Multicultural Influences in The Work of Isang Yun

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The document discusses the integration of Eastern traditional music into Western art music by the Korean-German composer Isang Yun, with a focus on his Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra. It provides context on Yun and Korean traditional music.

The document states it will provide a brief biography of Yun's life and works in the introduction.

The document mentions that the Tai-keum, the Korean traditional transverse wooden flute, was an inspiration for Yun’s Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra and will be described in detail.

MULTICULTURAL INFLUENCES IN THE MUSIC

OF ISANG YUN AS REPRESENTED IN HIS


CONCERTO FOR FLUTE AND SMALL ORCHESTRA

by
JU-HEE KIM

A DOCUMENT

Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements


for the degree of Doctor of Musical Arts
in the School of Music
in the Graduate School of
The University of Alabama

TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA
2009

Copyright Ju-Hee Kim 2009


ALL RIGHT RESERVED

ABSTRACT
The Korean-German composer Isang Yun (1917-1995) is among the few
musicians to have successfully integrated Eastern traditional music into Western art
music in the twentieth century. Indeed, this integration is the essence of his work, and he
regarded himself as a mediator of Eastern and Western music. This document focuses on
the means by which Yun transferred traditional Korean structures, philosophies, themes,
and instrumental techniques to modern Western compositions, with particular emphasis
on his Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra

Since Isang Yun is not well known

outside of Europe and Asia, I will provide a brief biography of his life and works,
followed by an introduction to Korean traditional music and instruments. The Tai-keum,
the Korean traditional transverse wooden flute, was an inspiration for Yuns Concerto for
Flute and Small Orchestra and will be described in detail. The third chapter will
examine Yuns compositional techniques: his incorporation of elements of the Asian
philosophy of Taoism, his development and use of the Hauppton technique, and his
transference of traditional Korean instrumental techniques to Western instruments. The
final chapter examines Yuns Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra (1977) and the
specific ways in which it relates to traditional Korean court music.

ii

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I am honored to take this opportunity to thank several people who made the
completion of my degree possible. First of all, I express my deepest appreciation to my
professor, Dr. Diane Boyd Schultz, who led me with limitless support to finish my
doctoral degree. Her enthusiastic teaching was not limited to the flute: it extended to all
of my studies. I cannot express how much I appreciate her. I would also like to thank Dr.
Joanna Biermann for her valuable time and contributions to the completion of this
document. My sincere gratitude also goes to the remainder of my committee, Dr. Craig
First, Dr. Koji Arizumi, Dr. Jonathan Noffsinger, and Mrs. Amanda W. Penick.
I would like to give a special thank you to my two beloved sons, Albert and Andy,
for their patience, and to my dear friends Hye-sook and Youngh for their encouragement
during my studies at the University of Alabama.
Finally, enormous appreciation and acknowledgments go to my parents Yoon
Hwan Kim and Jung Hye In, my lifelong mentors. Without their infinite support and
unconditional love, I could not complete this long journey. I dedicate this document to
them.

iii

CONTENTS
ABSTRACT.ii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS.......iii
LIST OF FIGURES.vi
INTRODUCTION1
1. ISANG YUNS BIOGRAPHY.3
a. First Period (1917-1958).......3
b. Second Period (1959-1974)......7
c. Third Period (1975-1995).......14
2. AN INTRODUCTION TO KOREAN TRADITIONAL MUSIC..20
3. INFLUENCE OF EASTERN TECHNIQUES...28
a. Taoism.....28
b. Hauptton.....35
c. Instrumental Technique...40
d. Sigimsae......40
i. Yueosung..42
ii. Junsung...48

iv

iii. Toesung and Choosung.....50


4. THE CONCERTO FOR FLUTE AND SMALL ORCHESTRA...52
a. Comparisons between Sujechun and the Flute Concerto...54
i. Instrumentation...54
ii. Form..56
iii. Yun-em.....57
b. Observations about the Flute Concerto....59
i. The First Section...59
ii. The Second Section.64
iii. The Third Section..67
CONCLUSION..78
BIBLIOGRAPHY AND REFERENCES...81
a. Books..81
b. Dissertations and Theses84
c. Articles...85
d. Internet Sources..88
e. Filmography and Discography....89
f. Score....89

LIST OF FIGURES

2.1. Hyang-ak Performance21


2.2. Tai-keum..23
2.3. Tai-keum Player...25
2.4. Chungganbo Notation..27
3.1. Symbol of Yin and Yang31
3.2. Structure of the Grave-Chambers in Kang Seo Go Bun..32
3.3. O Hang Sul and Yuns Image...34
3.4. A Setting of an Instrumental Arrangement on Stage...35
3.5. Yuns Brush Stroke of an Eastern Tone...37
3.6. Jung-Sung-Gok38
3.7. Yuns Etude for Flute Solo, Moderato, mm.1-4...38
3.8. Hauptton drawing by Schmidt.39
3.9. Yuns drawing of Hauptton..39
3.10. Korean Instruments and their Western Counterparts.40
3.11. Akhak gwebeom.....42

vi

3.12. Relationship of Jangdan to Yueosung...44


3.13. Vibrato Notation45
3.14. Images for Flute, Oboe, Violin, and Violoncello.45
3.15. Yuns Etude for Flute Solo, Moderato, mm. 1-4...46
3.16. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 169-171; Flute Only.46
3.17. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 233-238; Flute Only.47
3.18. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm.299-302; Flute Only..47
3.19. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 288-290; Flute Only48
3.20. Yuns Etude for Flute Solo, Allegretto, mm. 24-2548
3.21. Junsung..49
3.22. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 24650
3.23. Toesung and Choosung..50
3.24. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 36-37; Flute Only..51
4.1. Comparisons between the Flute Concerto and Korean Traditional Music56
4.2. Basic Structure of the Flute Concerto.57
4.3. Comparisons between the Flute Concerto and Sujechun59
4.4. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 1-9...61
4.5. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm.10-1962

vii

4.6. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 56-58; Flute Only...63


4.7. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 94-103; Flute Only.64
4.8. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 104-112..66
4.9. Yuns Flute Concerto, m. 133; Flute Only...67
4.10. Yuns Flute Concerto, 172-176......69
4.11. Yuns Flute Concerto, 177-180......70
4.12. Yuns Flute Concerto, 181-188......71
4.13. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 233-241; Flute Only......72
4.14. Yuns Flute Concerto, m. 246..74
4.15. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 246-260; Flute Only....75
4.16. Yuns Flute Concerto, mm. 288-230; Flute Only....77

viii

INTRODUCTION
The Korean-German composer Isang Yun (1917-1995) is among the few
musicians to have successfully integrated Eastern traditional music into Western art
music in the twentieth century. Indeed, this integration is the essence of his work, and he
regarded himself as a mediator of Eastern and Western music.
Yuns unique compositional techniques fall into three distinct categories: his
incorporation of elements of the Asian philosophy of Taoism, his development and use of
the Hauppton (main tone) technique, and his application of traditional Korean
instrumental techniques to Western instruments. Yun composed more than one hundred
pieces in a variety of genres. Among them, he composed more than twenty flute pieces,
including solo works as well as the concertos, because he thought that the flute was the
instrument most capable of expressing his musical ideas. Yun frequently wrote for three
different flutes in the same piece, such as alto flute, C flute, and piccolo, which are
representative of their Korean counterparts, the Tai-keum, Joong-keum, and So-keum.
However, in his Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra, Yun used only the alto flute and
the C flute. However, the range is similar to that encompassed by the three Korean flutes
mentioned above.

This document focuses on the means by which Yun transferred traditional Korean
structures, philosophies, themes, and instrumental techniques to modern Western
compositions, with particular emphasis on his Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra
Since Isang Yun is not well known outside of Europe and Asia, I will provide a brief
biography of his life and works, followed by an introduction to Korean traditional music
and instruments. The Tai-keum, the Korean traditional transverse wooden flute, was an
inspiration for Yuns Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra and will be described in
detail. The third chapter will examine Yuns compositional techniques, which fall into
three distinct categories: his incorporation of elements of the Asian philosophy of Taoism,
his development and use of the Hauppton technique, and his application of traditional
Korean instrumental techniques to Western instruments, most notably Sigimsae, a style of
Korean ornamentation. The final chapter examines Yuns Concerto for Flute and
Small Orchestra (1977) and the specific ways it relates to traditional Korean court music.

CHAPTER 1
Isang Yuns Biography
The life of Korean-German composer Isang Yun (1917-1996) can be divided into
three periods. The first period consists of his life in Korea, from 1917 to 1958. The
second period (1959-1974) is defined by his experiences and success in Europe. The third
period, which shows further style changes, is from 1975 until his death in West Germany.
His music in each period was strongly influenced by his life experiences, including his
nationalism and political involvement.
a. First Period (1917-1958)
Isang Yun was born in 1917 in Duk-San-Myun, South Korea. At the time, Korea
was under Japanese occupation. When Yun was three years old, he moved to Tong Young,
an important center of Korean traditional music on the South Coast. As a child, he
listened to Korean folk music, thereby forming the basis for his compositional style, as he
later wrote:
I heard and watched fishermen singing, women singing,
open-air theater, performances of shamans, and so on, which
were all performed by amateurs, except the shamans
performances. Those experiences became my compositional

elements.1
At age five, Yun entered a Korean private, traditional elementary school, which
was modeled on the classic Chinese traditional school; there he learned Chinese classical
philosophies such as Confucianism and Taoism. At age eight, he entered a Western,
modern-style elementary school introduced by the occupiers, the Japanese (Japan
officially annexed Korea by treaty in 1910). There he saw and heard the organ for the
first time. He said:
It was surprising, exciting, loud and massive, and it played
so many tones at one time. I was totally confused. Our
instruments play a single tone with no harmony, and the
tones are much softer. People listen to each tone individually.
Here, however, people listened to many tones
simultaneously. It was very exotic.2

Yun was fascinated by Western music, which he heard by chance while walking
past a church in his town, and he liked Western songs, which were unlike Korean
traditional songs. When Yun was thirteen, he studied the violin with a high school student
who lived nearby. After learning the violin and playing other composers music, Yun
decided to become a composer himself. That same year, his first composition was
performed at a local theater. He graduated from the local school in 1932.

Luise Rinser, Der Verwundete Drache (The Wounded Dragon) 1977, trans. from German to Korean as
Yun Isang Sangcheo Ieebum Yong Yun Isang (Seoul:Random House, 2005), 29 (hereafter cited as The
Wounded Dragon). In this document, all translations from Korean to English were made by Ju-Hee Kim.
2

The Wounded Dragon, 40.

Yuns formal Western musical education started in 1934, when he began studying
harmony with Hoyoung Choi, who was a violinist. Desiring still further education, he
went to Osaka Conservatory in 1935 to study cello and composition. Although he planned
to stay for two years, the death of his mother and financial difficulties forced him to
return to Korea earlier.
In 1937, his first work, the childrens songbook Mokdong ui Norae (Song of the
Shepherd) was published. A year later, he became an elementary teacher at Haw Yang
School in Tong Young.
He returned to Tokyo, Japan, in 1939, and studied with a composer, Ikenochi
Tomojiro, who had studied at the Paris Conservatoire. However, Yun did not only study
composition: he also participated in the Korean resistance against Japan. He returned to
Korea in 1942 because the Pacific War was nearing its end. After returning home, he still
worked for the resistance and was even imprisoned by the Japanese occupiers for two
months in 1944.
In 1945 the Pacific War ended and Korea became an independent country. That
same year, Yun began working as a teacher at a womens high school and taking care of
war orphans in his hometown. He was also a founding member of the Tong Young
Culture Association. During this time of change he continued to compose.

In 1947, Yun founded the Tong Young String Quartet, in which he played the
cello. Two years later, he moved to Pusan and became a teacher at the Pusan Teachers
School. In 1949, he published Dal Mu Ri, a book of six Korean songs. The compositional
style of this work was tonal, based on the traditional five tones of Korean music but
following the harmonic style of Western music. That same year, he founded the Pusan
Choir Association. Yun founded all of these associations in order to teach patriotism and
encourage people through and with music, which was a lifetime goal for him. That same
year, he married Soo-ja Lee, who was also a teacher at the Pusan Teachers School.
Although the Korean War started in 1950, Yun did not abandon composing music
or teaching. He composed many songs for children, including a music textbook (Sa Eum
Ak) for elementary schools, and continued to teach at the Pusan Teachers School and at
the University of Pusan, where he taught Western Music History. Yun composed Chui
Young Ui Norae, based on a story by the famous Korean poet, Chi-Jin Yu. It was the first
Korean opera and, like early Western opera, it also included a dance segment. In addition
to his teaching posts, he worked as a music critic for newspapers such as Dong-A Ilbo,
one of Seouls most important newspapers.
In 1953, the Korean War ended (Cessation), and Yun moved to Seoul. He taught
music at Yang-Jung High School, Seoul National University, and Duk-Sung Womens

College. While in Seoul, he composed his Cello Sonata No. 1 (1953), String Quartet No.
1 (1955), and the Piano Trio (1955). For those three pieces Yun was awarded the fifth
Seoul Cultural Award; he was the first composer ever to receive this award. Winning the
Seoul Cultural Award was a turning point in his life: it convinced him to go abroad to
study composition. Because he was self-taught, he felt that he needed to study twentiethcentury techniques, particularly twelve-tone technique, which was not taught in Korea.
Yun discarded all of his music composed before 1956, except for the Dal Mu Ri
songbook, the childrens school songs, and the textbook Sa Eum Ak.
b. The Second Period in Europe (1959-1974)
Yuns second period can be divided into two parts: the period before the political
incident, called the East-Berlin Incident, and the period after the Incident but before
1975.
In June 1956, Yun went to Paris to study composition. He entered the Paris
Conservatoire and studied with Tony Aubin. However, because Yun was more interested
in learning twelve-tone techniques, he was not satisfied with his education in Paris, and
he decided to move to Germany in August of 1957.
He entered the Musikhochschule in West Berlin and became a pupil of Boris
Blacher, Reinhard Schwarz-Schilling, and Josef Rufer. Blacher, who had spent his early

years in China, encouraged Yun to compose with his own musical ideas from his
background. Yun was taught counterpoint, canon and fugue by Schwarz-Schilling. Yun
studied the twelve-tone technique with Josef Rufer, who had been a student of
Schoenberg. During his studies in West Berlin, Yun was not sure of his compositional
style, which was a mix of East Asian and Western musical styles. While participating in
the Darmstadt Music Festival in 1958, Yun was inspired by John Cages piano piece
Music of Changes, in which Cage used the I Ching, an ancient Chinese oracle text, as an
inspiration to help arrange the various musical elements. Yun said:
There I heard a piece by Cage that was not music but noise.
I was fascinated with the experiment since it created a broad
spectrum of new possibilities, but I was also very confused.
I had to ask myself where I was and how I should proceed.
Should I begin to compose in a radical way like these people
who belonged to the avant-garde movement or should I
follow my own path according to my Eastern music
tradition?3

After that musical encounter, Yun decided to define his personal style as a combination of
East Asian and Western elements.
The next year, his Music for Seven Instruments was chosen for performance at
the International Summer Courses of Contemporary Music in Darmstadt and Five Pieces
for Piano won a prize in a Dutch competition funded by the Gaudeamus Foundation of
Shin-Hyang Yun, Yun Isang. Kyunggyesun sangui Emak (Seoul: Hangilsa, 2005), 81.

Bilthoven, Netherlands. Both works of music had great success and were based on the
free use of twelve tones. Yuns first use of the Hauptton technique occurs in the second
movement of Music for Seven Instruments. Hauptton is Yuns term for a common Korean
musical practice. The first long tone of a piece is its Hauptton. The piece departs from
this tone via glissando, change in the type of vibrato, grace notes, etc., and returns
periodically to this main tone, eventually fading away. Yun stated the following about the
Hauptton technique
Every tone [in East Asian Music] is exposed to
transformations from the initial stages of action to the dying
away. It is furnished with ornamentation, appoggiatura,
oscillations, glissandi, and dynamic variations. Above all the
natural vibration of every tone is consciously set up as the
means of expression.4

The Hauptton technique will be discussed in more detail in chapter three.


A description of Music for Seven Instruments in the Darmstdter Tageblatt provides a
summary of Yuns compositional technique:
The composer attempted a blending of Korean court music
and Western modern music, which Yun learned recently
from Blacher and Rufer. The piece is made in good taste
with delicate tone colors, and the sound and treatment are
distinctly Asian. A unique decorative effect, created by the
wind instruments swirling around a main pitch, and soft,
static string instrument sounds, distinguish this piece. It is
4

The Wounded Dragon, 112.

an amiable and not complicated work.5

After Yuns success at Darmstadt, he composed thirty-three pieces (including


four operas) during the rest of his second period. In 1960, his String Quartet No. 3 was
accepted by the International Society for Contemporary Music 6 and performed in
Cologne. After the success at ISCM, Yun received a commission to write music for the
Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra in West Berlin. He composed his orchestral piece
Bara, which was influenced by a Korean temple dance and premiered by the Berlin
Radio Symphony Orchestra in West Berlin. That same year, he composed Symphonic
Scene, which was inspired by an ancient North Korean fresco. In 1962, he composed a
chamber ensemble, Loyang, named after one of the four great ancient capitals of China.
Yun wrote this piece as a musical representation of the Chinese philosophy of yin and
yang. In Loyang, he requested East Asian instrumental techniques from Western
instruments. For instance, he required the flute to play in the Korean vertical flute manner
by indicating specific tone colors, vibrato treatments, and ornaments.7 Heinz Joachims
review from Die Welt articulates Yuns successful blending of two cultural traditions:
The strongest work of that night was Loyang, which was
written as a free-flowing creative fantasy. The piece revives
a tradition based on ancient Far Eastern court music, yet it is

The Wounded Dragon, 85.


Internationale Gesellschaft fr Neue Musik (International Society for Contemporary Music)
His instrumental techniques are the focus of chapter three

10

also spiritually related in style to modern technique.The


artistic attraction of the piece relies on the confrontation of
the bright sounds and arching melody with the dark,
rhythmic and harsh accents by the various percussive
elements.8

In 1964 Yun composed two mature pieces using his Hauptton technique: Gasa,
for violin and piano, and Garak, for flute and piano, both of which also use twelve-tone
technique. Garak is now considered a standard piece in the international flute
competition repertoire. Yun often used Korean titles to remind the performers that his
music has a different musical source than Western music and to suggest to them the
special character of the music. For example, Garak and Gasa both mean melody in
Korean. These early pieces also show free application of twelve-tone technique. Yun
explained the he studied the twelve tone row and changed the twelve tones in a variety
of ways. The twelve tone row is just a skeleton of my music.9

Another big success came in 1966 with the work Reak for Small Orchestra,
which was composed for the Donaueschingen Festival and commissioned by Heinrich
Strobel, a supporter of avant-garde music. This piece is particularly important because it

The Wounded Dragon, 102.


Young Hwan Kim, The Study of Isang Yun 1 (Seoul:Korea National University of the Arts, 1995), 9.

11

shows the development of Yuns Hauptton technique. Moreover, this illustrates his
adaptation of Korean court music to the conventions of Western twentieth-century music.

His first opera, The Dream of Liu Tung, was commissioned by Gustav Rudolf
Sellner, the director of the Deutsche Opera, Berlin for the 1966 Festwochen (Festival
Weeks). Sellner requested East Asian subject matter, and Yun chose a poem, The Dream
of Yellow Millet, written by fourteenth-century Chinese poet Ma Chih Yuan. The tale
centers around the conversion of a Confucian scholar, Liu Tung, to Taoism.10 Because
this opera was composed for a small orchestra similar to that of Korean traditional opera,
it can be referred to as a chamber opera.
From 1956 to 1967, Yun did not participate in any political activity. Although
after 1953 it was illegal for a South Korean to cross the border, Yun traveled to North
Korea in 1963 to view the Kang Seo Go Bun fresco, which depicts the Sasindo, the four
guardian animal deities that guard each of the four directions. This trip inspired him to
compose two pieces: the Symphonic Scenes (1960, having only seen photos of the fresco)
and Image (1967). However, since visiting North Korea was against the law, he was
kidnapped by the South Korean central intelligence agency (KCIA) in 1967 while in
Germany, and he became involved in what has been called the East Berlin Spy
Taoism will be discussed in chapter three.

12

Incident. Yun was taken to Seoul, where he was convicted of espionage and sentenced to
the death penalty; a second jury sentenced him to life imprisonment instead. An appeal
for his release, led by Igor Stravinsky and Herbert von Karajan, was presented to the
South Korean government; it was signed by approximately 200 artists, including Luigi
Dallapiccola, Hans Werner Henze, Heinz Holliger, Mauricio Kagel, Josef Keilbert, Otto
Klemperer, Gyrgy Ligeti, Arne Mellnas, Per Nrgrd, and Karlheinz Stockhausen. Isang
Yun was released and exiled in 1969, and he returned to West Berlin. He was not allowed
to visit South Korea again and his music was no longer performed there.
Although Yun was in prison from 1967 to 1969, he continued to compose. His
compositions from 1967 to 1975 form a separate compositional part of his second period.
In prison, he composed the opera Die Witwe des Schmetterlings (Butterfly Widow, 196768), Riul for clarinet and piano, and Images for flute, oboe, violin and cello. The opera
was completed by February 5, 1968, and premiered in the spring of 1969 in Nuremberg.
It was a great success. Like his first opera The Dream of Liu Tung (1965), Die Witwe des
Schmetterlings was based on an ancient Chinese Taoist story. Although Die Witwe des
Schmetterlings is a comic opera, it is often performed with The Dream of Liu Tung as a
set.
The following year, Yun became a professor at Hanover University. Before his

13

kidnapping, Yun had received a commission for an opera from the Kiel Theater, which he
fulfilled with Geisterliebe (Love of Ghosts), a story based on the ancient Chinese tales of
Liao Chai Chil. Geisterliebe was a great success, and it earned Yun the Kiel Culture Prize
in 1970. That same year, he composed Namo, which was inspired by songs of the ancient
Korean shamans. He became a naturalized German citizen in 1972, and was named
professor at the Musikhochschule in West Berlin. That same year he received a
commission to compose a piece for the Munich Olympics under the slogan the unity of
all culture. For this occasion, Yun chose to adapt a Korean folk tale, Sim Tjong, which
was based on Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism. His composition received a great
deal of international attention.
During his second period, Yun developed his musical style based on Hauptton
technique, and he also attempted to incorporate ideas from Taoism in his compositions. In
addition, he successfully transferred Korean traditional instrumental techniques to
Western instruments.
c. Third Period (1975-1995)
After 1975, Yuns compositional direction changed due to his arrest,
imprisonment, and subsequent exile from his home country. Before 1975, he composed
pure, absolute music; after 1975, he composed programmatic music that would speak

14

about suppressed people, conflict of the divided country [Korea], obstacles for
reunification, poverty in the third world, and the plight of women11 through his music.
He said:
But since the middle of the 70s, I have written a whole
series of instrumental concertos. I had determined to put my
political experiences in my works. For that I needed a
musical language that included humanitarian themes.
Therefore, I selected classical Korean stories. For example,
the Flute Concerto depicts a nun dancing in the moonlight,
and the Double Concerto is concerned with the issue of the
division of Korea. And my Cello Concerto, which reflects
the reality of my imprisonment, has to do with life and death.
Actually, the music concerns itself with these facts: what is
death, what is life, and what are their origins?12

Until the second period, most of Yuns music had Korean titles (Garak, Gasa,
Namo, Reak, etc.) and combined Korean musical form with Western musical forms and
styles. However, during his third period, Yun composed in traditional Western classical
genres, such as concertos, symphonies, and cantatas, and titled these works in the
classical manner. In addition, he used more tonal, melodic and consonant elements than
he did before 1975, and he tried to simplify his Hauptton technique.
Yun composed five symphonies and two chamber symphonies between 1982 and

Chang-Wook Kim, Famous People from Pusan in the Twentieth Centrury


Pusan: Pusan
Kwangyucksi, 2005)
267
Hanns-Werner Heister and Walter-Wolfgang Sparrer, Der Komponist Isang Yun (Munich: Edition Text
and Kritik, 1987), 293, trans. from German to Korean by Yong Hwan Kim.

15

1987. Walter-Wolfgang Sparrer wrote:


Isang Yuns symphonies form a complementary
compositional series. Despite their different instrumentation,
formal structure, and content they are related in thought and
can even be said to constitute a cycle.13

Yuns symphonies were written to express his reaction to political and social
conditions, not only in Korea but also across the world. Symphony No. 1, which was
commissioned by the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra for its centennial celebration in 1984,
was composed to highlight a contemporary issue: the use of nuclear weapons. Symphony
No. 2 was based on his personal experiences. Symphony No. 3 (1985) concerns a
philosophical matter: the relationship of heaven, earth, and humanity. Symphony No. 4
(1986) was based on political essayist and Nazi prison survivor Luise Rinsers personal
diary, Im Dunkeln Singen: 1982 bis 1985. Symphony No. 5 (1987) was set to a text by the
poet Nelly Sachs, who moved to Sweden in 1940 to escape Nazi concentration camps;
the symphony expresses the overcoming of Nazi suppression. It was commissioned by
the city of Berlin for the celebration of Berlins 750th and Yuns seventieth birthdays, and
was premiered by the Berlin Philharmonic on September 19, 1987. In 1988, Yun received
the Distinguished Service Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany from the
Jiyeon Byeon
The Wounded Dragon: An Annotated translation of Der verwundete Drache.
The Biography of Composer Isang Yun by Luiser Rinser and Isang Yun (Kent State University, 2003), 309.

16

German president Richard von Weizcker. His final symphony, Exemplum in memoriam
Kwangju (1981) was related to the movement for Korean democracy. Yun incorporated
his anger into the music, which referenced the 1980 military massacre. The Kwangju
Democratization Movement was a popular uprising in the city of Kwangju, South Korea
from May 18 to May 27, 1980. During this period, citizens rose up against Chun DooHwan's military dictatorship and took control of the city. During the later phase of the
uprising, citizens took up arms to defend themselves, but they were crushed by the South
Korean army. Yun said:
I am only a musician, nothing else, and as a musician I have
nothing to do directly with politics. As a musician I have
only one goal: to follow my artistic direction and its demand
for authenticity and awareness. But remember what I
explained to you about my father: he was only a scholar,
nothing else, and he just sat and read and composed poetry.
But when once a flood came and threatened the house, he
sprang up and helped build a dam. Always in a catastrophe
an artist is also a human like all others, and he must do
something for all; thus, he must get involved in politics. But
that can be his task only for a short time. One cannot
influence the whole of history, but one can modify a short
stretch.14

Accolades for Yuns music continued to accrue. In 1987, Text und Kritik in
Munich published Der Komponist, Isang Yun to commemorate Yuns seventieth birthday.
Jiyeon Byeon, 326.

17

In 1992, a ten-day music festival was held in Japan to celebrate his seventy-fifth birthday.
In 1994, Isang Yun Music Festival was held in South Korea, but Yun was not invited. The
next year, Yun was awarded the Goethe Medal in Weimar, Germany.
Yun was not only active musically after 1974; he was also deeply involved in
politics. From 1977 to 1984, he was chairperson of the European chapter of the Korean
Democratic Unity Union, which was founded in Osaka, Japan in 1973. The Korean
Democratic Unity Union was founded for people who live outside of Korea, and its
purpose was to try to help both Democratic development in and unification of South and
North Korea.
One of Yuns most personal causes was the rescue of Kim Dae Jung, who later became
South Korean president (1998-2003) and was the 2000 Nobel Peace Prize recipient. Yun
visited North Korea again in 1979, and established a music festival there in 1982, which
has been held every year since.
In 1982, South Korea, realizing Yuns fame as a composer, lifted the ban on his
music and once again allowed people to perform his music in public: a two-day event
called The Night of Isang Yuns Compositions was held there that year. In 1984, the
Yun Isang Research Institution was established in Pyongyang, North Korea. In 1990, Yun
held the first South and North Korea Unification Music Festival (once in North Korea

18

followed by another in South Korea). That same year, the Korean Alliance for
Reunification, of which Yun was chairperson, was founded in Berlin. In 1994, Yun retired
from the Korean Alliance for Reunification and ended his political career.
In 1995, Yun died from pneumonia in Berlin. A year after his death, the
International Isang Yun Gesellschaft e.V. (International Isang Yun Society) was
established in Berlin. An international music festival in Tong Young (Yuns hometown)
was founded in 2002. In 2005, The Isang Yun Peace Foundation was established in Seoul,
South Korea. The following year, the National Intelligence Service of South Korea
officially admitted that the East Berlin incident was in fact a false accusation. Finally, in
2007, South Korea issued a formal apology to Soo-ja Lee, Yuns widow, for his political
persecution, and offered an official invitation to her visit the country. She came for the
music festival celebrating Yuns ninetieth birthday. That same year, the International
Isang Yun Music Prize was jointly established by the Isang Yun Peace Foundation in
Seoul and the International Isang Yun Society in Berlin, the Isang Yun Ensemble Seoul
was founded in South Korea, and Yuns house in Berlin was purchased by the Isang Yun
Peace Foundation of Seoul. In 2008, the Isang Yun Festival was held in Seoul, Chunchun,
Junju, and Tong Young. The Second International Isang Yun Composition Prize was held
in 2009 as a testament to his continued influence on the musical world.

19

CHAPTER 2
An Introduction to Korean Traditional Music
The music and musical instruments of Korea were strongly influenced by
neighboring China and, later on, by Japan. However, Koreans did develop and maintain
their own musical traditions. For example, the Japanese ethnomusicologist Koizumi
Fumio observed that Korean folk songs are almost all in triple meter, and triplets instead
of dotted rhythms are also characteristic. These are in contrast to China and Japan.15
Surveys of Korean music usually divide it into four historical periods: pre-Koryeo
Dynasty (music composed between 52 B.C. and 918 A.D.), Koryeo Dynasty (918 - 1392),
Chosen Dynasty (1392 - 1910) and the present (music composed after 1910). Traditional
Korean music encompasses many musical types: sacred, military and court, religious
(including music from Buddhism, Taoism, Confucianism and native shamanistic
religions), and folk music.
The musical arrangement of Isang Yuns Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra
is most closely related to Korean court music. The earliest court music, called A-ak
(elegant music), has its origins in ritual Confucian temple music and was imported
from China in 1116. Though very popular for a time, this style fell out of favor until
15

Yulee Choi, The Problem of Musical Style: Analysis of Selected Instrumental Music of the Korean-Born
Composer Isang Yun (PhD diss., New York University, 1992), 45.

20

centuries later when it was reintroduced by the Chosen Dynasty, a time in which
Confucianism was the national religion. A-ak dominated Korean court music until the
mid-15th century when it was displaced by Hyang-ak (village music), an indigenous
music form. Hyang-ak continues to be the most common form of Korean court music.
The figure below shows the traditional seating arrangement of the performers.

.
Fig. 2-1 Hyang-ak Performance
Traditional court music performances were held twice a year, in the fall and the spring,
and were accompanied by dance. The ensembles of A-ak were divided into the Tungga,
which was played on the terrace of the main temple in the palace, and the Honga, which
was played in the palaces courtyard. The instruments used in performances of A-ak were
metal bells, gongs, jade chimes, wooden box, tiger-shaped scraper, barrel and hourglass
drums, stringed zithers, double reeds, globular flutes, transverse flutes, mouth organs,

21

vertical flutes, and panpipes.


Modern performances of court music are most often Hyang-ak, the most
representative piece of which is Sujechun (Long Life, Immeasurable as the Heavens).
Sujechun was composed during the Silla Period (668-918) and was derived from a song
called Jeongup, which describes the fears of an anxious wife awaiting her tardy
husbands return at night. The instrumentation for the piece is two Piris (oboe-like
woodwinds), Tai-keum (large transverse flutes), Hae-kum (two-stringed fiddle), Buk
(barrel drum) and Janggu (hourglass drum). Sujechun, written in one movement and
divided into three sections, strongly influenced Yuns development of his own musical
forms. The fourth chapter of this paper will explore the relationship between Sujechun
and Yuns Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra.
In order to appreciate the influence of Sujechun on Yuns compositions, it is
necessary to understand the importance of the flute in Korean culture and to discuss in
particular the Tai-keum. One of Koreas oldest myths concerns a flute presented to the
King of Korea, Sinmun Kim, by the dragon of the East Sea. In this tale the King received
reports of a strange event; an island had emerged in the East Sea, and on the island was a
queer tree of bamboo sticks which became one by night but two by day.16 Upon

Hye-Jin Song, A Stroll Through Korean Music History (Seoul: The National Center for Korean

22

hearing this the king himself sailed out to the East Sea to witness the miracle, and as the
two bamboo sticks became one again the skies blackened and the sea raged for eight days
before settling down. A dragon then emerged from the waters and presented the king with
a jade girdle and told him that peace will find the world if you make and play a flute of
this bamboo, as bamboo can make sound only when put together.17 So King Sinmun
Kim cut the bamboo, and, after cutting it into the shape of a flute, stored it at the
Cheonjon-go, a depository of royal treasures in Wolseong18.
According to Samguk Sagi (The Three Kingdoms History)19, Manpasikjeok is
one of the tales in which the Tai-keum has the power to ease disturbances in the world.
The actual meaning of Manpasikjeok is flute that settles ten thousand troubles. It is one
of Koreas national treasures.20

Fig. 2-2. Tai-keum


The Tai-keum is the largest traditional Korean transverse flute, measuring two
feet five inches, and its range of pitch is two-and-one-half octaves. It has a large
Traditional Performing Arts, 2000), 58.
Ibid., 58.
Wolseong is a tower divided into five stories. It was a place to keep national treasures. It was built in the
Silla period and still exists in Kyung-Joo, South Korea.
It is a historical record of the Three Kingdoms of Korea: Goguryeo, Baekje, and Silla. It was
completed in 1145. Samguk Sagi is the oldest extant Korean history.
20
Hye-Jin Song, A Stroll Through Korean Music History, 58.

23

embouchure hole, a resonating hole covered by a thin reed membrane, six equidistant
large finger holes, and one or two (originally five) additional non-stopped holes at the end.
The membrane makes the timbre of this flute dark and cool in the low registers and sharp
and piercing in the high registers. It also produces a buzzing sound unlike Western flutes.
The Tai-keum produces the softest and most graceful tones of Korean flutes and is played
in both court and folk music. The Tai-keum is one of the most important Korean
instruments and one of the most difficult to play. Traditional orchestras tune to the B flat
produced by the Tai-keum.
The Tai-keum is one of three transverse flutes, known as a group as Sam-jook
(three bamboos). All were invented and used primarily in the Silla period (57-953 AD),
the longest sustained dynasty in Asian history and a time of great cultural riches. The
other two transverse flutes are the Joong-keum (medium transverse flute) and the Sokeum (small transverse flute). They are very similar in construction to the Tai-keum, the
differences being the size, the number of holes, and range of the registers. For instance,
the Tai-keum produces Bb3 as its lowest note and Eb5 as its highest tone, while the
Joong-keum has a range from D4 to G5. The So-keum, typically used for chamber music
and song accompaniment, is slightly smaller in size and shorter in length than the Joongkeum and thus is two major seconds higher than the Joong-keum. Yun composed Etude

24

for Flute Solo not for the C flute alone, but for C flute, alto flute, and piccolo, having in
mind the three traditional Korean flutes mentioned above.
In order to play the Tai-keum properly, one must assume a prescribed unique
posture that is quite different from the posture used for playing the modern flute:
Sit on the floor with legs crossed and back stretched. Face forwards and turn the head
thirty degrees to the left and lower the flute to the lip until the position is correct. The top
end of the Tai-keum should rest on the left shoulder and the tube should be held at a thirty
degree angle away from the players body. The shoulder and the two thumbs effectively
support the instrument.

Fig. 2-3. Tai-keum Player


Ornamentation is an essential part of Korean traditional music. Jeongganbo, a
written notation used in Korean court music, was invented by composer Yeon Bak during

25

the Chosen Dynasty (1392-1910) and it still used in traditional Korean music. The
example below shows the Jeongganbo style of notation. It is important to note that one of
the ornaments affects range, two are related to embellishments with adjacent tones, three
indicate note lengths, and two refer specifically to vibrato. While Yun did not incorporate
many of these symbols into his flute works, he did focus on the many varieties of vibrato,
which will be addressed more fully in chapter three.

26

Fig. 2-4. Jeongganbo Notation21

21

Keith Howard, Korean Musical Instruments (Seoul: Se-Kwang, 1988), 116.

27

CHAPTER 3
Influence of Eastern Techniques
Yun did not borrow folk tunes or use instruments from his mother country, but he
did use Korean musical forms and instrumental techniques in his music. Korean
traditional music is characterized by the following: a lack of recurring motifs, no themes,
no harmony (because all of the instruments play the same pitch, in different octaves),
flexible rhythms, lack of prescribed forms, heterophonic textures, the single tone as the
basis, and flowing and highly ornamented melodic lines. The phrases begin by accenting
the first note, developing the main note, and tapering to a quiet ending. Traditional
Korean music is based on native shamanistic beliefs, Buddhism, Taoism, and
Confucianism.22 Yun used most of these aforementioned elements in his compositions.
Although he embraced many aspects of traditional Korean music, he always wrote in
Western notation.
This chapter will focus on three unique elements: Taoism, Hauptton technique,
and the instrumental technique known as Sigimsae.
a. Taoism

22

The Wounded Dragon, 114, 121

28

Taoism is neither a religion nor a philosophy. The word Tao can be translated
into English as path or way, thus, Taoism can be viewed as a way of life.23 The Tao is
the natural order of things. It is a force that flows through every living and sentient object,
as well as through the entire universe. When the Tao is in balance it is possible to find
perfect happiness.24
The founders of Taoism are believed by many religious historians to be Lao-Tse
(604-531 B.C.) and his follower, Chuang-Tzu (4 B.C.). Taoism began as a combination of
psychology and philosophy but evolved into a religious faith in 440 B.C. when it was
adopted as a religion in China. At that time Lao-Tse became popularly revered as a deity.
Taoism, along with Confucianism (551 B.C.) and Buddhism (second century B.C.),
became one of the three great religions of China and Korea.25 Lao-Tse outlined the
essence of Tao in his book, Tao Te Ching: The Classic of the Tao and Its Power:
The Tao that can be talked about is not the true Tao. The
name that can be named is not the eternal name. Everything
in the universe comes out of nothing. Nothing-the nameless
is the beginning, while Heaven, the mother is the creatrix of
all things.26

Jeaneane Fowler, An Introduction to the Philosophy and Religion of Taoism: Pathway to Immortality
(Brighton: Sussex, 2005), 106
www.crystalink.com/taoism.html.
www.religion-cults.com/Eastern/Taoism/taoism.html.
Lao Tse, Tao Te Ching: The Classic of the Tao and Its Power, trans. Man-Ho Kwork, Martin Palmer,
and Jay Ramsay (Rockport: Element Book, 1993), 27.

29

The Tao Te Ching outlines the three main elements, called the Three Treasures,
and they are compassion, economy, and humility. Yun stated the purpose of his music
was to teach people peace; this idea, then, relates to the first of the Three Treasures in that
it encourages man to abstain from aggressive war and capital punishment. Looking back
at his life, Yun said:
I grew up under the influence of the mysticism of Taoism
and Buddhism and I experienced their inspiration by reading
books related to these philosophies. They had a deep effect
on my music. Over seventy percent of my works have been
rooted in Taoism or Buddhism, or based on the related
legends...27

The best representative figure of Taoism, the symbol of the dualistic anagram of Yin and
Yang, was developed 1500 years before Taoism. Yin (dark side) and Yang (light side)
symbolize pairs of opposites, which are seen throughout the universe: good and evil, light
and dark, male and female. The impact of human civilization upsets the balance of Yin
and Yang. The concept of Yin and Yang was not limited to China, but migrated along with
Confucianism to Korea during the Three Kingdoms Period (B.C.57-668).28 Figure 3-1
shows the Tajitu, the symbol of Yin and Yang.

Seokyung Kim, Integration of Eastern and Western music: An Analysis of Selected Flute Works by
Korean Composer, Isang Yun (DMA diss., University of Cincinnati, 2003), 12.
www.religion-cuts.com/EasternTaoism/taoism.html

30

Fig. 3-1. Symbol of Yin and Yang


Yun became deeply involved in Taoism during his time of imprisonment in a
South Korean jail (see. p. 12). He stated, I was in prison and was not imprisoned. That is
true. And I was often actually happy. I always heard music around me, a music, which
was in myself, but also around me.29 Yun composed Die Witwe des Schmetterlings
(Butterfly Widow) (1967-1968), Images (1968), and Riul (1968) while imprisoned, and
these three pieces were based on Taoism.
For example, Images was inspired by the North Korean grave-frescos, Sasindo in
the tomb of Kang Seo Ko Bun (Kang Seo Great Tomb). Kang Seo Go Bun was built in the
sixth century in Goguryeo, in which the state religion was Taoism. Sasindo depicts four
god-like animals of Goguryeo, each of which protects a kings tomb at each of the four
cardinal points. The following example shows the structure of the Kang Seo Go Bun. The
coffin is in the middle, with the west protected by a white tiger, the east protected by a
blue dragon, the north protected by a black tortoise, and the south protected by a red

The Wounded Dragon, 233

31

phoenix.

Fig. 3-2. Structure of the Grave-Chambers in Kang Seo Go Bun30

Yun described his experience after seeing the fresco at Kang Seo Go Bun:
First you see an animal, possibly the tiger first. But it is also
possible that you first see the dragon, phoenix or tortoise. It
is up to you what you see first. Gradually you see the other
animals, and finally you know that these four animals are
also combined into one unique animal. Four is one, and one
is four. If you stand in front of the paintings for a long time,
the individual animals seem to move.31

Jiyeon Byeon, The Wounded Dragon: An Annotated Translation of Der Verwundete Drache, the
Biography of Composer Isang Yun, by Luise Rinser and Isang Yun. PhD diss,. (Kent State University,
2003), 112.
The Wounded Dragon, 117.

32

In Images, the four god-like animals are connected with the instrumentation. The flute,
oboe, violin, and cello each represent an animal of the Sasindo (see chart below). Further
connections to Taoist concept of singularity and unity are shown by the parts each
individual instrument plays: each has its own part, but each instrument plays both
individually and jointly.
Yin Yang O Hang Sul is another tenet of Taoism, and Images also exhibits this
precept. O Hang Sul represents the five elements of life: metal, wood, water, fire, and
earth. Images was composed in five sections, which represent O Hang Sul. The two
woodwinds and two string instruments represent the Yin and the Yang in that these
musical forces separate and merge over and over, just as the energies of the Yin and Yang
do. The following chart describes Yin Yang O Hang Sul and its connection with Yuns
Images.

33

Five Elements

Cardinal points

Colors

Animal Gods

Images

Wood

East

Blue

Blue Dragon

Oboe

Fire

South

Red

Red Phoenix

Violin

Earth

Middle

Brown

Brown Dragon

Coffin

Metal

West

White

White Tiger

Cello

Water

North

Black

Tortoise

Flute

Fig. 3-3. O Hang Sul and Yuns Images


Sometimes Yun used the arrangement of instruments on the stage to demonstrate
Taoist principles. For instance, the seating arrangement of the performers of his 1988
chamber work Distanzen (Distances) depicts the four natures of Taoism: God, Angel,
Messenger, and Man. This piece also represents the concept of Yin and Yang with wind
and string instruments working in conjunction with and independent of one another. The
following chart depicts the stage arrangement and its meaning.

34

Stage

Meaning

Horn
Flute
Clarinet

God
Oboe

Angel

Bassoon

Violin 1

Messenger

Violin 2
Contrabass
Viola

Man

Cello

Fig. 3-4. A Setting of an Instrumental Arrangement on Stage

b. Hauptton
Korean traditional music has a melodic line that consists of individual tones that
are altered by ornamentation such as vibrato, glissandi, changing dynamics, and other
possibilities. Yun retained this concept of the main tone in his music, naming it
Hauptton, and including it in his compositions. Yuns Hauptton is distinguished by the
appearance of a long sustained note that changes with glissando, vibrato, grace notes, and
so forth, as is the case in Korean traditional music. When a new Hauptton comes, the
previous one always fades away. Yun discussed his Hauptton technique at the Salzburg

35

Mozarteum and gave this explanation:


Suppose I want to choose the note A as the main tone. The
note A alone cannot be the music, and it needs things like
appoggiatura in front and back of it. In order to fix the note
A, preparation is needed, which can be lengthy. The
important fact is that the note A has to be sounded as a main
tone. Although there could be many other ornamentations
and changes, the pitch A has to be at the center. Thus, there
will be ornamentations and expressions surrounding it.32

Hauptton technique was the impetus for his musical language and compositional
style in that he took the Korean idea of singular notes and placed them in the context of
Western contemporary compositional techniques. Yun made this comparison:
In European music, a note gained its life when connected to
other notes and a single note remained relatively abstract,
whereas a separate note is alive itself in Oriental music. A
Western note can be compared to a line drawn from a
drawing pencil, while an oriental note can be compared to a
line drawn from a brush. All the notes continuously change
from appearance to disappearance, and decoration,
syncopation, glissando, volume changes, and varied vibrato
are used purposefully. When there is a change in a note, this
change is considered to have ornamental function, with
various partial expressions of a single note rather than a
collection of pitches that form a melody.33

Two essential elements for Hauptton are a note long in duration as the central

Walter-Wolfgang Sparrer and Isang Yun, My Way, My Ideal, My Music trans from German to Korean
by Kyocheol Jeong and Injung Yang. (Seoul: HICE Publisher, 1994), 51.
The Musical Society of Korea and Isang Yun Peace Foundation, Isang Yuns Musical World and the
East-Asian Culture (Seoul: Ye-Sol, 2006), 123.

36

pitch and the surrounding ornamental effects. While a long-lasting note seems static, it is
in fact moving vigorously as it experiences changes in dynamics and vibrato and is
decorated by grace notes and glissandi. When interpreted by performers, Yuns Hauptton
technique insures that each main tone is interpreted differently every time. Yun said that
the Hauptton technique was based on Taoist ideals.
From its beginning to the end of the sound, the individual
tone is constantly changing, and I view this process of
flowing and moving as within the bounds of Taoism. Such
variables as grace notes before the main tone, ornaments,
glissandi, vibrations, tone colors, and light and shade
expressed through the dynamic changes of tones are
representative of the dualities of stasis versus motion as are
found in Yin-Yang. Every aspect is constantly interacting,
creating endless possibilities.34

Yuns idea that the uneven line of a brush stroke illustrates Hauptton also supports the
concept of Yin and Yang. The beginning part of a stroke shows strong energy, which
represents Yang, the middle part represents stillness (Yin), and the closing flourish again
displays strong energy (Yang) that will soon die away (Yin).

Fig. 3-5. Yuns Brush Stroke of an Eastern Tone35


Soo-ja Lee, My Husband 2, 180
Dae-Sik Hur, A Combination of Asian Language with Foundation of Western Music: An Analysis of
Isang Yuns Salomo for Flute Solo or Alto Flute Solo (DMA doc., University of North Texas, 2005), 17.

37

Yuns Hauptton can be seen in its simplest form in the opening of a traditional
Korean song, Jung-sung Gok. Figure 3-6 shows two grace notes before the sustained
main tone, followed by more grace notes.

Fig. 3-6. Jung-Sung-Gok36

A more detailed version of Hauptton is shown in figure 3-7, the beginning of his Etude
for flute alone. It includes two grace notes before the long main tone, but it adds more
closing grace notes, volume change indications, and instructions for expressive use of
vibrato.

All of these departures from the main note add direction and life to the phrases.

Fig. 3-7. Etude for Flute Solo, Moderato, mm. 1-437

Dong Eun No, Yun Isangs Life and Art in Korea (Kyungkido: Korean Studies Information Co., 2002),
254.
Isang Yun, Etude for flute solo (Berlin: Bote & Bock, 1974), 4.

38

Martin Schmidt, a noted expert on Yuns music, divided the Hauptton into three steps.
The first step consists of grace notes before the main tone, the second is the development
of the tone by different kinds of vibrato, and the third includes Umspielung (playing
around) before the inevitable fading away. Figure 3-9 shows Schmidts graphic of Yuns
Hauptton technique.

Fig. 3-8. Hauptton drawing by Schmidt38

Yun himself provided a less formal drawing of Hauptton that still includes shaping to
indicate ornaments and pitch changes.

Fig. 3-9. Yuns Drawing of Hauptton39

Injung Song, In-depth Study of Isang Yuns Glissees Pour Violoncelle seul (DMA diss., Boston
University, 2008), 49.
Sin-Hyang Yun, Yun Isang. Kyunggyeson sanui Emak (Pajoo: Hangilsa, 2005), 176.

39

c. Instrumental Technique

Some Asian composers write for their native instruments; for example, Toru
Takemitsu composed Eclipse to blend the Western orchestra with the Biwa (Japanese
lute) and Shakuhachi (traditional Japanese end-blown bamboo flute). However, Isang Yun
did not compose music for Korean instruments. Instead, he equated Korean instruments
with their Western counterparts and wrote for those instruments instead.

Korean Instrument

Western Counterpart

Piri

Oboe

Tai-keum

Flute

Taipyungso

Trumpet

Hae-kum

Violin

Ajang

Cello

Kumungo

Guitar

Kayagum

Harp

Fig. 3-10. Korean Instruments and their Western Counterparts

d. Sigimsae (Ornamentation)

40

Yun adopted Korean instrumental playing techniques such as Sigimsae, which is


equivalent to the Western concept of ornamentation. However, in Korean traditional
music, ornamentation is more important than it is in Western music. Western music is
based on a vertical structure with linear lines, but Korean music, like other Eastern styles,
is completely linear. Sigimsae is used to enliven and decorate the music, to create forward
motion, and to allow for individual expression. Not surprisingly, Yuns music typically
has many long sustained notes with non-standard indications of vibrato, large interval
tremolos, trills, many different dynamic levels, and grace notes with large leaps: all of
these are derived from the Korean practice of Sigimsae, of which there are four main
categories: Yueosong (vibrato), Junsung (grace notes), Choosung (ascending glissando),
and Toesung (descending glissando).
The Akhak gwebeom ("Musical Canon") is a nine-volume treatise on music,
written in line drawings by hand in Korea in the fifteenth century, during the Chosen
Dynasty. It provides detailed descriptions about music theory, instrumentation,
instrumental techniques, and even how to build instruments. The figure below shows
descriptions of the kayagum and taipyungso.

41

Fig. 3-11. Akhak gwebeom.40

The author of the Akhak qwebeom, Yeon Bak, also wrote the Hapchabo, a
separate volume on ornamentation in Korean traditional music.

It is clear that Yuns

instrumental techniques, particularly the four types of Sigimsae, were heavily influenced
by these ancient treatises.
i. Yueosung (Vibrato)
Yueosung means to vibrate the main tone and is an important part of Korean
music because Korean music is not supported by harmonic progression. Korean music
has only one melodic line, which is often played in parallel octaves by more than one
instrument; in addition to timbral and dynamic changes, yueosung is one way to change
elements in the music. It is usually achieved by the performers own interpretation, and

http://kim.naver.com/

42

the ability of the performer affects the amount of yueosung. Yueosung is used more in
secular music than in court music. The number of vibrations in Korean music is defined
by the rhythmic cycle, called Jangdan, which is played by percussion instruments like the
Janggo and Buk (drums). Jangdan helps to outline the tempo, meter, and rhythmic
pattern, and the cycle of jangdan repeats with each musical phrase, which accords with
one breath of the performer. Clearly this differs from the exact rhythmic patterns of
Western music. There are nine jangdans, and the slower jangdans require more vibrations
than the faster ones.

The chart below outlines four different jangdans and their

corresponding number of yueosung

43

Time Value

Name of Jangdan
Jinyangjo

Number of Yueosung

Six dotted quarter notes per one Jangdan: About 9


the slowest

Joongmori

Twelve quarter notes per one Jangdan: About 4


moderate (faster than Jinyngjo)

Joongjoongmori

Twelve eighth notes per one Jangdan: About 2


faster than Joongmori

Jajinmori

Twelve eighth note per one Jangdan, but About 3


faster than Joongjoongmori
Fig. 3-12. Relationship of Jangdan to Yueosung

Both the Tai-keum and Western flute are considered air-reeds; their lack of
mouthpiece allows for many ways to produce a variety of vibratos. Other types of vibrato
must be learned. There are three ways to produce a wide vibrato (at the interval of a
fourth or fifth) on the Tai-keum: to shake the left hand vertically, to control the air with
different dynamic levels, and to shake the head and control the air with the embouchure.
Narrow vibrato, which encompasses less that a whole step, is produced by either shaking
the Tai-keum or the vocal cords on the main tone. The following example shows two
vibrato notations from Korean traditional music; the top graphic indicates narrow vibrato

44

while the bottom graphic indicates wide vibrato.

Fig. 3-13. Vibrato Notation.41


Yun incorporated the Korean manner of regular pulsating changes of pitch into
his music in five different ways. Because it is not possible to shake the Western concert
flute to produce the wide vibrato similar to that of the Tai-keum, he instead used vibrato
with specific written directions, trills, flutter tonguing, fast repetitions of the note and
tremolos. In Image, Yun give precise directions (Fig. 3-14) for the treatment of vibrato.

Fig. 3-14 . Images for Flute, Oboe, Violin, and Violoncello42.


At times Yun wrote instructions to the performer regarding the approach to vibrato. In the
Keith Howard, Korean Musical Instrument: A Practical Guide (Seoul: Se-Kwang Music Publishing Co,
1988), 113.
Isang Yun, Images for Flute, Oboe, Violin, and Violonecello. Berlin: Bote & Bock, 1968, Preface.

45

opening phrase from his Etude for flute solo, Yun indicated immer intensiv, mit
normalem Vibrato, which means always intense, with normal vibrato.

Fig. 3-15. Etude for flute solo, mm. 1-443

Yun often used trills, which also change the pitch, to emulate wide vibrato. In the
example below, from his Flute Concerto, Yun combined trilling of the main note with
vibrato and changing dynamic levels to change tone color and add shape.

Fig. 3-16. Flute Concerto, mm. 169-171.

In the following example, Yun used trills to produce the fast vibrato effect and often used

Isang Yun, Etude for flute solo (Berlin: Bote & Bock, 1974), 4. Permission to reproduce portions of the
scores of Isang Yun music kindly granted by Boosey & Hawkes Music Publishers Ltd.

46

this technique to lead his music to the climax.

Fig. 3-17. Flute Concerto, mm. 233-238.

The third example shows how Yun used flutter tonguing in conjunction with
decreasing dynamic levels to imitate the style of Korean wide vibrato.

Fig. 3-18. Flute Concerto, mm. 299-302.

The fourth example shows how fast repetition of the note can also mimic the fast
vibrato of Yueosung.

47

Fig. 3-19. Flute Concerto, mm. 288-290.


The next excerpt illustrates how Yun used the tremolo as a vibrato technique. In
general Yun specified the tremolo at the intervals from a 4th to a 6th.

Fig. 3-20. Etude for Flute Solo, Allegretto. mm. 24-25.

ii. Junsung (Grace notes)


Korean music typically has grace notes with large intervals and many varieties.
In most cases, the grace notes are short while the main note is long. The following

48

example shows that even though there are grace notes above and below, the main tone
retains its importance.

Fig. 3-21. Junsung44

In keeping with traditional practice, Yuns treatment of grace notes in his compositions
does not differ greatly from the Korean manner. One particular point to keep in mind is
that while Korean grace notes may be short and serve as simple embellishment, they can
also be equal in duration to the main note or can even be more accented than the main
note. Yun uses accent marks to indicate where he wants the performer to place the stress,
although the final interpretation of the grace notes depends on the performers choice and
the progression of the single melodic line. The example below shows Yuns inclusion of
grace notes and their accent marks.

Sungman Choi, Daekum Gyubon. (Kyungki: AR Publisher, 1995), 28-29.

49

Fig. 3-22. Flute Concerto, mm.246.


iii. Toesung and Choosung (Quartertones)
The Korean instrumental technique used to produce quartertones on the Tai-keum
is to roll the flute in and out and alter the angle of the air stream with the mouth. Toesung
refers to a half step down from the tone, while double Toesung is almost a whole step
down from the tone. Choosung is the opposite of Toesung: it is a half step up from the
main tone. Both secular and sacred music incorporate Toesung. The notation is shown in
the example below.

Fig. 3-23. Toesung and Choosung45

Keith Howard, Korean Musical Instrument: A Practical Guide. (Seoul: Se-Kwang Music Publishing
Co., 1988), 97.

50

Yun also employed two kinds of quartertone techniques corresponding to toesung


and choosung. The first is an ascending motion by quartertone and the second one
descends by quartertone; both are indicated by curved lines. Yun included quartertones
for tone color and they are produced not only through fingering alterations, but also
through embouchure manipulation in order to sound similar to the Tai-keum. Figure 3-24
shows the two kinds of quartertone techniques that Yun used in his Concerto for flute.

Fig. 3-24. Flute Concerto, mm. 36-37

51

CHAPTER 4
The Flute Concerto
After 1975, Yun started to compose in such traditional Western genres as the
symphony and the concerto, all the while keeping his unique compositional style. Yun
chose to compose in these Western genres because he thought they could better express to
listeners his ideas of humanity and his political situation. However, he tried to make his
techniques, including the Hauptton technique, much simpler than before, so that more
people could understand and perform his music. A perfect example of his blending of
Eastern and Western ideas is his Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra.
The Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra was commissioned by and
premiered at the Summer Music Days festival in Hitzacker, Germany, in 1977. Yun
composed the concerto with a specific flutist and conductor in mind, Karlheinz Zller and
Gnther Weissenborn, respectively. Zller, a German flutist, was principal flutist of the
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra from 1960 to 1969 and again from 1976 to 1993. The
brilliant technique of the flute part was meant for Zller. Yun endeavored to make the
orchestra part as simple as possible because the conductor, Weissenborn, was a pianist

52

who had little experience as a conductor.46


The Flute Concerto was inspired by the poem Chung San A Malhayeura, which
was written by the poet Suk-Cho Shin (1909-1975) which was in turn inspired by the
Korye (918-1392) Buddhist song, Chung San Byul Gok. Yun outlines the connection
between the music of the concerto and the story it represents:
The scene is a young nun alone in the Temple, illuminated
only by the light of the moon. She had had a miserable life;
she was abandoned when she was a child and had no choice
but to become a nun. As she aged, though, she could longer
repress her sexual desires. One evening, she danced naked
in front of a statue of Buddha. Enraptured, she thought that
the statue of Buddha was a young man. However, at the
height of her frenzied dance, she hugged the statue of
Buddha, and suddenly she felt nothing but cold stone. At
that moment she recognized the harsh realities of life. The
music starts from nothing and ends with nothing.47

In accordance with Yuns explanation of the concerto, the orchestra represents


the meditative atmosphere of the temple, while the soloists cadenza at the climax of the
concerto depicts the nuns madness. When she realizes she is in the present day and not in
a dance-induced dream state, the alto flute, which represents her, goes back to the
meditative style of the beginning of the work. This return is reflective of Taoist principles,
and Yun often said that the meaning of Tao is infinite and keeps moving but returns to
Yong Hwan Kim, Yunisang Yungu (Seoul: Sigongsa, 2001), 299.
Ibid., 75.

53

the first place.48 The orchestra is not merely an accompanying feature; it sets the
soundscape of the temple, particularly with the frequent utterances of the temple block.
Yun felt it was easiest to express his idea of Korean traditional music and indeed
Korean music itself by employing a small ensemble; for this reason he composed the
concerto for a soloist and small orchestral ensemble. Because the major part of Yuns
Flute Concerto is similar to Korean court music, it is helpful to compare this concerto to
the Sujechun, the most popular piece of Korean court music still played. Sujechun is the
oldest of all the royal court music in Korea, originating in the Silla Dynasty
approximately 1,300 years ago.
a. Comparisons between Sujechun and the Flute Concerto
i. Instrumentation
The instrumentation of the Flute Concerto consists of a soloist and a small
ensemble, which imitates the sound of the traditional Korean Sam Hyun Yuk Gak. Sam
Hyun includes three stringed instruments: Kumungo (zither-like instrument, with six silk
strings), Kayagum (zither-like instrument, with twelve silk strings), and Hyangbipa
(long-necked lute, with five strings). Yuk Gak is composed of the Buk (drum), Janggu
(hourglass drum), Tai-keum (large transverse wooden flute), Piri (oboe-like woodwind),

Mikyung Lee, Isang Yuns Musical World and the East-Asian Culture (Seoul: Ye-Sol, 2006), 37-38.

54

and Taiphyungso (trumpet-like woodwind instrument), but some modifications have been
made over time, such as the addition of more instruments like the So-keum (smallest
transverse flute), Ajang (seven-stringed bowed lute), Bak (type of woodblock), and others.
Yun utilizes Western instruments to imitate the Sam Hyun Yuk Gak, but departs from the
Korean model by including in the Flute Concerto many percussion instruments not found
in traditional Korean court music. Many different percussion instruments are used in the
Concerto. There are five temple blocks, which establish both a clear rhythm and the
atmosphere of the temple. Five tomtoms and three gongs are used to build tension and
passion and remind the listener of temple music. Of particular interest is the hyoshigi, a
Japanese instrument consisting of two pieces of hardwood or bamboo that are clapped
together to make an exotic sound. Additional instruments are the snare drum, vibraphone,
glockenspiel, three cymbals, two triangles, and eight sleigh bells. The following chart
outlines the similarities between the concertos instrumentation and traditional Korean
court music instrumentation.

55

Instruments

Concerto for Flute and Sam Hyun Yuk Gak


Small Orchestra

Solo

Flute/Alto Flute

Wind instruments play solo parts

1 flute

Imitates Tai-keum sound

1 Tai-keum

2 oboes

Imitate Piri sound

2 Piris

2 clarinets
2 bassoons

Advance story line

Hae-kum

2 horns

Imitate Taiphyungso
Sound

1 Taiphyungso

violin, viola, cello, Imitate the sound of Sam Kumungo, Kayagum, Hyangbipa
double bass
Hyun

Fig. 4-1. Comparisons between the Flute Concerto and Korean Traditional Music
ii. Form
Sujechun is a one-movement work divided into three sections. The first section
(A) introduces the melody and repeats it with rhythmic variation. The B section includes
the climax, where the melodic line has the highest pitches with more activity, and the
third section (A) includes a fast section before returning to the final reiteration of the
opening idea. Further evidence of this structural outline is provided by the rhythmic
pattern of the Janggu (hourglass drum), which also has a recurring cycle in ABA form.
Isang Yuns Flute Concerto is also a one-movement work, and it is divided into
three sections that are delineated by tempo markings and instrumentation. It has a slowfast-slow scheme, with the alto flute used as the solo instrument in the slow sections and
the C flute used in the fast middle section and cadenza from the third section, creating an

56

ABA form (see. Fig. 4-2). The A section is characterized by its meditative beginning and
end, while the B section has much more brilliant and virtuosic events. The chart below
outlines the basic configuration of the work.

Measures

Tempo

Instrumentation

First Section

1-103

M = ca. 60, 76

Alto flute, C Flute

Second Section

104-171

M = ca. 66, 60

C Flute

Third Section

172-302

M = ca. 76, 60, (52) 60

C Flute, Alto Flute

Fig. 4-2. Basic Structure of the Flute Concerto


iii. Yun-em (continuous tone)
Yun-em, meaning continuous tone, is a Korean traditional compositional technique for
wind instrument ensemble music, such as Sujechun. It is a unique kind of musical linkage
that joins the end of a section to the beginning of the ensuing section. Noted Korean
music scholar Hye Gyu Lee explains the concept in detail:
Korean music mainly for wind instruments is performed
with the cylindrical oboes which play the principal melody
before the cross flute, which embroiders the melody, along
with the two stringed fiddles, and the hourglass drum. The
characteristic feature of its style is the so-called Yun-em
which comes in between the end of a musical phrase and the
beginning of the following one. Such linking of the musical
phrase is to be found neither in Korean music for stringed

57

instruments, nor in Chinese music. This bridging-over part


is played by the cross flutes and the two-stringed fiddles,
making the cylindrical oboes and the drum rest for a time
until the next section begins. Such a style of performance
gives the impression of two groups of players on the one
hand, and makes the phraseology clear on the other hand.49

For example, between the sections in Sujechun, the main melody is played by the
Tai-keum, followed by Hae-kum (two-stringed fiddle), and Ajang (seven-stringed bowed
lute). Yuns Concerto likewise has no breaks between sections. The beginning of the third
section shows a typical application of Yun-em technique when the bassoons and horns
keep sounding until the flute enters with new musical material.
As in other Korean traditional music, the music of the Sujechun has one melodic
line with embellishments of the main tones; Yuns Flute Concerto has a similar
conception. The chart below compares features of the Sujechun and Yuns Flute Concerto.

Yulee Choi, The Problem of Musical Style: Analysis of Selected Instrumental Music of the Korea-born
Composer Isang Yun (Ph D diss., New York University, 1992), 92-93.

58

Attribute

Sujechun

The Concerto

Form

ABA

ABA

Philosophy

Taoism

Taoism

Instrumentation

Sam Hyun Yuk Gak

Small Chamber Orchestra

Structure

One movement

One movement

Yun-em technique

Yes

Yes

Hauptton

Yes

Yes

Virtuoso technical demands

Brilliant

Brilliant in the solo part

Fig. 4-3. Comparisons between the Flute Concerto and Sujechun


.

b. Observations about the Flute Concerto


i. The First Section
The Concerto begins at a slow tempo (metronome marking is 60 to the quarter

note), and the atmosphere of the music is very meditative, reflective of the temple scene
in the story on which this concerto is based. The first Hauptton starts with a B-flat
pizzicato in the bass and moves to the alto flute (Fig. 4-4); the alto flute then moves down
to A in measure 14, then up to F-sharp, C-sharp, D, and E-flat (Fig. 4-5). These
Haupttne ascend and move with increasing rhythmic value.
In this opening section, the strings primarily play quiet pizzicatos, which suggest

59

a Korean string instrument, the Kayakum50. The alto flute has fast moving notes with
great rhythmic variety; energy is created by additional trills and grace notes. In measure
12 (Fig. 4-5), when the alto flute is silent, the temple block sounds, evoking the landscape
of this piece, the temple. The wood block, which is played during the rests of the temple
block, adds further exoticism to this section.

Korean zither-like string instrument with 12 strings

60

Fig. 4-4. Flute Concerto, mm. 1-9

61

Fig. 4-5. Flute Concerto, mm. 10-19

62

At measure 57 (Fig. 4-6), Yun indicated geruschhaft in the score, which means noiselike. In this specific instance, the alto flute should imitate the sound of wind as it blows
through the temple.

Fig. 4-6. Flute Concerto, mm. 56-58

There is a great deal of musical tension at the end of the first section (Fig. 4-7). The alto
flute has been supplanted by the C flute, which is asked to play many fast notes leading to
loud, sustained fourth-octave pitches. This frenzied and vigorous passage (Fig. 4-7) has
many ascending figures with large leaps. At measures 94 and 95, the Hauptton is C6,
moving to C-sharp 6, and ending with A5. This part illustrates clearly that when a new
Hauptton is introduced, the previous one always fades away.

63

Fig. 4-7. Flute Concerto, mm. 94-103

This first section has many wide intervals and requires the flutist to play extended
passages in the high register at the fortissimo level. It requires great strength and physical
stamina from the flute soloist and foreshadows the demands of the ensuing sections,
including a lengthy cadenza. Compared to other flute pieces composed by Yun, this
concerto does not include as many extended techniques; however, this piece is extremely
physically taxing to the performer.

ii. The Second Section


The second section begins with the solo flute and violins intoning the pitch A;
there is no break after the first section (Fig. 4-8). Yun indicates that the woodwind

64

instruments play dolcissimo and at a dynamic level from pp to ppp, which is much quieter
than the first section (Fig. 4-8). The violins play harmonics and harmonic pizzicatos,
while the cello and bass play both pizzicato and arco, but with mutes attached to lessen
the sound. The C flute solo line is indicated to be played sempre dolce e espressivo,
although pitches climb and the dynamics extend to fff.

65

Fig. 4- 8. Flute Concerto, mm. 104-112

66

At measure 133 (Fig. 4-9), Yun writes major-third tremolos from A to C sharp for
the flute solo line that are interrupted by Umspielung (playing around) technique on the
Hauptton A.

Fig. 4-9. Flute Concerto, mm. 133

iii. The Third Section


The tempo marking for the beginning of the third section (Fig. 4-10) is about 76
to the quarter note, which is faster than the other sections beginnings; this trait is similar
to the beginning of the third section of Sujechun (see. p. 55). This third and final section
begins with rhythmic utterances in the bassoons and horns, which continue ascending to
create a sense of anticipation of the solo flutes next entrance. The string instruments
ascend in a similar fashion but with the use of glissandi, which is reminiscent of
traditional Korean instrumental techniques. Finally the low strings rest on the pitch C and
the flute makes its entrance; this event represents another instance of the Yun-em
technique in Korean traditional music (see. p. 54-55).

67

The third section has a greater variety of dynamic and rhythmic changes in the
solo part, an extreme trill section, frequent use of tremolos at the interval of the sixth,
leaping grace notes, and few rests. This section demonstrates that this piece is one of the
most technically challenging flute concertos.

68

Fig. 4-10. Flute Concerto, mm. 172-176

69

Fig. 4-11. Flute Concerto, mm. 177-180

70

Fig. 4-12. Flute Concerto, mm. 181-188

71

The forceful and unyielding trill section (Fig. 4-13) creates agitation, great
musical tension, and leads to the cadenza, which depicts the nun dancing naked in the
temple.

Fig. 4-13. Flute Concerto, mm. 233-241

As is typically the case, the cadenza is unmeasured in the score. It starts on the
hauptton F-sharp 6 and uses the ascending quartertone technique and jumping grace notes
to move to A-sharp and then C-sharp. This is climax of the concerto, the nuns frenzied

72

dance, which is portrayed by the brilliant techniques of trills, glissandi, flutter tonguing,
rhythmic changes, and large interval grace notes.
This section is divided by three tempo markings. The first one (cadenza, Fig 4-14) has a
metronome marking of 60 to the quarter note and represents the nuns dancing. The
second one, when the orchestra re-enters, (Fig. 4-15) is a little slower with a metronome
marking of 52 to the quarter note; it describes what the nun experiences at that moment:
she is dancing and hugging Buddha and suddenly she feels cold. The third one (Fig. 4-15)
has the metronome marking of 60 to the quarter note, which moves the music toward the
beginning tempo of this concerto. The nun emerges from her trance-like state and realizes
she is in the present.

It is here that the alto flute makes its return.

73

Fig. 4-14. Flute Concerto, m. 246

74

Fig. 4-15. Flute Concerto, mm. 246-260

75

At measure 288 (Fig. 4-16), there are grace notes of very wide intervals, some as
wide as an eleventh. In the last three measures, the flute intones a single note at various
gradations of dynamics levels and with interruptions of natural tone by flutter tonguing,
and then dies away. Yun often used flutter tonguing at the end of a flute piece, a technique
that is in common with Korean Tai-keum music, which typically ends with a wide vibrato
and a fading away of the flute tone.

76

Fig. 4-16. Flute Concerto, mm. 288-30

77

Conclusion
Yuns personal life experiences, which are reflected in his musical output,
demonstrate his love for his mother country and its turbulent history during much of the
twentieth century. When Korea was invaded by Japan, and again during the Korean War,
Yun composed songs to inspire nationalism and activate the Korean people. After the
Korean War, he continued to compose for the Korean people, and his largest contribution
was a series of songbooks for school children. Following the Kwangju Democratization
Movement (1980), Yun composed the orchestral work Exemplum in Memoriam Kwangju
in memory of the thousands of people massacred by the military forces of the ruling
leader. Yun believed that South Korean(s) and North Korean(s) can unify through
music,51 and he planned music festivals in South and North Korea to further this goal.
Music was one of Yuns tools for showing his patriotism, even though he was
exiled from South Korea following a visit to an ancient tomb in North Korea. His
patriotism affected his compositional techniques, which are characterized by their basis in
Taoism, the use of the Hauptton technique, and the application of Korean instrumental
techniques to Western instruments. Yun successfully united Korean musical elements

51

Soo-ja Lee, My Husband 2, 140

78

with Western musical styles and transformed many aspects of ancient Korean court music
traditions into modern compositions, thereby creating his distinctive musical personality.
The Concerto for Flute and Small Orchestra is a good example of Yuns unique
compositional techniques as well as the shift in his musical style after 1975. The concerto
expresses traditional Korean musical elements such as a single movement construction,
the use of Hauptton technique, varied ornamentations such as Korean Sigimsae, subject
matter drawn from Taoist writings, the use of multiple flutes, and certain dynamic shifts
and textural changes reflective yin and yang theory.
Isang Yuns flute pieces are often chosen by players to perform in major
international competitions and are sometimes even required in final rounds. However, his
music is not often performed in other situations because of its extreme technical difficulty.
Three challenges exist in Yuns flute music: long sustained notes, great variation of
vibrato and extreme ornamentation.
Yun explained that in his music, gesture and flexibility are important and his
metronome marks are approximate tempos, depending on the performer. Yun gives
performers freedom to interpret his music, just as in Korean traditional music. Roswitha
Stge, a flutist who worked closely with Yun, premiering and recording his music, said:
If you play at the exact tempo as given by the composer,
there are many parts we cannot possibly play. There are too

79

many notes in a short time ten or twelve in one quarter


note. That makes it impossible to playI asked Yun which
one is more important, playing every notes correctly? Or
musical gesture? Yun said: the performer must consider the
overall gesture instead of every note in the music.52

From the performers standpoint, Yuns music is technically difficult, physically


demanding, and artistically complicated. Without knowing the influences behind his
works, it can be problematic to interpret his works in an authentic manner. Performers
and audiences alike would benefit from further study in the area of East-West musical
blending to insure more convincing interpretations of Yuns music and greater
understanding by listeners.

The Musical Society of Korea and Isang Yun Peace Foundation, Isang Yuns Musical World and the
East-Asian Culture (Seoul: Ye-Sol, 2006), 11-12

80

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the Korean-born Composer Isang Yun. PhD diss., New York University, 1992.
Hay, Katherine. East Asian Influence on the Composition and Performance of
Contemporary Flute Music. PhD diss., Columbia University Teachers College, 1980.
He, Jian-Jun. Chou Wen-Chungs Cursive. DMA doc., West Virginia University, 2000.
Hur, Dae-Sik. A Combination of Asian Language with Foundation of Western music: An
Analysis of Isang Yuns Salomo for Flute Solo or Alto Flute Solo. DMA doc.,
University of North Texas, 2005.
Kim, Chul-Hwa. The Musical Ideology and Style of Isang Yun, as Reflected in his
Concerto for Violoncello and Orchestra (1975/1976). DMA doc., University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign, 1997.

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Kim, Eun Young. A Study on the Hauppttone Technique as Based on the Spirit of
Traditional Music. MA thesis., Ewha Womans University, 1998.
Kim, Insung. Use of East Asian Traditional Flute Techniques in Works by Chou WenChung, Isang Yun, and Toru Takemitsu. DMA doc., University of California, Los
Angeles, 2003.
Kim, Jasmine Jung-Im. Western Music in Korea: Focused on 20th Century Flute
Compositions by Korean composers. DMA doc., University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign, 2002.
Kim, Jeongmee. The Diasporic Composer: The Fusion of Korean and German Musical
Cultures in the Works of Isang Yun. PhD diss., University of California Los Angeles,
1999.
Kim, Seokyung. Integration of Eastern and Western Music: An Analysis of Selected
flute Works by Korean Composer, Isang Yun. DMA doc., University of Cincinnati, 2003.
Kim, Su-jin. A Study of Social, Cultural and Political Elements Reflected on the Music
of Isang Yun. EdD doc., Yonsei University, 2003.
Lee, Kyung Suk. An Analysis on Isang Yuns Images. MA thesis., Keimyung
University, 2002.
Lee, Seng Chul. A Study of Konzert fr Flte und kleines Orchestra of Isang Yun.
MA thesis, Kyungwon University, 2006.
Park, Jangwon. A Comparative Study on Yun Isangs Garak and Korean Classical Music
Techniques: the cases of flute and Taegum-melody. MA thesis, Yongin University, 2001.
Song, Injung. In-deph Study of Isang Yuns Glissees Pour Violoncelle seul. DMA doc.,
Boston University, 2008.
c. Articles
Cha, Hosung. The Last Conversation with Isang Yun. Journal of the Society for Korean

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Music, no. 11 (1996): 49-56.


Cho, Eunsook. The Relationship between Isang Yuns Hauptton and Nonghyun Focused
on Isang Yuns Glisses (1970). Em Ak Hak no. 9 (2002): 190-250.
. Yun Isangs Relationship of Compositional Technique and Korean Traditional
Music. Chungang Music Research no. 8-9 (Dec. 2000): 207-235.
Cho, Hoichang, and Suk Hee Kang. Yun Isangs Music Festival. Music & Performing
Arts Journal (Oct. 1994): 34-38.
Cho, Sung-Hwan. Yun I-Sangs Composition of Childrens Song during the Korean War
Period. The Society for Korean History Musicology no. 30 (2003): 697-724.
Choi, Ae-Kyung. Zu kompositorisechen Gestaltungspinzipien in der Symponik von
Isang Yun-am Beispiel des 1. Satzes der Symphony Nr. 1 (1982/83). Journal of the
Society for Korean Music no. 27 (2004): 147-176.
Chuo, Wen-Chung. Asian Concepts and Twentieth-Century Western Composers. The
Musical Quarterly 57 no. 2 (Apr. 1971): 211-229.
. Chinese Historiography and Music: Some Observation. The Musical Quarterly
62 no. 2 (Apr. 1976): 218-240.
.East and West, Old and New. Asian Music no. 1. (Winter. 1968-1969): 19-22.
. Open Rather Than Bounded. Perspectives of New Music no. 1. (AutumnWinter. 1966): 1-6.
Ford Foundation. A Conversation with Isang Yun. In Berlin Confrontation: Artists in
Berlin, 64-69. Berlin: Gebr. Mann Verlag, 1965.
Holland, Bernard. Critics Notebook; Orientalism By Way of Brooklyn. The New York
Times February 20, 1996.
Hong, Jung Soo. A View of Korean Music. Journal of the Society for Korean Music, no.
33 (2007): 9-45.
Jeong, Kyochul. The State and Problems of Research on Isang Yun through the
Literature about Him. Journal of the Society for Korean Music no. 12 (1996): 63-85.

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. A Study of Twentieth Century Flute Techniques in Isang Yuns Music. The


Musicological Society of Korea no. 9-2 (2006): 123-157.
Jeong, Yooha. The Musical Expression of May 18th Through Classical Music. Journal
of the Society for Korean Music no. 26 (2003): 191-220.
Kim, Yong Hwan. Isang Yuns Life and Music. Journal of the Society for Korean Music
no. 11 (1996): 12-48.
,trans. A Study of Yun Isangs Opera. Nuri Media no. 6 (1993): 147-207.
Lee, Heekyung. A Study of Yun Isang: Present and Future. Nuri Media no. 25 (Winter.
1994): 207-259.
.Three Composers from Three Countries in East Asia. Music and Culture no. 8
(2003): 57-87.
Lee, Kunyong, A Unification Music Festival. Music & Performing Arts Journal (Dec.
1998): 66-67.
Lee, Kyongpun. Eyes on Music and Culture: Review on the 2001 Conference of Korean
Musicological Society. Music and Culture no. 6 (2002): 165-172.
Lee, Mi-Kyung. The Musical Thought of Composer Isang Yun. Journal of the Society
for Korean Music no. 22 (2001): 51-69.
. Influence of Korean Music and Philosophy of Isan Yun. Eum Ak Hak no. 9
(2002): 167-193.
.Korean Elements in Yun Isangs Early Pieces: The Third Movement of
Nakyang (1962). Korean School of Arts no. 4 (2001): 275-204.
Lyu, Yaechaeng. A Study on Isang Yuns Compositional Technique: 2 Stcke fr Violin
Solo Kontraste (1987). Ewha Music Journal no. 4 (2000): 100-140.
Miller, Malcolm. New Consciousness. The Musical Times 132 (Apr. 1991): 205.
Noh, Dong Eun. Prof. Dong-Eun Nohs Reports after Visiting North Korea. Minjok no.
17 (1999): 23-122.
. Yuns Life and Music in Korea. Journal of the Society for Korean Music no. 17

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(1999): 23-122.
Park, Sung Hyang. An Interview with Yun Isang in Berlin. Music & Performing Arts
Journa, (Dec. 1993): 122-147.
Shin, In-Sun. Isang Yun 1. Music and Culture no. 28 (2004): 14-165.
. Isang Yun 2. Music and Culture no. 30 (2005): 127-165.
Schmidt, Christian Martin. Etude for Flute Solo by Isang Yun. Neue Zeitschrift fr
Musik 157 (Jan-Feb. 1996): 46-48.
Sparrer, Walter-Wolfgang. Unser Gr ster Meisterzm Tode von Isang Yun. Neue
Zeitschrift fr Musik 157 (Jan-Feb. 1996): 46-48.
. Jacket notes Isang Yun Symphonies 1 & 3, cpo, 999 125-2, 1991.

Warnaby, J. Record review: Riul for Clarinet and Piano; Piri for Solo Clarinet. Tempo
no. 178 (Sep. 1991): 60-61.
Yu, Byung Moon. Yun Isangs Tenth Anniversary. Minjok 2 (Nov. 2005): 12-25.
Yun, Isang. Contemporary Composer and Traditional Music. The World of Music no. 2
(1978): 57-60.
Yun, Shin Hyang. Gagok (1972) fr Stimme, Gitarre und Schlagzeug Isang Yun: Von
der Stimmkunst zur Klangfarbenkomposition. Music and Culture no. 24 (2002): 249-275.
. Reak: (1966) Fr Groes Orchester von Isang Yun: Eine Klangsprache im
dritten Raum. Journal of Society for Korean Music no. 26 (2003): 163-190.
. Multi Culture in musical sound in West Europe during the middle of twentieth
century. Music and Culture no. 8 (2003): 27-51.
. Yun Isangs Two Musical World. Eum Ak Hak no.9 (2002): 195-232.
d. Internet Sources
Duffie, Bruce. Composer Isang Yun: A Conversation with Bruce.
http://www.bruceduffie.com/yun

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http://www.crystalinks.com/taoism.html
Gifford, Keith. Yun, Isang. Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online.
http://www.grovemusic.com
http://www.kim.naver.com
http://www.religion-cults.com/Eastern/Taoism/taoism.htm
International Isang Yun Music Prize. http:// www.yunmusicprize.org
International Isang Yun Society Berlin. http://www.yun-gesellschaft.de
Isang Yun Peace Foundation Seoul. http://www.isangyun.org.
Tongyeong International Music Festival. http:// www.timf.org
e. Filmography and Discography
For Yun Isang, TongYong Modern Music Festival, KBS Media, 2000 [Video Tape].
Yun Isang Opera Simchung EBS, 1999 [Video Tape].
MBC Documentary: Yun Isang MBC production, 2006 [Video Tape].
2007 Yun Isang Music Festival [Video Tape].
Yun, Isang. Concerto for flute and small orchestra (1977): Roswitha Stge (flute),
Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester, Saarbrcken, camerata, 1985, CM-109 [compact disc].
f. Scores
Yun, Isang. Concerto for flute and small orchestra. Berlin: Bote & Bock, 1977.
. Chogi Gagokgyb (Early Song Book). Pyongyang: Korea News Service, 1990.
. Dalmuri. Seoul: Hangmoonsa, 1949.

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.Etude for Flute Solo. Berlin: Bote & Bock, 1974.


. Garak for Flute and Piano. Berlin: Bote & Bock, 1964.
. Images for Flute, Oboe, Violin, and Violoncello. Berlin: Bote & Bock, 1968.
. Invention for Two Flutes. Berlin: Bote & Bock, 1988.
. Music for Seven Instruments (Fl., Ob., Cl., Bn., Hn, Vl., Vc.). Berlin: Bote &
Bock, 1959.
. Salomo for Alto Flute or Flute. Berlin: Bote & Bock, 1978.
. Sori for Flute Solo. Berlin: Bote & Bock, 1988.
. Quartet for Flutes. Berlin: Bote & Bock, 1986.

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