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Chen Yi

Chen Yi

Chen Yi has been played on NTS over 10 times, featured on 14 episodes and was first played on 21 September 2014.

Chen Yi (陈怡; b. Guangzhou, Guangdong, China, 4 April 1953), a distinguished Chinese composer of East-West fusion classical music and also a violinist, became the first Chinese woman to receive a Master of Arts (M.A.) in music composition from the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing.

Chen grew up in Guangzhou, China, into a talented family. Her parents were doctors and musicians; her mother played the piano, and her father the violin. Her older sister was a child prodigy, and even today her older sister and younger brother work as professional musicians in China.

Chen began studying piano at age three, studying Western composers such as Bach and Mozart. Once the Cultural Revolution began in 1966, Western influences were severely shunned and the arts were attacked. For ten years, education came to a halt and people were relocated to work in large communes in countryside. Her father and older sister were the first to be sent away, but she managed to hide in her home town a while longer and continued to practice music with some impediments: she was forced to stuff a blanket inside her piano in order to dampen the sound, and play her violin with a mute. At age 15, she could hide no more. Party cadres searched her house, took her possessions, and dispersed the rest of her family to different locations to perform compulsory farm work.

During the Cultural Revolution, Chen used her time spent labouring in the countryside to learn and appreciate Chinese folk culture. She would later in life use this influence to find her own voice and style. At age 17, she returned to Guangzhou and began working as concertmaster in the orchestra of the Beijing Opera Troupe in Guangzhou.

Chen lived for many years in New York City, and studied composition with Chou Wen-chung and Mario Davidovsky at Columbia University, earning a DMA with distinction. Her husband is the composer Zhou Long. As of 2006, both Chen and Zhou are professors of composition at the University of Missouri–Kansas City Conservatory of Music and Dance.

Chen's orchestral compositions combine Chinese folk and Western instruments, inventing a new fusion of Eastern and Western classical music. She teaches Chinese folk fingerings for Western woodwinds and strings. Alongside her many orchestral works, she contributed to choral and chamber music repertoires and composed works for traditional Chinese instruments. For the Beijing Olympics opening ceremonies, director Chen Kaige selected her composition, Olympic Fire, now Rhyme of Fire. The Theodore Presser Company publishes her works.

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Chen Yi

Chen Yi has been played on NTS over 10 times, featured on 14 episodes and was first played on 21 September 2014.

Chen Yi (陈怡; b. Guangzhou, Guangdong, China, 4 April 1953), a distinguished Chinese composer of East-West fusion classical music and also a violinist, became the first Chinese woman to receive a Master of Arts (M.A.) in music composition from the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing.

Chen grew up in Guangzhou, China, into a talented family. Her parents were doctors and musicians; her mother played the piano, and her father the violin. Her older sister was a child prodigy, and even today her older sister and younger brother work as professional musicians in China.

Chen began studying piano at age three, studying Western composers such as Bach and Mozart. Once the Cultural Revolution began in 1966, Western influences were severely shunned and the arts were attacked. For ten years, education came to a halt and people were relocated to work in large communes in countryside. Her father and older sister were the first to be sent away, but she managed to hide in her home town a while longer and continued to practice music with some impediments: she was forced to stuff a blanket inside her piano in order to dampen the sound, and play her violin with a mute. At age 15, she could hide no more. Party cadres searched her house, took her possessions, and dispersed the rest of her family to different locations to perform compulsory farm work.

During the Cultural Revolution, Chen used her time spent labouring in the countryside to learn and appreciate Chinese folk culture. She would later in life use this influence to find her own voice and style. At age 17, she returned to Guangzhou and began working as concertmaster in the orchestra of the Beijing Opera Troupe in Guangzhou.

Chen lived for many years in New York City, and studied composition with Chou Wen-chung and Mario Davidovsky at Columbia University, earning a DMA with distinction. Her husband is the composer Zhou Long. As of 2006, both Chen and Zhou are professors of composition at the University of Missouri–Kansas City Conservatory of Music and Dance.

Chen's orchestral compositions combine Chinese folk and Western instruments, inventing a new fusion of Eastern and Western classical music. She teaches Chinese folk fingerings for Western woodwinds and strings. Alongside her many orchestral works, she contributed to choral and chamber music repertoires and composed works for traditional Chinese instruments. For the Beijing Olympics opening ceremonies, director Chen Kaige selected her composition, Olympic Fire, now Rhyme of Fire. The Theodore Presser Company publishes her works.

Original source: Last.fm

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