About Francis Wong

Few musicians are as accomplished as Francis Wong, considered one of "the great saxophonists of his generation" by the late jazz critic Phil Elwood. A prolific recording artist, Wong is featured on more than forty titles as a leader and sideman. For over two decades he has performed his innovative brand of jazz and creative music for audiences in North America, Asia, and Europe with such with such luminaries as Jon Jang, Tatsu Aoki, Genny Lim,William Roper, Bobby Bradford, John Tchicai, James Newton, Joseph Jarman, Don Moye and the late Glenn Horiuchi.

But to simply call the Bay Area native a musician would be to ignore his pioneering leadership in communities throughout Northern California. Wong's imaginative career straddles roles as varied as performing artist, youth mentor, composer, artistic director, community activist, non-profit organization manager, consultant, music producer, and academic lecturer. Key vehicles for his work are Asian Improv aRts, the company he co-founded with Jon Jang and as a Senior Fellow at the Wildflowers Institute. In addition, Wong was a California Arts Council Artist in Residence from 1992 through 1998, and a Meet The Composer New Resident in 2000-2003. In 2000-2001 he was a Rockefeller Next Generation Leadership Fellow. He has also been a guest member of the faculty at San Francisco State University (1996-98) and at University of California at Santa Cruz (1996-2001).

”I choose for my work to build community and to seek out how I, as an artist can meet the challenges that our community faces. In the Asian American community, the biggest challenge is continuity of culture and the impact of assimilation. Through music, I envision a way to create continuity through the integration of tradition and innovation.

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commented 2016-11-05 10:19:55 -0700
hello Francis Wong,

I have created a book entitled “The Yijing Modes”. The largest part of this work is a systematic modal interpretation of the 64 hexagrams of the Chinese classic “Book of Changes”.

In the introduction there is a detailed analysis of the sequence of the hexagrams, the so called ‘King Wen Sequence’. I show that the underlying structure of the sequence is a Daoist body map, comparable with the Xiuzhen tu and the Neijing tu.

regards, Greg Rosser
commented 2015-02-21 11:23:32 -0800
About Francis Wong http://bit.ly/19RT8xZ via @franciswongsf
commented 2013-11-06 18:41:26 -0800
TY :)
Francis Wong's Website