Celebrated BBC Proms composer returns to Loretto School

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Fung Lam returns to LorettoCelebrated composer, Fung Lam, 33, returned to his former school, Loretto near Edinburgh.

His visit came hot on the heels of his work being performed at this year's BBC Proms. Fung, who was a boarder and studied Music at Loretto School, had a composition commissioned by the BBC and the work, entitled, "Endless Forms" was premiered at this year's Proms and was on the same billing as works by Rachmaninov and Prokofiev.

Fung Lam's "Endless Forms" is inspired by the last sentence of Darwin's 'Origin of Species'.

Fung Lam explains, " The work celebrates an insight into the diversity of life. The title also relates to the Bhuddism's view of life as an endless cycle of forms: birth, death, rebirth. The subject of spiritual enlightenment is a recurring theme in my output."

Jonathan Hewat, Director of External Affairs at Loretto added,"We are always delighted to welcome Fung back to Loretto. He was astonished with some of the remarkable changes Loretto had undergone, particularly our status as an All-Steinway School. Fung has offered to return to Loretto soon and we would be only too pleased- he is an inspiration to budding young musicians."

Further details on Fung Lam

Born in Hong Kong in 1979, Fung Lam studied at Loretto School, near Edinburgh before composition with Martin Butler, Michael Finnissy and Michael Zev Gordon at the Universities of Southampton and Sussex, and was awarded a DPhil in composition from the latter in 2012. Based in the UK since 1996, he first came to attention in 2005 when the BBC Philharmonic under James MacMillan gave the world premiere of his orchestral work Illumination, which was subsequently performed by the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra and Hong Kong Sinfonietta.

Fung Lam holds the distinction of being the youngest Chinese composer (and the first from Hong Kong) to be commissioned by the BBC, when, in 2007, he was invited to write a work for the BBC Concert Orchestra. Unlocking, which took inspiration from an exhibition of locks at the Victoria and Albert Museum, was given its premiere under Charles Hazlewood, who also explored the work in detail in BBC Radio 3’s Discovering Music. A second BBC commission quickly followed: the miniature BE (2008) was heard at the Southbank Centre as part of BBC CO’s ‘Music & Chance’ concert, alongside pieces by such diverse artists and composers as the Pet Shop Boys, Paul Patterson and Tansy Davies. In 2009, Lam was selected for the LSO Discovery Panufnik Young Composers Scheme; his work Yong (‘Surge’) was performed by the LSO under François-Xavier Roth and, the following year, at the Asian Music Festival by the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of the composer. A commission for the Hong Kong Philharmonic, Rong (‘Harmony’), was given its premiere at the World Expo Shanghai in 2010 under Edo de Waart. Most recently, a further BBC commission, the Darwinian influenced Endless Forms, received its world premiere at the BBC Proms in July 2012. Performed at the Royal Albert Hall by the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Sakari Oramo, it was broadcast live on BBC Radio 3.

With a focus primarily on orchestral composition, Lam nonetheless tends to avoid dense instrumentation for large-scale forces and extravagant gestures in favour of clarity and restraint. Although the pentatonic scale may feature in his work, he holds back from traditional associations of Chinese culture by using these pentatonic elements in a primarily Western context. References to Buddhism, in particular the journey to spiritual enlightenment, which is a recurring theme in his output, are as likely to be filtered through the influence of such composers as Jonathan Harvey and Somei Satoh, as they are to be motivated by personal practice.

Earlier this year Fung Lam received the Young Artist Award from the Hong Kong Arts Development Council.

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