Michael Alec Rose

Michael Alec Rose in 2007 Michael Alec Rose composes chamber and symphonic music. He is Professor of Composition at Vanderbilt University’s Blair School of Music. His awards and commissions include the Walter W. Naumburg Foundation’s chamber music commission, for which he composed his ''String Quartet No. 2'', premiered by the Meliora Quartet at Lincoln Center and the Library of Congress; a commission from the International Spoleto Festival for a violin-cello duo; twenty-five consecutive annual awards in composition from the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, 1986–2010; string quartet commissions from the Blair and Mendelssohn Quartets; and three commissioned performances by the Nashville Symphony, including ''Symphony No. 1—Paths of Peace'' (2000).

Rose’s ''Interferon, or Piano Concerto'' was performed by two orchestras in the Czech Republic in 2001. Two ballets commissioned by the Nashville Ballet were premiered in 2003–2004. ''The Pedagogy of Grief'' (Viola Sonata No. 3) was first performed at the Peabody Institute of Music, Baltimore, in 2005. ''Arguing with God: Concerto for Klezmer and Chamber Orchestra'' received its first performance in March 2007, by the Nashville Chamber Orchestra and Brave Old World, the Klezmer group. This concerto was the culminating event of that year's American Jewish Music Festival. ''Graces, Furies'', commissioned for the Carolina Piano Trio, was premiered by them in three cities in North Carolina in May 2007, with further performances throughout the United States in 2008.

Rose is the co-founder and co-director of an international exchange program involving the Royal Academy of Music in London and Glasgow (RAM and RSAMD) and the Blair School of Music: "Collaborative Composition in London". He has twice visited RAM as Guest Composer, with performances of his music at various London sites. Several of his works have also been featured at the Tate St. Ives Gallery in Cornwall. Among the many new works commissioned for these U.K. performances are ''Hubbert Peak: Three Gas Stations for String Quartet'' and ''Dr. Johnson and Mr. Savage: Pantomime for Violinist and Cellist'' (both for members of the Kreutzer Quartet, in residence at RAM). Both these works were premiered in the spring of 2008 at London’s recently rediscovered Victorian vaudeville theatre, Wilton’s Music Hall. Other works by Rose sprung from the exchange program have been performed in Mexico, Kosovo, Macedonia, under the dome of St. Paul’s Cathedral, and in the Enlightenment Gallery of the British Museum. Rose’s ''Pastoral Concerto for Violin and Orchestra''—commissioned by his exchange program co-director, violinist Peter Sheppard Skærved—was premiered with Sheppard Skærved as soloist and the Vanderbilt Orchestra, under the direction of Robin Fountain, in November 2008.

A further outgrowth of Rose’s exchange program work is ''The Periodic Table'' (Chamber Concerto for Piano and Eight Players), for pianist Aaron Shorr, Head of Keyboards at the RSAMD in Glasgow, where the concerto was premiered in June, 2009.

Two more works were premiered in Wiltons Music Hall in 2009: ''Everything Under the Sun: Four Seasons for Two Violins'', and ''An Arch Never Sleeps'' for Violin and Double Bass, featuring virtuoso bassist Chi-chi Nwanoku. In 2010, Rose published ''Audible Signs: Essays from a Musical Ground'' (Continuum Books) and composed ''Five Bucolics'' for tenor Tony Boutté, a setting of poems by Maurice Manning.

Rose graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and studied with Pulitzer Prize-winning composers George Crumb and Richard Wernick, as well as with George Rochberg and Samuel Adler. Rose has won several major teaching awards at Vanderbilt, including the prestigious Chair of Teaching Excellence. Provided by Wikipedia
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    Audible signs essays from a musical ground by Rose, Michael Alec, 1959-

    New York : Continuum, 2010
    Format: Electronic eBook
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