Hope Lee


Wen-Pin Hope Lee is a Taiwanese composer. His works comprise a variety of genres, including symphonies, theatre, dance, solo works, chamber music, computer music, and multimedia performance art. In 2004 he began his Taiwan Series of compositions: a body of work inspired by Taiwanese culture, including Indigenous peoples and Hakka melodies, sung texts in Taiwanese, and the ambient sounds of Taiwan locales. Lee is the winner of the 2006 Golden Melody Award for Best Composer of Traditional and Artistic Music and a nominee for the 2007 Golden Melody Award for his recording of his five-act theatre dance piece Hsiahai City God through Water of Mengjia.
Lee resides in Taipei, where he teaches composition at his alma mater, the National Taiwan Normal University. In 2013, Lee had become the only Taiwanese among the notable alumni of Boston University under its entry on Wikipedia. Currently, Lee is one of the professors of Department of Music who exempt from faculty assessment for lifetime.
He is also active in the leadership of the Sonare Symphony Orchestra in Taipei.

Training

Lee first experiences with music were as a child under the tutelage of pianist Chiu-chin Lai. At the age of 17 he began studies in composition and music theory with Prof. Chin-yow Lin. He entered the bachelor's program at the National Taiwan Normal University the following year; his teachers were Shing-kwei Tzeng, Mao-shuen Chen and Shu-shi Chen. Upon graduation Lee moved to America for graduate studies in composition and music theory at the Boston University. His teachers in Boston were Lukas Foss, Theodore Antoniou and Marjorie Merryman. Lee was awarded the Doctor of Musical Arts degree in composition in 1999. Lee received his doctorate of musical arts in January, 1999. In 2013, Lee had become the only Taiwanese among the notable alumni of Boston University under its entry on Wikipedia.  Currently, Lee is one of the professors of Department of Music who exempt from faculty assessment for lifetime.
Upon his return to Taiwan Lee was appointed to the composition faculty at the National Taiwan Normal University, where he also serves as director of the Digital Media Center Music Interactive Laboratory. He also teaches music at the National Taichung University and the Affiliated Senior High School of NTNU. He is active as the artistic director of the Sonare Symphony Orchestra and as executive of Music Dimensions, an ensemble devoted to the performance of new Taiwanese music.
Lee’s works consist of a variety of solo music, chamber music, symphonies, theater dance, film scoring and popular music. In recent years, Lee has been active in cross-disciplinary art, combining interactive images with all kinds of theatrical productions of dances, drama, and musicals. Lee has also written a great number of works in musical, popular music, and commercial scoring, establishing himself as one of the most important composers of crossover music in Taiwan.

Representative works

Since 2004, Lee has pivoted his work around the theme of Taiwan Series and his latest representative works include the following:

Orchestral music

In recent years, Lee has turned his attention to collaborative works employing digital arts. Works that have resulted from this include: Association of Raindrops, Transformation and Interaction, a depiction of ecological systems in Taiwan; Dimensions, a visualisation of religious rites using the techniques of digital virtual music theater; The Ghost Arrives!, a music theater piece using digital images; and Fabric Legend from the Taiwanese Legend Series, a music theater piece encompassing elements of literature, folk tale, drama, dance, and interactive images. Feint-and-Parry Misdirect, from the Taiwanese Nursery Rhyme Series, incorporates elements of children’s literature, computer music, and interactive images in a work of image-interactive virtual musical theater; the piece is scored for voices, prepared piano with amplification effects, and percussion quartet.

Publications

Print

Lee's autobiography has been published in book form in a collection entitled Discovering Formosa: Taiwanese Contemporary Composers.
Lee regularly publishes scholarly research and presents lectures as well as compositions. The topics usually relate to his creative work, as when the ArtsIT 2009 Conference in Taiwan featured him in a panel discussion of "An Interactive Concert Program Based on Infrared Watermark and Audio Synthesis."

Recordings