Tag: Robert Stallman

  • Remembering Robert Stallman Greece 1969

    Remembering Robert Stallman Greece 1969

    Great photo of my friend, Robert Stallman, footloose and fancy free in Greece in 1969, playing Debussy’s “Syrinx.” Note the kid goat. Bob died last Sunday at the age of 73.

  • Remembering Flutist Robert Stallman

    Remembering Flutist Robert Stallman

    I’m very sorry to learn of the death of my friend, the flutist Robert Stallman. Bob was one of several artists I got to know while living in Philadelphia, as a proprietor of an antiquarian book business. I scored big points by being able to identify him (“…like the flutist?”) by his name on his credit card.

    Bob and I palled around and ate a lot of lunches together. He was always neck-deep in some project or other, producing his own CDs and creating arrangements of the works of his beloved Mozart and Schubert. These went beyond mere transcriptions. They involved all sorts of creative decisions, and Bob inevitably arrived at polished and ingenious solutions to every kind of puzzle.

    I absolutely recommend his recording of Mozart “New” Quintets for Flute and Strings, on his own label, Bogner’s Café.

    Stallman studied with Jean-Pierre Rampal, recorded with Placido Domingo, and championed the music of his friend, the English composer Stephen Dodgson. In addition, he gave first performances of works by John Harbison, Karel Husa, William Thomas McKinley, and Burr Van Nostrand, among others.

    He was crazy about music, of course, but he was also fond of literature and good food. His apartment walls were adorned by letters and autographs of the great composers, which he collected.

    We started to drift apart after he and his wife, Hannah, moved to Massachusetts, maybe four or five years ago. We did do a telephone interview over the air in 2015. Prior to that, he was my guest several times on “The Lost Chord.”

    Bob was 73 years-old. I will always remember him as cheerful, garrulous, and boundlessly enthusiastic. Often, he seemed almost boyish. He was certainly far younger than his years.

    I’ll honor Bob with one of his recordings, following Otto Klemperer’s performance of Beethoven’s “Miss Solemnis” – which is to say around 3:40 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    http://www.aboutrobertstallman.com/

  • Robert Stallman on The Lost Chord

    Robert Stallman on The Lost Chord

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” I’ll be joined by flutist Robert Stallman, who will talk about his new album, “Cosi fan Flauti,” recently issued on the Bogner’s Café label.

    On top of a lifetime of experience as a performer, Stallman (a former pupil of Jean-Pierre Rampal) has an unusually intimate knowledge of the scores of Mozart, having transcribed some 50 of his works for other combinations involving the flute. A superb album of “new” quintets for flute and strings, derived from some of the piano sonatas, was met with great acclaim upon its release in 2006, in large part for Stallman’s idiomatic grasp of the composer’s method. He went on to perform the same service for Franz Schubert, having arranged some 40 of his works, several of which were issued on another album in 2009.

    The centerpiece of his most recent issue is a new “Sinfonia Concertante” for two flutes and orchestra, based on a two-piano sonata, which Stallman transcribed and then had his friend, the English composer Stephen Dodgson (a descendent of Charles Dodgson, a.k.a. Lewis Carroll), orchestrate. We’ll be listening to this reimagining of Mozart’s original, as well as Dodgson’s own Concerto for Flute and Strings, which was dedicated to Stallman and recorded for the Biddulph Recordings label, back in 1994.

    Also on the new album is Mozart’s Concerto for Flute and Harp (with Stallman’s own cadenzas) and two selections from the “Haffner Serenade” performed on the flute.

    I hope you’ll join me for “Cosi fan Flauti,” this Sunday night at 10 ET, with a repeat Wednesday evening at 6; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.

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