Peter Shin
Introspective, referential, and observant, the music of Peter S. Shin 신세종 (b. 1991) strives in reach of others. His work investigates issues of social and national belonging, the co-opting and intermingling of disparate musical vernaculars, and the liminality between the two halves of his second-generation Korean-U.S. American identity. The New York Times described him as “a composer to watch” and his music “entirely fresh and personal” following his premiere at Carnegie Hall.
Highlights include a performance of his electroacoustic dance work Screaming Shapes at the Walt Disney Concert Hall; an orchestral commission by John Adams and Deborah O’Grady for the Cabrillo Festival; the chamber orchestral work Hyo commissioned by the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra which explores his family’s immigration story; and the on-going “Hallyu Interventions” series which contends with the globalization of South Korean contemporary culture known as the hallyu wave via the sounds of K-Pop.
Recent and upcoming projects include the release of Bits torn from words about the reclamation of his mother tongue on the vocal band Roomful of Teeth’s latest studio album; new works for Friction Quartet, Ensemble intercontemporain, Tanglewood, Kaleidoscope, and an evening-length collaboration with Wild Up and Roomful of Teeth.
Peter has received both the Charles Ives Scholarship and Fellowship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Fulbright fellowship, and commissions from the Harvard University Fromm Music Foundation, American Composers Forum, and Chamber Music America. He has participated in programs by the orchestras of Minnesota, St. Louis, and Berkeley, and in the music festivals of Tanglewood (MA, US), Aspen (CO, US), and IRCAM (Paris, FR).
A native of Kansas City, Missouri, Peter is a second-generation Korean-U.S. American and the son of South Korean immigrants who have called the U.S. home for over 30 years. With degrees from the University of Michigan (B.M.), the University of Southern California (M.M.), and the Yale School of Music (M.M.A.), Peter is currently a Ph.D. candidate at the University of California, Berkeley.