Fred Ho (1957-2014) was a Chinese American composer, writer, baritone saxophonist, performer, and social activist. Feeling a lack of racial and cultural diversity in the music community, he founded the Afro-Asian Music Ensemble in 1982 and Asian American Art Ensemble in 1983, exposing people to new American music. He was also interested Native Hawaiian music and culture, Japanese American immigrant labor songs, and Korean folk music and opera, and collaborated with Afro and Latino American artists to discuss the struggles of people of color in America.
Some of his most popular works include a bilingual opera: “A Chinaman’s Chance,” a musical theater work: “A Song for Manong,” and an Afro-Asian ballet: “Journey Beyond the West: The New Adventures of the Monkey King Where No White Man Has Gone Before!”
He hosted guest lectures and speeches at various colleges including Harvard, Stanford, and Williams College to discuss the Asian American experience.
– Nikki Lee