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*Contact: jen@jenshyu.com

Biography: JEN SHYU

LONG BIO:
Born in Peoria, Illinois, from East Timorese and Taiwanese parents, Jen Shyu began ballet training with the Peoria Ballet Company (PBC) at age 6, piano at 7 from Lew Brandes followed by Roger Shields (student of Soulima Stravinsky, Igor Stravinsky's son), and violin at 8 from Ruth Livingston followed by Mihai Craioveanu. Her early accomplishments include dancing the role of Clara and other roles "en pointe" with the PBC; serving as concertmaster of the Central Illinois Concert Orchestra at age 10; performing as piano soloist Tschaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1, 3rd movement with the Peoria Symphony Orchestra at age 13; placing 6th at age 9 and later in the Finals at age 15 at the Stravinsky International Piano Competition, playing piano solo works by Bach, Beethoven, Stravinsky, 
 


and Chopin; being the youngest student at Yale University’s Summer Drama Program at 16; serving as Illinois' Junior Miss her senior year of high school and winning the Miss America Talent Scholarship at America's Junior Miss with piano.

With classical dance and instrumental training in her system, Jen began singing at age 12 when, at her mother's suggestion, she auditioned for her local theater company's production of the musical Cinderella. From that point, she developed a love for the stage, further fed by her role as Diana Morales in her local theater company’s production of A Chorus Line at age 16. It was musical theater repertoire which introduced her to the music of composers George Gershwin, Cole Porter, Jerry Herman, Jerome Kern, and Stephen Sondheim, all of whom led her to discover the great interpreters of their songs - Billie Holliday, Sarah Vaughn, Ella Fitzgerald, Dinah Washington, Betty Carter, and then to presently playing  along with and studying solos of Louis Armstrong, Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, Bud Powell, Von Freeman, Woody Shaw, Booker Little, John Coltrane, Nat King Cole, Stuff Smith, and countless others.

 

  In high school, Jen began classical vocal training under Dr. Kerry Walters. During the summer of her junior year of high school, Jen was a soloist with the U.S. Collegiate Choir on a three-week European tour at 17, singing in venues in Holland, France, Italy, England, and Germany. With initial intentions of studying drama, she attended Stanford University and received a B.A. in Vocal Performance under Jennifer Lane. Piano and dance teachers there included pianist Thomas Schultz and dancers Robert Moses (jazz/modern), Tony Kramer (contact improvisation), and Susan Cashion (Latin American dance). She studied Psychoacoustics at Oxford University, England during her junior year through the Stanford-at-Oxford program.  During her eight months overseas, she performed in London and at the Bath Abbey with the professional choir, Joyful Company of Singers, and with the Arcadian Singers and Merton and Queens College Chapel Choirs of Oxford. She also studied opera and art song with Nick Clapton of the Royal Academy of
Music, Philip Cave of the Tallis Scholars, Vera Rosza, and Mitsuko Shirai, Hartmut Höll, and Barbara Ann Martin at the Mozarteum in Salzburg.  En route toward a classical singing career, she studied at the Lake Placid Institute with Phyllis Bryn-Julson, Susan Webb, Ian Partridge, John Wustman, and Myron MacPherson immediately after graduating. She had sung some jazz with a quartet at Café Nights on Stanford campus, but studying at the Stanford Jazz workshop that same summer under Madeline Eastman and Mark Murphy convinced her to explore her voice in improvized music before jumping into opera conservatory training.  There she met Dafnis Prieto, Yosvany and Yunior Terry who inspired her to study music and dance in Cuba.

During her three years in San Francisco, Jen worked as a Producer at Thick Description, an alternative theater company led by Tony Kelly, and was Development Director at Other Minds, Inc., a contemporary music organization which produces San Francisco's only international new music festival. She met Francis Wong in October of 2000, an important community leader and mentor to many artists.  She credits him with  steering her toward doing creative work based on her culture and ancestry.  In April 2001, Jen traveled to Cuba through Plazacuba.com where she studied folkloric and salsa dance, singing, percussion, and piano from Andres Alen at La Escuela Nacional de Arte. Her experience there has led to her integration of Asian and African elements in her research and work.  Jen also worked extensively with Francis Wong's Gathering of Ancestors and music and dance ensemble Red Jade comprising John-Carlos Perea, Melody Takata and co-directors Jimmy Biala and Lenora Lee.  She was also a member of Jimmy Biala's Latin jazz ensemble Con Alma and performed with them at the San Jose Jazz Festival August 2002. Jen also performed at the Asian American Jazz Festival and Soko Arts Festival.  Also while living in the Bay Area, she worked with pianists Jon Jang, Art Hirahara, rapper AK Black, and sang on the albums of alto saxophonists Doug Yokoyama and Lewis Jordan. Through Asian Improv aRts. Jen was also awarded a California Arts Council Next Generation grant along with poet Matthew Shenoda and dancer Sevenju Pepper.


In December of 2003, Jen began studying improvisation and musical concepts with Steve Coleman which eventually led to her singing on his album Lucidarium (Label Bleu, 2004).  Since singing and playing violin with him at the Marciac Jazz Festival in August 2003, Jen has moved to New York and is currently singing with Steve Coleman and Five Elements as well as developing her own music and research ranging from Taiwanese music to taking trips to Chicago to sing with Von Freeman at the New Apartment Lounge to following Dianne McIntyre's footsteps in solidifying the connection between musicians and dancers.  Jen also sang and performed in Sekou Sundiata's 51st (Dream) State which was previewed at Aaron Davis Hall, NYC, in January '06.  With grants from Bronx Council on the Arts, Asian Cultural Council, and a commission from Roulette Space/Jerome Foundation in 2008 for a new work for voice, dance, and string ensemble, she produced her newest record, Jade Tongue (Chiuyen Music 2008) and was just awarded a MacDowell Fellowship for 2009.

She recently sang the role of Shala in Anthony Braxton's opera, Trillium E, on a recording that will be released in 2011 or 2012.


SHORT BIO:
        Born in Illinois from Taiwanese and East Timorese parents, Jen Shyu is a soloist and bandleader now based in NY, and has established herself as a pioneering and original voice in the improvisational, experimental jazz, and creative music and multidisciplinary worlds. Shyu has worked with innovators such as Anthony Braxton, Mark Dresser, Dave Burrell, and currently records and tours with saxophonist/composer Steve Coleman and Five Elements since appearing on his latest albums Harvesting Semblances and Affinities (Pi Recordings 2010) and Lucidarium and Weaving Symbolics (Label Bleu 2005 & 2006).  Jen has also worked closely with actress/performance artist Soomi Kim on her award-winning piece Lee/gendary inspired by Bruce Lee, where Jen composed for and performed with Soomi at the the Beckett Theatre as part of the first National Asian American Theatre Festival. 
        Aside from locally at venues such as Brooklyn Academy of Music and Lincoln Center and internationally throughout Europe, Asia, and Africa, Jen was a MacDowell Colony National Endowment for the Arts Fellow in 2008-2009 and has been awarded fellowships from the Asian Cultural Council, Jerome Foundation, the Bronx Council on the Arts, and special commissions from Roulette Space & the Jazz Gallery, for which she collaborated with choreographer/dancer Satoshi Haga.  She has done extensive music research in Cuba, Brazil, Taiwan, China, and most recently, East Timor. 

More: www.jenshyu.com, www.myspace.com/jenshyu.com.   Downloads of her albums:  www.jenshyu.bandcamp.com


:::::::::RESEARCH::::::::

At the encouragement of Francis Wong and Steve Coleman, Jen travelled to Taiwan in March and April of 2003 to research Taiwanese folk and aboriginal music.  With the help of Professor Wu, Rong-shun of National Institute for the Arts and urbanized Amis tribe descendents, she collected music from the 10 remaining tribes of Taiwan.  With the help of both Professor Chien, Shan-Hua and Professor Chang, Chen-Lan of National Taiwan Normal University and Professor Zhong at Tainan Normal University, collected folk music from Pingtung, the southern region of Taiwan.  In 2007/2008 for a total of 4 months, Jen returned to Taiwan to continue her research, this time with the support of the Asian Cultural Council, the help of the Formosa Aboriginal Song and Dance Troupe, and Sisal Garden community center in Hengchun, Pingtung.

She also travelled to Cuba in June 2003 to attend the Sixth International Theoretical Conference on Chinese Overseas Emigration and to do research on the Chinese-Cuban community, thus beginning her research and comparative studies of the Chinese Diaspora.  She worked with Yrmina Eng, who founded the Promoting Group of Chinatown in 1994 and Maria Teresa Montes de Oca Choy, professor of Asian Studies at the University of Havana.  The Promoting Group and Maria Teresa work together to organize the International Conference on Overseas Chinese Emigration every other year.  Another of Jen's mentors,  Professor Ling-chi Wang of University of California at Berkeley, had organized a conference there in 1998 on a wide variety of issues involving Cuba and the United States (agriculture, literature, music, minorities, women, etc.).  He then helped organize another conference in Havana in December 1999 at the University of Havana which concerned the Chinese in Latin America and the Caribbean. 

Jen also travelled to Brazil for two months researching Brazilian music and studying a Brazilian technique of dance from Rosangela Silvestre and Vera Passos. She has also had the fortune of working with a progressive percussion group, Grupo Kontra, comprising Nei Sacramento, Felipe Alexsandro, and Luciano Silva. 

in 2009/2010, Jen spent a total of three months in Beijing, China, researching the narrative song form "shuochang" or "speak-sing" from Zhang Wei Dong, a young master of Danxiar and Kunqu.  She also collaborated with guqin player Wu Na and guzheng player Wu Fei and performed throughout Beijing solo, duo, and with a version of Jade Tongue with Oberlin musicians and local Chinese jazz musicians, organized by Zhang Huan.  Her first trip in 2009 was supported by the Asian Cultural Council.

Her most recent research trip was to her mother's homeland in East Timor in 2010 for three months, supported by the Jerome Foundation.  Photos of her fieldwork can be viewed here.  With the help of Nelson Turquel, David Palazón, Lucas Serrão Lopes, Secretary of State of Oecusse Jorge Teme, and countless others connected to the Ministry of Education and Secretary of State for Culture (Sr. Virgilio Simith, Nuno Oliveira, Sr. Eugénio do Sagrado Corção de Jesus Sarmento, and Jonathan Henick at the US Embassy), she focused on recording and studying the traditional vocal music of the elders in the districts of Ainaro (Maubisse), Manufahi (Same), Aileu, Ataúro, Oecusse, Liquiçá, Manatuto, and Dili (Becora).  Her biggest thanks are to the incredible singers in the villages who generously shared their songs and lyrics, and allowed us to document them for the Secretary of State for Culture.

All this research is ongoing. More writings on the research to come. Along with her interest in qi gong and healing sounds, Jen is currently composing and developing ideas on vocal and dance improvisation, working closely with choreographer/dancer Satoshi Haga.

DISCOGRAPHY:

Jen Shyu: Raging Waters, Red Sands (DVD pending)
Jen Shyu solo: Inner Chapters (pending)
Mark Dresser & Jen Shyu duo (pending)
Steve Coleman & Five Elements, Harvesting Semblances & Affinities (Pi Recordings, 2010).
Jen Shyu & Jade Tongue, Chiuyen Music (2008).
Miles Okazaki, Generations, (Sunnyside Records, 2009).
Positive Catastrope, (Cuneiform Records, 2009).
Steve Coleman & Five Elements, Weaving Symbolics (February 2006, Label Bleu).
Steve Coleman & Five Elements, Lucidarium (February 2005, Label Bleu).
Jen Shyu Quartet, For Now (May 2002).  Debut jazz album as bandleader.
Doug Yokoyama Quartet, Thanks For Stopping By (Dec. 2002).
Lewis Jordan Quartet, More Travels of a Zen Baptist (Oct. 2002).
Asian Improv Records, Soko Arts Festival 2001 (May 2001).


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