DMA Recital: Alex Fang, piano

FREE

Alex Fang (DMA, Piano Performance), a student of Craig Sheppard, performs Johannes Brahms: Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat major, Op. 83. With collaborative pianist Mia HyeYeon Kim.


Note: The performance will be livestreamed.
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Program:

Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat Major, Op. 83
I. Allegro non troppo
II. Allegro appassionato
III. Andante
IV. Allegretto grazioso–Un poco più presto

Biographies

DMA student Alex Fang

Alex Fang is dedicated to sharing music and creating personal connections with his audience members, collaborators, and students. He is currently pursuing his doctorate under the guidance of Craig Sheppard at the University of Washington, where he is also a Teaching Assistant for the Modern Music Ensemble, directed by Cristina Valdés. He received his masters from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music under Sharon Mann and Yoshikazu Nagai, and his bachelors from Northwestern University under Alan Chow and James Giles, where he additionally completed a combined bachelors/masters in computer science. His studies have included pedagogy training under Marcia Bosits and Iris Hsu Shiotsuki. Notable performances include Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 1 with the San Francisco Conservatory of Music Orchestra as the 2022 winner of the piano concerto competition, chamber performances alongside faculty members at Icicle Creek Chamber Music Festival in Leavenworth, and a 2023 world premiere of a double harpsichord concerto with Harmonia. 


Alex’s approach to music and teaching offers a holistic combination of the mind and the heart. Through music, he strives to inspire a lifelong joy in learning and respect for the arts. He enjoys helping students analyze and understand the musical language in order to develop their independence and artistic individuality. Since 2015, he has engaged with a wide range of students through private teaching as well as after-school programs, including Bridge to Arts and Music at Third Baptist Church in San Francisco and Academy of Music and Arts for Special Education at Northwestern University. Locally, Alex is active as a soloist, orchestral keyboardist, teacher at Cascade Piano Studio, and collaborative pianist for the Seattle Jewish Chorale. In his free time, Alex enjoys playing badminton and Tetris, and exploring hikes and food in the Seattle area.

HyeYeon Kim, doctoral student in piano performance

Born and raised in Seoul, South Korea, Dr. Mia HyeYeon Kim began her piano studies at the age of seven. She has earned prizes in the Frances Walton Competition, the Metropolitan International Piano Competition, the Texas State International Piano Competition, the Memphis International Piano Competition, the Universal Music Competition, and the Seoul Philharmonic Competition. In spring 2024, Dr. Kim performed George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue with the University of Washington Wind Ensemble, conducted by Timothy Salzman, in both Seattle and Daejeon, South Korea. In 2023, she performed with the Central Texas Philharmonic Orchestra under Stefan Sanders as a winner of the Texas State International Piano Concerto Competition. She won the University of Washington Concerto Competition in 2022 and performed Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 1 with the UW Symphony Orchestra, conducted by David Rahbee. Also in 2023, she premiered Viktor Kosenko’s Mazurka No. 1 on Classical KING FM 98.1. An active performer in her community, she has appeared at the Seattle Public Library, the Museum of Flight, Seattle Opera’s Tagney Jones Hall, and the Seattle Art Museum.

 

Dr. Kim is also an experienced educator. At the University of Washington, she has served as a Teaching Assistant for the Modern Music Ensemble and secondary piano courses. She has worked as Director of the Creative Keyboards Piano Camp and as a piano faculty member at Music Works Northwest in Bellevue, Washington. In summer 2025, she was appointed a Rising Faculty Star at the 15th Texas State International Piano Festival, where she gave masterclasses to gifted young musicians. In fall 2024, she was invited to perform and teach masterclasses as a faculty artist at the Georgia Musicale Group Retreat Festival. In 2026, she will join the piano faculty of the OpusOne International Music Festival. Since 2023, she has also served as an adjudicator for the Ladies Musical Club of Seattle and the Washington Music Educators Association Solo and Ensemble Competition.

 

Outside of music, Dr. Kim enjoys coffee, movies, and yoga. She recently completed her vinyasa yoga teaching certification and is exploring ways to integrate yoga into musical training. In 2022, she led a “Yoga for Musicians” workshop at the University of Washington with support from the UW School of Music Student Advisory Council.

 

Dr. Kim earned her Doctor of Musical Arts at the University of Washington with a dissertation titled An Analytical Study of Das Jahr by Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel, under the direction of Craig Sheppard. She received her Bachelor of Music from Yonsei University in Seoul, her Master of Music from the New England Conservatory under Victor Rosenbaum, and her Artist Diploma from the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music under Soyeon Kate Lee.

 

Since 2022, she has taught as adjunct faculty in the Master of Arts in Music program at Wesleyan College in Macon, Georgia.