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Daron Hagen's
Three Silent Things, a setting of 10 poems by such diverse
authors as Adelaide Crapsey, Robinson Jeffers, Paul Goodman and Wallace Stevens proved a stately, chimerical
work. Scored for piano quartet and soprano, the work is lyrical in its utterance and spare in its rhetoric.
There is very little tutti playing, and the soprano is as likely as not to sing an entire poem as a duet with
one of the instrumentalists. Mr. Hagen's esthetic is varied but concentrated -- a stark, proclamatory opening leads directly to a gentle
cello solo; there are many such surprises throughout the work.
Three Silent Things was written for
Karen Noteboom, who sang it with a sweet, full tone and an appropriate dignity.
--- Tim Page, The New York Times, 10/5/86
Three Silent Things, a 30-minute work for soprano, violin, viola, cello and piano,
composed by Daron Hagen in 1984, is curious music for a young man to have written. A couple of the 10 texts he sets
are unusual choices, like the Adelaide Crapsey poem from which the title comes. But most of the poets, like Walt
Whitman and Robert Graves, have been frequently turned to by American composers. The work begins with a Whitman text set to stern, proclamatory music with hints of 12-tone
complexity. Soon the piece shifts modes and wistful tonality predominates. The composer deftly mixes spiky rhythmic
restlessness, jagged instrumental lines and crunchy chords. ...
Brenda Harris was the sensitive soloist.
--Anthony Tommasinni, The New York Times, 6/5/98