Thursday, May 22, 2025

Three Summer Concerts: The Beethoven piano quartets


Friday, June 27th, 

The early Beethoven Piano Quartets

Virtuosi Thailand led by Toto, violin

Book now by email!

Reservations: 1,000 baht per person. Email asiachart@hotmail.com



All proceeds to the musicians.



Ludwig van Beethoven

These are three gems written in 1785, when Beethoven was 14, still living in Bonn and before he had met Haydn. They are remarkable in that, even though there are hints of the influence of Mozart and Haydn, they clearly show the emergence of the original Beethoven style. For example, no.3 in C major contains melodies which were adapted to the piano sonatas op 2. no.1 in F minor and no. 3 in C major, ten years later. But these works are not merely early sketches. They reveal Beethoven’s youthful brilliance, offering both a glimpse into his developing style and a collection of beautifully crafted, engaging works that stand on their own as delightful and expressive music. This is a program which I selected based on listening to the set many times. I'm excited to have it brought into performance. Don't miss it!

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Piano Quartet No.1 in E-flat major, WoO 36 No.1

Adagio assai / Allegro con spirito / Thema con variazione


Piano Quartet No.2 in D major, WoO 36 No.2

Allegro moderato / Andante con moto / Rondo. Allegro


Piano Quartet No.3 in C major, WoO 36 No.3

Allegro vivace / Adagio con espressione / Rondo. Allegro



Book now by email!

Reservations: 1,000 baht per person. Email: asiachart@hotmail.comAll proceeds to the musicians. 

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Tarin Supprakorn, piano


Eastman School of Music

Jirajet Jesadachet, (Toto) violin




Royal Academy of Music in London









Yu-Ju Lai, viola




Franz Liszt University of Music in Weimar
member of Taipei Symphony Orchestra








Wang Tzu-Wen, cello

The Tianjin Juilliard School, faculty

International Music Competition Bonn “Grand Prize Virtuoso”






Book Now!

Reservations: 1,000 baht per person. All proceeds to the musicians. Book by Email: asiachart@hotmail.com


Chat on WhatsApp

Tickets: No tickets will be issued for concerts. Admission to the music room on the day of the concert will be in accordance with the sequence of receipt of payment (ie, who pays first goes in first and can select their desired seat).

Etiquette: No photos during the performance. Photos may be taken during the encore only. During the main performance please put your phone in silent mode and put it away.

Children: Children aged eight years and older may attend the concert depending on the suitability of the program. 

Cancellations and credits: Credit will be allowed for future concerts in the event of illness. Please don't come if you're feeling sick or recovering but still coughing. 

Directions to Eelswamp: Find 'Eelswamp' on google maps.

Bolt Taxi service to Eelswamp: Just enter "Eelswamp" in the destination box.



Past concerts in this series:



Friday June 6th, 6pm

All Bach


Four famous concerti from JS Bach
Friday June 6th, 6pm

Violin Concerto in A minor, BWV 1041
Violin Concerto in E major, BWV 1042
Concerto for 2 violins in D minor, BWV 1043
Concerto for Oboe & Violin in C minor, BWV 1060

Five string musicians and three soloists




Toto Jirajet Jesadachet, violin

studied at Royal Academy, London



                                    Pang Visanee Vongvirulh, violin

                                    studied at Mozarteum University, Salzburg,









Mook Nuttha Kuankajorn, oboe

Hochschule für Musik Karlsruhe

Principal oboe, Thai Philharmonic




Next in this series:

   Friday, June 27th: The three Beethoven Piano Quartets WoO36

   Monday, August 25th: Two Mozart String Quintets in G minor and E flat



Friday, May 16, 2025

Shostakovich's Farewell

Friday, May 30th, 6pm

Shostakovich Violin and Viola Sonatas


Tasana Nagavajara, viola



Anna Takeda, violin 



Akkra Yeunyonghattaporn, piano


Violin Sonata in G major, Op. 134 (1968)

Written for Oistrakh on his 60th birthday, the sonata has three movements, the finale of which is a massive passacaglia with bold cadenzas for both piano and violin, culminating in a grand statement taking only a few bars, before dwindling away to a slow march, with a chilling conclusion.

and

Viola Sonata in C major, Op. 147 (1975)

A farewell work, the last work he wrote, completed just weeks before Shostakovich succumbed to lung cancer and heart failure in July 1975. The viola’s dark timbre lends itself to the sonata’s somber and elegiac character.

Here's a nice quote about the second movement:

"The second movement of Shostakovich’s Viola Sonata, Op. 147 is a sarcastic scherzo, marked Allegretto. It’s built on biting rhythmic figures and bitonality, where the viola and piano play in two separate keys simultaneously. This unsettling effect gives the movement a sense of disjointed irony, almost like a distorted folk dance.

Interestingly, much of the material comes from Shostakovich’s unfinished 1942 opera, The Gamblers. The movement carries a mocking, grotesque quality, with the viola’s angular phrasing clashing against the piano’s stumbling accompaniment. There’s a sense of forced joviality, as if the music is laughing through gritted teeth."

The final movement - Shostakovich's final movement - is a delicate lullaby building to an intense lament with a brilliant cadenza before fading away with the initial delicate lullaby, Shostakovich's farewell to the world.

These are two masterpieces from the greatest composer of the 20th century. If you appreciate Shostakovich, don't miss this performance. 


Tasana Nagavajara is well known to us, having played more concerts at Eelswamp than I can count. He studied at the International Menuhin Music Academy in Switzerland and the Vorarlberg Conservatory in Austria, specializing in chamber music. He has performed extensively across Europe, North America, and South America, collaborating with renowned ensembles like Camerata Lysy Gstaad. Tasana served as Concertmaster of the Bangkok Symphony Orchestra for ten seasons and has performed major violin concerti with Thailand’s leading orchestras. He is a founding member of the Faculty of Music at Silpakorn University and has directed the Silpakorn Summer Music School (SSMS) since 2005. His work focuses on introducing chamber music repertoire to Thai audiences, expanding the country’s classical music scene.

Anna Takeda has played for us at Eelswamp on several occasions, both as a soloist and as part of the Pro Musica Quartet. She was educated in Japan and then at the Manhattan School of Music. She has played the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto at the Merkin Concert Hall, as well as the Tchaikovsky Concerto recently in Pattaya. She also played an all Bach program with Akkra and Kasina, last year at Eelswamp.

Akkra Yeunyonghattaporn studied at the Yong Siew Toh Conservatory of Music (National University of Singapore), where he won the Piano Concerto Competition and received the Best Accompanist Award for two consecutive years. He later earned his Master’s degree in Piano Performance and a Graduate Performance Diploma in Chamber Music from the Peabody Conservatory of Johns Hopkins University, followed by a Doctor of Music degree from McGill University. Akkra has performed across Asia, Europe, and North America, collaborating with internationally acclaimed artists such as Leon Fleisher, Richard Goode, Pascal Rogé, and Dina Yoffe. 

Reservations: 1,000 baht per person. Email asiachart@hotmail.com. All proceeds to the musician.
Tickets: No tickets will be issued for concerts. Admission to the music room on the day of the concert will be in accordance with the sequence of receipt of payment (ie, who pays first goes in first and can select their desired seat).

Etiquette: No photos during the performance. Photos may be taken during the encore only. During the main performance please put your phone in silent mode and put it away.

Children: Children aged eight years and older may attend the concert depending on the suitability of the program. 

Cancellations and credits: Credit will be allowed for future concerts in the event of illness. Please don't come if you're feeling sick or recovering but still coughing. 

Directions to Eelswamp: Find 'Eelswamp' on google maps.

Bolt Taxi service to Eelswamp: Just enter "Eelswamp" in the destination box.