General Director,
Taipei Chinese Orchestra
Yiu-kwong Chung is Taiwan's best
known and most often performed composer.. His music,
distinguished by its profound Chinese philosophical background and
expressive range, has won large and enthusiastic audiences all over
the world. He has written for every conceivable type of music
ranging from the grandest orchestral work, Chinese opera, musicals, to the
most intimate piece in New Age style.
In March 2000, The Eternal City for
Chinese Orchestra captured the 1st prize of the 21st Century
International Composition Competition held by the Hong Kong Chinese
Orchestra. His another 1st-prize winning chamber work in 1986,
Chariots Ballad for Solo
Marimba and 7 Percussionists, quickly entered the
repertory, with performances by the Prague Percussion Ensemble and
over 50 different percussion ensembles of many leading universities in
USA and Japan. Festive Celebration for Wind
Orchestra, now published by Musikverlag Johann Kliment KG in
Vienna, has been performed by many orchestras throughout the world and
is recorded on the 7th and the 8th WASBE Conference CD sets. His
two bold and energetic pieces Dance of the Earth and Taiwanese
Children Song , performed by cellist Yo-Yo Ma, are recorded on
SONY-Taiwan's Super Charm Yo-Yo MA Album.
Following Chung's move to Taiwan in
1991, his music began to receive much wider recognition and has been
performed throughout the world at many major international festivals
such as Prague Spring Festival, ISCM World Music Days, Shanghai Music
Festival, Festival of the Asian Composers' League, and WASBE
International Band Festival. Numerous recent commissions and
collaboration with international renowned artists, such as Yo Yo Ma,
Cho-liang Lin, Wu Man, Christian Wirth, Eva Fampas, Emphasis Saxophone Quartet, the Berlin Philharmonic 12 Cellists, and Elsner String Quartet, have
confirmed the growing interest in his music throughout the world.
Commissioned works in 2006
included
Four Studies on Themes of Pablo Picasso for Wind Ensemble, Concerto for Wind Orchestra, Concerto for Clarinet and Wind Ensemble, Concerto for Alto Saxophone and Wind Ensemble, Big Dippers
Formation for Suona Solo and Small
Chinese Ensemble, Pestle Song for
Alto Saxophone and Percussion, Concerto No. 2 for Marimba and Strings,
Orchestral Suite Echoes in Mountain Valleys, Postmodern
Psalm for Choir, Multi-vector for 10 Percussionists, and
Taiwanese Opera Who Is My Bride.
His
recent most important world premieres include the Hakka Sketches
by Cho-liang Lin and International Sejong Soloists in November 2006
at National Concert Hall, Taipei; Taiwanese Opera Who Is My Bride by Tang Mei
Yun Opera Company in April 2006 at National Theater, Taipei; Guitar
Concerto For Eva by Eva Fampas in October 2004 at
Melina
Mercury Cultural Center,
Athens; and Musical Butterfly Lovers by Tafen Musical Company
in September 2003 at National Theater,
Taipei.
His most recent
CD/DVD releases include a National Chinese Orchestra recording
of The World of Chinese Painting, a Ju Percussion Group 20th
Anniversary DVD recording of Drumming No. 5, a Tafen
Musical Company's VCD recording of Butterfly Lovers.
Enrich recording of Cantos II for Saxophone Quartet and
Happy Hour for 2 Saxophone Quartets performed by the Emphasis
Saxophone Quartet from France and Diapason Saxophone Quartet from
Taiwan, a
Hugo recording of Under the Red Eaves for
Orchestra.
Yiu-kwong Chung was born in Hong Kong,
1956. He received formal percussion training at the Philadelphia
College of the Performing Arts and Brooklyn College, City University
of New York where he studied percussion with Nicolas D'amico and
Morris Lang. He also studied marimba with Leigh Howard Stevens and
Keiko Abe. From 1980 to 1986, he served as the Assistant Principal
Percussion at the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra. As a composer he
was basically self-taught until in 1986 he was awarded the 1st
prize at the 13th Percussive Arts Society Composition
Competition in USA which enabled him to study composition formally in
the Ph.D. program of the Graduate Center, City University of New York
with Robert Starer and David Olan. He received his Doctoral of Musical
Arts (D.M.A.) degree in percussion in 1991 and Ph.D. degree in
composition in 1995 from the Graduate Center, City University of New
York. His D.M.A. dissertation Hans Werner Henze's Five Scenes from
the Snow Country: An Analysis (available at UMI Dissertation
Information Service) was granted the Barry Brook Dissertation Award.
In 1995, based on structures, orderly sequence, and symbolism of the
64 hexagrams, Chung invented I-Ching Compositional System (ICCS) which
is now regarded as the most successful exemplar of integrating
fundamental Chinese Yin-yang philosophy into Western
contemporary compositional and analytical theories. Chung is currently
the General Director of the Taipei Chinese Orchestra, the foremost
traditional Chinese orchestra in the world.