
Biography
Born in British Hong Kong, David Ho-yi Chan (陳浩貽, b.1992) is a London-based composer, conductor and organist. Rooted in a deep interest in harmonic syntax, his aesthetics seeks to enrich the beauty of simplicity and solid practical writing with a clear sense of direction building and consistency by integrating both contemporary and traditional concepts.
With music broadcasted on BBC Radio 3, RTHK Radio 4, Hong Kong Cable Television and Now TV (Hong Kong), his former collaborators and commissioners include BBC Radio 3, BBC Singers, Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge, Choir of Selwyn College, Cambridge, Choir of St Pancras Church, Musicus Society, Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra, Hong Kong Oratorio Society, Hong Kong Strings, Hong Kong New Music Ensemble, Hong Kong Children’s Choir, Yat Po Singers, RTHK Quartet, Romer (String Quartet), Hong Kong Youth Windophilics, among others. He has previously worked with Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra under the Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Composers Scheme 2018/19, and players from BBC Philharmonic Orchestra and Philadelphia Orchestra.
Since undergraduate studies, Chan's music has been featured at various festivals in the UK, Hong Kong and other countries, such as the London Festival of Contemporary Church Music (2017-19), Musicus Fest (2017), Brandenburg Choral Festival of London (2017), "Asia - Europe" New Music Festival (2016) and Asian Composers League Festival & Conference (2015, 2016). In 2014, Chan’s work was selected for performance at the prestigious International Society for Contemporary Music (ISCM) World Music Days in Poland, marking him as the youngest Hong Kong composer to be featured in the festival’s history.
Chan is a versatile choral artist and composer. He was appointed the Juror for the British Composer Awards 2018 (Choral Category), the Honorary Member of the Association of Croatian Choral Directors (2018), the Emerging Composer at the Florence Choral (2017), and awarded the title ‘World Youth Choral Artist’ by World Youth and Children Choral Artists’ Association (2015). In 2014, Chan was invited to conduct the background choir for Rolling Stones in Macau during their world tour concerts. In 2018, Chan won 3rd place - Freundeskreis Brauweiler Prize at the Musica Sacra Nova: 14th International Composers Competition in Germany. The awarded work is published by Schott Music. He is also commissioned by The Esoterics as their annual Polyphonos: International Composer (2018/19), and C4: The Choral Composer/Conductor Collective in New York for the 2020-21 IGNITE Commission.
In international choral competitions, choirs continue to achieve exceptional results with works by Chan. Notably with his two winning commissions, Marymount Secondary School Choir became the first champion from Hong Kong at the widely acclaimed Béla Bartók 27th International Choir Competition (2016, youth choir category), and the winner of secondary school girls’ choir (intermediate category) at the 71st Hong Kong Schools Music Festival (2019) respectively. The premiere of his “By Chance” is also the winning repertoire of the Guangdong University of Technology Male Choir at the 5th Guangdong University Student Art Exhibition (2017, Choral) and the 5th National University Student Art Exhibition (2018, Choral) in mainland China. Latest commission for the Heep Yunn School Choir was featured at the 12th World Choir Games (2023).
Previously the Acting Director of Music at St Pancras Church, Chan is the first known East Asian to hold such a post at a long-standing Anglican church in central London. On Remembrance Day in 2023, he led the Choir of St. Mary's with Christ Church, Wanstead for the choral evensong at the Southwark Cathedral, becoming the first Director of Music with Hong Kong heritage working at the Church of England to conduct a cathedral service in London. As an organist, he visited renowned churches across the UK, including Southwark Cathedral, Chichester Cathedral, St. Martin-in-the-Fields, and his former organ students include college organ scholar at Oxford.
(Updated on 29th September 2025)