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She is a composer, arranger and violinist born in
Guangzhou, Guangdong, China who became one of the first women at the
Central Conservatory of Arts in Bejing to receive a Master of Arts. Coming from a musical family her
father was a doctor and violinist, her mother a doctor and pianist, and her
sister and brother are also musicians with her sister being a child
prodigy. She began to learn
the piano and the works of composers such as Mozart and Bach when she was
just three years old but everything has to stop when she was 13 as the
Cultural Revolution began.
Determined to keep playing as long as she could she hid in the town
after her father and sister had been sent away and used a mute to play her
violin and stuffed blankets in the piano to keep the sound muffled. She hung out until she was 15 when
the house was searched, the things she owned removed and her and her family
sent to the country to carry out compulsory labour. She did not waste her time in the
country though and learned about Chinese folk traditions that would be
beneficial for her in future compositions. She returned to her hometown when she was 17 and before
long she was the concertmaster of the Beijing Opera Troupe Orchestra. In 1977 she enrolled in the Beijing
Central Conservatory of Music and in 1986 she travelled to the United
States to take further education in music and remained in New York City
where she studied composition at Columbia University. During the 1990s she was seen as
composer-in-residence with the choral group Chanticleer among several
others. She married the
composer Zhou Long and today they are both Professors of Composition at the
Conservatory of Music and Dance at the University of Missouri-Kansas
City. Her compositions are
many and include three symphonies, "Arirang", "Sakura" and other Chinese
works, Ballad, Dance and Fantasy, The Golden Flute, Suite for Cello and
Chamber Winds, KC Cappricio, Chinese Myths Cantata, Woodwind Quintet and
many other choral and chamber works.
Recordings of her music include The Music of Chen Yi, Sparkle
and Momentum. In 2001
she was honoured with the Charles Ives Living Award from the American
Academy of Arts and Letters and that same year she received the ASCAP Concert
Music Award.
Chanticleer recordings
Arirang
Teldec 16676 (CD: Wondrous Love: A World Folk Song Collection)
Arranger - Chen Yi
Sources:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chen_Yi_(composer)
- http://www.presser.com/Composers/info.cfm?Name=CHENYI
- http://composers21.com/compdocs/chenyi.htm
- http://hometown.aol.com/chenyi/myhomepage/profile.html
- http://www.creativeworkfund.org/pages/bios/chen_yi.html
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