Kiwis Holloway and Lardelli are joined by fellow-composer Chris Gendall. Gendall is a high-flyer in his field, winning the SOUNZ Contemporary Award in 2008 with his orchestral score, Wax Lyrical, while numerous other works can be heard on CDs by NZ Trio and trombonist David Bremner.
The current project began last March when the three composers went to Japan to work with their instrumentalists, an experience that Gendall describes as invaluable.
"All three demonstrated just what their instruments could do," he explains. "This enabled us to internalise the sounds they made and re-imagine them in our own voices."
Gendall was fascinated by the contemporary Japanese music written for koto and sho, and all the upcoming New Zealand concerts by the Miyata-Yoshimura-Suzuki Trio feature works by Takashi Tokunaga, Toshio Hosokawa and Osamu Kawakami.
Gendall's piece Choruses, the piece he has written for them, is derived from native New Zealand birdsong.
"As a composer, I'm always interested in the sounds that are around us," Gendall says. "Here I transcribed the song of a tui, not only for its melodic and rhythmic qualities but also for the colours of its sound, and the way it moves. My piece explores the way this sound bends, reflects and develops, in both physical and musical ways.
"In purely sonic terms, the tui's song is amazingly chaotic. It's fascinating to hear the way in which all those different signals it gives out interact; and that's what's behind the gnarly harmonies and figures in my piece."
The printed score of Choruses consists of 21 elegantly scribed pages. From the start, it's easy to predict a star turn from Suzuki's tenor recorder, against the pungent sustained underlaying notes of the sho and koto. To quote the classic Allen Toussaint soul ballad, it runs "from a whisper to a scream".
After the group's final performance, Gendall heads to Dunedin, where he is Otago University's Mozart Fellow. One senses a certain pride in his description of himself as a freelance composer.
"I'm certainly planning to survive," he says. "And the Mozart Fellowship is really helping."
Performance
What: Miyata-Yoshimura-Suzuki Trio
Where and when: Hopetoun Alpha, Auckland, Thursday at 7.30pm; St Andrews on the Terrace, Wellington, Sunday 28 February at 3pm; St Mark's Church, Lower Hutt, Monday 29 February at 7.30pm