HELEN SUNG
Helen Sung is an acclaimed pianist and composer. Born and raised in
Houston, TX, she studied classical piano and violin and attended Houston’s
renowned High School for the Performing & Visual Arts (HSPVA). Continuing
her classical piano studies at the University of Texas at Austin, a chance
meeting with jazz music caused an eventual course change: she went on to
graduate from the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz Performance (at the New
England Conservatory) and win the Kennedy Center's Mary Lou Williams Jazz
Piano Competition.
Now based in New York City, Helen has worked with such luminaries as the
late Clark Terry, Wayne Shorter, Ron Carter, Wynton Marsalis (who named
her as one of his “Who’s Got Next: Jazz Musicians to Watch”), MacArthur
Fellows Regina Carter and Cecile McLorin Salvant, and Terri Lyne
Carrington’s Grammy-winning “Mosaic Project.” Helen and her band have
performed at major festivals/venues including Newport, Monterey, SFJAZZ,
Disney Hall, and Carnegie Hall. Internationally, her “NuGenerations” Project
toured southern Africa as a U.S. State Department Jazz Ambassador, and
recent engagements include debuts at the London Jazz Festival, Jazz at
Lincoln Center Shanghai, Blue Note Beijing, and the Sydney International
Women’s Jazz Festival. In addition, she currently performs with fine
ensembles including the Mingus Big Band and McLorin Salvant’s Ogresse.
Helen followed her jazz chart-topping Concord Jazz release Anthem For A
New Day with Sung With Words, a collaborative project with the celebrated
American poet Dana Gioia, supported by a Chamber Music America/Doris
Duke Foundation New Jazz Works grant. In 2020 she was awarded an NYC
Women’s Fund grant for Quartet²: a project combining her jazz quartet with a
string quartet. Helen has also completed composition commissions for the
West Chester University Poetry Conference, North Coast Brewing Company,
JazzReach, and a composer residency at Flushing Town Hall.
Inspired by her experience at the Monk Institute, she stays involved in music
education through residencies and workshops, and also produced a Jazz
Week program benefiting underserved youth in Camden, NJ. In 2017, the
University of Texas College of Fine Arts awarded her its most prestigious
honor – the E. William Doty Distinguished Alumna Award, and HSPVA
inducted her into its Jazz Hall of Fame. She has served on the jazz faculties
at the Berklee College of Music, the Juilliard School, and Columbia
University, where she also was the inaugural jazz artist-in- residence at
Columbia’s prestigious Zuckerman Institute in 2019. Helen was named a
Steinway Artist in 2020.
