Bauer, ROSS
music ensemble univ brandéis
Bauer, ROSS, noteworthy American composer and teacher; b. Ithaca, N.Y., Nov. 19, 1951. He studied at the New England Cons, of Music (B.M., 1976) and with Martin Boykan, Seymour Shifrin, and Arthur Berger at Brandéis Univ. (Ph.D., 1984); also had additional composition training with Berio at the Berkshire Music Center at Tanglewood (summer, 1982). He was a lecturer and leader of the Brandéis Jazz Ensemble at Brandéis Univ. (1985–86), and a founding member of the Griffin Music Ensemble (1985–94). He was a lecturer at Stanford Univ. (1986–88) and director of its new music ensemble, Alea IL From 1990 to 1994 he was an assoc. prof. at the Univ. of Calif, at Davis, where he became a prof. in 1994; he also founded and directs its Empyrean Ensemble. Among his numerous honors are the Walter Hinrichsen Award from the American Academy and Inst. of Arts and Letters (1984) and a composer’s fellowship from the NEA (1986). He also received commissions from the Fromm Music Foundation (1991) and Serge Koussevitzky Foundation (1994), and in 1997 won the Speculum Musicae International Composers’ Competition. In 1988 he held a Guggenheim fellowship, and in 1989 he won the League-ISCM National Composer’s Competition for his Chimera for Nine Players (1987). Bauer describes his music as coming directly out of the tradition as exemplified by the first and second Viennese schools and their descendants in America. His works are freely chromatic, often motorie and sometimes evoke his substantial interest and background in jazz.
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