Chinary Ung

Chinary Ung (Khmer: អ៊ុង ឈីណារី[1] pronounced [ʔuŋ cʰiːn̪aːriː]) (born November 24, 1942 in Takéo, Cambodia) is a composer currently living in California, United States.

Career

After arriving in the US in 1964 to study clarinet, he turned to composition studies with Chou Wen-chung and Mario Davidovsky, receiving a Doctor of Musical Arts from Columbia University in 1974. In 1988, he became the first American to win the University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for musical composition.[2] Additionally, he received the Kennedy Center Friedheim Award, as well as awards from The American Academy of Arts and Letters, Asia Foundation, Asian Cultural Council, Rockefeller Foundation, Ford Foundation, Guggenheim Foundation, Joyce Foundation, and The National Endowment for the Arts.

In October 2007 the Del Sol String Quartet was invited to premiere the composer's Spiral X playing the Library of Congress' collection of Stradivarius instruments.

Ung taught music at Northern Illinois University, Connecticut College, the University of Pennsylvania, and Arizona State University, before being appointed to the faculty at the University of California, San Diego. In 2013, UCSD promoted Ung to the rank of Distinguished Professor. He currently holds the position of Presidential Fellow: Senior Composer in Residence at Chapman University in Orange, California.

Ung's music is published by C. F. Peters Corporation and his music is recorded on New World Records, Bridge Records, Cambria, London Records, Other Minds, Oodiscs, Nami Records, Kojima Records, Albany Records, Norton Recordings, Composers Recording Incorporated, Folkways Records, and Koch International.

Awards

List of selected works

  • 1970 Tall Wind, for soprano and chamber ensemble
  • 1974 Mohori, for soprano and chamber ensemble
  • 1980 Khse Buon, for solo cello or viola
  • 1985 Child Song, for alto flute, viola, harp
  • 1986 Inner Voices, for orchestra
  • 1987 Spiral, for cello, piano, and percussion
  • 1989 Spiral II, for soprano, tuba, and piano
  • 1990 Grand Spiral: Desert Flowers Bloom, for symphonic band
  • 1992 Spiral VI, for clarinet, violin, cello, and piano
  • 1995 Antiphonal Spirals, for orchestra
  • 1997 Seven Mirrors, for solo piano
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References


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