CONDUCTORS
- NOTE: All bios are at that point in time.
Jacob Youngmok Chang, South Korea - 2024
Jacob Youngmok Chang, the chairman of the Korea International Choral Association. He founded and led non-profit choirs such as the Jeonwon Choir and the
Academy Choir, and founded the Daegu City Choir in 1981 and served as its first conductor. Along with performing, he served the chairman of the Korean Federation
on Choral Music and the president of Daegu Arts University, and has been a committee member of the IFCM Asia Pacific Choral Council.
Chang who majored in religious music at Union University of the Philippines, graduated from the University of the Philippines' Graduate School of Music (majored
in vocal and conducting) and began his teaching career in 1971. He has worked at Jinju National University of Education and Keimyung University for 30 years. He
was also awarded the degree of Doctor of Divinity in Sacred Music and the Performing Arts (Honoris Causa) from the Union Theological Seminary at the Philippines
Christian University in 2010.
Mark Anthony Carpio, the Philippines - 2024
Mark is currently a faculty member of the Conducting and Choral Ensemble Department of the University of the Philippines College of Music,
where he earned his Master's degree in Choral Conducting and his Bachelor's degree in Piano.
In 2001, Mark succeeded Prof. Andrea O. Veneracion, founder of the Philippine Madrigal Singers and Philippine National Artist for Music, as choirmaster of the group.
Since then, he has continuously led the choir to even greater heights by winning in several international choral competitions.
Known for his collaboration with emerging composers, innovative programming, and approachability, he is a much sought-after choral clinician, giving choral workshops
all over the Philippines and around the world. He is also frequently invited as guest conductor and as an adjudicator in local and international choral competitions.
In the Philippines, he regularly collaborates with the Philippine Choral Directors Association, the Cultural Center of the Philippines and the National Commission
for Culture and the Arts, for music and choral education programs.
Nurturing young singers is his passion. He directs the Consortium of Voices, a choral society of young choristers and also conducts the Pansol Choir, a church-based
community choir. He also serves as the Artistic Director of the Andrea O. Veneracion Sing Philippines Foundation, which spearheads choral music development
initiatives. These include the Sing Philippines Youth Choir which he conducts, whose singers come from all over the country.
Mark is also a piano accompanist, vocal coach, and a countertenor soloist.
Tracy Wong, Malaysia/Canada - 2023
Dr. Tracy Wong hails from Malaysia and is a choral conductor, music educator, composer, vocalist, and pianist. Currently residing in Ontario,
Canada, she is the Assistant Professor of Choral Studies at Western University, where she conducts Chorale and Les Choristes ensembles. She also serves as the Conductor
of the Grand Philharmonic Youth Choir in Kitchener, Ontario.
She holds a Doctor in Musical Arts and Master in Music Performance (Choral Conducting) degrees from the University of Toronto under the tutelage of Dr. Hilary
Apfelstadt. She is also the proud recipient of the 2016 & 2017 Elmer Iseler National Graduate Fellowship in Choral Conducting, and 2018-2019 McMaster University Student
Union Teaching Award.
As an active clinician and educator, she has conducted workshop for choirs in North America, Malaysia, Brunei, France, Ireland and Portugal.
Her choral works are available on her website as well as Cypress Choral Music (Canada), Graphite Publishing (USA), and Young Choral Academy (Malaysia).
Tracy is a proud alumna of the inaugural 2011 and 2012 Asia Pacific Youth Choir.
Chi Hoe Mak, Malaysia - 2023
Chi Hoe enjoys a varied career as an award-winning choral conductor, singer, adjudicator, clinician. He is currently Artistic Director of Young Choral Academy,
Resident Chorus Master and Principal Artist with Kuala Lumpur City Opera, Artistic Director and Conductor of the Penang Philharmonic Chorus and a Visiting Tutor of
Voice at Sunway University School of Arts in Malaysia.
Chi Hoe is co-founder of the Malaysian Choral Eisteddfod (MCE), one of the leading choral festivals in Malaysia and is an active advocate of choral and singing
education in the country. As a choral conductor, he has won many Gold awards and prices with his choir at many national and international choir festivals. As an
adjudicator and choral clinician, he has presented and adjudicated at choral festivals in China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Ireland, Philippines, Russia, Singapore,
United Kingdom, Vietnam and all over Malaysia.
An alumnus of the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire in UK, he obtained two Master of Music degrees in Voice and Choral Conducting, both with Distinction and won all
the conducting prizes at college. He was the first Asian to win a prestigious Conducting Fellowship to work with the London Symphony Chorus in 2010 which launched
his conducting career in UK.
Chi Hoe was conferred an Honorary Member of the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire (HonRBC) for his outstanding contribution to his profession.
He is also a member of the IFCM Asia Pacific Choral Council and the Asian Choral Association.
Vivian Wing Wun Ip, Hong Kong - 2019
A native from Hong Kong, Ip is an active choral and orchestral conductor. In the seasons 2016/17 and 2017/18, Ip was appointed by Jaap van
Zweden as assistant conductor for the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra.
Currently the music director of Xing-er Symphonic Orchestra, she has worked with Polish Baltic Philharmonic, Vienna Chamber Orchestra, Kammerorchester Musica Vitae,
Pro Arte Orchestra Vienna and Hong Kong Strings. As a choral conductor, she has conducted the Berlin Radio Choir, DR Vokalensemblet, Hong Kong Oratorio Society,
Hong Kong Children's Choir, Indiana University Symphonic Choir, Indiana University Children's Choir, among others.
With an Associate Instructorship, she received her Master of Music degree in Choral Conducting at the Indiana University Bloomington. She received her Mag. Art.
degree (distinction) in Orchestral Conducting at the University of Music and Performing Arts Vienna. She actively participated in masterclasses by maestri Fabio
Luisi, Simone Young, Bertrand de Billy and Helmuth Rilling.
In 2018, Ip led the Xing-er Symphonic Orchestra to win a Gold Award at the 6th World Orchestra Festival in Vienna, in which Ip received a Talented Conductor Prize.
She received a special prize in the 6th International Competition for Young Choral Conductors in 2011.
She has taught conducting in the BA and MA Programme of the Music Department, Chinese University of Hong Kong since 2019 spring.
Beverly Shangkuan-Cheng, Philippines - 2018
President of the Philippine Choral Directors Association, Faculty of the University of the Philippines College of Music. She received a Bachelor of Music (summa cum laude)
from the University of the Philippines, a Master of Music from the Yale School of Music and the Yale Institute of Sacred Music, and a Doctor of Musical Arts from the University
of Michigan, USA.
She is the Principal Conductor of the Ateneo de Manila College Glee Club, Resident Conductor of the Philippines' International Bamboo Organ Festival, and Founding Conductor of
the Dawani Women's Choir. Previously, she conducted the University of Michigan Residential College Singers, the University of Michigan Opera Chorus, the Yale University Church
Choir, and the Yale Marquand Chapel Choir.
She is a First Prize Winner at the American Choral Directors Association (ACDA) National Graduate Conducting Competition, the most prestigious national conducting competition
in the United States. Her other conducting and academic awards include the Levi Barbour Fellowship from the University of Michigan, the Phyllis Curtin Career Entry Award from
the Yale School of Music, the Ani ng Dangal award from the Office of the President of the Republic of the Philippines, the Margot Fassler Award and the Hugh Giles Prize from
the Yale Institute of Sacred Music.
Stephen Leek, Australia - 2015
Freelance Australian Composer/Conductor Stephen Leek has long associations with some of the finest and most innovative choirs around the world including Gondwana Voices
(Australia), the Tapiola Children's Choir (Finland), Kamer Choir (Latvia), The Formosa Singers (Taiwan), and his own choirs, vOiCeArT and The Australian Voices, that he
co-founded and conducted for 17 years until the end of 2009.
As a conductor, Leek is in demand to work as guest conductor around the globe. As a composer he writes in his own distinctive contemporary style that is often imitated by
others, and his works, which have broad appeal, are performed by a wide selection of choirs throughout the world. He has been commissioned by some of the leading choral groups
world-wide. Having written 13 operas, numerous orchestral and chamber works, music for education and dance, yet, Leek is often credited as the founder of Australian choral
music through his composition of over 700 innovative choral works which explore a uniquely Australian colour and texture. A Churchill Fellow, Leek has received many national
and international awards including the prestigious Robert Edler International Choral Prize for his contribution to the development of global choral music. He is currently
Vice-President of the International Federation for Choral Music, and in 2012/13, the Artistic Director of the Shanghai Youth Choir.
Chifuru Matsubara, Japan - 2014
Permanent conductor of the Tokyo Philharmonic Chorus. Studied at the Kunitachi College of Music in Tokyo, and the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki. He also completed several
masterclases for choral conducting under Eric Ericson, Dan-Olof Stenlund, Peter Erdei.
He was invited as a conductor to Helsinki University Male Choir, Finish Radio Chamber Choir, Suomen Laulu, Cetus Noster, Estonian Philharmonic Choir, Latvian Radio Choir,
Polish Chamber Choir, Ellerhein Girls' Choir, and an assistant to Erkki Pohjola - Tapiola Choir.
Publication: Tapiola Sound by E. Pohjola (Japanese edition), Jean Sibelius - His Life as Seen Through His Symphonies
Recordings: Japanese choral music with the Tokyo Philharmonic Chorus etc.
Jennifer Tham, Singapore - 2014
A professional choir director, Jennifer is best known for her work with the Singapore Youth Choir (now the SYC Ensemble Singers), which she has directed since 1986. Her
training as a composer at the Simon Fraser University (Vancouver, Canada) has led her to explore and re-define the choral idiom through her work with the SYC and in the
Singapore school choir scene. She is also Artistic Director of the Young Musicians Society (YMS), which runs the First Aid for Choirs and Conductors workshop series as well
as the Kodaly Seminar Asia for music pedagogues and choir conductors in collaboration with the Kodaly Institute of the Liszt Academy of Music (Budapest, Hungary).
Jennifer was Artistic Director of the Asia South Pacific Symposium on Choral Music (Singapore, 2001) and on the Artistic Committee for the 7th World Symposium on Choral Music
(Kyoto, 2005). An elected Board member of the International Federation for Choral Music, Jennifer helps coordinate the Asia Pacific Choral Council as well as the Asia Pacific
Youth Choir.
Jennifer has chaired and spoken on panels at conferences in Singapore, Sweden, Estonia and Denmark, and was principal lecturer at the 2008 Lithuanian Conductors Summer Academy,
hosted by the Lithuanian Choral Union and the Ministry of Culture. She has taught choral conducting and pedagogy at the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts, and is on faculty at the
Kodaly Seminar Asia where she teaches conducting and leads the Morning Sing.
In 2011, Jennifer was awarded for Artistic Excellence by the Composers and Authors Society of Singapore. In 2012, she was conferred the Cultural Medallion, the nation's highest
arts accolade, by the President, Republic of Singapore, for her contribution in shaping Singapore's cultural landscape.
Hakwon Yoon, Korea - 2012, 2013
Hak-won Yoon, who has made chorus as the national art and made the world know of the greatness of Korean choral, has graduated composition department of Yonsei University,
completed graduate school of University of Lowell, and received honorary doctoral degree from Midwest University. Through his forty years of leading World Vision Choir,
Dae-woo chorale, Seoul Ladies' Singers and Incheon City Chorale, he raised the standard of Korean choral and made it popular to the public. Now, he is discovering young Korean
composers to make new and epochal Korean chorus and showing it to the world thus leading the Korean wave in choral society.
There exists endless romance and warmness within his perfected and exquisite music. His natural musical sense and passion, his deep insight and marvelous achievements brought
him the world's respect and praise to call him as Eric Ericson of Korea.
He successfully held positions of chief director of Korea Federation of Choral Music, advisor of IFCM, dean of Chungang University School of Music, music director of World
Vision Choir. Currently he is the music director of Far-East Broadcast Yoon Hak-won Choral, director of Korea Choral Conductor Academy, judge of World Choral Olympics and
senior conductor and art director of Incheon City Chorale.
Saeko Hasegawa, Japan - 2011, 2013
Saeko Hasegawa is Artistic Director of the Little Singers of Tokyo (LSOT), Board member of the International Federation for Choral Music (IFCM), National President of Pueri
Cantores, Executive Board member of the Japan Choral Association (JCA), and Guest Professor at Tokyo Junshin Women's College.
She studied music at the Music High School attached to the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, and Clark College in USA.
She has been Music Director and Conductor of LSOT since its 20th anniversary in 1971, succeeding her father and co-founder of the choir, Shinichi Hasegawa, as the 2nd conductor
of the Choir. Then LSOT won the Gold prize 3 consecutive years in the Japan Choral Association's national choral competition, and also the first prize in European Broadcasting
Union's international chorus competition. She was the chairperson of the artistic committee at the 7th World Symposium on Choral Music in Kyoto in 2005, and was a lecturer and
a juror in many domestic and international festivals or competitions - the World Choir Games in Bremen in 2004, the Symposium on Church Choral Music in Bandung, Indonesia in
2007, the Singapore Youth Festival in 2009, and the JCA National Choral Competition in 2009.
Jonathan Velasco, the Philippines - 2011, 2013
Jonathan Velasco is a most sought-after choral conductor, clinician, and adjudicator in the world today. He joined the University of the Philippines Madrigal Singers under
Prof. Andrea Veneracion in 1981, and became its assistant choirmaster a year later. In 1989, he studied Choral Conducting at the Berliner Kirchenmusikschule under Martin Behrmann
and finished with distinction.
He is the first Asian to conduct the World Youth Choir (1996) and was jury for the 2002, 2004, and 2006 Choir Olympics in Busan, Bremen and Xiamen. He has also judged international
choral competitions in Maasmechelen (Belgium), Budapest (Hungary), Tolosa (Spain), Wernigerode and Marktoberdorf (Germany), Riva del Garda (Italy), Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia) and
Hong Kong.
Velasco regularly holds choral clinics and workshops in Manila as well as in the USA, Germany, France, Sweden, Spain, the Netherlands, Japan, Indonesia, Taiwan, Malaysia and
Singapore. He is the President of the Philippine Choral Directors' Association (PCDA) and currently conducts the Ateneo Chamber Singers and the Chamber Choir of Asia.