multiple centuries. Soprano Katie Procell and numerous selected performers navigate a persistent tension between simplicity and complexity delicately threaded throughout the program, providing a solid stage for the texts of notable poets Pablo Neruda, Oscar Wilde, and more. The strengths of vocal and instrumental chamber music merge into a cohesive powerhouse in this recording, brimming with sung stories that compliment Dayton’s compositional style. https://www.navonarecords.com/catalog/nv6424/

Selected as Critic's Choice Opera News Magazine, October 2022. Read the article here. "Dayton continually creates fresh and interesting sounds with these forces while Procell enthusiastically illuminates his idiosyncratic explorations with her gleaming soprano" - Joshua Rosenblum

LINER NOTES:

As meticulous as Peter Dayton is in his music, he gives equal attention to words. As he tells it, it is through poetry that he first began exploring ideas of structure in art, long before turning to music. Each of the four sets of songs on "Stories Out of Cherry Stems" deal with different texts in inventive, often surprising ways. All of them feature the talents of soprano Katie Procell, who brings an expressive and singular performance to each piece. There is a natural, effortless quality to the vocal lines, which is as much a credit to Dayton's compositions as to Procell's interpretations. None of this musical material is simple. Yet every line spills from the tongue as if it could not have been uttered in any other way.​

The conviction of these performances is evidence of the close working relationship between the composer and singer, who met in 2018 when Dayton attended a concert Procell was giving of Olivier Messiaen's Harawi (1945). Stunned by her performance, Dayton introduced himself and suggested working together on a future concert. Numerous collaborations quickly blossomed between the singer and composer, including the two pieces which bookend this album: Entwine Our Tongues: Sapphic Fragments (2019) and Desiderata: Ten Pieces of Wisdom (2020).

In Entwine Our Tongues, Procell sings with four reed instruments: two oboes and two clarinets (with doublings on English horn and bass clarinet). The texts come from Jordi Alonso's Honeyvoiced (2014), a book of poems based on the writings of Sappho. The song cycle opens with a flurry of activity in the instruments and an immediate bold entrance from Procell. Dense, shimmering harmonies vanish as quickly as they arrive, while Procell's grounding melody holds everything together. A truly standout moment of this piece is the penultimate movement, in which Procell is left unaccompanied to maneuver through complexly sensuous lines set to a text describing the hope that her desires might coincide with another's. The absence of the ensemble here is as palpable as is Procell's total self-sufficiency in her a cappella performance. The moment her solo ends, the reeds re-enter, launching the listener into the final, gently rocking movement.​

The other ensemble piece of this album is Lost Daughter: Songs on the Myth of Persephone (2020/2021), for soprano, flute, viola and harp. Dayton selected each text of this cycle from a different source and time period, exploring various aspects of motherhood and grief. The piece begins plaintively; the three instruments seem at times to be one instrument-assemblage: a strange and subtle organ. Procell's dramatic and technical facility is on full display. She floats delicately over the top of the instruments, suddenly shifting her weight into heavier lines. Gentle gliding tones burst into nimble chromatic runs and wide leaps, then settle back into steady low incantations, barely above a whisper. Contrasting the first four movements, Dayton casts the fifth almost entirely as a spoken narration of Louise Glück's Persephone, the Wanderer (2006), while the three instruments weave around each other in careful heterophony. Procell is equally expressive in her dramatic reading as in her singing, bringing out all the wit and insight of Glück's modern commentary on the ancient myth.​

The remaining pieces are duets between Procell and a single instrument. Si Solamente (2017), for soprano and cello, sets three poems by Chilean poet Pablo Neruda. Each deals in its own way with intimacy, with presence and absence. In three long movements, this piece is a haunting tour de force for both singer and cellist. There are two striking moments of athletic vocalise from Procell in the second movement. In the third movement the singer muses on a paradoxical desire for a lover's silence in order to more fully feel their presence through the possibility of that silence being broken. Dayton avoids any obvious renderings of silence in this movement. His use of a simple vocal melody anchors the poem's strophic form, while the cello moves through variations on a two-note repeating phrase, constantly reinventing itself but retaining its essential identity.​

Desiderata, for soprano and saxophone, opens by invoking a similar theme, as Procell reminds the listener to "remember what peace there may be in silence." The performance of this piece's ten aphorisms—each punctuated by its own brief silence—matches the sincerity and humility of the text. Every one of these miniatures is as complete a composition as any of the longer movements on this album. Within them is found the same commitment to melody and line, the same careful attention to detail that characterizes Dayton's style. There is a persistent tension between simplicity and complexity delicately threaded through all these songs: twisted stems of cherries from which stories are spun. Each story is given charismatic life by Procell and her fellow performers.

-Stuart Wheeler

November, 2021

  • Entwine Our Tongues, Sapphic Fragments: I. Fragment 32
    Entwine Our Tongues: Sapphic Fragments, texts by Jordi Alonso Soprano, Oboe, Oboe (doubling English Horn), Clarinet, Clarinet (doubling Bass Clarinet) Total duration ca. 11’ Published 2019 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Six movement work I. (Fragment 32) II. (Fragment 27) III. (Fragment 51) IV. (Fragment 169) V. (Fragment 96) – VI. (Fragment 149) Translation can be a tricky matter. The challenge is compounded by orders of magnitude when the sum total material one has to translate is a single word or phrase. Yet this is the state in which most of Sappho’s poetry exists. The vast majority of translations of Sappho’s words, then, are executed by a mixture of scholarly inference and poetic license, tentatively guessing at intentions. I imagine that tentative feeling is similar to the nervous energy of attraction, of trying to sense mutual chemistry, the age-old binary question.
  • Entwine Our Tongues, Sapphic Fragments: IV. Fragment 169
    Entwine Our Tongues: Sapphic Fragments, texts by Jordi Alonso Soprano, Oboe, Oboe (doubling English Horn), Clarinet, Clarinet (doubling Bass Clarinet) Total duration ca. 11’ Published 2019 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Six movement work I. (Fragment 32) II. (Fragment 27) III. (Fragment 51) IV. (Fragment 169) V. (Fragment 96) – VI. (Fragment 149) Translation can be a tricky matter. The challenge is compounded by orders of magnitude when the sum total material one has to translate is a single word or phrase. Yet this is the state in which most of Sappho’s poetry exists. The vast majority of translations of Sappho’s words, then, are executed by a mixture of scholarly inference and poetic license, tentatively guessing at intentions. I imagine that tentative feeling is similar to the nervous energy of attraction, of trying to sense mutual chemistry, the age-old binary question.
  • Si Solamente: Tres Canciones de Pablo Neruda: I. A todos, a vosotros...
    Si Solamente, three songs on texts by Pablo Neruda Soprano and Violoncello Total duration ca. 22’ Published 2017 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Three movement work I. A todos, a vosotros… II. Barcarola III. Me gustas cuando callas These settings of Pablo Neruda’s poetry represent my first foray into non-English text setting in nearly a decade. Now, however, with these settings commissioned by Lauren Van Den Broek and Robert Kaufman, I have finally ventured into the rich poetry of South America. Neruda’s poetry ranges from the pastoral to the romantic and evocative, encompassing worlds in his apostrophes and images. The first poem, from Neruda’s “Canto General,” serves as a fitting opening to the song cycle. Address everyone “a todos, a vosotros,” earthly beings and spirits of the night, Neruda describes a universe of addressees for his songs, natural and human.
  • Si Solamente: Tres Canciones de Pablo Neruda: III. Me gustas cuando callas
    Si Solamente, three songs on texts by Pablo Neruda Soprano and Violoncello Total duration ca. 22’ Published 2017 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Three movement work I. A todos, a vosotros… II. Barcarola III. Me gustas cuando callas These settings of Pablo Neruda’s poetry represent my first foray into non-English text setting in nearly a decade. Now, however, with these settings commissioned by Lauren Van Den Broek and Robert Kaufman, I have finally ventured into the rich poetry of South America. Neruda’s poetry ranges from the pastoral to the romantic and evocative, encompassing worlds in his apostrophes and images. The first poem, from Neruda’s “Canto General,” serves as a fitting opening to the song cycle. Address everyone “a todos, a vosotros,” earthly beings and spirits of the night, Neruda describes a universe of addressees for his songs, natural and human.
  • Lost Daughter: Songs on the Myth of Persephone: I. Requiescat
    Lost Daughter: Songs on the Myth of Persephone Soprano, Flute, Viola, Harp Total duration ca. 24’ Published 2021 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Composed for Jessica Ng Five movement work I. Requiescat, text by Oscar Wilde II. Persephone, Falling, text by Rita Dove III. Hymn to Persephone, text by Edna St. Vincent Millay IV. Demeter &, text by Alfred Lord Tennyson, adapted by Peter Dayton V. Persephone the Wanderer, text by Louise Glück • Requiescat from “Poems” (1881) by Oscar Wilde. This poem is in the Public Domain. • Persephone, Falling from “Mother Love,” W.W. Norton, New York,  1995 by Rita Dove. Used by Permission of the Author. • Prayer to Persephone from “Second April” (1921) by Edna St. Vincent Millay. This poem is in the Public Domain. • Demeter and Persephone from “Demeter, and Other Poems” by Alfred Lord Tennyson (1889). This poem is in the Public Domain. Text adapted and arranged by Peter Dayton, • Persephone, the Wanderer” by Louise Glück.
  • Lost Daughter: Songs on the Myth of Persephone: VI. Persephone the Wanderer
    Lost Daughter: Songs on the Myth of Persephone Soprano, Flute, Viola, Harp Total duration ca. 24’ Published 2021 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Composed for Jessica Ng Five movement work I. Requiescat, text by Oscar Wilde II. Persephone, Falling, text by Rita Dove III. Hymn to Persephone, text by Edna St. Vincent Millay IV. Demeter &, text by Alfred Lord Tennyson, adapted by Peter Dayton V. Persephone the Wanderer, text by Louise Glück • Requiescat from “Poems” (1881) by Oscar Wilde. This poem is in the Public Domain. • Persephone, Falling from “Mother Love,” W.W. Norton, New York,  1995 by Rita Dove. Used by Permission of the Author. • Prayer to Persephone from “Second April” (1921) by Edna St. Vincent Millay. This poem is in the Public Domain. • Demeter and Persephone from “Demeter, and Other Poems” by Alfred Lord Tennyson (1889). This poem is in the Public Domain. Text adapted and arranged by Peter Dayton, • Persephone, the Wanderer” by Louise Glück.
  • Desiderata: Ten Pieces of Wisdom: I. Go placidly amid the noise and the haste...
    Desiderata: Ten pieces of wisdom, text by Max Ehrmann Soprano, Alto Saxophone Total duration ca. 8’50” Published 2020 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Ten movement work I. Go placidly amid the noise and haste… II. Speak your truth quietly and clearly… III. Avoid loud and aggressive persons… IV. Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans… V. Exercise caution in your business affairs… VI. Be yourself… VII. Take kindly the counsel of the years… VIII. Nurture strength of spirit to shield you… – IX. Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle… – X. And whether or not it is clear to you… The text of this work was requested by Katie Procell as a possible poem that I could set for her and saxophonist Kyle Blake Jones. The simple, plainspoken text of the poem sets forth author Max Ehrmann’s precepts of a happy life. Desiderata’s gentle simplicity and epigrammatic form made for a surprising challenge in my text-setting process.
  • Desiderata: Ten Pieces of Wisdom: VIII. Nurture strength of spirit to shield you...
    Desiderata: Ten pieces of wisdom, text by Max Ehrmann Soprano, Alto Saxophone Total duration ca. 8’50” Published 2020 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Ten movement work I. Go placidly amid the noise and haste… II. Speak your truth quietly and clearly… III. Avoid loud and aggressive persons… IV. Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans… V. Exercise caution in your business affairs… VI. Be yourself… VII. Take kindly the counsel of the years… VIII. Nurture strength of spirit to shield you… – IX. Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle… – X. And whether or not it is clear to you… The text of this work was requested by Katie Procell as a possible poem that I could set for her and saxophonist Kyle Blake Jones. The simple, plainspoken text of the poem sets forth author Max Ehrmann’s precepts of a happy life. Desiderata’s gentle simplicity and epigrammatic form made for a surprising challenge in my text-setting process.
  • Desiderata: Ten Pieces of Wisdom: IX. Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle… – X. And whether or not it is clear to you…
    Desiderata: Ten pieces of wisdom, text by Max Ehrmann Soprano, Alto Saxophone Total duration ca. 8’50” Published 2020 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Ten movement work I. Go placidly amid the noise and haste… II. Speak your truth quietly and clearly… III. Avoid loud and aggressive persons… IV. Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans… V. Exercise caution in your business affairs… VI. Be yourself… VII. Take kindly the counsel of the years… VIII. Nurture strength of spirit to shield you… – IX. Beyond a wholesome discipline, be gentle… – X. And whether or not it is clear to you… The text of this work was requested by Katie Procell as a possible poem that I could set for her and saxophonist Kyle Blake Jones. The simple, plainspoken text of the poem sets forth author Max Ehrmann’s precepts of a happy life. Desiderata’s gentle simplicity and epigrammatic form made for a surprising challenge in my text-setting process.
  • Stories Out of Cherry Stems Album Cover
    Stories Out of Cherry Stems Album Cover
    https://www.navonarecords.com/catalog/nv6424/ Composer Peter Dayton and Navona Records present STORIES OUT OF CHERRY STEMS, an album of original vocal chamber music with carefully curated texts spanning multiple centuries. Soprano Katie Procell and numerous selected performers navigate a persistent tension between simplicity and complexity delicately threaded throughout the program, providing a solid stage for the texts of notable poets Pablo Neruda, Oscar Wilde, and more. The strengths of vocal and instrumental chamber music merge into a cohesive powerhouse in this recording, brimming with sung stories that compliment Dayton’s compositional style.

Illustration: The Happy World of Hoodleoos (2021-present)

Hoodleoos: Illustrations of cute anthropomorphic birds

Website: https://hoodleoos.com, updated with new images every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday

An image of an adult bird sending some young birds a story. The story is first depicted in a speech bubble which shows a bird planting a seed which then grows into an enormous tree. Parts of the same story are then depicted in different bubbles through different artistic mediums: a book, a theatrical play, a puppet show, interpretive dance, and a film. The image is in grayscale.

About Hoodleoos

What is a hoodleoo? It is some relation of the Columbidae family of pigeons and doves, with all of the practical questions about how their wings work like human fingers, what would the purpose of tail feathers be, etc. neatly side-stepped. They’re cute, distant relations of Columbidae with a hobbit-like disposition, that’s good enough. Though they are the adorable, rotund stars of this world, it is the world that they live in, sustain, and maintain, that has really fired my imagination. Emphasis on leisure, conversation, public transportation, community, sharing, recreational art-marking, accessibility, and unbridled joy have fueled my creations in these drawings, with a number of deeply personal drawings taken from family memories, as well as little jokes paying tribute some of my favorite works of art and locations. The use of bubbles: speech bubbles, thought bubbles, electronic transmission bubbles has been key in these drawings, presenting more than one enclosed picture in a single image. This has struck me as being true to how we live on a daily basis, split between perceptions of our immediate surroundings, and (often equally vivid) imaginings of other places, times, situations, concepts. We think about our future plans, we talk to people about our past plans and what we were thinking about saying in the future which we are currently experiencing. The use of pictures as objects within some of these drawings is an extension of this, as vivid as a thought, but viewable by all. While I do use text in many of these, as much as possible I hope that it is incidental to understanding the story or scenario that unfolds. If some of the illustrations have a puzzling element, I hope that the cuteness of this world’s inhabitants encourages engaging with the stories, to figure out what these busy but unhurried birds are up to!

About These Drawings

I began drawing these hoodleoos around the middle of December 2021, and have been steadily producing illustrations since. I will be updating this website with new images every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday with an image from any point in my creative journey, and this will go on until I stop, I suppose. The order of illustrations is completely random from my (as of November 2022) collection of nearly 200 images. As I create more, they will be added to the end of the queue, also with some randomization.

About My Approach

My approach to these illustrations is bound up with my materials. These illustrations are all hand-drawn and colored using (with few exceptions) various weights of drawing, multi-media, and watercolor paper (Strathmore, Grumbacher, Canson) and Tombow Dual-Brush water-based brush pens. The color schemes of different illustrations play with the various parameters of these water-brush pens. For instance, in numerous illustrations I only employed brush pens that have a single common number as in their 3-character color code. For some illustrations I employed brush pens grouped into a single color family or combinations of color families designated by the manufacturer. For some illustrations, I have randomly selected between 9 and 10 brush pens. Different personal codes designate these different approaches. Here are some of them which you might see with various illustrations:

  • TCLS([color]) - Tombow Color Limited Selection, an approach to color selection not based in the manufacturer-designated codes or color-categories using a limited selection of colors, either singly or in combination.
  • TCS[###] - Tombow Color Series (Example: TCSXX6), the Xs and numbers refer to the number of the 3-character color code that is the point of commonality for the colors employed in the illustration.
  • TCSComp[#]([color]/[color]) - Tombow Color Series Complimentary, the number refers to the series of complementaries the parentheses refer to the color families involved, such as Blue and Violet.
  • TCRS(X#) - Tombow Color Random Selection, made using 9 or 10 randomly selected brush pens (that exclude previous selections). The letter refers to a single selection series, the number refers to the number within the selection series (Example. TCRSA2, the second random selection in the first selection series).
  • TCSS([color]) - Tombow Color Superspectrum Series, employs colors from all 3 related parts of the manufacturer-designated color family (ex. Red: Violet-Red, Red, Yellow-Red)

Origins

This entire, ongoing project exists thanks to my wonderful husband Douglas Johnson. At the key moments of in the origin story of this Happy World of Hoodleoos, Doug has planted the grain of an idea (a millet grain probably) which has brought a flock of ideas swarming and pecking around it. It started in the early spring of 2020. Doug brought home a plastic bird feeder to hopefully bring a little life to the balcony that I was spending more time looking out over than ever previously. I was skeptical that it would have many customers, considering my balcony is on the 16th floor of my building. There are few times I have been happier to be proven wrong. Finches, grosbeaks, and (most importantly) mourning doves have, since that day, made a daily commute to my balcony to feast on sunflower chips, millet, suet, and plenty of other tasty morsels. Hours of entertainment for me! After a while I began to call the big mourning doves that came bustling and bonking around my balcony the nickname “hoodleoos” after the various sounds they make when flying or calling to each other. They are my (albeit messy) friends, and we’ve tried to make as hospitable and nutritious a place for these city-dwelling scrapper birds as possible. Doug’s next pivotal contribution was the literal shower thought that launched the proverbial thousand ships. During one of the few family visits in the post-vaccine era, I was idly wondering how our balcony birds were faring without us (would the feeders last through the trip?) when Doug drew a stout dove in profile with his finger in the steamed glass of our hotel shower. I was enraptured! HOODLEOODLEOO! It was perfect, hilarious, adorable. The shower glass was streaked in steam hoodleoo cartoons by the end of the trip. My imagination was fired with these adorable little Busytown-like creatures. As my work has been virtual but Doug’s remains hands-on, I had taken to writing out my daily schedule on a sheet of paper for Doug, to which I began to add little Hoodleoo-doodles; sometimes one in a particular costume (like Huck Finn or as a three-piece suit businessman), sometimes in a little scenario (like birdwatching or conducting a vocal group). As my drawings became more elaborate (and therefore, fundamentally, sillier), Doug once again stepped in to provide the materials for the drawings you will find on this site: the Tombow water-based markers and various drawing and mixed media papers were his own excellent curations. The 2021 end-of-year winter holidays, when the Omicron variant yet again drove us all into our own bubbles again was when these drawings really took off. These happy, loving, eager, enthusiastic hoodleoos are something of my own wish-fulfillment for a better, kinder world, made from my far-seeing vantage in the sky. Thank you, Doug, for being the wind beneath the wings of my wonderful, big, bonking hoodleoos.

Bonk??

“the rose is a symbolic figure so rich in meanings that by now it hardly has any meaning left”

-Umberto Eco (“Postscript to the Name of the Rose”)

Along with some of doves’ favorite foods -millet & sunflower chips- you’ll see the word “BONK” a lot here, whether freestanding or in a pun on another word. What’s the deal? It’s a word I’ve adapted to mean many things, possibly most anything! Here are some of the ways that I use it:

  • To describe the motion of pigeons and doves walking, bobbing their head forward as their legs move backward: bonk bonk bonk!
  • To describe the health and strength of particularly big, round birds (e.g. “that bird is big and bonking!”)
  • To onomatopoetically describe the visual impact of suddenly seeing a particularly big, round bird (“bonk!”)

In the world of the hoodleoos, Bonk is a positive thing. It’s displayed on signage, shirts, incorporated into names of people, places, and things. It is an aspiration of birds to get big and bonkin’, and to happily bonk around with their world! Bonk is the bird pursuit of happiness (and millet).

Exhibitions

  • "Hello, BIRDS" - Area 405, Baltimore Maryland, April 8-May 7, 2023 in conjunction with Stillpointe Theatre's production of "Nevermore"
  • Meditation
    Meditation
    Meditation (2023) 12"x9" Tombow Water-based Dual-brush Pens on Grumbacher Paper Tombow Superspectrum Series 2: Gray (Cool) Private Collection
  • A Life of Its Own
    A Life of Its Own
    A Life of Its Own (2022) 12"x9" Tombow Water-based Brush-pens on Grumbacher Paper Tombow Superspectrum Series: Gray Private Collection
  • Sweet Memories
    Sweet Memories
    Sweet Memories (2023) 12"x9" Tombow Water-based Dual-brush Pens on Grumbacher Paper Tombow Superspectrum Series 2: Violet-Red (Violet, Violet-Red, Red)
  • Departure Announcements
    Departure Announcements
    "Departure Announcements" (2022) 12"x9" Tombow Water-based Dual-brush Pens on Grumbacher Paper Tombow Superspectrum Series: Red (Violet-Red, Red, Yellow-Red) Private Collection
  • Music & Memory
    Music & Memory
    "Music & Memory" (2022) 12"x9" Tombow Water-based Dual-brush Pens on Grumbacher Paper Tombow Superspectrum Series: Violet (Blue-Violet, Violet, Violet-Red)
  • Celestial View-dleoo
    Celestial View-dleoo
    "Celestial View-dleoo" (2023) 12"x9" Tombow Water-based Dual-brush Pens on Grumbacher Paper Tombow Superspectrum Series 2: Blue-Violet (Blue, Blue-Violet, Violet) Private Collection
  • Symphony in Blue-dleoo (The Tea Party)
    Symphony in Blue-dleoo (The Tea Party)
    "Symphony in Blue-dleoo (The Tea Party)" (2022) after Whistler's Peacock Room 12"x9" Tombow Water-based Dual-brush Pens on Grumbacher Paper Tombow Superspectrum Series: Blue (Blue-green, Blue, Blue-Violet)
  • Park Picnic
    Park Picnic
    "Park Picnic" (2023) 12"x9" Tombow Water-based Dual Brush Pens on Grumbacher Paper Tombow Superspectrum Series 2: Blue-Green (Green, Blue-Green, Blue)
  • A Space for Dreaming
    A Space for Dreaming
    "A Space for Dreaming" (2022) 12"x9" Tombow Water-based Dual Brush Pens on Grumbacher Paper Tombow Superspectrum Series: Green (Yellow-Green, Green, Blue-Green) Private Collection
  • Adventure Park
    Adventure Park
    "Adventure Park" (2022) 12"x9" Tombow Water-Based Dual Brush Pens on Grumbacher Paper Tombow Superspectrum Series: Yellow (Yellow-Red, Yellow, Green-Yellow) Private Collection

Concert Livestreams (2020-present)

After the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, when it was impossible to put on live music concerts, I began hosting piano livestream concerts centered around the holidays and times of year when I might be at home and playing piano for my family. By bringing some of the intimacy and familiarity of seasonal music to the homes and screens of friends and family who were all doing their best to keep a social distance, I hoped to infuse that time of isolation with more companionship and comfort. Concert programs have often incorporated an eclectic mix of jazz standards, showtunes, classical piano music, and piano arrangements of video-game music.

  • Winter Solstice Eve 2022 Livestream
    Streamed live on Dec 20, 2022 12/20/22, 6:30pm EST Concert Program below ⬇️ Since 2018 I have been working full time at Arts Education in Maryland Schools, a statewide nonprofit advocating for equitable access to arts education for Marylands public school students. In addition to being a good cause, I’m privileged to work for an organization that values its employee as humans and encourages healthy work/life boundaries. If you would like to contribute to a good cause and the job that helps give me the stability to keep creating, you can donate at this link: aems-edu.networkforgood.com/ Program: • Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas, from Meet Me in St. Louis (1944) - Hugh Martin (1914-2011) & Ralph Blane (1914-1995) • The Great Pumpkin Waltz, from "It's The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown" (1966) by Vince Guaraldi (1928-1976) • O Tannenbaum, from A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965) - Guaraldi , tune by Melchior Franck (1579-1639) • Prelude No. 3 in G Major, from 6 Preludes, Op.
  • Peter Dayton's Birthday Piano Livestream 2022
    Streamed live on Feb 22, 2022 2/22/22, 6:30pm EST The way I've most enjoyed spending my birthday these past few years has been sharing music with you all, my loved ones! Settle down and relax to a mixture of works from the Classical repertoire and jazz/songbook standards. This program will include the world premiere of "Crystals (on aloneness)" by Brandon Scott Rumsey, which I commissioned. Thank you to Brandon for creating this incredible piece. Please read below the setlist for the poem by Geoffrey Nutter which accompanies this piece. The program will take approximately 65 minutes. Program/Setlist: Piano Collections, Final Fantasy X: 2. Tidus's Theme (2001), Nobuo Uematsu (b. 1959), arr. Masashi Hamauzu (b. 1971) Castle in the Sky (1986) - Sheeta's Decision, Joe Hisaishi (b. 1950) Piano Collections, Final Fantasy IV: 11. Troian Beauty (1992), Nobuo Uematsu, arr. Shiro Satou Le Tombeau de Couperin - V.
  • Winter holiday piano livestream
    Streamed live on Dec 24, 2021 12/24/21, 8:00pm EST Another dark Christmas eve this year; here are some bright harmonies and shimmering chords to hopefully keep the seasons bright. Please stay safe: maintain social distancing and masking, get vaccinated/boosted, and get tested. And demand better of your local and federal representatives. With outcry, things like student loans get halted, NK95s get sent out. Keep crying out. Setlist: 24 Preludes, Op. 28: No. 9, in E Major (1839) - Fryderyk Franciszek Chopin (1810-1849) L'heure des Enfants (Children's Corner), L2. 119 (1908): III. Serenade à la Poupée (Serenade for the Doll) - Claude Debussy (1862-1918) The Nutcracker (1892): Dance of the Sugarplum Fairy - Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) Letters for Rosy (2021) - Peter Dayton (b. 1990) 12 American Preludes (1944): 4.
  • Fall Equinox Piano livestream
    Streamed live on Sep 22, 2021 NOTE: my computer battery died part-way through the performance. There is a small break but almost the entire program is captured here. 9/22/21, 7:30pm EDT The seasons are changing- here are some chord changes to accompany the leaves and colors. Setlist: Music Box Theme #1, from "Tuck Everlasting" (1980) by Grey Larson Bran Bal, the Soulless Village, from "Piano Collections Final Fantasy IX" by Nobuo Uematsu, arr. Shiro Hamaguchi Summertime, from "Porgy & Bess" by George Gerswhin Preludes, Book II: 2. Dead Leaves by Claude Debussy My Far Home, from "Piano Collections Final Fantasy V" by Nobuo Uematsu Pleiades Dances, Book VI: 5.
  • Peter Dayton's Spring Piano Livestream
    Streamed live on Mar 28, 2021 The Spring Equinox is a recent memory and we look towards a post-COVID end of 2021 - there is hope, warmth, and, increasingly in the evening, there is light. Join me for a while to enjoy some jazz standards, classics, and some of my own favorite selections to usher in spring. Program: Final Fantasy V Piano Collections: 2. Tenderness in the Air (街のテーマ), by Nobuo Uematsu Carousel: If I Loved You, music by Richard Rodgers Pleiades Dances VI: 1. Prelude to a Small Spring (小さな春への前奏曲), by Takashi Yoshimatsu Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall, by Allan Roberts & Doris Fisher Rêverie, by Claude Debussy "Gypsy": Small World, music by Jule Styne Final Fantasy VIII Piano Collections: 3. Fisherman's Horizon (フィシャマンス ホライゾン), by Nobuo Uematsu, arranged by Shiro Hamaguchi Funny Girl: People, music by Jule Styne 24 Préludes, Op. 11: No. 21, Prélude in B-flat Major, by Alexander Scriabin Spirited Away: The Sixth Station, by Joe Hisaishi 2 Arabesques: No.
  • Peter's Thirty-First Birthday Eve Concert
    Streamed live on Feb 21, 2021 Last year I hosted a huge birthday concert of my recent vocal music - this year, things have to be a little more scaled back, but I would still love to spend some time with you on the eve of turning 31. What a tumultuous few years the last 12 months have been - hopefully we are beginning the uphill climb not just towards the pre-pandemic 'normal,' but towards a better future than the past we left behind. Just jazz standards and tunes I love tonight. Hope you'll join and have a slice of cake for yourself too. Setlist: In a Sentimental Mood - Duke Ellington, Irving Mills, Manny Kurtz Final Fantasy VII Piano Collections: Tifa's Theme - Nobuo Uematsu, Arr.
  • Happy Not-2020-Anymore! Virtual Piano Livestream
    Streamed live on Dec 31, 2020 Tonight's the night! We turn our calendars from the disastrous year of 2020 to a, hopefully better, 2021. Problems won't be solved by this numerical change, but there are a lot of signs that we can work together to make this next year better. We're staying distanced/safe at home, but here's music to put on in the background to your own safe celebrations. Join me and sip a bubbly drink of your choice to some upbeat classics and relaxing jazz interpretations of showtunes, as we spend some time together before ringing in the new year.
  • Peter Dayton's Solstice Solace Special
    Streamed live on Dec 21, 2020 Join me for some music to make spirits bright on the darkest day of the year. My husband and I are hunkered down for the holidays, hoping for a COVID-safe future; I know we are not the only ones who are abstaining from family visits in the service of our collective safety. Tune in for some music that, at least for me, makes it feel a little more like home for the end of year holidays (please be aware that the piano audio is pretty soft and the voice audio is much louder; I have marked in the program where I speak so you can adjust accordingly or skip over). Program: Préludes, Book I: VIII. La Fille aux Cheveux de Lin - Claude Debussy Remarks 8 Part-Songs: 3. The Blue Bird - Charles Villiers Stanford A Charlie Brown Christmas: Christmastime is Here - Vince Guaraldi Ma Mère L'Oye: 2.
  • Peter Dayton's TwentyTurkey Musical Holiday Special
    Streamed live on Nov 25, 2020 In order to keep our loved ones, ourselves, and our communities safe, we are not gathering for tomorrow's national holiday. Usually, I would be playing piano at home, Thanksgiving being the the yearly inauguration date of playing music from the Charlie Brown Christmas Special songbook, as well as other jazz standards and relaxing classics, while my sisters are doubtless both continuing their exhausting workload of reading, while mom uses the love language of food to celebrate our homecoming, while dad plays with the mostly placid, occasionally explosive dogs. I won't be playing in the living room this year, but maybe you'll allow me to spend some time with you within the four corners of your screen, and I can share with you some of the sounds of family that hopefully we will be able to share again next year in person. Program to Include works by: Vince Guaraldi Henry Mancini George Winston And Others

Album: Aspects of Landscape: Music from the World of John Hitchens (2020, Independent)

Release date: March 12, 2020

Liner Notes: 

Liner Notes:
This album was created to celebrate and supplement the 80th retrospective showing of paintings by British artist John Hitchens (b. 1940); it is also a celebration of a correspondence, creative exchange, and friendship that has endured since 2012, when I first reached out to request permission to display the works of John’s father, Ivon Hitchens, whose paintings inspired my suite for oboe (doubling cor anglais) and violin, Open Air. The correspondence and exchange truly grew into a friendship after I composed a work for solo piano, which I then orchestrated, inspired by John’s three-panel painting From Sombre Lands. I incorporated a visit to John into the same itinerary in which I recorded the orchestral version, entering the bucolic world of West Sussex and visiting John’s studio at Greenleaves, a creative clearing tucked away amidst a jungle of rhododendron trees.

Since then, I have had the privilege to visit John twice more, with a growing stack of physical letters tracking our creative and personal journeys over the years. This exchange and friendship has produced numerous compositions and paintings: John’s From Sombre Lands inspired my Piano/Orchestral piece From Sombre Lands, which inspired John’s 2016 painting From Sombre Lands, Orchestral Version, which inspired my 2017 orchestral composition Symphonic Poem: From Forgotten Lands. My experiences of pastoral Petworth, Byworth, Bignor Hill, and the Roman Road inspired my 2014 string orchestra piece Grounds, which inspired John’s 2019 painting Grounds. These pieces, and the creative journeys they represent are presented here, with the bonus postscript of a piece in which I composed using the letters of John’s first and last name for its elemental materials. I feel safe in saying that, for both John and myself, our aesthetic tastes are broad-ranging, yet I feel my own music is more of a departure from John’s usual sources of musical inspiration than his paintings are for me. Other artists whose works have inspired my music include Ivon Hitchens, Fernando de Szyszlo, and Graham Sutherland, artists whose work includes a level of abstraction. Meanwhile, John’s usually prefers less narrative genres for the music that accompanies his painting practice: house music, minimalism (I am indebted to John for introducing me to Simeon Ten Holt). Of the many languages and styles that can be seen in John’s vast and powerful portfolio, I find beauty and pleasure in every period, phase, or stage, and am fascinated by the ways in which my own work has stimulated him to create works that show John exploring new styles, incorporating older styles into his current practice, and generating work that, in turn, challenges me to explore new sounds. Comparing the paintings From Sombre Lands and From Sombre Lands, Orchestral Version reveals John returning to colors, brushstrokes, shapes, and techniques from his earlier œuvre. John’s Grounds uses colors almost never seen in John’s recent work: greens and violets! A painting like Grounds will perhaps mean a responding work that departs from my colors will be necessary! John’s creative fertility seems to show no slowing, so I see no end in sight to our exchange of letters, artwork, ideas, and goodwill. For a composer who is constantly stimulated, moved, and creatively inspired by artwork and poetry, to have artwork inspired by my own compositions has been one of the great honors of my career.

Congratulations, John, and thank you. – Peter Dayton

For further information about the journey of my friendship and correspondence with John Hitchens, visit peterdaytonmusic.com/Dayton-hitchens-story

  • From Sombre Lands, after a painting by John Hitchens (Piano Version)
    From Sombre Lands, after paintings by John Hitchens, for Piano Total duration ca. 5’ Published 2013 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Mar. 13, 2013 in Nashville, TN By Shelby Flowers From Sombre Lands was requested by my friend Shelby Flowers for her senior recital, as a work which would connect Rachmaninoff’s Etude Tableau in D Minor Op. 33, No. 4 and Chopin’s Nocturne in B Major Op. 62, No. 1 on her program. I also turned to the work of British semi-abstract landscape artist John Hitchens for assistance. From Sombre Lands looks to Hitchens’ painting in its local, rather than universal organization. As the painting itself is not a mimetic depiction of anything, there is no specific ‘program’ that a musical response could follow.
  • From Sombre Lands, after a painting by John Hitchens (Orchestra Version)
    I had originally conceived From Sombre Lands (2013) as a work for solo piano. It was requested by a dear friend and fellow composer for a recital which would connect Rachmaninoff’s Etude Tableau in D Minor Op. 33, No. 4 and Chopin’s Nocturne in B Major Op. 62, No. 1 on her program. I turned to the work of British semi-abstract landscape artist John Hitchens for inspiration, as works inspired by or responding to pieces of visual art have figured largely in my creative impetus, and I had already composed a piece based on the paintings of John’s father, Ivon Hitchens, himself a well-respected modern landscape artist. While the painting was integral in beginning the piano composition, upon completion it seemed that the work had taken a different direction.
  • Grounds, for String Orchestra
    The creative exchange I have enjoyed with British artist John Hitchens, creator of the painting which inspired this work, has been one of the great honors of my life. As our friendship, correspondence, and collaboration nears the ten-year mark, we now have created two chains of mutually-inspired paintings and musical compositions. In this case, the Grounds series began with my 2014 string orchestra piece of the same name that was inspired by the John Hitchens’s pastoral surroundings in West Sussex. This musical composition inspired John to create a gorgeous painting called Grounds in 2018 (viewable on the “Collections-Collaboration” page of John’s website, johnhitchens.com/collections-collaboration). This work is then both a response to John’s sprawling creation, but a sequel to my own years-old composition.
  • Symphonic Poem: From Forgotten Lands, after a painting by John Hitchens
    This work is the latest addition to a growing catalogue of letters, works of music, paintings, and visits that constitute my friendship with the British artist John Hitchens and his wife Rosy. In response to John's large three-panel painting "From Sombre Lands," I composed a piano work, which I then orchestrated. Inspired to this orchestration, John completed a large painting in 2015. This new piece is in response to that latest painting in our chain of creative correspondence. The title comes from what I suppose is a misreading of one of the captions to a photograph of the painting in progress, which John included in a letter to me. It is perfectly fitting, though. Landscapes have been the primary subject of John's career, first in a loose painterly style like his father Ivon Hitchens, and then in a more geometric, abstracted style, with paintings resembling the patterning and texture of aerial photographs of landscapes.
  • Letters for John (arr. for Viola & Piano)
    My friendship and correspondence with British painter John Hitchens has been one of the great honors and joys of my life. A friendship that began as an artistic dialogue with the work of his father Ivon Hitchens, and then came to include John’s own beautiful paintings and our first meeting in West Sussex, I am deeply gratified by the quarterly exchange of news, images, and ideas that has persisted for several years between us. The musical material for this work emerged from a musical translation of John Hitchens’s name into notes. All of the music emanates from this core, hence ‘letters’ are both literal correspondence, and letters arranged into musical ideas in this piece. The style of the work also reflects my understanding of the aerial-photograph-inspired abstraction of many of Hitchens’s paintings, with circularity, repetition, and curvaceous shapes. For John, with deep affection.
  • From Sombre Lands, after a painting by John Hitchens (live performance)
    From Sombre Lands, after a painting by John Hitchens, for Piano March 12, 2020 @ City of Southampton Art Gallery, Southampton, UK Peter Dayton, Piano Peter Dayton performed "From Sombre Lands," for piano at the opening of the 80th birthday retrospective of artwork by John Hitchens: "Aspects of Landscape," running at the City of Southampton Art Gallery from March 13 - June 27. There are plans for a performance to take place, along with a panel discussion, in late May 2020. Alongside the exhibition's opening was the publication of a monograph covering a portion (but hardly all of) John's extensive, beautiful, and varied work and the release of an album of Peter's music inspired by John's paintings. The painting visible in the background of Peter's performance is John Hitchens's painting "Grounds (2018)," an artwork inspired by Peter's piece "Grounds" for string orchestra (Grounds, For String Orchestra )

Album: Notes to Loved Ones, Music for Strings and Piano (2018, Navona Records)

Release Date: March 9, 2018

Up-and-coming composer Peter Dayton makes his Navona Records debut with the release of Notes to Loved Ones, an album of works for piano and strings. Dayton’s style of composition is heavily influenced by people with whom he is fascinated and their works of art.

These influences are the driving forces behind Notes to Loved Ones. Fantasy for viola and piano, is contemplative and collected. The composer, himself, likens its thematic content with “the continuity of a changing dream.” The string quartet Morceaux des Noces, is reflective of the Americana in early 20th century composition. Sonata “Los Dedicatorias,” for violin and piano is tentative, with the juxtaposition of the highest part of violin’s range against the warm, middle tones of the piano.

Messiaen lovers will enjoy Variations for string quartet, which is reminiscent of Quatuor pour la fin du temp and the ethereal qualities within it. About the rhapsodic Sonata for cello and piano Dayton reflects: “I drew upon [Shostakovich’s] emotional geography of cattiness and sarcasm as well as tragedy and pensive calm.”

Review by American Record Guide:

"This album of works by Peter Dayton (born 1990) show a composer whose heart and care are palpable. His melodic sensibilities are at center stage. It’s a collection of works whose main motifs you’re going to walk away from a performance singing. These works are often inspired by people or pieces of art, and that makes this album all the more like a personal tribute. These works practically hum with the intensity of love and life, and they are presented in sequence in a way that makes the process of listening to them feel like looking through a beautiful photo album. These performances are emotional and dedicated, and Dayton is a young composers who has a voice that deserves to be heard often." (American Record Guide, June 2018)

  • Fantasy, for Viola & Piano
    Fantasy, for Viola and Piano Total duration ca. 4’30” Published 2009 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Nov. 4, 2015 in Nashville, TN By Emma Dansak and Peter Dayton The Fantasy’s name adequately expresses its formal freedom: a harmonically lush exploration of different moods, colors, meters, and tempi. New material follows new material as if in a dream, though continuity is maintained through an arcing melodic gesture that builds itself into the fabric of the Fantasy. At the end, the Fantasy slowly recedes from the audience, fading away as if we are waking unwillingly from it.
  • Morceaux des Noces: I. Allegretto Fluente
    Morceaux des Noces, for String Quartet Total duration ca. 22’30” Published 2013/2014 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Three movement work I. Allegretto fluente II. Adagio semplice III. Andante amoroso – Allegro animato Premiered on Jul. 18, 2013 in Cincinnati, Ohio By Joshua Ulrich, Rachel Frankenfeld, Stephen Goist, Laura Jekel This quartet began as simply one “Morceau”, the first movement: a commission from my fellow Blair School of Music graduate Sarah Wood for her wedding in June of 2013. The first movement was composed in the fall of 2012, the second, dedicated to my parents and in honor of their nearly quarter-century marriage, was composed over the change of the year, and the final movement was composed in 2013.
  • Morceaux des Noces: II. Adagio Semplice
    Morceaux des Noces, for String Quartet Total duration ca. 22’30” Published 2013/2014 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Three movement work I. Allegretto fluente II. Adagio semplice III. Andante amoroso – Allegro animato Premiered on Jul. 18, 2013 in Cincinnati, Ohio By Joshua Ulrich, Rachel Frankenfeld, Stephen Goist, Laura Jekel This quartet began as simply one “Morceau”, the first movement: a commission from my fellow Blair School of Music graduate Sarah Wood for her wedding in June of 2013. The first movement was composed in the fall of 2012, the second, dedicated to my parents and in honor of their nearly quarter-century marriage, was composed over the change of the year, and the final movement was composed in 2013.
  • Morceaux des Noces: III. Andante amoroso
    Morceaux des Noces, for String Quartet Total duration ca. 22’30” Published 2013/2014 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Three movement work I. Allegretto fluente II. Adagio semplice III. Andante amoroso – Allegro animato Premiered on Jul. 18, 2013 in Cincinnati, Ohio By Joshua Ulrich, Rachel Frankenfeld, Stephen Goist, Laura Jekel This quartet began as simply one “Morceau”, the first movement: a commission from my fellow Blair School of Music graduate Sarah Wood for her wedding in June of 2013. The first movement was composed in the fall of 2012, the second, dedicated to my parents and in honor of their nearly quarter-century marriage, was composed over the change of the year, and the final movement was composed in 2013.
  • Violin Sonata "Los Dedicatorias": II. Vicente & Fernanda
    Sonata, “Los Dedicatorias,” for Violin and Piano Total duration ca. 18’30” Published 2016 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Four movement work I. Fernando de Szyszlo y Lila II. Vicente y Fernanda III. Manuela y Noelle IV. Adam George y Cristina Espejo Fernando de Szyszlo’s paintings have inspired me since 2011, generating four compositions and a lasting correspondence and friendship with the artist. After several years of contact with the esteemed Peruvian painter, I decided to accept the generous offer of hospitality extended to me, and I went down to Lima to visit the Szyszlo family. Over four days I met four generations of de Szyszlos, spending a substantial amount of time with each of the members of the family. The movements of this work each take as their musical material a transformation of the names of members of the Szyszlo family.
  • Violin Sonata "Los Dedicatorias": III. Manuella & Noelle
    Sonata, “Los Dedicatorias,” for Violin and Piano Total duration ca. 18’30” Published 2016 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Four movement work I. Fernando de Szyszlo y Lila II. Vicente y Fernanda III. Manuela y Noelle IV. Adam George y Cristina Espejo Fernando de Szyszlo’s paintings have inspired me since 2011, generating four compositions and a lasting correspondence and friendship with the artist. After several years of contact with the esteemed Peruvian painter, I decided to accept the generous offer of hospitality extended to me, and I went down to Lima to visit the Szyszlo family. Over four days I met four generations of de Szyszlos, spending a substantial amount of time with each of the members of the family. The movements of this work each take as their musical material a transformation of the names of members of the Szyszlo family.
  • Variations, for String Quartet
    Variations, for String Quartet Total duration ca. 11’30” Published 2012 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work, continuous variations Premiered on Jul. 18, 2013 in Cincinnati, Ohio By Joshua Ulrich, Rachel Frankenfeld, Stephen Goist, Laura Jekel This quartet was composed in the spring of 2012, following an exchange program with the Royal Academy of Music in London and the Kreutzer Quartet. Rather than moving in a slow gradation of change away from the source material, each variation addresses the original theme through contrasting styles and treatments, often moving directly between polar opposites. The work was premiered at Grace Episcopal Church in Cincinnati, Ohio in 2013 by members of the Price Hill String Quartet at a benefit concert for the marriage equality group Freedom to Marry Ohio.
  • Cello Sonata: I. (With urgency and forward motion)
    Sonata, for Violoncello and Piano Total duration ca. 9’ Published 2014 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Two movement, continuous work I. [with a sense of urgency and forward motion] II. Stark, Percussive Premiered on Jul. 18, 2015 in Valencia, Spain By Mayte García Atienza and Carlos Amat of NOMOS This Sonata was composed as part of an interdepartmental collaboration at the Peabody Institute in the fall of 2014. A work conceived to be performed either with bassoon or violoncello and piano, this Sonata explores extremes in emotional, and registral, territory in two movements. From catty, sarcastic repartees and high anxiety in the first movement, to the tragedy and introspective melancholy of the second, the work’s tenor came from a desire to compose a piece that explored emotional boundaries that I felt were underrepresented in the bassoon’s solo repertoire. The Sonata’s emotional geography also draws from my close contact with Dmitri Shostakovich’s Viola Sonata, Op.
  • Cello Sonata: II. Stark, percussive
    Sonata, for Violoncello and Piano Total duration ca. 9’ Published 2014 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Two movement, continuous work I. [with a sense of urgency and forward motion] II. Stark, Percussive Premiered on Jul. 18, 2015 in Valencia, Spain By Mayte García Atienza and Carlos Amat of NOMOS This Sonata was composed as part of an interdepartmental collaboration at the Peabody Institute in the fall of 2014. A work conceived to be performed either with bassoon or violoncello and piano, this Sonata explores extremes in emotional, and registral, territory in two movements. From catty, sarcastic repartees and high anxiety in the first movement, to the tragedy and introspective melancholy of the second, the work’s tenor came from a desire to compose a piece that explored emotional boundaries that I felt were underrepresented in the bassoon’s solo repertoire. The Sonata’s emotional geography also draws from my close contact with Dmitri Shostakovich’s Viola Sonata, Op.
  • Notes to Loved Ones Album Cover
    Notes to Loved Ones Album Cover
    Release Date: March 9, 2018

Project: MAY SHE | SHE MAY, A Chamber Opera in One Act (2016)

Single-Act Chamber Opera

Premiered on Apr. 25 in Baltimore, MD
By Tirzah Hawley (Gertrude)
Young Eun Lee (May)
Katharine Estes (Mabel)
Hanna Shin, Piano
Mari Takeda, Percussion
Aaron Thacker, Harpischord
Peter Dayton, Composer, Librettist, Conductor


This work was composed as part of the Opera Etudes collaboration program at the Peabody Institute, the premiere directed by Roger Brunyate. It concerns one of the pivotal relationships in the life of the famous writer Gertrude Stein. At the age of 20 (1900), a medical student at the Johns Hopkins University, Stein finds herself unhappy in her work and in the misogynistic hostility from her teachers and colleagues. She also finds herself attracted to one of the women in her circle of friends, May Bookstaver. In discovering a side of herself that she had not before acknowledged, Gertrude Stein undergoes an experience which will change the course of the rest of her life. Some of her earliest fictional writings are conspicuously drawn from this experience, including Q.E.D. (which addresses this same love affair) , Melanctha from Three Lives, and The Making of Americans

  • MAY SHE | SHE MAY: A Chamber Opera in One Act (Concert Performance)
    MAY SHE | SHE MAY: A Chamber Opera in One Act (2016) Music & Libretto by Peter Dayton 1. Narrazione 1 (“Radcliffe graduate Gertrude Stein…”) – Mabel 2. Scena 1 (“It is just unjust…”) – Gertrude & Mabel 3. Narrazione 2 (“May B, May Bookstaver…”) – Mabel 4. Scena 2 – (“Miss Stein, your morals…”) – May & Gertrude 5. Narrazione 3 (“She may wonder about May…”) – Mabel & Gertrude 6. Scena 3 (“When we first met…”) – Gertrude & Mabel 7. Narrazione 4 (“The rose is gripped by its thorns…”) – Mabel 8. Aria – (“May I explain? May I try, May, may I…”) – Gertrude 9. Narrazione 5 (“Now they do not…”) – Mabel 10a. Scena 4: Ariette Appaiate (“Dear May, dear me…”) – Gertrude & Mabel 10b. Scena 4 / Narrazione 6 (“Gertrude, you may…”) – May & Mabel 11. Scena 5 (“Come in, Gertrude…”) – May, Gertrude, Mabel 12.
  • MAY SHE | SHE MAY.jpg
    MAY SHE | SHE MAY.jpg
    Portrait of Gertrude Stein by Pablo Picasso (1906), Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • MAY SHE | SHE MAY - Finale
    The final scene from the world premiere of MAY SHE | SHE MAY, a one-act chamber opera about Gertrude Stein's first love affair, at the Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University in 2016.

Project: An American Mass: A Collection of Settings of Modern American Poetry for Mixed Chorus (2013-present)

"An American Mass" is a series of choral settings of modern American poetry that examine transcendent themes through a secular lens. The texts that I set in these choral compositions deal with questions of how humans relate to one another, how we see the world around us, how eternal an instant can feel, the joy of sensual pleasure, the desire for things to be what they seem, the desire and frustration for the betterment of our own human nature. An ongoing project, "An American Mass" was originally intended to be a ten movement work. It is really more of a choral songbook or collection of pieces, which can be performed individually, grouped into suites, or performed altogether, and as time passes the "Mass"will no doubt continue to grow as well. A work that is attempting to increase the repertoire of spiritual but secular choral music, "An American Mass" subscribes to no dogma, hence the freedom with the way the movements can be programmed or grouped.

Works:

  • A Name For All (2017), text Hart Crane (SATB)
  • THIS (2017), text by A. R. Ammons (SATB)
  • The Weight Of The World Is Love (2017), text by Allen Ginsberg (SSATBB)
  • The Answer (2016), text by Robert Creeley (SATB)
  • The Tree That Plucks Fruit (2015), text by Vicki Hearne (SATB)
  • Midsummer (2015), text by William Bronk (SATB)
  • By Disposition of Angels (2014), text by Marianne Moore (SATB)
  • The Core (2013), text by Ronald Johnson (SATB)
  • I Will Be Earth (2013), text by May Swenson (SATB)
  • Just Walking Around (2013), text by John Ashbery (SATB)
  • By Disposition of Angels, text by Marianne Moore
    By Disposition of Angels, text by Marianne Moore for SATB Chorus Total duration ca. 5’ Published 2014 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Marianne Moore’s By Disposition of Angels is nebulous in both senses of the word: asking questions of and about the stars and our relation to them and each other. In all of these categories, “mysteries expound mysteries,” it is a poem of questions that simply meditates on the beauty of both our own humanity and the enduring stars “aquiver forever.” Permission for the use of "By Disposition Of Angels," written by Marianne Moore in 1945 and re-published in The Collected Poems of Marianne Moore is granted by the Literary Estate of Marianne C. Moore, David M. Moore, Administrator, Literary Estate of Marianne Moore. All rights reserved.
  • The Tree that Plucks Fruit, text by Vicky Hearne
    The Tree that Plucks Fruit, text by Vicki Hearne, for SATB Chorus Total duration ca. 3’30” Published 2015 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Vicki Hearne’s poem has a simple vocabulary that masks the difficult of the concepts she is illustrating. Paradoxes are heaped one upon the other, but presented in a matter-of-fact fashion. Still, her concise use of this simple vocabulary provides a key: the tree, the air, the truth, the stars, and, most importantly, words. The role words and manmade concepts play in forming our existence and experience of the world is the heart of the poem. The tree/orchard is the world, and our lives are the fruit, clearly the product of the world, and yet somehow we consider ourselves formed separately from it, as if plucked from the air. Numbers are conceptual, yet these and other concepts uphold the world. We are caught in this tension between the real and the conceptual, epitomized by the word, which is only symbolic of actual thought.
  • Midsummer, text by William Bronk
    Midsummer, text by William Bronk, for SATB Chorus Total duration ca. 4’45” Published 2015 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Midsummer is one setting in a series of choral settings of modern American poetry that examine transcendent themes through a secular lens. I have been composing since 2013, a collection I have entitled An American Mass. A poet of particular conceptual inventiveness, like Wallace Stevens, Bronk in this poem contrasts the painting-like tranquility of his ‘green world’ with some startling language and images: Someone looking into a mirror and seeing their own back, and Bronk’s desire preserve the serene moment’s immediacy with the same intensity “as much as if an atrocity had happened”.
  • Just Walking Around, text by John Ashbury for Tenor & SATB Chorus
    Just Walking Around, text by John Ashbery, for SATB Chorus Total duration ca. 6’15” Published 2013 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Jun. 6, 2015 in Baltimore, MD By Joshua Glassman and the Mt. Vernon Consort Ashbery’s poem begins with a profound question: how do the few words we take on as a name describe our essence? The poem meditates on our feelings of connection and otherness, whether that between connection to others or otherness from ourselves. After following this looping train of thought, Ashbery’s ruminations conclude in part by throwing the question out the window, sidestepping these labels “now that the end is near,” and wishing simply that he and the one he addresses be near each other, whomever they each are or whatever they are called. “Just Walking Around” from A WAVE by John Ashbery. Copyright © 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984 by John Ashbery. Reprinted by permission of Georges Borchardt, Inc., on behalf of the author. All rights reserved.
  • I Will Be Earth, text by May Swenson
    I Will Be Earth, text by May Swenson, for SATB Chorus Total duration ca. 2’20” Published 2013 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Jun. 6, 2015 in Baltimore, MD By Joshua Glassman and the Mt. Vernon Consort Swenson’s ecstatic words, elaborating the permeable barrier between love and lust, emotional and physical connection, tumble over each other, breaking conventions of punctuation, grammar, and syntax. In the first stanza, Swenson assigns her and the poem’s addressee the roles of complementary objects, interlocking pieces. In the second stanza, she latches onto the maritime imagery that ends the first stanza, transubstantiating the ground to a flood, roots to oars, describing an endless rocking of pleasure and almost dangerous, animal desire. The musical setting reprises the first stanza, with even more clamorous tumbling of amorous voices. “I will be earth” by May Swenson. Used with permission of the Literary Estate of May Swenson. All Rights reserved.
  • The Core, text by Ronald Johnson
    The Core, text by Ronald Johnson, for SATB Chorus Total duration ca. 2’15” Published 2014 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Jun. 6, 2015 in Baltimore, MD
By Joshua Glassman and the Mt. Vernon Consort This short poem by Johnson addresses, in mystical tones, the desire for clarity, transparency, equivalency between perception and reality, so that words themselves have a physical quality of realness “you can put your foot through.” The Core, in aching brevity speaks to our search for truth, with the past tense “wanted” suggesting that this poem comes at the end of a long search, still not fully completed. "The Core," by Ronald Johnson, from Poetry magazine, June 1972, used by permission of the Literary Estate of Ronald Johnson.
  • Just Walking Around, text by John Ashbury (live premiere performance)
    Recording by Arts Laureate American Masses, An Evening of American Choral Music was conceived and presented by composer Peter Dayton and tenor/conductor Joshua Glassman. Through a kickstarter campaign, Dayton and Glassman were able to raised over $4,500 to pay their local Baltimore ensemble: the Mt. Vernon Consort. The program features a diversity of American spiritual music, ranging from Sacred Harp arrangements and African American Spirituals to Barber's Agnus Dei and the world premiere of a new work by composer Peter Dayton: "Light and Mystery, Suite from An American Mass." Solo: Drew Belsinger The Mt.
  • I Will Be Earth, text by May Swenson (Live Premiere)
    Recording by Arts Laureate American Masses, An Evening of American Choral Music was conceived and presented by composer Peter Dayton and tenor/conductor Joshua Glassman. Through a kickstarter campaign, Dayton and Glassman were able to raised over $4,500 to pay their local Baltimore ensemble: the Mt. Vernon Consort. The program features a diversity of American spiritual music, ranging from Sacred Harp arrangements and African American Spirituals to Barber's Agnus Dei and the world premiere of a new work by composer Peter Dayton: "Light and Mystery, Suite from An American Mass." The Mt.
  • The Core, text by Ronald Johnson (Live Premiere)
    Recording by Arts Laureate American Masses, An Evening of American Choral Music was conceived and presented by composer Peter Dayton and tenor/conductor Joshua Glassman. Through a kickstarter campaign, Dayton and Glassman were able to raised over $4,500 to pay their local Baltimore ensemble: the Mt. Vernon Consort. The program features a diversity of American spiritual music, ranging from Sacred Harp arrangements and African American Spirituals to Barber's Agnus Dei and the world premiere of a new work by composer Peter Dayton: "Light and Mystery, Suite from An American Mass." The Mt.
  • American Masses Kickstarter Pitch Video
    Kickstarter Pitch Video for the concert that hosted the world premiere of 3 choral pieces from the American Mass project. Video by Claire Weber Music by Peter Dayton and Joshua Bornfield

Interdisciplinary Project: Extraño Lugar, Music Inspired by Paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo (2011-present)

The surrealist and primitivist works of the late Fernando de Szyszlo have served as an ongoing inspiration for many years. His dark, lush, symbolic paintings have inspired numerous compositions for solos and duos. In personal correspondence about these tributes de Fernando de Szyszlo's work, de Szyszlo writes: "Thanks to you for the pleasure you have given me with your music and for understanding what I search for in painting." Joining these pieces inspired by his paintings is a more recent work that pays tribute to my visit to Perú, where I met and stayed with the artist and his family.

  • Extraño Lugar, Elogía Fantasmagorica, for Accordion and Guitar Quartet (2018)
  • Sonata, "Los Dedicatorias," for Violin and Piano (2016)
  • Sol Negro, for 2 Guitars (2014)
  • Cello Suite, Los Visitantes de la Noche (2012)
  • Mar de Lurín, for Oboe and Guitar (2011)
  • Recinto, for Double Bass (2011)
  • Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo (art&music)
    Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo for Oboe and Guitar Total duration ca. 5’ Published 2011 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Oct. 23, 2011 in Nashville, TN By Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire The paintings of Polish-Peruvian artist Fernando de Szyszlo (b. 1925) were introduced to me by Dr. Michael Alec Rose in the Spring of 2010. I was transfixed by the vibrant, saturated colors that Szyszlo used, and by the mysteriously ancient quality and subject matter of his art. In a manner analogous to music, Szyszlo's artwork is pervaded by motifs that gain their own significance both within each painting and a universal significance within Szyszlo's œuvre. His paintings of Lurín from (a coastal city in Peru) are some of his most beautiful and sensuous works. This composition was the winner of the 2012 Blair School of Music Composition Competition and is dedicated to Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire.
  • Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo (live performance: Stevenson-Brennan)
    Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo for Oboe and Guitar Total duration ca. 5’ Published 2011 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Oct. 23, 2011 in Nashville, TN By Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire The paintings of Polish-Peruvian artist Fernando de Szyszlo (b. 1925) were introduced to me by Dr. Michael Alec Rose in the Spring of 2010. I was transfixed by the vibrant, saturated colors that Szyszlo used, and by the mysteriously ancient quality and subject matter of his art. In a manner analogous to music, Szyszlo's artwork is pervaded by motifs that gain their own significance both within each painting and a universal significance within Szyszlo's œuvre. His paintings of Lurín from (a coastal city in Peru) are some of his most beautiful and sensuous works. This composition was the winner of the 2012 Blair School of Music Composition Competition and is dedicated to Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire.
  • Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo (live performance: Qiao-Wang)
    Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo for Oboe and Guitar Total duration ca. 5’ Published 2011 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Oct. 23, 2011 in Nashville, TN By Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire The paintings of Polish-Peruvian artist Fernando de Szyszlo (b. 1925) were introduced to me by Dr. Michael Alec Rose in the Spring of 2010. I was transfixed by the vibrant, saturated colors that Szyszlo used, and by the mysteriously ancient quality and subject matter of his art. In a manner analogous to music, Szyszlo's artwork is pervaded by motifs that gain their own significance both within each painting and a universal significance within Szyszlo's œuvre. His paintings of Lurín from (a coastal city in Peru) are some of his most beautiful and sensuous works. This composition was the winner of the 2012 Blair School of Music Composition Competition and is dedicated to Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire.
  • Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo (live performance: Duo Confesso)
    Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo for Oboe and Guitar Total duration ca. 5’ Published 2011 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Oct. 23, 2011 in Nashville, TN By Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire The paintings of Polish-Peruvian artist Fernando de Szyszlo (b. 1925) were introduced to me by Dr. Michael Alec Rose in the Spring of 2010. I was transfixed by the vibrant, saturated colors that Szyszlo used, and by the mysteriously ancient quality and subject matter of his art. In a manner analogous to music, Szyszlo's artwork is pervaded by motifs that gain their own significance both within each painting and a universal significance within Szyszlo's œuvre. His paintings of Lurín from (a coastal city in Peru) are some of his most beautiful and sensuous works. This composition was the winner of the 2012 Blair School of Music Composition Competition and is dedicated to Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire.
  • Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo (live performance: world premiere)
    Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo for Oboe and Guitar Total duration ca. 5’ Published 2011 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Oct. 23, 2011 in Nashville, TN By Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire The paintings of Polish-Peruvian artist Fernando de Szyszlo (b. 1925) were introduced to me by Dr. Michael Alec Rose in the Spring of 2010. I was transfixed by the vibrant, saturated colors that Szyszlo used, and by the mysteriously ancient quality and subject matter of his art. In a manner analogous to music, Szyszlo's artwork is pervaded by motifs that gain their own significance both within each painting and a universal significance within Szyszlo's œuvre. His paintings of Lurín from (a coastal city in Peru) are some of his most beautiful and sensuous works. This composition was the winner of the 2012 Blair School of Music Composition Competition and is dedicated to Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire.
  • Recinto, for solo double bass, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo
    Recinto, for Double Bass, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo Total duration ca. 7’ Published 2011 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Apr. 7, 2011 in Nashville, TN By Brycen Ingersoll This work was composed after the premiere of my Sonata for Solo Violin in the winter of 2011 at the request of Brycen Ingersoll. Its title comes from Peruvian painter Fernando de Szyszlo's Recinto, or 'Enclosure,' series. The windows and staircases clearly visible in these paintings raise the question of whether the enclosure is figurative or literal, and, if figurative, if the enclosure is a voluntary or involuntary state. Either way, the presence of what appears to be a sacrificial table tells us that the enclosure is a dangerous place.
  • Cello Suite: Los Visitantes de la Noche, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo
    Cello Suite: Los Visitantes de la Noche after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo Total duration ca. 10’30” Published 2012 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Five movement, continuous work I. Primer Visitante (Slow and menacing) - II. Segundo Visitante (Fast and aggressive) - III. Tercer Visitante (Medium slow, lyrical and elegant) - IV. Cuarto Visitante (Very fast, brutal) - V. Abolición de la Muerte (Medium slow, with anguish) Premiered on Mar. 18, 2014 in Nashville, TN By Justin Goldsmith The Cello Suite responds to the paintings of the Polish/Peruvian painter Fernando de Szyszlo. Hermetically symbolic, sensuous, primordial, Fernando de Szyszlo’s work often takes the forms of series of paintings on a single subject. Los Visitantes de la Noche takes its inspiration from a collection of paintings, based primarily off the figures in the eponymous triptych. The figures appear singularly in paintings entitled Visitante and several of them appear together in Abolicion de la Muerte.
  • Sol Negro, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo, for 2 Guitars
    Sol Negro, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo, for 2 Guitars Total duration ca. 6’30” Published 2014 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Two movement work I. Preludio II. Sol Negro Premiered on Mar. 14, 2014 in Baltimore, MD By Eric Meier and Thomas Morgan Clippinger Fernando de Szyszlo’s paintings have inspired me since 2011, having been the genesis of four pieces of mine to date. De Szyszlo, influenced by Incan artwork and symbolist poets, draws the sol negro image, the black sun “of melancholy,” from a Gérard de Nerval poem. In de Szyszlo’s paintings, the sun hangs ominously: a brooding the first movement expresses, a menace that I attempt to manifest in the second. De Szyszlo’s black sun also touches the Incan image of the apocalyptic black rainbow (another painting title: Arco-iris negro). The second movement takes its tone from this apocalyptic image in a series of bursts of destructive energy that consume even themselves.
  • Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo (Figments, Vol 2. recording)
    "In his 'Mar de Lurín' for oboe and guitar, Peter Dayton imbues the lyrical oboe lines with vibrancy and mystery." American Record Guide Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo for Oboe and Guitar Total duration ca. 5’ Published 2011 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Oct. 23, 2011 in Nashville, TN By Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire The paintings of Polish-Peruvian artist Fernando de Szyszlo (b. 1925) were introduced to me by Dr. Michael Alec Rose in the Spring of 2010. I was transfixed by the vibrant, saturated colors that Szyszlo used, and by the mysteriously ancient quality and subject matter of his art. In a manner analogous to music, Szyszlo's artwork is pervaded by motifs that gain their own significance both within each painting and a universal significance within Szyszlo's œuvre. His paintings of Lurín from (a coastal city in Peru) are some of his most beautiful and sensuous works.
  • Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo (Vanderbilt Virtuosi recording)
    Mar de Lurín, after paintings by Fernando de Szyszlo for Oboe and Guitar Total duration ca. 5’ Published 2011 by Peter Dayton Music (ASCAP) Single-movement work Premiered on Oct. 23, 2011 in Nashville, TN By Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire The paintings of Polish-Peruvian artist Fernando de Szyszlo (b. 1925) were introduced to me by Dr. Michael Alec Rose in the Spring of 2010. I was transfixed by the vibrant, saturated colors that Szyszlo used, and by the mysteriously ancient quality and subject matter of his art. In a manner analogous to music, Szyszlo's artwork is pervaded by motifs that gain their own significance both within each painting and a universal significance within Szyszlo's œuvre. His paintings of Lurín from (a coastal city in Peru) are some of his most beautiful and sensuous works. This composition was the winner of the 2012 Blair School of Music Composition Competition and is dedicated to Lindsey Reymore and Professor Joshua McGuire.