Calvert Johnson, compiler, 2012



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EAST ASIAN WORKS FOR HARPSICHORD AND ORGAN

Calvert Johnson, compiler, 2012



Prepared for the Royal Canadian College of Organists national convention, Victoria BC, July 2010

American Guild of Organists national convention, Nashville TN, July 2012

(notes: last name is capitalized; women composers indicated by *)



CHINA (including Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore)


Since the 19th century, Chinese composers have been attracted to Western musical idioms, often with an interest in combining Chinese stylistic elements and melodies with Western forms and procedures. There is a precedent for counterpoint and harmony in Chinese music, particularly Peking opera, in which various instruments do more than perform heterophonic versions of the same melody. Many Chinese composers are thoroughly grounded in Western music, and often have digested the ethnomusicological studies of their own musical traditions. Several Austin organs were installed in Shanghai churches in 1930, but were destroyed in the Communist Revolution. After 1949 the Communist government encouraged both the study of traditional, classical and folk musics of China as well as Western music (often with imported Russian teachers). The Cultural Revolution (1966-1976) suppressed Western music and musical instruments, but after the arrest of the Gang of Four, composers have returned to Western music, and fusion music that combines Western and Chinese instruments and genres has become a significant part of Chinese contemporary musical activity. Organs have been installed in major concert halls (Rieger-Kloss, Beijing Concert Hall; Austin, Forbidden City Concert Hall; Oberlinger, China National Radio Station; National Center for Performing Arts; others are in St. Ignatius Catholic Cathedral, Central Concert Hall, and Oriental Arts Centre, Shanghai; and in provincial centers such as Ghangzhou; Shenzen, etc.). There is even an Organ Museum on Xiamen Island, Fujian Province. The largest of the 17 pipe organs installed in Taiwan, is at the National Concert Hall, Taipei. There are organs in churches (St. John’s Anglican Cathedral), universities (Klais, Chinese University of Hong Kong), and concert halls in Hong Kong, notably the Hong Kong Cultural Centre (Rieger). There was even a flourishing organ building industry in China, beginning in 1601 at Macau. The Jesuits had an organ factory at Zikawei, where they made a bamboo organ in the mid-19th century.
Urrows, David Francis. The Pipe Organ and the Jesuits in China: A Brief History. Lecture at Ricci Centre for Chinese-Western Cultural History, University of San Francisco Center for the Pacific Rim, 9 May 2008.
Harpsichord

CHAN Ka-Nin (b.1949)

Phantasmagoria for harpsichord

Alienor Harpsichord Book. Chapel Hill: Hinshaw Music Inc., 1988

For biographical notes, see Chan Ka-Nin under organ

RECORDING: Phantasmagoria. Calvert Johnson, harpsichord. Soliloquies: New Japanese and Chinese Music for Harpsichord and Organ. Albany TROY 1049 (2008).












CHEN Yi (b. 1953)*

Song in Winter for harpsichord, di, zheng

Philadelphia: Theodore Presser, 1993

For biographical notes, see Chen Yi under organ










HO, Alice Ping Yee*

Qim

Toronto: MS, 2013

www.alicepingyeeho.com

hopingyee@hotmail.com

EDUCATION: born Hong Kong; B.Mus. (composition), Indiana University; M.Mus.(composition), University of Toronto; study with John Eaton; Brian Ferneyhough, John Beckwith.

AWARDS: du Maurier Arts Ltd. Canadian Composers Competition, MACRO International Composition Competition, Luxembourg International Composition Prize and International League of Women Composers Competition.













LEE, Hope Anne Keng-Wei (1953)*

In the Beginning was the End, (1989) for harpsichord and accordion

Kassel: Furore-Verlag, 1996

LEE, Hope Anne Keng-Wei (1953)*

Melboac for harpsichord (1983)

Kassel: Furore-Verlag, 1996

LEE, Hope Anne Keng-Wei (1953)*

Tangram (1992) for bass clarinet, harpsichord and tape

Kassel: Furore-Verlag, 1997

For biographical notes, see Lee, Hope under organ

RECORDING: Melboac. Vivienne Spiteri, harpsichord. New Music for Harpsichord from Canada and the Netherlands; Musique actuelle du Canada et des Pays-bas pour clavecin. Montreal: Société d’Enregistrement, SNE 542 (1988).












LEE, Thomas Oboe (b. 1945)

Twenty-nine Fireflies, op. 18, book 2 (1982-86) for harpsichord or piano

Boston: Departed Feathers Music, Inc., 1986

For biographical notes, see Lee, Thomas Oboe under organ










LIANG, Lee (USA, b. Tianjin, China 1972)

Some Empty Thoughts of a Person from Edo




www.lei-liang.com/

EDUCATION: Born in Tianjin, China. BM New England Conservatory, MM; PhD Harvard. Study with Sir Harrison Birtwistle, Robert Cogan, Chaya Czernowin, Mario Davidovsky, Joshua Fineberg, Elliott Gyger, Lee Hyla and Bernard Rands

CAREER: Associate Professor of Music, U of California, San Diego; Honorary Professor of Composition and Sound Design, Wuhan Conservatory of Music (2000); Distinguished Visiting Professor, Shaanxi Normal University College of Arts in Xi’an (2004); Harvard University (2003-6) where he received the Derek Bok Distinguished Teaching Award; Visiting Assistant Professor of Music, Middlebury College (2006-7). 

AWARDS: Elliott Carter Rome Prize (2011); Xinghai National Piano Music Competition (special distinction, 1984; Third Prize, 1987; Second Prize, 1988); Heinrich Strobel Foundation bursary from theSouth West German Radio Experimentalstudio (2004); Meet the Composer/MetLife Creative Connections Grant (2007); Fondazione William Walton Residency Award (2008); Aaron Copland Award (2008); ASCAPLUS Award (2008); and Guggenheim Fellowship (2009); honorable mention, Aliénor Awards for harpsichord composition competition (2004, for Some Empty Thoughts of a Person from Edo), George Arthur Knight Prize fromHarvard University (2006, for Serashi Fragments) and finalist, Thailand International Composition Competition for Saxophone (2006, forParallel Gardens). 












TSANG Richard (b. 1952)

Images of Bells for harpsichord

Hong Kong Arts Centre













TZENG, Shing-Kwei (Taiwan b. 1946)

The Way of Heaven (1983)




EDUCATION: Born in Ping-Tung. Musikhochschule, Freiburg (1977-81); Darmstadt (1980); Film music study at École Normal de Musique, Paris (1986-1987);

CAREER: Professor, National Taiwan Normal University (1981-2005); Research, IRCAM (1986); Chair, Society of Electro-Acoustic Music, Taiwan (1999-2002);



YU, Man-Ching “Donald”
(Hong Kong b.1980)

In Memoriam of J. S. Bach (2001) for harpsichord

Verona NJ: Zimbel Press, 2008

For biographical notes, see Yu, Man-Ching under organ


CHINA (including Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore)

Organ

CHAN Ka-Nin (b. 1949)

Par-ci, par-là (2002) for chamber ensemble and organ

Toronto: Canadian Music Centre, 2002.

CHAN Ka-Nin (b.1949)

Reflection and Promenade for organ (1992)

London, Ontario, Canada: Jaymar Publication, 1993

CHAN Ka-Nin (b.1949)

Rise (1994) for trumpet and organ

MS: Toronto

CHAN Ka-Nin (b.1949)

Star of the Sea for 2 instruments and harpsichord (1996)

MS: Toronto

www.chankanin.com kanin.chan@utoronto.ca

CHAN Ka Nin was born in Hong Kong, moving to Canada in 1965,

EDUCATION: composition with Jean Coulthard at the University of British Columbia and with Bernhard Heiden at Indiana University (Doctor of Music in composition 1983).

CAREER: professor of music theory and composition at the University of Toronto.

AWARDS: the Béla Bartok International Composers’ Competition, the Barlow International Competitions, the International Horn Society Composition Contest, the Juno Awards for Best Classical Composition, and the 2001 Dora Award for Outstanding New Musical in Toronto (for his opera Iron Road). Phantasmagoria won three awards in the Aliénor Harpsichord Composition Competition sponsored by the Southeastern Historical Keyboard Society.

STYLE: “Reflection is a contemplative piece for solo organ. The music is lyrical and reaches a climax near the middle of this one movement work. The introduction and coda consist of extreme high and low notes which seem to suggest the communion between heaven and earth.” “Promenade describes a casual excursion of a youngster who seems to find everything in sight interesting and exciting. In this work, the complexity of intricate rhythms and mixed meter is offset by the simplicity of using only the white keys of the keyboard.” (Notes from an email from the composer and from the Jaymar Publication edition of his organ works). The title of Phantasmagoria, which means “a rapidly changing series of things, is a fantasia for the harpsichord. The momentum of the horizontal progression is akin to quantum molecular motion where individual parts may seem to be moving randomly, [but] the overall state of the matter is gradually changing.” Although Chan frequently includes “Oriental idioms in [his] compositions, it is not very apparent in this piece” although “the monodic style (and the lack of counterpoint) is nonetheless influenced by oriental instrumental writing.” (Notes from an email from the composer)

RECORDING: Reflection and Promenade for Organ. Calvert Johnson, organ. Soliloquies: New Japanese and Chinese Music for Harpsichord and Organ. Albany TROY 1049 (2008).

Canadian Organ Music Showcase. David Palmer, organ. CMC B000P3WXZC (2006)











CHANG Vicky Pei-lun (Taiwan, b. 1966)*

Big Fat Man

Amherst NY: MS, 2008

CHANG Vicky Pei-lun (Taiwan, b. 1966)*

Dyam-Ma-Ga

Amherst NY: MS, 2008

CHANG Vicky Pei-lun (Taiwan, b. 1966)*

Grasshopper & Rooster

Amherst NY: MS, 2008

CHANG Vicky Pei-lun (Taiwan, b. 1966)*

Oriental in Five

The Organist’s Companion (September 2013) Colfax NC: Wayne Leupold Editions, 2013

CHANG Vicky Pei-lun (Taiwan, b. 1966)*

Prayer

Amherst NY: MS, 2013.

CHANG Vicky Pei-lun (Taiwan, b. 1966)*

Quarrel

Amherst NY: MS, 2007

CHANG Vicky Pei-lun (Taiwan, b. 1966)*

Suite for Organ (Bird, Cloudy Sky, Raining Night, Train)

Colfax NC: Wayne Leupold Editons, 2006

CHANG Vicky Pei-lun (Taiwan, b. 1966)*

Taiwan Suite II

Amherst NY: MS, 2012

CHANG Vicky Pei-lun (Taiwan, b. 1966)*

When in Our Music God Is Glorified

Amherst NY: MS, 2013

http://www.wnyfestivalchorus.org/vickychang.htm

EDUCATION: DMA organ performance at the College-Conservatory of Music of the University of Cincinnati, MM in organ at the ManhattanSchool of Music, and the BM in piano at Fu Jen Catholic University in Taipei, Taiwan, where she studied organ with Maw-sheng (Harry) Chen.

CAREER: Music director at St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, Lancaster NY. Music director of the Festival Chorus in Lancaster NY. Assistant Professor Erie Community College (since 2011).

PERFORMANCES: National Concert Hall of the National Chiagn Kai-Shek Cultural Center in Taipai, and in Beijing (broadcast throughout China).

COMPOSITIONS: She began to composer in her teens. “Cloudy Sky” and “Raining Night’s Flower” were composed for her Taipei National Concert Hall recital. She describes these two pieces, “Cloudy Sky is constructed in three parts. First there is a short introduction; second, there is the introduction of the Taiwanese folk tune ‘Teanh-oh-oh’ with a new phrase arrangement, at the beginning of the second section which uses an ostinao patternin the pedal and a rhythmic pattern on the manual to accompany the melody; third is a development section.” The original version for the premiere performance was for clarinet and organ, which has been alluded to in the registration on this recording. “Raining Night’s Flower is based on the Taiwanese folk tune ‘Woo-yah-hwui.’ This piece can be divided into four parts. First a short introduction, the melody is generated by the first and last phrase of the folk tune, and both are highly ornamented. Second, there is a simple hymnal style, in which the entire folk tune is placed on the soprano line. Third, there is development, from measure 32-to 38, the descending triplet passages resembling the raindrops while it modulates into a different key. At the end, it is a trio in canon with a little coda.” (Notes from an email from the composer as well as notes from the Wayne Leupold Editions publication).

RECORDINGS: Suite for Organ: Cloudy Sky, Raining Night’s Flower. Calvert Johnson, organ. Soliloquies: New Japanese and Chinese Music for Harpsichord and Organ. Albany TROY 1049 (2008).



Travel by Music. “Grasshopper and Rooster,” “Big Fat Man,” Dyam Ma Ga,” “Ghost,” “Quarrel.” Pei Lun Vicky Chang, organ. Peter Lee (2010).










CHEN, Chelsea (b. 1983)*

Jasmine Fantasy (2010) for violin, organ, strings




CHEN, Chelsea (b. 1983)*

The Moon Lady: A Chinese Folktale for Organ and Narrator.

Colfax NC: Wayne Leupold Editions, 2011.

CHEN, Chelsea (b. 1983)*

Rice Dumplings for violin and organ




CHEN, Chelsea (b. 1983)*

Spring Breeze for violin and organ




CHEN, Chelsea (b. 1983)*

Taiwanese Suite for organ (2003): Hills in the Springtime, Moonlight Blue, Mountain of Youth

Colfax NC: Wayne Leupold Editions, 2010.

CHEN, Chelsea (b. 1983)*

Three Taiwanese Folksongs for organ (2007): Four Seasons, The Cradle Song, The Country Farmer

Colfax NC: Wayne Leupold Editions, 2013.




www.chelseachen.com

EDUCATION: A native of San Diego, Ms. Chen studied piano with Jane Bastien, and organ with Leslie Robb and Monte Maxwell. The Juilliard School: BM and MM in organ with John Weaver and Paul Jacobs. Fulbright scholarship: a year in Taiwan composing and performing. Yale University: Artist Diploma under Thomas Murray.

CAREER: Artist-in-Residence at Emmanuel Presbyterian, Manhattan.

AWARDS: numerous awards in organ performance competitions.

PERFORMANCES: Singapore’s Esplanade, Hong Kong’s Cultural Centre, Los Angeles Disney Hall, Philadelphia’s Kimmel Center, and 2008 AGO national convention (Minneapolis).

RECORDING: Eastern Treasures. Con Brio CBR 21141












CHEN Qigang (b. 1955)

Hui Sheng for organ (1992)

Paris: Gérard Billaudot Editeur, 1993

www.qigangchen.com

julie_yang2004@yahoo.com (Chen’s assistant in France)

EDUCATION: Chen was a child in Beijing when the Cultural Revolution began. His father, an administrator of the Beijing Academy of Fine Arts, was sent to a labor camp, and Qigang was subjected to “ideological reeducation.” He continued studying composition; ready in 1977 when the Chinese government permitted study of Western music again, selected through a competition as one of 26 students to enter the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing, where he studied composition with Luo Zhonghong. In 1983 he received permission to pursue a master’s degree at the Paris Conservatoire, studying with Olivier Messiaen, Betsy Jolas, Claude Ballif etc. He worked at IRCAM in 1987 and studied in Siena with Donatoni. 1988 he received the Diplome supérieur in composition, and in 1989 Diplome in musicology at the Sorbonne.

HONORS & AWARDS: Prestigious prizes in composition: first prize (1986) in the French Ministry of Culture’s International Composition Contest, Stipendienpreis at Darmstadt (1988), “Musician of the Year” (1990) by the Chinese press, SACEM’s Hervé Dugardin prize (1991), Villa Medicis prize (1993), Grand Prize of the City of Paris (2000).

COMMISSIONS: Radio France, Nieuw Ensemble (Netherlands), Orchestre National de France, China National Ballet, Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal (from www.qigangchen.com)











CHEN Yi (b. 1953)*

Dunhuang Fantasy for organ and chamber wind ensemble

Philadelphia: Theodore Presser, 1999

http://www.presser.com/composers/info.cfm?name=chenyi

www.myspace.com/composerchenyi

Distinguished Professor, University of Missouri-Kansas City Conservatory of Music and Dance, recipient of the Charles Ives Living Award (American Academy of Arts and Letters, 2001-04).

EDUCATION: BA and MA in music composition (Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing), DMA (Columbia University), studying with Wu Zuqiang, Chou Wen-chung and Mario Davidovsky. She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2005.

COMMISSIONS: Yehudi Menuhin, Yo-Yo Ma, Evelyn Glennie, the Cleveland Orchestra, the BBC, the Seattle, Pacific, and Singapore Symphonies, the Brooklyn, New York, and Los Angeles Philharmonic, Sächsische Staatskapelle Dresden, the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, Raschèr Saxophone Quartet and Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra, Orchestra of St. Luke's, among many others.

RECORDINGS: BIS, New Albion, CRI, Teldec, Telarc, Albany, New World, Naxos, Quartz, Delos, Angel, Nimbus, and KIC.

HONORS & AWARDS: Guggenheim Foundation (1996), National Endowment for the Arts (1994), Lieberson Award (American Academy of Arts and Letters, 1996), first prize, Chinese National Composition Competition (1985), Lili Boulanger Award, National Women Composers Resource Center (1993), New York University’s Sorel Medal (1996), the CalArts/Alpert Award (1997), Grammy Award (1999), University of Texas Eddie Medora King Composition Prize (1999), Adventurous Programming and Concert Music awards from ASCAP (1999 and 2001, respectively), Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center’s Elise Stoeger Award (2002), Edgar Snow Memorial Fund’s Friendship Ambassador Award (2002), Kauffman Award in Artistry/Scholarship from the UMKC Conservatory (2006), and honorary doctorates from Lawrence University WI (2002), Baldwin-Wallace College OH (2008), University of Portland OR (2009), and The New School University in NYC (2010).

STYLE: Chen Yi blends Chinese and Western traditions, transcending cultural and musical boundaries. (from Theodore Presser Company website bios on composers).

RECORDING: Dunhuang fantasy. Kimberly Marshall, organ. Momentum. BIS 1352 (2003).











CHIN Gordon Shi-wen (Taiwan, b. 1957)

Rhapsody for organ (1992)




http://www.music.ntnu.edu.tw/faculty/king/en/index.htm

EDUCATION: Born Yun-Lin, Taiwan. DMA in composition, Eastman School of Music studying with Samuel Adler and Christopher Rouse

EMPLOYMENT: music director of Yin-Qi Chorus and Symphony Orchestra in Taipei, and he is a faculty member of National Taiwan Normal University.

COMPOSITIONS: one of the most active composers in Taiwan. Compositions include four symphonies, a cantata, violin concerto, piano concerto, choral works, chamber works, percussion quartets, and works for solo instruments. Chin's works have been performed world-wide by Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, Asia Pacific Orchestra in Los Angeles, San Diego Symphony Orchestra, Yuodia Chorus and Orchestra in Tokyo, Ensemble 2e2m of France, Amadinda Percussion Group of Hungary, among others.












HSIAO Tyzen (b. 1938) (Taiwan)

Prelude for Pipe Organ (1990)




http://www.taiwanus.net/people/tyzen/

Tyzen Hsiao was born in Taiwan's southern port city of Kaohsiung on 1 January 1938.

EDUCATION: His mother was his first piano teacher. In his teens he studied voice with Ms Kao Ya-Mei, and piano with Ms Kao Chin-Hwa. At the National Taiwan Normal University, he studied piano with Kao Tsu-Mei and Li Fu-Mei, and composition with Hsu Tsang-Houei. In 1965 he went to Japan to study at Musashino Music University, where his teachers were Fujimoto Hideo (composition) and Nakane Nobue (piano). Master’s in composition at California State University at Los Angeles (1987) studying with Byong Kon Kim.

EMPLOYMENT: he taught at the Wenzao University, National Kaohsiung Normal University, the Tainan University of Technology and the Tainan Theological College and Seminary. He was appointed professor at the National Taiwan Normal University in 1973. Financial pressures led him to relocate to Atlanta in 1977, where he was depressed and homesick and hence did no composing. In 1978 he moved to Los Angeles and began composing again.

COMPOSITIONS: many works based on Taiwanese melodies and vocal works use Taiwanese language (not Chinese). The Taiwan government was displeased with his March of Democracy and forbid performances of his works in Taiwan. In 1987 he wrote Symphony Opus 49 "Formosa" and the art song "Never Disregard Taiwan", and released a recording, Psalms of the Taiwanese: Tyzen Hsiao’s Compositions by the North American Taiwanese Professors Association. In 1988 Hsiao composed Taiwan the Formosa; The Prelude for Pipe Organ won the California Music Teachers Association Composition Competition in 1991. The Wild Lily student movement of 1990 led to democracy in Taiwan, and he was permitted to return to his homeland. He lived at Danshui on the sea and wrote many works amidst national and international recognition of his accomplishments as a composer. Due to a stroke in 2002, he returned to Los Angeles for reasons of health, and has stopped composing again.

HONORS: The Taiwanese-American Foundation awarded him a Humanity Award Laureate, 1989; Taipei Cultural Medal.












LEE, Hope Anne Keng-Wei (1953)*

Gently rings in autumn wind (1995)

Kassel: Furore-Verlag, 1996

LEE, Hope Anne Keng-Wei (1953)*

Von einem fremden Stern (1993) for organ

Kassel: Furore-Verlag, 1996










http://thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=U1ARTU0002021

musiccentre.ca/influences/composer.cfm?a

Born in Taiwan, 14 Jan 1953, and a naturalized Canadian 1974

EDUCATION: B SC, University of Toronto (1973), B MUS (1978), & M MUS, McGill (1981). Hope Lee began studying piano at five. She moved to Canada in 1967, and studied piano with Patrick Li and theory at the Royal Conservatory of Music. At McGill University she studied piano with Rose Goldblatt and Louis-Philippe Pelletier, electronic music with Mariano Etkin, Alcides Lanza and Bengt Hambraeus, and composition with Hambraeus, John Rea and Brian Cherney. She studied 1981-3 with Klaus Huber at the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik in Freiburg, West Germany (as a recipient of a German academic exchange scholarship and a Canada Council grant). She was an active participant in new music festivals in Austria, France, Hong Kong, at the Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics at Stanford University, Darmstadt Ferienkurse für Neue Musik (1989) and the Oriental Music Festival in Durham, England (1979). The Durham festival led her to study ancient Chinese poetry and traditional Chinese music—notably the qin (Chinese seven-string plucked zither), which she learned to play.

Lee attended the first International Women Composers' Conference in West Berlin (1982); was composer-in-residence at the Künstlerhaus Boswil in Switzerland (1985); taught composition at Queen’s University (1986-7) and the University of Calgary (1999, 2001, 2003-4). In 2000 she was artist-in-residence at Die Hoege in Bassum, Germany, and guest composer at the International Computer Music and Multimedia Symposium, Taiwan. In 2004 she was visiting professor of composition at Wuhan Conservatory of Music in China.

COMMISSIONS: Since 1983, Lee has received many commissions, and her music has been performed at conferences, festivals, and other events in Canada the US, Europe and Asia.

HONORS: She won first prize in PROCAN’s Young Composers' Contest for Dindle and Ballade of Endless Woe (1979); two CAPAC William St Clair Low Awards (1979 for Ballade, and 1982, for Nabripamo); the Music Today Award (Japan, 1985, for Melboac); and first prize in the Scotia Festival of Music Boulez Year Composers' Competition (1991, for Nabripamo).

STYLE: “Lee writes complex atonal music that avoids traditional forms, and is often tough, propulsive and forcefully expressive. She exploits conventional instruments imaginatively and in unusual combinations, creating colourful and evocative sonorities. Her ethnic and scientific background and her literary, philosophical and other interdisciplinary interests have greatly enriched her work. Aptly described by Michael Schulman as a ‘cross-cultural explorer,’ she is always exploring new sounds and structures, and striving for constant growth, both within individual works and in her output as a whole.” Her works are available through the Canadian Music Centre.

(source: http://thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=U1ARTU0002021)











Lee, Thomas Oboe (b. 1945)

Chorale Fantasy, op. 97a (2003) for organ

Boston: Departed Feathers Music, Inc., 2003

LEE, Thomas Oboe (b. 1945)

Fantasia, op. 97 (2001) for organ

Boston: Departed Feathers Music, Inc., 2001

LEE, Thomas Oboe (b. 1945)

Shepherd, Show Me How to Go, op. 15a (2003) for organ

Boston: Departed Feathers Music, Inc., 2003

LEE, Thomas Oboe (b. 1945)

Toccata, Adagio and Fugue, op. 96 (2001) for organ

Boston: Departed Feathers Music, Inc., 2001

www.thomasoboelee.com

thomas.o.lee@comcast.net

Thomas Oboe Lee was born in Beijing September 5, 1945. 1949 he and his family left China, lived in Hong Kong until 1959. He moved to Sao Paolo, and then the USA in 1966.

EDUCATION: Began in Brazil during the Bossa Nova era. University of Pittsburgh (BA 1972); study with Gunther Schuller at New England Conservatory of Music (MM jazz 1974 & composition 1976); Betsy Jolas at Tanglewood, and Earl Kim at Harvard University (PhD 1981).

CAREER: Faculty, Music Department at Boston College since 1990. He and composers from New England Conservatory formed the “Composers in Red Sneakers” group sponsoring contemporary music concerts.

HONORS & AWARDS: Rome Prize (1986); two Guggenheim Foundation Fellowships, two National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships, two Massachusetts Artists Foundation Fellowships, the Charles Ives Fellowship from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, First Prize at the 1983 Friedheim Kennedy Center Awards for his Third String Quartet ... child of Uranus, father of Zeus, and recording grants from the Martha Baird Rockefeller Fund and the Aaron Copland Fund for Music.

COMPOSITIONS: over a hundred thirty works: seven symphonies, eleven string quartets, nine concerti for various instruments, choral works, song cycles and scores of chamber works. His most popular work, Morango ... Almost A Tango, composed for the Kronos Quartet, has been performed by Pilobolus, the Netherlands Dance Theater, the Royal Ballet of Flanders, the Pacific Northwest Ballet and Australian Ballet, the Cullberg Ballet of Sweden. "Morango ..." was used as a sound track for "Call It Sleep" - a documentary on Henry Roth.

COMMISSIONS: Amnesty International, Thoreau Society, Fromm Music Foundation, Koussevitsky Music Foundation, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, Boston Pro Arte, Omaha Symphony Orchestra, Kronos Quartet, Manhattan String Quartet, Artaria Quartet, Hawthorne Quartet, Raphael Trio, Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble, Cambridge Chamber Players. (from the composer’s website and his contribution to Wikipedia).












LUO, Weidau (Taiwan, b. 1936)

Organ Prelude, Christmas Cantata “The Prince of Peace” (1966)

New York: The composer, 1971

http://www.globalchurchmusic.org/docs/index.php?lang=en&pID=0

EDUCATION: Born Tamsui, Taiwan. Tainan Theological College and Seminary, Taiwan (MDiv), Union Theological Seminary (SMM, composition), UCLA (PhD in ethnomusicology)

CAREER: professor of music, Asian Institute for Liturgy and Music (Manila, Philippines) and Seminary President and head of Church Music Department of Tainan Theological College and Seminary (Taiwan), retired in 2002. Editor of Sound the Bamboo Christian Conference of Asia hymnal 2000. Editor of the official hymnal of the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan.

COMPOSITIONS: more than 100 hymns and anthems, Teach Us to Praise.

HONORS & AWARDS: Fellow of the Hymn Society of American and Canada (1995)











MA Shui-long (Taiwan, b. 1939)

Toccata and Fugue, op. 35/5 (1975)




http://www.imu.nctu.edu.tw/eng/facultyDetail.php?sn=87

http://www.culture.tw/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=526&Itemid=157

EDUCATION: Born in Keelung, Taiwan. Studied theory and composition with Prof. Hsiao, and Er Hua at National Taiwan Academy of the Arts, graduating in 1964. 1972, awarded scholarship to study with Oscar Sigmund, Regensburg Kirchenmusik Hochschule, Germany, and graduated with distinction, 1975.

HONORS & AWARDS: Sun Yat-Sen Literature and Arts award, Wu San-Lien Literature and Arts Award. Golden Tripod Award (twice). Executive Yuan Cultural Award (highest award by Taiwan government), 2007.

COMPOSITIONS: more than 80 works for orchestra, chamber ensemble, piano, voice, and chorus.

PERFORMANCES: His works have been performed in Taiwan, Europe, the United States, South Africa, and South East Asia. In 1983, National Symphony Orchestra of the United States directed by Mstislav Rostropovich performed Bamboo Flute Concerto in Taipei, broadcast live via satellite on PBS. In 1986, he visited the Columbia University and the University of Pennsylvania as a Fulbright scholar and gave four full concerts at New York's Lincoln Center and other major cities.

CAREER: former president, Taipei National University of the Arts (retired 2002); head, Music Copyright Association Taiwan (MCAT). Professor of composition at National Chiao-Tung University (NCTU) and Taipei National University of the Arts (TNUA). Chairman of the Asian Composers League and Composers Association of Republic of China (CAROC), Vice-chairman of Asian Composers' League National Committee (ACL).











REN Damin

Yong xian dai jue shi yue shou fa gai bian Zhong wai dian zi qin qu 100 shou

Beijing: Ren min yin yue chu ban she, 1999













TSENG Shing-Kuei (b.1946) (Taiwan)

Des Himmels Kreislauf

Manuscript, 1987

TSENG Shing-Kuei (b.1946) (Taiwan)

Reincarnation (1986)

Paris: Henry Lemoine, 1989

EDUCATION: Born Ping-Dong, Taiwan. Studied electro-acoustic music at Musik Hochschule, Freiburg, 1980-1981. 1986/1987, Tzeng went to IRCAM to deepen his knowledge and technique of electro-acoustic music. After his return from Paris, Tzeng introduced electro-acoustic music to his students in a systematic way, but without a well-equipped studio! Visiting researcher or guest composer – 2002-2003 at Stanford and the University of North Texas, 2005, and 2006 in CNMAT of U.C. Berkeley.

CAREER: professor of composition, National Taiwan Normal University (NTNU)

HONORS & AWARDS: Premier Grand Prix, Concours Internatinoal de Composition pour Orgue (Paris).











WANG An-Ming (b.1929)*

Fantasy for organ

Stevens Point WI: Vivace Press, 2001

WANG An-Ming (b.1929)*

Mystic Moments

Bethesda MD: MS, 2009

WANG An-Ming (b.1929)*

Soundings for organ

Bethesda MD: MS, 2000

Born in Shanghai, Wang An-Ming now lives in Potomac, Maryland.

EDUCATION: Central China University (BA), Wesleyan Conservatory (BA magna cum laude), and Columbia University (MA).

COMPOSITIONS: keyboard, vocal, chamber, choral, and orchestral media, and have been featured at Charleston’s Spoleto Festival, the International Conference on Women in Music in Atlanta, and other major festivals. Her full-length opera Lan Ying premiered at the Kennedy Center in Washington and her Concerto for Piano and Orchestra premiered in Virginia.

STYLE: Repetition, imitation, variation, and sequence are her primary means of development. Soundings, written for and dedicated to Calvert Johnson, is a large ternary structure in which the outer sections are characterized by parallel chords imitated closely between the hands as an accompaniment to pedal themes. The central section presents two lyric melodies with a calmer accompaniment and softer dynamic level. Fantasy for Organ “was completed in 1988 and received its premiere at the United Church in Washington D.C. in that year. It was specifically composed for that concert which featured all works by Wang An-Ming. The composition depicts a person’s desire to probe the deeper meanings of life through fantasy and mysticism. It opens with an introductory section that leads into the main theme, which is mystical in nature. A choral-like section emerges signaling the blessing of the soul. It closes with the repeat of the mystical theme.” (Notes from an email from the composer and notes provided with the publication).

RECORDING: Fantasy for Organ. Calvert Johnson, organ. Soliloquies: New Japanese and Chinese Music for Harpsichord and Organ. Albany TROY 1049 (2008).





*WANG, Po-Chun Cindy (b. Taiwan, 1980?)

Chicken Timbales (2009) for organ, bass, timbales, electronic sounds




*WANG, Po-Chun Cindy (b. Taiwan, 1980)

People Like Salsa (2009) for violin, bass, organ, electronic sounds




www.pochungwang.com

EDUCATION: BM Berkelee College 2002 (study with Marti Epstein, Greg Fritze, John Bavicchi); MM Boston University 2004 (study with Lukas Foss and Steven Weigt); DMA University of Missouri-Kansas City 2009 (study with Chen-Yi, James Mobberly, Paul Rudy, Zhou-Long).

CAREER: University of Massachusetts, Lowell (since 2010); Harmonix Music Systems (since 2008); MIT (2006-2008); UM-KC (2004-2006)

HONORS & AWARDS: Ellen Taaffe Zwillich Prize, IAWM (2003); Boston Symphony Hall young composer award (2002); awards in video game sound/music;












WONG, Lewis (b. 1982)

Three Children’s Songs for violin and organ




www.lewisviolin.com

EDUCATION: BM Juilliard; MM Eastman. Study with Milton Babbitt and Samuel Adler

CAREER: Visiting Artist-in-Residence, SUNY Stony Brook

HONORS & AWARDS:












XIAO, Tairan (Taiwan, b. 1938)

Meditaion, 1985




EDUCATION: Born Kao-Siong, Taiwan.










YU, Man-Ching “Donald” (Hong Kong b.1980)

Frankenstein for cello and organ (2006)

Hong Kong: MS, 2006

YU, Man-Ching “Donald” (Hong Kong b.1980)

Three Bagatelles for violin and organ (2008)

Wehr’s Music House, 2008

YU, Man-Ching “Donald” (Hong Kong b.1980)

Revelation Fantasy

Hong Kong: Triumph Music, 2010.

YU, Man-Ching “Donald” (Hong Kong b.1980)

Three Organ Pieces (Meditation, Mystical Aria, Toccata fantastique) (2006)

Verona NJ: Zimbel Press, 2008

YU, Man-Ching “Donald” (Hong Kong b.1980)

Twelve Preludes for organ (2006)

Verona NJ: Zimbel Press, 2008

http://www.societyofcomposers.org/user/man-chingdonaldyu.html

http://manchingdonaldyu.com/ manchingyu@msn.com

Man-Ching Donald Yu is a Hong Kong composer and pianist.

EDUCATION: studied piano with Krassimira Jordan at Baylor University (BM 2004); scholarship to Cortona Contemporary Music Festival (Italy, 2007). International Summer Academy, Mozarteum Salzburg (composition diploma, 2007). International Summer Course for New Music, Darmstadt. PhD (composition), Hong Kong Baptist University studying with Christopher Keyes

COMPOSITIONS: Over 100 works for piano, organ, chamber ensemble, voice, choir, opera, film, orchestra, and concerti.

STYLE: characterized by the intermingling of the lyrical language of atonality, Chinese color, as well as impressionistic elements.

CAREER: Assistant Professor, Hong Kong Institute of Education (since 2011); 1998, debut as piano soloist with Pan Asia Symphony Orchestra.

HONORS & AWARDS: Since 2007, he won three ASCAPLUS Awards for his compositions and performances. 2008, awarded Sir Edward Youde Memorial Fellowship.

PREMIERES: Most of his works have been featured at various concerts, festivals, and conference throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia including the recent 17th International Festival of Modern Arts: Two Days and Two Nights of New Music at the Odessa Philharmonic Theater (the Ukrainian Section of ISCM) as well as in 2010 Yu received international acclaims with the performances of his First Symphonywhich was premiered by the Lugansk Academic Philharmonic Orchestra at the Lugansk Philharmonic Hall under the baton of Serjij Chernyak and his Apocalypse for orchestra was premiered by the Chernivtsi Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra at the Chernivtsi Philharmonic Hall under the baton of Josyp Sozansky in Ukraine, among others. His music theory paper has been presented and published at the 9th international Music Theory and Analysis Conference in Serbia in 2011.

COMMISSIONS: Opera Hong Kong Chorus, the Choral Fellows of the Harvard University Choir (U.S.), the Onondaga Civic Symphony Orchestra (U.S.), Equinox Trio (Malta), MusicOrba Duo (France), Duo 46 (U.S.), the Hong Kong Youth Choir, and the Hong Kong Chamber Orchestra, among others.












ZHANG, QI (b. 1984)*

Symphony in a Teapot (2005; 2009)

Mainz: Schott, 2012

www.Petrushka-project.com/works/composes/show.20883.html

EDUCATION: Native of Shanghai; DMA student, University of Southern California, studying with Cherry Rhodes; MM (organ), University of Southern California, 2009; Organ Playing Certificate, University of Southern California, 2011; BM (organ), Shanghai Conservatory of Music, studying with Lei Zhu; additional study with Jean Guillou, Paris. Composition study with Mei-Li Pai, Frederick Lesemann, and James Hopkins,

HONORS & AWARDS: First Prizes in competitions including the Shanghai Electronic Organ Competition (2001), the International Electronic Organ Competition in Spain (2004) and the Oriental Youth Stars Art Series Competition in Beijing plus the Best Performance Award, Youth Group (2005). 






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