Winner
of numerous awards and prizes, Vincent Ho has emerged
as a much sought-after composer. During his academic
studies, his works were already being performed by
many prestigious ensembles and orchestras, including
The Toronto Symphony Orchestra, The Vancouver Symphony
Orchestra, The Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra, l’Orchestre
de la Francophonie canadienne, Arraymusic, The Arditti
Quartet, The Composer’s Quartet, Earplay New
Music Ensemble, Counter-Induction, and Land’s
End Chamber Ensemble. His music has also been featured
at numerous festivals such as The Winnipeg New
Music Festival,
New York’s MATA New Music Festival,
Parry Sound’s Festival of the Sound, The
Markham Music Festival, Toronto’s Massey
Hall New Music Festival, Ottawa’s Strings
of the Future Festival, and Bakersfield’s New
Directions Series. In addition to North America,
his works have been performed in China, France
and Italy.
His many awards have included
Harvard University’s Fromm
Music Commission, The Canada Council for the
Arts’ “Robert Fleming Prize” (for
most talented young Canadian composer, 2005), The
Canadian Music Centre’s “2006 Emerging
Composer Prize”, the “Morton Gould
Young Composer Award” (ASCAP, 2004), four
SOCAN Young Composers awards (Second Prize, 1999;
Third Prize, 2001; two Second Prizes, 2004), EARPLAY’s “Donald
Aird Memorial Composition Award” (2004),
Portland Chamber Music Festival’s “2006
Composers’ Competition”, the “Audience
Prize” from the Toronto New Music Festival (1999),
and The University of Southern California’s “2004
Sadye J. Moss Composition Prize”. He has
also received prizes from the Strings of the
Future, the PEEL Music festivals
(both 1999), and was a finalist for the 2005
Hultgren Solo Cello Works Biennial.
Born in
Ottawa, Ontario in 1975, Vincent Ho began his musical
training through the Royal Conservatory of Music.
After receiving his Associate Diploma in Piano
Performance from the RCM in 1993, he enrolled as
a composition major at the University of Calgary.
After earning his Bachelor of Music degree, he
went on to earn his Master of Music degree from
the University of Toronto (1998) and his Doctor
of Musical Arts degree from the University of Southern
California (2005). His mentors have included Allan
Bell, David Eagle, Christos Hatzis, Walter Buczynski,
and Stephen Hartke. In 1997, he was awarded a scholarship
to attend the Schola Cantorum Summer Composition
Program in Paris, where he received further training
in analysis, composition, counterpoint, and harmony,
supervised by David Diamond and Philip Lasser from
the Juilliard School of Music and Narcis Bonet
from the Paris Conservatoire.
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