Ashi Day

Biography

Ashi Day is a composer and educator whose vocally-driven music explores unconventional intersections between music and theater; using the voice as a compositional tool; strategic use of humor and absurdity; and expanding the canon to embrace and reflect the experiences of performers and audiences, especially women and girls, with an emphasis on compassion and kindness. She also writes a lot of songs about animals.

Ashi received a Discovery Grant for Women Composers from Opera America to support the development of Waking the Witch. a 75-minute immersive chamber opera in which the audience assumes the role as a 16th-Century accused witch being interrogated by a Witchfinder (countertenor or mezzo-soprano/contralto). Using a text drawn from the words of historical witch hunters as well as modern day leaders and movements with eerily similar rhetoric, the opera explores ever-repeating human vulnerability to absurd beliefs and the danger of mixing authority and religion with black-and-white thinking and conspiracy theories. Written for solo voice and Pierrot+ ensemble (fl., cl., vln., vlc., pno., and perc.), the treble instruments join the drama as animal familiars, possibly real, possibly hallucinatory shapeshifting demons who do the devil’s work.

Ashi’s additional short chamber operas all explore, in some way, who gets to move freely through the world and who does not. For Whom the Dog Tolls, written for soprano Charlotte Stewart-Juby, is a 10-minute piece for soprano, piano, duck call, and whistle, that shows a day-in-the-life of a Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever, a unique breed of Canadian hunting dog with the ability to lure ducks to their demise. The opera deliberately creates a role for soprano that is victorious and joyful at every moment, and has been performed by The Fresh Squeezed Opera Company and Renegade Opera as well as in multiple concert performances. The Green Child, commissioned by clarinet and soprano duo Whistling Hens, tells the story of two girls rescuing each other from both physical and existential danger. Both the singer and the instrumentalist portray characters in the 15-minute “play” based on the French fairytale “The Green She-Devil” and the 12th-Century English legend of the green children of Woolpit. The piece was included in Hartford Opera Theater’s Folxtales in addition to multiple concert and festival performances by the Hens.

Ashi’s operas, art songs, and choral pieces have also been performed by Opera from Scratch, Whistling Hens, StageFree, Metropolitan Master Chorale of Los Angeles, Artifice, Ensemble Lyrae, American University Chorus, Wisconsin State University Concert Choir, College of the Holy Cross Choir, University of Wisconsin-River Falls Chamber Choir, the University of Stavanger, and more. She has won calls for scores from Calliope’s Call and Juventas New Music Ensemble with her art song “Open Your Mouth,” a simple setting of Proverbs 31:8-9 that showcases the similarities between biblical and social justice language. She has also been a festival composer at Choral Arts Initiative’s PREMIERE|Project Festival, Denison TUTTI, New Music on the Bayou, NEO Voice Festival, Women Composers Festival of Hartford, Music by Women, University of North Georgia’s Research on Contemporary Composition Festival, District New Music Coalition’s New Music DC, and more. Ashi won prizes in the Sewanee Church Conference’s FYFE Choral Composition Competition for the sacred anthem “Even So, Lord, Quickly Come” and the New York Treble Singers Composition Competition for “The Dove Pursues the Griffin.” She has been commissioned by Whistling Hens, PERI Trio, Connecticut Yankee Chorale, Anthology vocal quartet, Cantate Chamber Singers, and flutist Megan Shanley Alger, as well as by individual singers and church choirs.

In devised theater, she collaborated with artists of various disciplines to co-create Narrative the Build We for Cultural DC’s Source Festival and Being Moss as part of I Thought the Earth Remembered Me with banished? productions for the Capital Fringe Festival.

Ashi has been named a DC Arts and Humanities Fellow for 2021 and 2023 alongside artists of all mediums “whose artistic excellence significantly contributes to the District of Columbia as a world class cultural capital.”

Ashi earned a B.M. and M.M. in Composition respectively from Bucknell University and Westminster Choir College. Composition teachers include William Duckworth, Jackson Hill, Stefan Young, and Joel Phillips. Equally dedicated to education, Ashi spent five years teaching elementary music and reading in south Florida, simultaneously studying improv theater and classical voice. She later earned her Ed.M. in Arts in Education from the Harvard Graduate School of Education, where she was named an Urban Scholars Fellow for her work in arts education. She now works in arts education administration, creating opportunities for people of all ages to experience, explore, learn through, and train in music and opera. As a soprano, she is a professional church musician and a member of DC’s new composer/conductor collaborative ensemble, Artifice. Ashi is an excellent partner for singing rounds and hopes you’ll ask. She resides in Washington, DC, with her husband and her dog/muse.

Photo Ashi Day
Photo https://operawire.com/q-a-ashi-day-on-waking-the-witch-contemporary-opera/

Composer info

Nationalité

Canada

1982
Website

Works in Paramirabo's repertoire