David Fung

David Fung is a concert pianist.

Early life and education

Fung attended James Ruse Agricultural High School in Sydney, where he graduated with a UAI of 100 and earned a scholarship to study the M.B.B.S. course at the University of New South Wales.[1] Following two years of medical school, Fung left to pursue an education and training in music.[2]

Musical education and training

In 2002, David Fung won the ABC Symphony Australia Young Performers Awards, after four rounds of competition which culminated in his performance of Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra during the concerto finals at the Sydney Opera House Concert Hall.[3] He has subsequently appeared with the major orchestras of Australia and recorded a CD with the ABC Classics label.[4]

Deciding to pursue a career in music, Fung transferred in 2003 to the Colburn School in Los Angeles to study with John Perry. Fung was the first student of piano to be admitted to the Colburn Conservatory in its inaugural year; in May 2007, he became the first pianist to graduate from the Conservatory.[5] Fung also holds an Artist Diploma from the Colburn School and Master's and Doctorate degrees from Yale University, where he studied with Claude Frank and Peter Frankl. He later studied with Arie Vardi in Germany at the Hochschule für Musik, Theater und Medien Hannover.

Career

Fung has appeared extensively with the world’s major orchestras including the Cleveland Orchestra, Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, the National Orchestra of Belgium, the National Taiwan Symphony Orchestra, the New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra, the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, the San Diego Symphony, the San Francisco Symphony, and the Tampere Philharmonic Orchestra, and with the major orchestras in Australia, including the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, the Queensland Symphony Orchestra, and the Sydney Symphony Orchestra.

In July 2016, Mr. Fung’s highly acclaimed debut with the Cleveland Orchestra at the Blossom Music Festival was “everything you could wish for” (Cleveland Classical) and he was further praised as an “agile and alert interpreter of Mozart’s crystalline note-spinning” (The Plain Dealer). In the following week, he performed Rachmaninov’s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini at the Beijing National Stadium for their Olympic Summer Festival. Other highlights of the season include invitations to the Louvre, the Palais des Beaux-Arts, the Kennedy Center, the Baryshnikov Arts Center, and a recital tour in China at all the major venues including the Beijing Concert Hall, Shanghai Oriental Art Center, Guangzhou Opera House, and the Tianjin Grand Theater.

A frequent guest artist of concert series and festivals throughout the world, Mr. Fung has performed at the Aspen Music Festival, Caramoor, the Edinburgh International Festival, the Ravinia Festival, then Atlantic Music Festival, the Bari International Music Festival in Italy, Music at Menlo in California, New York's Carnegie Hall and Merkin Hall, Los Angeles' Walt Disney Concert Hall and Royce Hall, Wigmore Hall in London, Scotland's Queen’s Hall, Belgium's La Monnaie, Toronto's Glenn Gould Studio, the Sydney Opera House, the National Concert Hall in Taiwan, and Israel's Mann Auditorium. His debut at the Edinburgh International Festival Queen’s Hall Series was acclaimed as being “impossibly virtuosic, prodigiously talented... and probably [doing] ten more impossible things daily before breakfast,” by Jonas Green in the Edinburgh Guide. His recitals at the Edinburgh International Festival were especially well received.[6][7]

Fung became a prizewinner of the prestigious Queen Elisabeth International Music Competition and the 12th Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Master Competition in Tel Aviv, where he was also awarded the Prize for Best Classical Concerto, and Best Performance of Chamber Music.[8]

Besides the piano, Fung also plays the harpsichord and violin.

Personal life

Fung is proficient in Chinese and Italian.[9]

Recordings

In addition to recording for Naxos and ABC Classics, Fung has recorded three albums with Los Angeles-based Yarlung Records.

In 2005, Mr. Fung’s debut album with Yarlung Records linked the virtuosity in the piano music of Liszt and Ravel: Liszt’s Sonata in B minor and Les jeux d’eau à la villa d’Este, with Ravel’s Jeux d’Eau and La Valse. His second album with Yarlung, Evening Conversations, featured a solo recital of intimate works by composers ranging from Mozart to Tan Dun. Evening Conversations was praised as “an overall favorite” by James Harrington in the American Record Guide and was named one of the Top 10 Recordings of 2011 by Linn Records. As a chamber musician, Mr. Fung has recorded the complete violin and piano works of American composer Lawrence Dillon with violinist Danielle Belen (Naxos) and partnered with Canadian ‘cellist Elinor Frey in her album Dialoghi (Yarlung).[10]

Notes

  1. Woo, Eddie (9 April 2012). "Media Release on David Fung". James Ruse Union.
  2. Fung, David (23 January 2013). "Following artistic dream proves perfect medicine". The Australian.
  3. Symphony Services Australia (October–December 2002). "Artist Development News". Network News. Archived from the original on 2006-11-29.
  4. David Fung (2008). "Long Bio". Retrieved 2007-08-27.
  5. David Fung (2008). "Long Bio". Retrieved 2007-08-27.
  6. Green, Jonas (2006-08-21). "David Fung Bank of Scotland Queen's Hall Series". Edinburgh Guide.
  7. Fairley, Jan (2006-08-22). "David Fung". The Scotsman.
  8. Arthur Rubinstein International Music Society (2008). "Competition Winners". Retrieved 2008-04-15.
  9. David Fung | LinkedIn
  10. Yarlung Records (2006). "Yarlung Records". Retrieved 2007-08-27.

External links

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