Mikel
Rouse was born in 1957 in St. Louis, Missouri. He graduated from
the Kansas City Art Institute and the Conservatory of Music at the
University of Missouri at Kansas City. Rouse moved to New York City
in 1979, where he studied African and other World Musics and began
his study of the Schillinger Method of Composition.
Upon moving to New York, Mr. Rouse formed his contemporary chamber
ensemble, Mikel Rouse Broken Consort. With Broken Consort, Rouse
produced numerous recordings including Soul Menu (1993);
A Lincoln Portrait (1988); A Walk In The Woods
(1985), which appeared on The New York Times list of the "Ten
Best Records of 1985"; and Jade Tiger (1984).
Additional recordings span a variety of genres: Etudes
(1980); Set The Timer (1985); Social Responsibility
(1987); Against All Flags (1988), which was The New York
Times "Pop Album of the Week" upon release; Colorado
Suite (1984); and Quorum (1984), the first piece of
its kind for sequencer. Quorum was used for Ulysses Dove's
Vespers and a film of this work, directed by David Hinton,
aired on PBS's Great Performances "Dance in America" series
and received two primetime Emmy Awards.
In 1995, Rouse premiered and directed the first opera in a trilogy
of modern operas: Failing Kansas, inspired by Truman Capote's
In Cold Blood. This led to an emerging art form he calls
"counterpoetry," which involves the use of multiple unpitched
voices in counterpoint. Other works that employ this technique include
the CD Living Inside Design (1994), a collection of extended
spoken songs, and Autorequiem (1994) for strings, percussion
and voices.
In 1996 Mr. Rouse premiered and directed the modern opera Dennis
Cleveland at The Kitchen in New York. Dennis Cleveland
was hailed by The Village Voice as "the most exciting and innovative
new opera since Einstein on the Beach". The Australian Broadcasting
Company filmed a documentary of Dennis Cleveland which
aired nationally in 2001. Additional performances of Dennis
Cleveland include The Eclectic Orange Festival in Costa Mesa,
California in 1999; the Perth International Arts Festival in Perth,
Western Australia in 2000; the Krannert Center for the Performing
Arts in Urbana-Champaign, Illinois, where the production was redesigned
in 2001 with assistance from the University of Illinois; and Lincoln
Center for the Performing Arts in New York in May of 2002. In 1998,
the Brooklyn Academy of Music commissioned the third opera of his
trilogy, The End Of Cinematics.
In addition to Mr. Rouse's early director roles for the stage, he
directed the films Roundtable (1979), The Glass Bead
Game (1982), A Walk in the Woods (1985), Funding (2001), The End Of Cinematics (2002) and Music For Minorities (2004).
In 1999 Mr. Rouse completed Return, a collection of songs
built around samples from his 1985 Book One for string
quartet. Also in 1999, Mr. Rouse completed the music for the multimedia
work Cameraworld, collaborating with video artist Cliff
Baldwin. In 2000, Mikel Rouse completed the score and film for Funding,
a full-length feature DVD/film/chamber orchestra work. In 2000 he
conceived and produced the first commercial CDROM release of prepared
piano samples from John Cage’s Sonatas & Interludes.
In 2001 the John Cage Trust commissioned Mikel Rouse to realize
the score for Cage’s radio-play-turned-theatrical-production
James Joyce, Marcel Duchamp, Erik Satie: An Alphabet. Mr.
Rouse completed the score at Louisiana Tech University during the
beginning of his three-year Meet the Composer Residency in Ruston,
Louisiana. He also played the part of James Joyce in the international
2001-2002 tour of An Alphabet, premiering at the Edinburgh
International Festival and including runs at the Dublin Fringe Festival,
the Hebbel Theatre in Berlin, the Krannert Center for the Performing
Arts at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign, Cal Performances
at Berkeley, California, the Perth International Arts Festival in
Western Australia, and the Eclectic Orange Festival in Costa Mesa,
California.
In 2002 he released two CDs, Cameraworld and a remastered
Failing Kansas, and one DVD, the film Funding,
through the major public online retail outlets. In 2005 he released
Test Tones, completed in 2002 and Music for Minorities,
completed in 2003. The live multimedia concert of Cameraworld
premiered March 1, 2003 at the Curtis M. Phillips Center for the
Performing Arts in Gainesville, FL. A mini-concert of songs and
original film from Music for Minorities was presented September
2003 at the McGlohon Theatre at Spirit Square in Charlotte, NC.
The completed piece toured the US and Pacific Rim in 2005-2006,
with commissioning support from UCLA Live. Music For Minorities
premiered on March 4, 2005 at On the Boards, Seattle WA. In 2004,
Mr. Rouse’s music was put on iTunes for electronic download
sales.
The third opera in his trilogy, The End Of Cinematics premiered
in Fall 2005, through collaboration with the Emerging Technologies
department of the National Center for Supercomputing Technologies
and the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts at the University
of Illinois at Urbana, with further commissioning support from the
Mondavi Center at the University of California, Davis; and the University
of Florida, Gainesville.
In fall 2006, Mr. Rouse embarked on a major tour of The End
Of Cinematics. Stops included The Carolina Performing Arts
Center, Chapel Hill, NC; The Brooklyn Academy of Music Brooklyn,
New York; The University of Florida Performing Arts, Gainesville,
FL; Liverpool Culture Company, Liverpool, UK and The Miami Performing
Arts Center Miami, FL.
A new piece commissioned by The Merce Cunningham Dance Company,
the John Cage Trust and Betty Freeman premiered at The Joyce Theater, NYC in October 2006.
The piece was scored for multiple iPods set to "shuffle"
so that each audience member had a different realization of
the score. The music for the piece, International Cloud Atlas,
was released exclusively on iTunes and was available for
download prior to the premiere. In addition to International
Cloud Atlas, Mr. Rouse also released two additional recordings:
House Of Fans and Love At Twenty. All three recording
are available on iTunes. The official release date was October
17, 2006.
This prolific artist's compositions have been performed throughout
the United States, Europe and the Pacific Rim. His work has been
presented at major festivals, including the Bang On A Can Festival
in New York City, the Edinburgh International Festival, the Perth
International Arts Festival, the Eclectic Orange Festival in California,
the New Zealand Festival in Wellington, and the Melbourne International
Arts Festival.
Mr. Rouse has received a grant from the Foundation for Contemporary
Performance Arts (December 2001); a grant from the Fund for U.S.
Artists at International Festivals (January 2001); a grant from
the Rockefeller Foundation MAPP program (July 2000); a commissioning
grant from the Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust (November 1997-April
1999); an Edward F. Albee Fellowship (August 1996); numerous awards
from Meet the Composer, including a Meet The Composer New Residencies
Grant in Ruston, Louisiana (March 2001 through February 2004) and
a commission from the Meet the Composer/Reader's Digest Commissioning
Program (November 1995-April 1996); a grant from the New York State
Council on the Arts (October 1991-February 1992); and numerous ASCAP
Awards (1985-present). He has thrice been nominated for the CalArts
Alpert Award in the Arts (1994, 1999, 2001). Mikel Rouse currently
resides in New York City. More information is available at www.mikelrouse.com