Yue's third sister, Yan, was living in
England, and in 1982 she helped him leave China. He got a place at the Guildhall School of Music, where he studied the silver flute. Since then Yue has had a wide-ranging musical career, including composing, arranging, performing and recording
traditional Chinese music. He has also recorded with his brother
Guo Yi (郭艺), who plays the
sheng (a sort of bamboo mouth organ). In 1990 they made a Real World album called 'Yuan'. This recording also includes the singing of his second sister, Xuan. The two brothers then performed at international festivals and concerts as the
Guo Brothers. Since 1990 he has also performed at a wide range of venues including
WOMAD (World of Music, Arts and Dance) Festivals worldwide as a soloist, writing and performing his own music. From 2003 he has worked in "Shan Qi" with
Giovanni Amighetti,
Helge A. Norbakken, Guido Ponzini,
Wu Fei, and Gjermund Silset. Yue's range has extended far beyond traditional Chinese music, and he has worked with Peter Gabriel,
Sinéad O'Connor and
Hothouse Flowers. Yue has also collaborated with creative musical artists from
Africa,
Italy and
Japan. In 1992 he won an American instrumental award with the album
Trisan (Real World) in partnership with the Japanese
taiko drummer
Joji Hirota, and the Irish singer/composer
Pol Brennan. In 1995 Yue and Joji recorded the album
Red Ribbon, and his bamboo flute concerto 'My Peking Alley' was performed at the 1999 WOMAD Festival in Reading with the
BBC Concert Orchestra. ==Film and theatre work==