Yang Bang-eon’s ‘Rebirth’: How This New Theme Song Revives a Historical Tragedy at the Danjong Festival
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releases Danjong Cultural Festival theme song
“I wanted to transform a tragic history into a festival and send a message of hope to people living today.”
World-renowned pianist and composer Yang Bang-eon, 66 (pictured), will unveil “Rebirth,” the theme for the Danjong Cultural Festival’s 60th anniversary, on the 24th. He will preview the piece with a music video at 6 p.m. during the opening ceremony of the 59th Danjong Cultural Festival on the main stage at the Donggang riverbank in Yeongwol County, Gangwon.
“Rebirth” reimagines Danjong’s tragic story as a narrative of renewal and hope. The composition highlights Yang’s signature blending of East and West, classical and new-age, tradition and modernity.
He said he took a fresh approach to traditional instruments and aimed to create a soundscape where a Western orchestra and piano coexist with those instruments. Drawing on a dramatic portrayal of the young king’s feelings, Yang said he shaped the piece so that its final passages convey a hopeful message: that together we can achieve something meaningful.
Born in Tokyo, Yang studied at Nihon Medical School and worked as a physician before turning to music. Since his 1996 debut, he has collaborated with leading orchestras worldwide, including the London Philharmonic. He composed “Frontier,” the theme for the 2002 Busan Asian Games, and served as music director for the opening and closing ceremonies of the PyeongChang Winter Olympics. He splits his time between Korea and Japan and continues to compose across film, animation, commercials and video games.
The Danjong Cultural Festival traces its roots to local rites launched by residents in 1967 and will mark its 60th anniversary next year. Yeongwol County plans to use the milestone to raise the festival’s international profile, and commissioning this theme song was part of that effort.
This year’s festival, themed “The King’s Return, the Dawn of Hope,” runs three days through the 26th and features programs that present Danjong not as a tragic monarch but as a figure of hope.











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