Chan was born in San Diego, California.[2] His parents, natives of Taiwan, met as graduate students at Stanford University.[3] He began his musical education at age 3 when his parents enrolled him in a violin class.[3] At age 14 he won the San Diego Symphony's Young Arts Concerto Competition, which enabled him to appear with the orchestra in two series of concerts. He was also the featured soloist with the San Diego Youth Symphony on their tour of Austria, Germany, Hungary and the former Czechoslovakia.
He became one of the Metropolitan Opera's concertmasters in 2000.[4] On February 2, 2003, the occasion of a Met Orchestra performance, he made his Carnegie Hall solo debut playing Brahms's Concerto for Violin, Cello and Orchestra with Met colleague cellist Rafael Figueroa. He was the soloist in Sofia Gubaidulina's In Tempus Praesens (concerto for violin and orchestra) with the Met Orchestra in 2012. For Handel'sGiulio Cesare, Chan appeared onstage in costume during one of David Daniels' arias to supply the obbligato violin part.[8]
He has been a frequent guest at Japan's Pacific Music Festival, the Taipei Music Academy and Festival, the Seattle Chamber Music Festival, and La Jolla's SummerFest.[2] He has also played chamber music with Lang Lang in a "Lang Lang With Friends" concert.[9]
He joined the faculty of the Juilliard School in 2005.[4] He is head of the Orchestral Performance Program at the Manhattan School of Music and has previously served as a faculty member at the Mannes School of Music.[11]
He can be heard on the soundtrack of the films Teeth and The Caller.
Conducting
Chan has served as Music Director of the APEX Ensemble and as Music Director of Camerata Notturna chamber orchestra.[12]
Wine
After marrying his wife, violinist and Met colleague Catherine Ro,[5] his father-in-law gave him a box of good wine.[3] Once he joined the Met Orchestra, he befriended colleagues who were wine connoisseurs. His budding interest led to an obsession with Burgundy wine, to the point where he knew almost every vineyard on the Côte-d'Or.
His interest in wine led him to meet with Bernard Hervet, former chief executive of Maison Faiveley, and Aubert de Villaine of Domaine de la Romanee-Conti. Their meeting resulted in the founding of the festival Musique et Vin au Clos Vougeot in the Burgundy region of France, of which Chan is the music director.[13]
Personal life
Chan and his wife, violinist Catherine Ro, live in the New York area.[5] They have three children.[14]
Discography
David Chan: La Campanella
Beethoven: Violin Concerto (Park Avenue Chamber Symphony, David Bernard, conductor)
Great Duos For Violin And Cello (with Rafael Figueroa, cellist)