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How Hong Kong composer Alice Yeung overcame knifepoint mugging to debut most daring work

Alice Yeung’s Time (in-)Linear, featuring harmonica virtuoso CY Leo and pianist Daniel Chu, is possibly the first of its kind in the world

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Hong Kong composer Alice Yeung is known for her dramatic, visceral music. Her most ambitious work to date, Time (in-)Linear, will premiere at the Hong Kong City Hall Concert Hall on June 27 with a performance featuring harmonica virtuoso CY Leo and pianist Daniel Chu. Photo: May Tse
Enid Tsui

Alice Yeung Hoi-ching does not just write music for listening; she writes music that is meant to be seen.

The Switzerland-based, Hong Kong-born composer with a first degree in composition and electronic music from the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts (HKAPA) creates dramatic, visceral experiences that transform concert halls into theatres – and her inventiveness is getting noticed.

She has won a wide range of commissions in her home city, from the Hong Kong Sinfonietta (HKS) to the Hong Kong New Music Ensemble.

She also performed at the International Festival of Contemporary Music in Venice in 2024, and has collaborated with many European groups, including the Dutch National Opera & Ballet. And she is only 27.

Blending music with sounds from daily life

Her work Wings’ Matra, which was commissioned in 2024 for the HKS, has to do with her phobia of pigeons – a condition that is not uncommon due to the size of urban flocks.

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