Source: http://www.sing365.com/music/lyric.nsf/Vienna-Teng-Biography/288E36D8BBD0F33548256E170011D61D
Name: Vienna Quan-Yin Teng
Birthplace: Stanford Hospital, Stanford, California
Age: 24
Height: 5' 5.5"
Weight: 125 lbs.
Eyes: Brown
Hair: Black
Race: Chinese
Ethnicity: American
First Piano Lesson: September 1983
It’s not unusual to see someone
leave her high tech job these days to seek out new adventures.
But how many of them wind up performing on the Late Show
with David Letterman less than six months later?
By the time San Francisco-based
singer/songwriter/pianist Vienna Teng, 25, quit her full-time
software engineering job at Cisco Systems in 2002, she
had signed with independent label Virt Records and was
preparing for her full-length CD release, Waking Hour.
A few months later, she was featured on NPR’s Weekend
Edition, made her network television debut on the Letterman
show, and was followed around by a camera crew from CNN
for a prime-time profile. With her graceful melodies and
evocative lyrics, Vienna has garnered critical acclaim
and a rapidly growing legion of fans throughout the world.
Her days are now filled with interviews and sold-out performances.
Needless to say, it has been an abrupt shift from her
cubicle days.
But in truth, the jump from code
warrior to full-time musician had been a long time coming.
Vienna began taking piano lessons at age 5, studying classical
composers like Bach and Chopin. Far from being pressured
into studying music, however, Vienna asked for piano lessons
on her own. While she delved fully into classical works,
leading her to even take on the name of Vienna after the
Austrian city of composers, she was drawn more to the
act of improvisation, and in expressing the ideas that
were emerging in her own imagination. She wrote her first
song at age 6, and had an album’s worth of instrumentals
composed by age 16.
The evolution from hobby to full-time
job happened gradually, as an appreciative audience began
forming around the music she created while attending Stanford,
where she graduated in 2000 with a degree in Computer
Science. "I realized how much my songs could affect
people - that they had some value. People wanted to hear
them and wanted to make them a part of their lives."
Her first "concerts" were impromptu events,
consisting of curious students gathering around the dorm
lounge piano as she played and sang. They started to recognize
her songs - and to request them. Bootleg tapes and MP3s
of rough recordings circulated around campus. People started
asking when the CD was coming out, which led Vienna to
record Waking Hour when she wasn’t attending class or
studying.
Vienna returns with her much-anticipated
sophomore release, Warm Strangers, on February 24. The
album is a diverse collection of lush, melodic songs,
incorporating Vienna's classical background and folk sensibilities
within a contemporary pop framework. The album was produced
by David Henry (REM, Cowboy Junkies, Josh Rouse) and mixed
by Roger Moutenot (Roseanne Cash, Guster, Joseph Arthur).
Whereas Waking Hour, written during the high school and
college years, was mostly autobiographical, Warm Strangers
marks Vienna's bold leap into fiction. Orchestral and
acoustic landscapes, using everything from string quartets
to slide guitars, provide an inviting sonic backdrop for
her short stories of love, death, struggle and hope. In
describing Warm Strangers, Vienna notes, "We pass
through each other's lives so briefly that it's easy to
think of the people around us as mere objects, cold and
removed. Writing songs is my way of breathing warmth into
them. Attempting to tell their stories, however fictitious
the results, reminds me of our common humanity."