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South Korean maestro Chung will be the first Asian to head Italy’s famed La Scala

The Radio France Philharmonic orchestra's South Korean conductor Myung-Whun Chung performs during a rehearsal in the new auditorium of the Maison de la Radio before its inauguration on November 14, 2014 in Paris. The two orchestras of Radio France will perform Wagner, Mozart and Prokofiev during tonight's inauguration of the new Maison de la Radio after five years of refurbishing. AFP PHOTO LOIC VENANCE

Myung-Whun Chung conducts the Radio France Philharmonic orchestra during a rehearsal at the Maison de la Radio before its inauguration on November 14, 2014, in Paris. Loic Venance/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Loic Venance/AFP via Getty Images

BUSAN, South Korea β€” South Korea’s K-pop artists are on such a roll across the globe that it can be easy to forget their classical music forebearers were rocking the world’s concert halls well before they were born.

And they’re still at it. One of the notable recent milestones of “K-classics,” as South Korean classical music has been dubbed, is the historic Italian opera house Teatro alla Scala’s choice of celebrated South Korean conductor and pianist Myung-Whun Chung as its musical director.

Boxes in La Scala opera house in Milan, Italy.

Boxes in La Scala opera house in Milan, Italy. Christoph Sator/picture alliance via Getty Images hide caption

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Christoph Sator/picture alliance via Getty Images

Milan’s La Scala announced in May that Chung will take the post when current director Riccardo Chailly’s contract ends in late 2026. Chung is the first Asian and second non-Italian to hold the position, and, as La Scala put it in a statement, “one of the most beloved artists among the Milanese public.”

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Since 1989, Chung has conducted 84 opera productions and 141 concerts for La Scala, more than anyone other than its official music directors, who have included such musical luminaries as Arturo Toscanini and Claudio Abbado.

“It feels like getting married after loving each other for 36 years,” Chung said of his new position at a May 19 news conference at the Busan Concert Hall in South Korea’s second-largest city.

Chung was born into a highly musical family, the second youngest of seven children. He made his public debut as a pianist at age 7. At 8, he moved to the U.S. As a teenager, he began performing in a trio with his sisters, violinist Kyung-Wha and cellist Myung-Wha Chung.

Winning second prize at the International Tchaikovsky Competition in 1974 lifted his career to new heights. Chung moved to Italy in 1982, where he immersed himself in the culture. That includes food, so much so that he grows his own tomatoes and olives.

Chung has conducted many of the world’s top orchestras, including the Berlin Philharmonic and New York Philharmonic. He has served as music director of several others, including the Paris’ OpΓ©ra Bastille and the Seoul Philharmonic.

Myung-Whun Chung speaks at a news conference after La Scala announced it had named him its next music director, at Busan Concert Hall, Busan, South Korea, May 19.

Myung-Whun Chung speaks at a news conference after La Scala announced it had named him its next music director, at Busan Concert Hall, Busan, South Korea, May 19. Classic Busan hide caption

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Classic Busan

He is particularly known for his interpretation of Giuseppe Verdi’s operas, many of which debuted at La Scala, and his ability to bring out their emotional intensity.

Verdi’s “Simon Boccanegra is a personal favorite,” Chung said at the news conference last month, “particularly because of the title character, Boccanegra, who embodies what a great man should be: The generosity, the warmth that comes through.”

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Since Chung’s rise to fame, younger South Korean musicians have claimed an outsize share of prizes in international competition.

South Korea’s robust musical talent pipeline has produced young virtuosos including Yunchan Lim, who in 2022 became the youngest pianist to win the prestigious Van Cliburn International Piano Competition at age 18, and Seong-Jin Cho, the first South Korean winner of the International Chopin Piano Competition in 2015.

Shin Soo-jung, a professor emeritus at Seoul National university, a pianist and friend of Chung’s family, sees three key ingredients to South Korea’s success.

“Number one: Korean folk, they have a really artistic temperament, improvisation and expression of feeling and that kind of thing,” she says. “And number two: There’s always supporting parents, especially mothers.”

And the third ingredient, she says, is South Korea’s growing economic clout, which has enabled young talents to study overseas.

After decades of performing in Europe, Chung began to think of paying it forward. He returned to Korea in 2005 to conduct the Seoul Philharmonic, to foster new talent and musical exchanges.

Chung says he admires maestros such as Verdi for their contributions to humanitarian causes.

“His greatest work was that before he died,” he told reporters, “he prepared a retirement home for musicians, which he built in Milan, and he was he dedicated all his royalties to this place.”

Chung notes that Koreans and Italians have a lot in common: how they express their emotions, their love of singing.

Both are peninsulas jutting off the Eurasian landmass. For centuries before 1871, Italy was a divided nation. Korea was divided in 1945 and still is.

Italy’s reunification during the 19th century had a sort of unofficial anthem, “Va, pensiero,” the beloved chorus from Verdi’s Nabucco, which premiered at La Scala in 1842. Chung has conducted the anthemic piece, which occasionally triggers cries of “Viva Italia!” from the audience.

Chung’s humanitarian cause has been to reunify North and South Korea through music. In 2012, he conducted the musicians of North Korea’s Unhasu Orchestra and the Radio France Philharmonic in Paris. In 2017, he created the One Korea Orchestra. His concerts have raised money for aid to North Korean children.

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But for now, tensions between the two Koreas are running high, and the prospect of Chung conducting an inter-Korean orchestra remains a distant one.

NPR’s Se Eun Gong contributed to this piece in Seoul and Busan, South Korea.

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