Mladen Milicevic received a B.A. (1982) and an M.A. (1986) in music composition and multimedia arts studying at The Music Academy of Sarajevo, in his native Bosnia-Herzegovina. In 1986 Mr. Milicevic came to the United States to study with Alvin Lucier at Wesleyan University in Connecticut, from which he received his masters in experimental music composition (1988). From the University of Miami in Florida, Mr. Milicevic received his doctorate in music composition in 1991, studying with Dennis Kam. For several summers, he also studied with Michael Czajkowski at the Aspen Music School. He was awarded numerous music prizes for his compositions
in the former Yugoslavia as well as in Europe. Working in former Yugoslavia
as a freelance composer for ten years, he composed for theater, films, radio,
and television, also receiving several prizes for this body of work. After
moving to the United States in 1986, Mr. Milicevic has performed his live
electronic music, composed for modern dances, made several experimental
animated films and videos, set up installations and video sculptures, had
exhibitions of his paintings, and scored for films. His academic interests are
interdisciplinary, and he has made many presentations at various
international conferences on a wide range of topics such as music, film,
aesthetics, semiology, sociology, education, AI, religion, and cultural studies.
Bizarrely enough, in 2003 he has scored film The Room which has now
become an international phenomenon as the “worst” film ever made. Mr.
Milicevic is Professor Emeritus in the School of Film and Television,
Recording Arts Department at Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles.
He has been the Chair of the Recording Arts Department for 11 years, and in
2019 he stepped down from that position to become the first faculty
member at Loyola Marymount University who teaches 100% online classes.
Now Dr. Milicevic’s primary educational interest is focused on online
teaching modalities.