Hao Huang (pianist)
Hao Huang | |
---|---|
Born | Jersey City, New Jersey, U.S.A. |
(Jun) Hao Huang (黄俊豪) is a Hakka Chinese American concert pianist, published scholar, narrator, playwright, composer and the Bessie and Cecil Frankel Endowed Chair in Music at Scripps College.
Huang has performed in over two dozen countries overseas and authored or co-authored approximately four dozen journal articles and book chapters on topics in Western classical music, popular music, ethnomusicology, music history, anthropology, environmental studies, women's studies, American Studies and Humanities.
Education
Awarded the Leonard Bernstein Scholarship at Harvard College at Harvard University,[1] Huang was referred to study with Leon Fleisher. Graduating with an A.B. cum laude in music, Huang was selected by audition for the national Frank Huntington Beebe Award for European Study which supported a tour of England, Switzerland, France and Italy. Upon returning to the States, he studied with Beveridge Webster at the Juilliard School on a piano scholarship, earning an M.M. in piano.[2] Huang finished his academic studies as a Graduate Council Fellow at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, earning a D.M.A. in piano performance degree under the guidance of Charles Rosen and Gilbert Kalish.[3]
Career
Huang is the Bessie and Cecil Frankel Endowed Chair in Music at Scripps College.[4] As a four-time United States Information Agency Artistic Ambassador [5] to Europe, Africa and the Middle East, he was a featured performer at the George Enescu Festival and the Barcelona Cultural Olympiad.[6] Huang has performed as a recitalist, concerto soloist and chamber musician with the Mei Duo and the Gold Coast Trio in the U.K., Austria, Hungary, Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Poland, Romania, China, New Zealand, South Africa, Mexico, Belize, Brazil and other nations. He has appeared on television and radio broadcasts both in the USA and abroad, and gave an Artist/Educator interview for The Piano Education Page.[7]
Huang's essay "The Parable of the Grasshoppers" was honored as American Music Teacher's 1995 Article of the Year by the Music Teachers National Association.[8] Other scholarly articles have been published in refereed journals in Hungary, Russia, UK, Greece, Japan, the PRC and the USA, of which the most frequently cited are “Why Chinese people play Western classical music: Transcultural roots of music philosophy” in International Journal of Music Education 30(2), 2012; “Yaogun Yinyue: rethinking mainland Chinese rock ‘n’roll” in Popular music 20(1), 2001; book chapter “The Oekuu Shadeh of Ohkay Owingeh” in Voices from Four Directions: Contemporary Translations of the Native Literatures of North America, U of Nebraska Press 2004; “Billie Holiday and tempo rubato: Understanding rhythmic expressivity”, co-author RV Huang, in Annual Review of Jazz Studies 7, 1994; “Speaking with spirits: The Hmong Ntoo Xeeb new year ceremony”, co-author B Sumrongthong, in Asian folklore studies, 2004. Huang's scholarly work has been recognized by The Chronicle of Higher Education, The Washington Post and National Public Radio’s “Morning Edition.”
In 2021, Hao Huang initiated and narrated the nationally acclaimed podcast about the 1871 LA Chinatown massacre (authored and produced by Micah Huang), "Blood on Gold Mountain,"[9] that reached #23 in the USA in the history category of Apple Podcasts. The podcast was featured on National Public Radio, the Washington Post,[10] Spectrum News 1, the digital media outlet NowThis News, KPBS Public Media and others. In fall 2022, his podcast play, "坚持 Jianchi/Perseverance," registered over half a million hits on Baidu in the PRC.[11] In fall 2023, he co-curated the exhibition “íyo’toróvim yaraarkokre ‘eyoo’ooxono- Remembering the Caretakers of the Land; Materials on Southern Californian and Southwest Native American Peoples” with Jennifer Martinez Wormser, Director of Denison Library at Scripps College.[12] Huang served as senior consultant for the 2024 LA Hungry Ghost Festival presented by California Arts Council Creative Corps fellow Micah Huang and The East Wind Foundation for Youth in Chinatown, Los Angeles.[13][14]
Awards and honors
In 1998, Huang was selected as an NEH Scholar for the National Endowment of the Humanities Summer Seminar, “National Identity in China: the New Politics of Culture” at East–West Center, University of Hawai'i at Manoa.[15] Huang served as a 2008 Fulbright Scholar in American Studies and Music at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest, Hungary.[16] Huang was awarded a 2011 National Endowment for the Humanities Teaching Development Fellowship for his teaching project, “Bridging Cultures”, one of 9 awarded nationally from 218 applications.[17] In 2012, he was selected as an American Council on Education Fellow with support from the ACE Council of Fellows Fund for the Future.[18] Huang was a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Scholar at the last international NEH seminar "Arts, Architecture and Devotional Interaction in England, 1200–1600", York UK in 2014.[19]
In 2019, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation's Truth, Racial Healing & Transformation (TRHT)[20] program granted an award to Huang as creative producer of a multimedia performance event in Pico House in partnership with the Chinese American Museum of LA, about the Los Angeles Chinese massacre of 1871, one of the worst race lynchings that ever took place on the West Coast of the United States. In collaboration with the UCLA Asian American Studies Center, Huang was presented with the 2021 UCLA Chancellor’s Arts’ Initiative Award[21] as executive producer of the “Chinatown Elegy” transarts/interdisciplinary events (featuring the Chinese Music Ensemble at UCLA, duo singers Emma Gies and Micah Huang, body movement artist Young-Tseng Wong, dance choreography by Kevin Williamson) that commemorated the 150th anniversary of the Los Angeles Chinese massacre of 1871, performed at El Pueblo de Los Ángeles Historical Monument and on the Wood Steps at Bowling Green, Scripps College. These performances were attended by US Representative Judy Chu, Los Angeles city councilman Kevin de León, UCLA Chancellor Gene D. Block and others. In early 2022, under the aegis of Scripps College and in partnership with the USC Pacific Asia Museum, Huang served as Project Director of a National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Grants for Arts three-part interarts performance event, American Dreams – Asian Nightmares (composed and produced by Micah Huang), that explored the rich and often bittersweet history of Asian Americans in California.[22] As a playwright and a poet, Huang was one of three authors awarded a 2022 California Writers Residency at Yefe Nof[23] near Lake Arrowhead, California; later in summer 2022, he was an artist-in-residence as a composer at La Macina di San Cresci [24] in Greve in Chianti, Italy. In fall 2022, Huang was chosen as a Scripps Racial Justice and Equity Fellow,[25] for a research project on histories of anti-Chinese violence in California, at the Library of Congress, the National Archives and Records Administration, and Bancroft Library at UC Berkeley.
References
- ^ "Harvard alumnus directory".
- ^ "Juilliard alumni directory".
- ^ "SUNY at StonyBrook alumni website".
- ^ "Faculty Profile | Scripps College in Claremont, California". www.scrippscollege.edu.
- ^ "Federal agency picks Converse teacher for tour". www.goupstate.com.
- ^ "Cultural Olympiad" (PDF). www.fundaciobarcelonaolimpica.es/.
- ^ "The Piano Education Page – Artist/Educator Archive Interview – Dr. Hao Huang". pianoeducation.org.
- ^ "AMT Article of the Year". www.mtna.org.
- ^ "Blood on Gold Mountain". blood-on-gold-mountain.captivate.fm. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
- ^ "One of the bloodiest massacres". www.washingtonpost.com. Retrieved 30 October 2021.
- ^ "坚持 Jianchi/Perseverance, 中国生物多样性保护与绿色发展基金会". mbd.baidu.com. Retrieved 18 November 2022.
- ^ "'They are still here'". claremont-courier.com. 29 September 2023. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
- ^ "Los Angeles Hungry Ghost Festival". lahungryghostfestival.com. 5 May 2024.
- ^ "Step into the Spirit Realm". www.ladowntownnews.com. 19 August 2024. Retrieved 8 October 2024.
- ^ "1998 NEH Summer Seminar awards" (PDF). www.neh.gov.
- ^ "Tseng-Hao Huang | Fulbright Scholar Program". fulbrightscholars.org.
- ^ "NEH "Bridging Cultures"". www.neh.gov.
- ^ "2012 ACE Fellow announcement". issuu.com. 15 July 2012.
- ^ "Call for Participants: Summer School: Arts, Architecture and Devotional Interaction in England 1200–1600 (York 2014)". medievalartresearch.com. 20 December 2013. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
- ^ "WKKFoundationTRHTprogram". healourcommunities.org. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
- ^ "Chancellor's Arts Initiative Grant Program | Research & Creative Activities". www3.research.ucla.edu. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
- ^ "National Endowment for the Arts Grant Announcement for FY 2022" (PDF). www.arts.gov. Retrieved 23 June 2022.
- ^ "Yefe Nof California Writing Residency". yefenof.com.
- ^ "Artist Residency at La Macina di San Cresci". resartis.org. 6 March 2019.
- ^ "2022 Scripps College Racial Justice and Equity Faculty Fellow". www.scrippscollege.edu. 11 April 2023.