On AR Rahman’s birthday, Sita Ramam composer Vishal Chandrashekhar reveals what makes the music legend a great mentor


What to write about someone about whom everything has been already written? What to explore new about a person whose career has been discussed, factoring in every minuscule detail? What to do when all the unknown facts about him have become common knowledge? What else can you say about AR Rahman, what’s not been already said? Turns out there’s a lot. The taciturn era-defining musician has been silently giving back to society, and on his 56th birthday, we unraveled some new dimensions in a conversation with Vishal Chandrashekhar, composer of brilliant albums like Sita Ramam and Jil Jung Jak, who also happens to be a student of AR Rahman’s KM Music Conservatory.

Composer Vishal Chandrashekar.

Vishal Chandrashekhar was part of the pilot batch of the conservatory, which was founded in 2008. Even before becoming a student of AR Rahman, Vishal had been composing songs, but he joined the one-year course to further his understanding of music. “AR Rahman was my principal. He provided a great environment and faculty for us to flourish… in terms of music theory and all that. KM is a kind of place where you find students with varying degrees of strengths. Though I had been composing music, my stint as a student there helped me become more refined.”

One of the high points of his life is when he presented his research work to Rahman, says Vishal. “This was after I graduated from KM. As I was working on my research work, I realised how brilliantly Rahman had structured the course because it came in handy for what I was doing. So, when I mailed him explaining what I had done at 11.50 pm, he replied saying ‘it’s good’ at 11.55 pm… within five minutes. More than anything his gesture stood out because all of this is his way of giving back to society.” Vishal fondly cherishes that reply even now.

When asked to elaborate on how the conservatory is AR Rahman’s way of ‘giving back to society, Vishal Chandrashekhar says, “See, it is something not anyone can imagine doing. For example, I am recording with a lot of violin players. And all of them are above the age of 45. As musicians, we have realized that the new generation of string players is slowly vanishing. What he is doing with KM is that he is bringing in a lot of underprivileged students with a good musical sense and teaching them for free. Not many people know. I know because I was there.”

He adds, “We won’t feel the impact of all of this now. But down the line say after ten years… we will realise it. He is creating an orchestra that can give a fight to international ones like any Macedonian or Budapest orchestra. I had the experience of recording in Budapest and in Chennai for Sita Ramam. There’s a huge difference in the understanding of music between us and them. Rahman is bridging that gap by creating new talents who are well-adapted not just to Indian music but to Western music too. He has already created so many opportunities for musicians here, and after a decade, you can see a lot more of what he has been doing all these years.”

While signing off, Vishal says, “We say Ilaiyaraaja and AR Rahman are all like a vast sea, but after my research work and working experience, they are like the ocean. There is so much more to their music than we know.”



Moby Releases New Atmospheric Album ‘Ambient 23’


Renowned DJ and producer Moby started the year off on the right foot by dropping off his latest weightless album, Ambient 23.


Moby has become one of the most iconic artists in the electronic music scene over the past few decades, with countless smash hits and unique explorations under his belt. Beyond his own music, he’s helped push progressive ideas forward while more recently beginning to shake up the current state of streaming culture with his new imprint, always centered at night. Now, Moby is starting the year off on the right foot by dropping off a fresh album filled with ambient soundscapes, Ambient 23.

Ambient 23 carries on with Moby’s semi-annual tradition of releasing an ambient album while simultaneously furthering the message he set off to highlight with always centered at night, which is to showcase uncompromising music that is “emotional, atmospheric, and potentially beautiful.” The album offers a total of 16 tracks, each stripped of any name or meaning beyond its track number, which effectively puts the focus on the soundscape he set off to create more than anything.

Speaking about the album’s creation, Moby said, “It’s a bit different than some of my more recent Ambient records because it’s almost exclusively made with weird old drum machines and old synths from my collection, inspired by my early ambient heroes.” And true to the style of the genre, these pieces of ambient art will whisk you away while listening to them while stirring up emotions along the way. You’ll find yourself filling blissfully calm and floating through the cosmos with each passing second as waves of electronic euphoria wash over your soul.

Listen to Ambient 23 on Spotify or your preferred platform, and make sure to follow Moby on social media to stay in the know on his future releases and more!

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Screen and heard: is TikTok changing the way pop stars perform? | Culture


After a punishing two years for the live music industry, pop shows returned with full force in 2022, with many of the world’s top-tier stars jostling to see their fans in a live setting once again. Punters have been faced with an embarrassment of riches, from Harry Styles’ multi-night US arena residencies to Charli XCX’s Grecian rave fantasia to Dua Lipa’s Studio 54-esque disco spectacular.

But even if you couldn’t afford the higher-than-ever price tags for big pop shows – the result of a significant labour shortage and the need for artists to recoup losses after two years without touring – it was also easier than ever, in 2022, to experience shows from afar. The year’s most-talked about tours – Lady Gaga’s Chromatica Ball, Lorde’s Solar Power tour, Rosalía for Motomami and the 1975’s At Their Very Best – felt as though they were designed to be shared on social media, with clips from each show proving inescapable on TikTok and Twitter.

Each night of Gaga’s tour trended on Twitter; each new 1975 show has led to a flood of new footage of frontman Matty Healy doing all manner of outrageous things from kissing fans to eating raw meat. For fans watching online, the beats of each show became as indelible as the actual hits.

The 1975 performing in Los Angeles, November 2022. Photograph: Jordan Curtis Hughes

Tobias Rylander, who designed the 1975’s tour, says he’s always trying to put together “a show that reads well on social media”. Over his time working with the band over the past decade, he says, his designs have become increasingly “Instagram-ready” – the band’s previous tour, for example, featured vertical screens, “so people could actually hold their phone the way they wanted to and take pretty pictures.” Rylander even says that he tries to design shows “so that any fans googling or YouTubing the show will be able to tell, by the colour of the thumbnail, what year it was and what song it was”.

For the 1975 At Their Very Best tour, Rylander and the band wanted to highlight the performers onstage – a shift from the bright LED screens and coloured lights of past shows – so he instead conceptualised a house set lit in white, like a theatre production. Part of this was due to Covid: Rylander says that because lighting technology, trucks and crews are “twice, if not three times” more expensive than pre-pandemic, “we couldn’t afford the big, expensive tech lights”. Rylander and the band were also conscious of their environmental impact, and the house set allowed them to build a show with few bespoke parts that would have to be shipped from continent to continent. Instead, the set is largely built of steel and aluminium, and has created “minimal landfill waste”. Still, one thing didn’t change: “We wanted the set to read well on camera, both moving image and still.”

‘Theatre and TV, and a rock show and a pop show’ … Lady Gaga performs her Chromatica Ball show. Photograph: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Live Nation

Rylander isn’t the only designer keeping fan footage in mind when working with pop stars. LeRoy Bennett, a lighting and production designer who works extensively with Lady Gaga, as well as Paul McCartney, Ariana Grande and the Weeknd, says that he and Gaga were “absolutely” thinking about social media when designing the Chromatica Ball. “I take that approach quite a bit because social media has become such a big part of the world,” he says.

When conceptualising the Chromatica Ball, Bennett was drawn to the “stark, strong, harsh” world of brutalist architecture; the resulting show featured a dramatic grey set bright enough to be perfectly captured for social media and neutral enough for Gaga’s outlandish outfits to stand in stark relief. “The people way at the back have to see the artist – so when you light an artist, you have to pretty much do what you would do for a television show,” he says. “It’s a combination of theatre and TV, and a rock show and a pop show. It lends itself to that social media-friendly atmosphere.”

The clean, dynamic design of the Chromatica Ball is mirrored in the sets of Rosalía, the 1975 and Lorde. Rosalía performs on a brightly lit white backdrop against which she and her dancers dance and scoot around the stage. Lorde’s show is architectural and geometric – and plainly striking enough for one fan to get a tattoo of the show’s bold centrepiece.

TikTok boom … Rosalía on her Motomami tour. Photograph: Mario Guzman/EPA

All four shows look great on TikTok. In Rosalía’s, the gigantic vertical screens on each side the stage outright mimic the video-sharing app’s interface. Phones are situated around the stage for her musicians and dancers to broadcast to the screens throughout the show, with certain moments – selfie videos with fans taken from high-up, a spare ballad with a phone propped against the piano lid as she plays – echoing the familiar visual formatting and intimacy of popular videos on the platform.

Chiara Stephenson, a stage designer who has worked with Björk and the xx, and who worked on Lorde’s tour, describes herself as a “theatre creature” – she trained under Michael Grandage and Christopher Oram – and says she wanted to bring a “theatrical sensibility” to the Solar Power shows. Unlike Bennett and Rylander, Stephenson says that she wasn’t thinking about social media when working on the tour, despite the telegenic setup. “With the amount of people coming to see the show over the months, you can’t get away with it just being aesthetic,” she says. “What [Lorde] is doing is so rooted and grounded in the music that the law for us was: what’s enhancing the music? What’s telling a story?”

Lorde’s intention, she says, was to step away from the gargantuan LED screens that are often standard in pop shows and return to something more analogue, but still distinctive. “I’m most excited, when you’re in an arena or theatre, feeling the three-dimensionality of the light coming through whatever the sculpture or design is on stage,” Stephenson says. “That’s something you can’t ever really capture – I’m delighted that it photographed well, but that wasn’t the guiding reason.”

Even so, it’s undeniable that many of the year’s most viral moments on TikTok were derived from live shows this year: Rosalía elaborately chewing gum during her song Bizcochito, Healy relentlessly touching his crotch, Gaga belting a power ballad while wearing an Edward Scissorhands-style claw and standing on a flaming stage.

Perhaps these moments are reverse-engineered to go viral or, perhaps, fans are just sharing more content than they used to, thrilled to be back in arenas and metres away from their heroes. “Doing shows after all this time, it’s a joyous moment for the audience,” says Bennett. “People always want to go to see live entertainment. I mean – you can only watch so much TV.”



Why did Apple fail to launch a classical music app last year?


Image Source : FILE Apple

Apple reportedly failed to launch a ‘dedicated’ application for classical music in 2022, post acquiring classical music service Primephonic. The tech giant stated that it planned to release a ‘dedicated’ classical music application in 2022, but could not launchh because without any specific reason given.

ALSO READ: ‘Amazon Prime Air’ drone service launched in the US: All you need to know

The Cupertino based consumer tech company has acquired Primephonic in August 2021, as per the reports of MacRumors. ALSO READ: Mivi Model E Review: Premium looking smartwatch with decent performance

On the acquisition in 2021, Apple said, “Apple Music plans to launch a dedicated classical music app next year combining Primephonic’s classical user interface that fans have grown to love with more added features.”

ALSO READ: Apple to launch bigger OLED display iPad Pro models: Know-more

Since then, the company has not commented on the expansion plans in public. Hence, it is still unclear if the app will be published in 2023 itself or not.

When Primephonic shut down in September 2021, users received free access to Apple Music for six months, the report said.

In September 2021, it was reported that the iPhone maker was preparing to launch a standalone classical music app that would be available along with its flagship ‘Apple Music’ application.

Users were likely to get the standalone classical music app in the iOS 16 update that was planned before the end of last year.

Inputs from IANS

Latest Technology News



‘Yellowstone’ Is Set in Montana. But Its Music Comes Straight From Texas.


In a pivotal moment of Yellowstone’s pilot episode, protagonist John Dutton’s estranged son, Kayce, returns to his father’s ranch. As he steers his truck toward the property’s entrance, he mutters, “Hope I don’t regret this,” and the choppy fiddle from Texas band Whiskey Myers’s “On the River” sets an adventurous tone. As Kayce drives toward the threshold of his childhood home, the austere song intensifies the scene with a power worthy of a prodigal son’s return. 

First-time viewers of the hit Paramount Network series may come for the cowboys, the Western culture, and the serene vistas of horse-dappled pastures, only to get sucked into the show’s gripping story lines (think: bar brawls ending in bullfights) and operatic melodrama (think: a livestock commissioner burying someone alive under a cattle guard instead of making him pay a fine).

On Yellowstone, stakes are constantly rising and expanding beyond the property markers of Dutton’s Montana ranch. No matter where the plot wanders, however, it retains a singular dark, Western tone that brings fans along for the ride. The soundtrack, featuring Texas musicians such as Whiskey Myers, the Panhandlers, Ryan Bingham, and Wade Bowen, is critical to keeping the expansive show tethered to its tone and cultural subtext.

Yellowstone’s playlist, curated by music supervisor Andrea von Foerster, helps wash every setting—from corporate boardroom scenes to still shots of vast flaxen plains—in the same stark, rustic realism. A proud roster of Texas artists has scored some of the series’ most dramatic moments. This isn’t simply because Texas is the second-largest state in the nation. Taylor Sheridan, the show’s cocreator, is a born-and-raised Texan and a 2021 inductee to the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame. His Academy Award–nominated film, Hell or High Water, takes place in Texas, and the state is a primary setting in several of his other works (Sicario: Day of the Soldado, 1883). Texas runs deep in the DNA of Yellowstone, and it’s only fitting that Sheridan and von Foerster would tap its rich music scene to help set an authentic tone for the neo-western opus.

The show’s recurring use of Texas music is made linear in Spotify’s popular Yellowstone official playlist. (The country and rock mix boasts over 165,000 followers, a number more than one-third larger than the population of Billings, Montana—the closest metro city to Yellowstone National Park.) Featured singers who hail from our state, from Whiskey Myers to Uncle Lucius, make music with stripped-down qualities of country and rock often collectively pegged as “Texas country.” Genres and labels aside, the Texas country music scene is famous for its independence from the mainstream. Artists can spend their entire careers touring and pursuing success without crossing state lines. This self-sufficiency supplies the state with a high concentration of artists empowered to take alternative paths, which begets the creation of country songs that may not be fit for national country radio but are perfect for a ranch-set soap opera. 

One of season four’s most consequential scenes uses “All I See Is You,” a tune by Austin-based country-rock quartet Shane Smith & the Saints. It marks the exodus of Jimmy, a young wrangler, whom Dutton dispatches to Guthrie, Texas, to learn how to be a cowboy. Jimmy is tossed into the custody of brawny rodeo bullies who aren’t too keen on the young, wide-eyed buck. Dreading their long drive ahead with the naive Jimmy, the older cowboys decide to blare music instead of talk. The driver, Travis (played by Taylor Sheridan himself), barks “Shane Smith and the motherf—ing Saints” before flipping on the song. Its plaintive fiddle lead rises above the noise, transforming the scene from a comical back-and-forth to a bittersweet tearjerker. As the ballad gets louder, Jimmy peers out his passenger window to share a final glance with the lover he’s leaving behind. From beginning to end, the scene is filled with a sense of anxiety. But at the end of it all, Shane Smith & the Saints’ grassy, upbeat song grounds it in a hopeful tone and an assurance that Jimmy is off to bigger and better things.

Later in the season, we see Jimmy fully integrated into his rodeo assistant role. In a montage, he looks on as professional wranglers rein and trot in the center of a rodeo arena. The rodeo is a new setting for Yellowstone, not only because it’s in Texas, but because it portrays the flashy, showbiz aspects of Western riding. Up until this point, horse riding is all utility and no performance. Through Jimmy’s starry eyes, we see a stark change from the rural acreage that backdrops most of the show. The montage is set to two country-rock songs by Texas artists: Bluff Dale native Red Shahan’s “Javelina” and Sebastopol-born Cody Johnson’s “Dear Rodeo.” Von Foerster could have just as easily selected more popular or recognizable Southern rock songs to set an upbeat pace for the scene, but that wouldn’t have fit the realism of the show. These selections sound more like things you would actually hear at a Texas rodeo, making the sequence as real and exciting for us as it is for Jimmy.

One Texas musician is getting a boost by appearing on-screen as well as on the soundtrack. Grammy-winning songsmith and Austinite Ryan Bingham plays a ranch hand on the Dutton property. At night, he often serenades the crew with tunes from Bingham’s real-life catalog. His performances help to add a bit of culture and romantic sensibility to the rowdy Dutton workforce, who otherwise seem to spend the entirety of their free time drinking, gambling, hiding bodies, and breaking into fights. “To have him on ‘Yellowstone’ is a gift,” Sheridan told the L.A. Times. “He is the graveled voice of this generation’s cowboys and poets.”

Sheridan and von Foerster seem to be making a concerted effort to extend opportunities to Texas artists. Sheridan enlisted Weatherford native Garrett Bradford to pen a song for the show to be used in a transitional scene. The track, “This Way of Life,” is a spare recording of Bradford and his acoustic guitar. Played over various shots of the ranch—aerial views of the equestrian barn, daybreak over the mountains, the family chef making biscuits—it mourns the death of the rural lifestyle. This point is often returned to throughout the series. Dutton’s ranch—the largest privately owned property in Montana—is under constant territorial threat from outside forces. In some ways, the show is about the unbeatable strength of stalwart country dwellers who stick to their guns, literally and figuratively. The Texas artists featured on the soundtrack help to provide the show, and this message, with sensitivity and thoughtfulness that temper its harsher aspects of murder and betrayal. They add to the show’s immersive power, so viewers feel like they can imagine what life is really like on a picturesque Montana ranch, even if it’s the last of its kind. The final Bradford lyrics heard in the scene play as Dutton is shown waking up: “As long as I’m still breathing and my blood is flowing red / Our way of life ain’t dead.”

Quavo Tributes Takeoff On “Without You” Track


On November 1, the hip hop world was rocked when it was reported that Migos member Takeoff was tragically gunned down. While his family members Quavo and Offset has largely mourned in silence (save for Instagram posts), the former is the first to publicly speak on his loss.

Huncho shared a touching tribute track to Takeoff, “Without You.” On the track, he eulogizes his fallen angel. “It’s so hard to tell you I’ma miss you because you always with me and we did everything together,” Quavo said in his IG post.

Quavo Tributes Takeoff On “Without You” Track was last modified: January 5th, 2023 by Meka



Fear No Music concert highlights alums of impressive Young Composers Project


For its upcoming Locally Sourced Sounds concert (Jan. 9) at The Old Church, Fear No Music will highlight pieces by several alums of its incredibly successful Young Composers Project.

Founded by pianist Jeff Payne in 1997 to teach and promote the complex art and craft of writing music, YCP has influenced the lives of several hundred participants over the past 25 years. Many have gone on to write music for choirs, orchestras, chamber ensembles, individual artists, musical theater, folk groups, film and television, the game industry, and other areas.

Open to students from grades 5 through 12, YCP gives young composers the opportunity to develop their ideas with professional musicians through workshops and a concert.

“The kids get three workshops, which includes feedback,” Payne said. “A student submits a piece, which might be as simple as eight measures with a melody and some chords. A group of professional musicians from the Oregon Symphony and top freelancers play through it and make suggestions on how to improve the piece. What do you think about doing this with different instrument or another combination? Perhaps add another section of music? Then we record it and send the kids home for a couple of months for the next workshop. We go through the process again, seeking to develop and improve the piece, and make a recording and send them home again. The third time they come back we have a finished product that we then put on in a public concert. It’s a very hands-on experience.”

Participants can take YCP more than once and the cost is $275, with scholarship funding for those who cannot afford it.

Portland-based composer Ryan Francis did the program in 1998 and 1999, and received a bachelors from the University of Michigan and a masters and doctorate from The Julliard School of Music. His work has garnered accolades from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and several foundations. Francis currently teaches at Pacific University and helps run YCP as its program manager.

During the first half of the Fear No Music concert, violinist Inés Voglar Belgique and Payne will perform Francis’ “Sillage.”

“Sillage is a French word for wake,” explained Francis. “It means to feel one’s presence, even when they are not there. In the context of this concert, it acknowledges the legacy of Tomáš Svoboda who recently passed away.”

A giant among composers in Portland, Svoboda’s “Marimba Concerto” was recorded by the Oregon Symphony and nominated for a Grammy award in 2003. The concert will begin with Svoboda’s “Suite for Piano 4-hands,” featuring Monica Ohuchi and Payne.

The program also includes a piece by 20-year-old Grace Miedziak, who participated in YCP in 2018 and 2019.

“YCP opened a lot of doors for me,” said Miedziak. “It was my first opportunity to write a proper piece that would be performed by a group of musicians. It helped me when I applied to the Thornton School of Music at USC. That was my dream school, and now I’m a junior there, studying composition and music production.”

Cellist Nancy Ives will play “Trout and the Hatch,” which Miedziak wrote last year.

“I grew up in Bend, and my parents took me camping every year,” said Miedziak, “often to East Lake near La Pine. My piece refers to the magical experience of being on the lake at sunset when insects would hatch on the surface of the water and that brings out the fish – jumping over our canoes to feast on the insects.”

Ives and Ohuchi will perform “Dead Ends” by Rohan Srinivasan, who did YCP four years while attending Sunset High School. Now the 19-year-old is in his second year at Julliard studying composition with Andrew Norman.

“Ryan Francis and YCP helped me to convince my parents that I was decent enough to have a shot at this music thing,” said Srinivasan. “‘Dead Ends’ is slow and sort of meditative. The piece is made of little sections that don’t entirely relate to one another. They are like different snapshots that run out of steam.”

Showing the variety of YCP’s reach, the concert will feature several pieces by singer-songwriter Rachel Jumago. She took part in YCP during its first five years, and then went to Whitman College, where she received a bachelors in Biology and Environmental Studies.

Jumago kept developing her talents in folk music, taking songwriting workshops at the Sisters Folk Festival, and formed Arbielle with Katie Fitzgerald while teaching at Sandy High School. Jumago (age 38) plays piano, banjolele (banjo-ukulele), and sings her own compositions. Fitzgerald plays guitar, banjo and harmonizes.

For the concert, Arbielle will perform several numbers from their latest album “Little One,” which is available on Bandcamp and other streaming platforms.

After 25 years, it turns out that Payne’s original students are bringing their students to YCP. You could say that Payne is a granddaddy, a moniker that he laughs off. But if he is involved for another 10 years or more, he is going to acquire great-grandaddy status.

7:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 9, The Old Church, 1422 S.W. 11th Ave.; admission by donation; app.arts-people.com

— James Bash

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Life Listens: New music from NewJeans, Bad Bunny, Moby, Miley Cyrus and lewloh


American singer Miley Cyrus’ New Year’s Eve performance with her godmother, country music icon Dolly Parton, set Twitter ablaze, with one fan describing it as “one of the greatest performances of all time”.

While that particular tweet is admittedly hyperbolic, the chemistry between the two from different generations is quite a joy to watch.

One of the highlights was when they sang Cyrus’ 2013 signature hit Wrecking Ball and segued seamlessly into Parton’s 1974 classic that was later made famous by the late Whitney Houston, I Will Always Love You. Their duet on Parton’s 1973 hit Jolene was another emotional moment.

The concert, held in Miami, was the second instalment of the annual Miley’s New Year’s Eve Party. Parton was the co-host and the show also included other stars, such American socialite Paris Hilton and Australian pop powerhouse Sia.

Cyrus certainly has a knack for executing riveting performances with her seniors. One of her more surprising duet partners was new wave luminary and art pop pioneer David Byrne, with whom she sang the 1983 David Bowie hit Let’s Dance.

Singapore Scene: YNR & lewloh – Better Year

Modern Notebook for January 8, 2023


Binna Kim’s work “Stacked Emotions” is music that imagines a conversation – at times, an argument, other times, an agreement – between two individuals, such as a married couple. And she enhances the music by setting the text of 19th-Century poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning.

And, we’ll hear music by Nico Muhly that draws upon and blends together English and Latin texts from the 12th to 18th centuries. It’s titled “Hymns for Private Use,” and it’s a collection of five spiritual songs for voice and wind quintet.

Plus music by Elijah Daniel Smith, Adam Schoenberg, Carlos Simon, Gity Razaz, Jessica Rudman, and others; and performances by GHOSTLIGHT Chorus and Chelsea Music Festival Strings, Cellist Claire Bryant, pianist Eunmi Ko, saxophonist Julian Velasco, clarinetist Andy Hudson, vocalist Shara Nova with the Akropolis Reed Quintet, and more.

Hear it all on Sunday night from 8 to 10 ET on Classical WSMR 89.1 and 103.9. Streaming at wsmr.org.

Hour 1

Flight from Carlos Simon’s Warmth from Other Suns.

Stephen Rush’s Whirlwind.

Cygnus from David Liptak’s Constellations.

Binna Kim’s Stacked Emotions.

Ars Antica by Daniel Kidane.

Gity Razaz’s 4 Haikus.

Hour 2

Animus by Elijah Daniel Smith.

Jessica Rudman’s Twisted Blue.

Hymns for Private Use by Nico Muhly.

Helen Grime’s Virga.

Each week, Tyler Kline journeys into new territory and demystifies the music of living composers on Modern Notebook. Listen for a wide variety of exciting music that engages and inspires, along with the stories behind each piece and the latest releases from today’s contemporary classical artists. Discover what’s in store on Modern Notebook.



Musicians mourn death of renowned Hong Kong composer Joseph Koo, ‘godfather’ of Cantonese pop music


Tributes are pouring in for renowned Hong Kong composer Joseph Koo, who died in Vancouver on Tuesday.

Koo, 92, was dubbed the “godfather of Cantopop” or Cantonese pop music for laying the foundation for the genre through his TV drama theme song compositions.

He was also known for writing the scores to Bruce Lee’s Fist of Fury and The Way of the Dragon.

“Before him there wasn’t really such a thing as Cantopop,” said Allan Lau, a music producer from Vancouver, adding that most people in Hong Kong would listen to English or Mandarin songs.

“He is to Hong Kong music what Bruce Lee is to Kung Fu and martial arts.

“I guarantee you that there isn’t a single Cantonese-speaking person or a Hong Kong person who didn’t grow up listening to his music or have been influenced by his music,” he added.

Koo moved to Vancouver in the 1990s, and retired in 2015. He composed more than 1,200 songs in his decades-long career.

His farewell concert in Hong Kong — where Lau played keyboards and piano — drew about 12,000 people.

“I will always remember that that was my little gift for him,” Lau said.

Dominic Chung Siu Fung — Koo’s assistant in the 1970s, who continued to be friends with the composer while he lived in Vancouver — says Koo was a kind person, who was always eager to help young musicians. 

“Anybody who wants to learn music from him, any question you want to ask him, he will answer you,” Chung said.

“He taught me how to use music to be a professional.”






© Lien Yeung/CBC
Dominic Chung Siu Fung says Joseph Koo always helped young musicians.

Lau, who says he was inspired by Koo’s music to move to Hong Kong and pursue Cantopop as a career, recalls having lunch with the composer in Vancouver when he was in his late 80s.

“He was doing fine, but I knew that he was getting up there in age,” he said. “And so I knew that the time would be arriving, but I just never expected it to hit so suddenly.

“This is a monumental loss … You’re never prepared for the death of someone you admire so much.”

Cantopop is in good hands, he says, because of Koo’s everlasting influence on the many musicians he taught. 

“It will live on and so will his music.”