Age, Biography and Wiki
Scott L. Miller was born on 1966, is a composer. Discover Scott L. Miller's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 57 years old?
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1966.
He is a member of famous composer with the age 57 years old group.
Scott L. Miller Height, Weight & Measurements
At 57 years old, Scott L. Miller height not available right now. We will update Scott L. Miller's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Scott L. Miller Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Scott L. Miller worth at the age of 57 years old? Scott L. Miller’s income source is mostly from being a successful composer. He is from . We have estimated
Scott L. Miller's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
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$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Timeline
Four instruments; duration: 20 minutes. First performance: 2 November 2018, Strains, at Studio Z, St. Paul, MN.
Smartphone, SonAR Study I app, headphones; duration: 13 minutes. Created with assistance from the St. Cloud State University Visualization and Simulation Lab. First performance: 5 September 2018, SCSU, St. Cloud, MN.
Two or more instruments and interactive-electronic (Kyma), two cardioid microphones, and multi-channel diffusion of sound; duration: 14 minutes. Written for Camilla Hoitenga and Taavi Kerikmäe. First performance: 16 February 2018, Studio Z, St. Paul, MN.
Alto flute, clarinet, violin, cello, piano, tam-tam, fixed-media electronics and 360º VR film; duration: 11 minutes. Film by Rein Zobel. First performance: 29 December 2017, Ensemble U:, Estonian Academy of Music and Theatre, Tallinn.
Fixed-media electronics and video; duration: 9 minutes. Video by Paul Clipson. First performance: 17 May 2017, Spectrum NYC.
Electric guitar, fixed-media electronics and video; duration: 10 minutes. Video by Rosemary Williams. Reconstruction and revision from The Cosmic Engine (2008). First performance: 17 May 2017, Daniel Lippel, SpectrumNYC.
Fixed-media or interactive electronics and video; duration: 10 minutes. Video by Ted Moore. First performance: 7 October 2016, Sügisfest, Estonian Academy of Music and Theatre, Tallinn.
Flute and interactive-electronics (Kyma), two cardioid microphones, and multi-channel diffusion of sound; duration: 10 – 50 minutes. First performance: 7 September 2016, Carla Rees, PACE-1, De Montfort University, Leiceister, UK.
Guitar and fixed-media electronics; duration: 10 minutes. Commissioned by Dan Lippel. First performance: 15 January 2016, Daniel Lippel, St. Cloud State University, St. Cloud, MN.
Soprano/Tenor saxophone, clarinet/bass clarinet, guitar, real-time electronics, interactive-electronics (Kyma), multiple cardioid microphones, and multi-channel diffusion of sound; duration: 2 hours 45 minutes. Commissioned by Hinge Arts for the Kirkbride. First performance: 7 December 2015, Fifth Column, Zachmann Gallery, Fergus Falls, MN.
Flute, clarinet/bass clarinet, violin, cello, piano, multi-percussion, and fixed-media electronics; duration: 9 minutes. Commissioned by Ensemble U:. First performance: 3 November 2015, Ensemble U:, St. Cloud State University, St. Cloud, MN.
Saxophone, interactive-electronics, two cardioid microphones, and four-channel diffusion of sound, and video; duration: 10 minutes. Created in collaboration with Michael Monhart and Scott Weissinger. First performance: 11 August 2015, Kyma International Sound Symposium, Bozeman, MT.
Marimba and fixed-media electronics; duration: 7 minutes. Commissioned by Heather Barringer. First performance: 12 June 2015, Heather Barringer, Studio Z, St. Paul, MN.
Alto flute, violin, cello, tam-tam, and fixed-media electronics; duration: 11 minutes. Commissioned by Spitting Image Collective. First performance: 2 May 2015, Strains, Studio Z, St. Paul, MN.
Miller is a Professor of Music at St. Cloud State University, Minnesota, where he teaches composition, electroacoustic music and theory. He is Past-President (2014—18) of the Society for Electro-Acoustic Music in the U.S. (SEAMUS) and presently Director of SEAMUS Records. He holds degrees from The University of Minnesota, The University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill and the State University of New York at Oneonta, and studied composition at the Czech-American Summer Music Institute and the Centre de Création Musicale Iannis Xenakis.
Cello, interactive-electronics, two cardioid microphones, and four-channel diffusion of sound; duration: 10’. Created in collaboration with Émilie Girard-Charest. First performance: 14 December 2014, Estonian Academy of Music and Theater, Tallinn, Estonia.
Interactive-electronics and ensemble; duration: 10’. Created in collaboration with Anne La Berge. First performance: 28 September 2014, Lübeck, Germany.
Organ and interactive-electronics; duration: 10’. First performance: 26 September 2014, Alex Annegorn, St. Jakobi Church, Lübeck, Germany.
Piano and fixed-media electronics; duration: 10 minutes. Commissioned by Keith Kirchoff. First performance: 7 June 2014, Keith Kirchoff, New York City Electronic Music Festival.
¼-tone flute and interactive-electronics; duration: 10 – 15 minutes. Written for Anne La Berge. First performance: 13 September 2013, Anne La Berge, Espace Senghor, Brussels.
Interactive-electronics and ensemble; duration: 12 minutes. First performance: 17–19 May 2013, Zeitgeist, St. Paul, MN.
Bass clarinet and electronics; duration: 9 minutes. Commissioned by Pat O’Keefe. First performance: 15 March 2013, Pat O’Keefe, St. Paul, MN.
Structured improvisation for interactive-electronics and ensemble; duration: 10 minutes. First performance: 2 October 2013, Fifth Column, St. Cloud, MN.
Structured improvisation for interactive-electronics and ensemble; duration: 18 minutes. First performance: 2 October 2013, Fifth Column, St. Cloud, MN.
Structured improvisation for interactive-electronics and ensemble; duration: 8 minutes. First performance: 2 October 2013, Fifth Column, St. Cloud, MN.
Flute, guitar, and electronics; duration: 6.5 minutes. Commissioned by Jesse Langen and Linda Chatterton. First performance: 6 February 2013, St. Cloud State University.
Trumpet, violin, viola, interactive-electronics; duration: 1 minute. First performance: 1–11 October 2012, SoundProof Fall 2012 concert tour, Bowling Green State University; College-Conservatory of Music, University of Cincinnati; Ohio University; Electronic Music Midwest 2012.
EMMI robots (AMI, CARI, TAPI), interactive-electronics, two cardioid microphones; duration: 10 – 30 minutes. First performance: 14 July 2012, Sound and Music Computing Conference, Copenhagen, Denmark.
¼-tone alto flute and interactive-electronics; 8’. First performance: 23 November 2011 by Carla Rees, on rarescale concert (re)introduction, Shoreditch Church, London, UK. Published by Tetractys.
Soprano, bass clarinet, marimba, vibes, multi-percussion and piano, setting of Felip Costaglioli’s poem; duration: 20 minutes. First performance: 6–8 October 2011, on Zeitgeist’s concert series Fall Music Harvest, Studio Z, St. Paul, MN.
Interactive-electronics, two cardioid microphones, and four-channel diffusion of sound; duration: 10 – 15 minutes. First performance: 18 September 2011, Kyma International Sound Symposium 2011, Porto, Portugal.
Interactive-electronics, two cardioid microphones, and four-channel diffusion of sound; duration: 6.5 minutes. First performance: 24 September 2010, Kyma International Sound Symposium 2010, Vienna, Austria.
Bass clarinet, marimba, multi-percussion, piano and interactive-electronics; duration: 11.5 minutes. First performance: 1 – 3 April 2010 on Zeitgeist’s concert series Wired, Studio Z, St. Paul, MN. Official premier: 10 April 2010, SEAMUS 2010 National Conference, Saint Cloud, MN, by Zeitgeist. 2009
Clarinet and interactive-electronics; duration: 5.5 minutes. First performance: 20 October 2009, Hewitt Pantaleoni Concert Series, Oneonta, NY, Calvin Falwell, cl.
Clarinet and interactive-electronics; duration: 7.5 minutes. Created in collaboration with Pat O’Keefe. First performance: 17 February 2009 at Spark Festival of Electronic Music and Art, University of Minnesota Arts Quarter, Pat O’Keefe, cl.
Flute, clarinet, percussion and interactive or fixed-media electronics (CD); duration: 7 minutes. First performance: 20 February 2009 at Spark Festival of Electronic Music and Art, University of Minnesota Arts Quarter, Jenny Hanson, fl, Pat O’Keefe, cl., Patti Cudd, perc. Solo cl. version first performed 17 April 2009 at SEAMUS 2009 National Conference, Fort Wayne, IN, Marianne Gythfeldt, cl.
Nebe Na Zemi (Heaven on Earth) Soprano, interactive-electronics performance environment for Kyma, two cardioid microphones, and four-channel diffusion of sound; duration: 32 minutes. Created for visual artist Vladimír Havlík's multi-channel video installation in the Corpus Christi chapel, Olomouc, CZ. Setting of text from Karl Marx's Das Kapital. First performance: 5 November 2008, Marketa Večeřova, sop.
Bass clarinet, piano, two percussionists and fixed-media electronics (CD); duration: 2.5 minutes. Commissioned by Zeitgeist. First performance: 20–22 June 2008 by Zeitgeist, Studio Z, St. Paul, MN.
Two Snare Drums and fixed-media electronics (CD); duration: 5 minutes. Commissioned by Patti Cudd. First performance: 7 March 2008 by Patti Cudd, Studio Z, St. Paul, MN.
Soprano, clarinet/bass clarinet, acoustic/electric guitar, cello, four channel interactive and fixed-media electronics, three channels of video projection; duration: 65 minutes. Created in collaboration with Rosemary Williams (video artist) and Pat O'Keefe (woodwinds). Commissioned by The Southern Theater. First performance: 30–31 May 2008 by Scott Miller, Rosemary Williams, Pat O'Keefe, Norah Long, Jeff Lambert, and Jacqueline Ultan, Electric Eyes New Music and Media Festival, The Southern Theater, Minneapolis, MN.
Clarinet, cello, and piano; duration: 10 minutes. Commissioned by Trio Montecino. First performance: 8 October 2006 by Trio Montecino, Gant Recital Hall, St. Cloud, MN.
Interactive work for Kyma, two cardioid microphones, and four-channel diffusion of sound; duration: 6.5 minutes. First performance: September 2006, Livewire Electronic Music Concert, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.
Violin and fixed-media electronics (CD); duration: 19 minutes. Commissioned by Mlade Podium Festival for premier by violinist Iva Kramperová. First performance: 12 September 2006 by Iva Kramperová, Mlade Podium Festival, Pardubice, CZ.
Bass Clarinet and Interactive Electronics, 2 cardioid microphones, and 4 channel diffusion of sound; duration: 12 – 20 minutes. Commissioned by and created in collaboration with Pat O'Keefe. First performance: February 2006, by Pat O'Keefe, Spark Festival of Electronic Music and Art, Ted Mann Hall, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.
String Orchestra and fixed-media; duration: 7 minutes. Commissioned by Maple Grove Senior High School Orchestra with support of the Maple Grove Music Boosters. First performance: 30 January 2006, by the Maple Grove Senior High School Orchestra, Matt Caron, conductor, Maple Grove, MN.
Commissioned by Zeitgeist. Includes the works: Apnèe, Mirror Inside, St. Victoire, Desire Also Has Its Own Geography, Dressing Up, Jardins Mécaniques, Digging Space, Les Cançóns de la Sang, New Snow. Spoken-word, Interactive-Electronics, Alto Sax/Bass Clarinet, Piano, Percussion (2); includes settings of Philippe Costaglioli's "Apnèe," "St. Victoire," and "Dressing Up;" duration: 65 – 70 minutes. Created in collaboration with Zeitgeist and Philippe Costaglioli. Underwritten by the American Composers Forum with funds provided by the Jerome Foundation. Made possible with support from the Zeitgeist Commissioning Collective. First performance: 4–12 June 2004 by Philippe Costaglioli, Scott Miller, and Zeitgeist at Studio Z, St. Paul, MN.
Miller has been named a McKnight Composer Fellow three times (2001, 2013, 2018), a Fulbright Scholar (2014—15), and his work has been recognized by numerous state, national, and international arts organizations, and reviewed and covered by journals including Computer Music Journal (MIT Press), New Music Box, I Care if You Listen, and others. He has been the featured artist at several festivals, including the Chicago Electro-Acoustic Music Festival (April 2019), the Lipa Festival (2017), and the Estonian Academy of Music’s Autumn Festival, Sügisfest 2016.
Women's Choir (SA) and Percussion; duration: 6 minutes. Composed with support from the Minnesota State Arts Board Artist Assistance Fellowship, Fiscal Year 2001 and supported in part by the American Composers Forum through the 2001 McKnight Composer Fellowship Program. First performance: 5 December 2001 by the SCSU Women's Choir and the SCSU Percussion Collective, Ritsche Auditorium, St. Cloud, MN.
Created with support from St. Cloud State University Scholarly and Creative Activity Reassign Time. Wind Ensemble and Fixed-media; duration: 8 minutes. First performance: 22 April 2001 by the SCSU Wind Ensemble at St. Mary's Cathedral, St. Cloud, MN.
Viola and Fixed-media; duration: 7 minutes. First performance: 27 March 2000 by Coca Bochonko, Ruth Gant Recital Hall, St. Cloud, MN. 1998
Fixed-media; duration: 8 minutes. First performance: 12 November 1998 at Sonic Circuits VI, St. Cloud, MN.
Mixed Choir and fixed-media; duration: 7 minutes. First performance: 17 April 1998 by the SCSU Concert Choir, Jeffrey Douma, cdtr., Ritsche Auditorium, St. Cloud, MN.
Scott L. Miller (born 1966) is an American composer best known for his electroacoustic chamber music and ecosystemic performance pieces.
Miller's music is characterized by collaborative approaches to composition and the use of electronics, performer-computer improvisation and re-imagining ancient composing processes through the lens of 21st-century technology. Inspired by the inner-workings of sound and the microscopic in the natural and mechanical worlds, his music is the product of experimentation and collaboration with musicians and performers from across the spectrum of styles.