Robert Fleisher


Robert Fleisher's music has been heard throughout the United States and in more than a dozen other countries. His works have been released on Albany, Capstone, Centaur, Navona, Neuma, Petrichor, Phasma, PnOVA, Sarton, and SEAMUS labels. Fleisher's acoustic works have been praised as “eloquent” (Ann Arbor News), “lovely and emotional” (Musicworks), “astoundingly attractive” (Perspectives of New Music), and “ingenious” (The Strad). His electroacoustic music has been described as "fascinating" (Fanfare), "endearingly low-tech" and possessing "a rich, tactile texture" (The New York Times). Fleisher's scores have been exhibited in France, the Netherlands, and in "Scribing Sound" exhibitions at two New Music America festivals. Awarded artist residencies at the Hambidge Center, Millay Colony, Montalvo Center, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Yaddo, and Mishkenot Sha'ananim, he has also received support from the Illinois Arts Council, National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Ruttenberg Arts Foundation. The author of Twenty Israeli Composers (1997), Fleisher is also a contributor to Theresa Sauer’s Notations 21 (2009). A New York City native, he attended the High School of Music and Art, graduated with honors from the University of Colorado, and earned his M.M. and D.M.A. degrees at the University of Illinois, studying composition with Ben Johnston, Salvatore Martirano, and Paul Zonn. He is Professor Emeritus at Northern Illinois University.

Contact: rfleisher1@niu.edu

REVIEWS

"The Fleisher pieces are an altogether different animal. Abderhalden’s array of flutes are the stars here, underpinned by Flens’s subtle tintinnabulations, working in a post-classical vein that is indebted equally to the spatial creations of Robert Dick and Steve Reich, but take their cues from an acoustic-minded form of ambient music as well, one that, frankly, has yet to be invented. Until now. Bravo!" -- Darren Bergstein, Review of Five Pieces for Flute and Percussion, on “Ilta” (Stefanie Abderhalden, flute; Kyle Flens, percussion), Neuma Records, 2022, in Downtown Music Gallery (DMG) Newsletter, October 28, 2022.

"The highlight, however, is Gregory Beyer's performance of Robert Fleisher's Maniondala for solo MalletKAT. "It is a combination of prerecorded performances from different Fleisher works and several battery sounds from the malletKAT. Much of what the soloist plays relates to the other new works on the album, either through motivic materials or the soundscape. This makes it an appropriate ending to an impressive percussion release." -- Kyle Cherwinski, Review ofManiondala in the CD, Long Roll (University of Illinois Percussion Ensemble; Gregory Beyer, malletKAT), Albany Records, 2017, in Percussive Notes Vol. 56, No. 2 (May 2018): 66.

"Things improved after the interval, with Robert Fleisher's ingenious Ma mère for solo cello, using only the cello line from Jeux de vagues, the central section of Debussy's La mer." -- Bruce Hodges, "Casals Trio: Weill Recital Hall 12 May 2015," in The Strad (August 2015): 74-75.

"This is an exemplary recording. It is difficult to imagine anyone being ultimately disappointed with a disk featuring well nigh perfect performances of such intriguing repertoire. The remainder of the disk features works that are more accessible, yet still tremendously interesting and engaging. Robert Fleisher's set of five poems by Carl Sandburg are particularly apt in how they embody the spirit of the texts so convincingly, with an openness that never feels empty." -- Gregory Berg, review of CD "Portraits" (Lynn Eustis, soprano; Robert Best, baritone; Elvia Puccinelli, piano), Capstone Records, 2008, in Journal of Singing (March/April 2011): 489-490.

."Loretto Alfresco is endearingly low-tech: its sounds are drawn entirely from recordings of a friend striking pots, pans and other items, which Mr. Fleisher sped up, slowed down, and overlaid to create a rich, tactile texture." -- Allan Kozinn, New York Times (June 18, 2010): C11.

"Ma mère for solo cello by Robert Fleisher mixes material from the second movement cello parts of Debussy's orchestral work La mer as well as brief appearances of other works, creating snapshots of what is at once familiar and new. An incredible performance by Katri Ervamaa made this work shine." -- Jenni Brandon, Society of Composers, Inc. Newsletter XL/4 (July-Aug 2010).

Amongst all the fine performances, there were several that should not have been missed. Highlights included . . . Robert Fleisher's Ma mère for solo cello. -- Matthew C. Saunders, Society of Composers Inc. Newsletter, XXXIX/2 (March-April 2009).

"Five excerpts from Carl Sandburg's "Cornhuskers" formed the basis of Robert Fleisher's Prairie Songs, interpreted by soprano Emily Truckenbrod and pianist Amy I-Lin Cheng. From the subtly shifting "I was born on the prairie" to the angular and unsettling "I am here when the cities are gone" with its haunting refrain "I am dust of man," this excellent cycle concluded with Truckenbrod's transcendent delivery of "I speak of new cities and new people." -- Guy Vollen, Society of Composers, Inc. Newsletter XXXIV/3 (May-June 2004).

"Robert Fleisher provides Two Movements for Violoncello (1973), which were originally for bassoon but perfectly suit the singing quality of the cello." -- Sarah Freiberg, review of CD "Soliloquy" (Elizabeth Morrow, cello), Centaur Records, 1999, in Strings Magazine (January 2000),

"Robert Fleisher's 10-minute, brooding Secrets from 1974 is the oldest and longest cut here; it makes use of eloquent silences, sprinkles and bursts from the full range of the keyboard." -- Bruce Martin, review of CD "Syncopated Lady" (Tomoko Deguchi, piano), Capstone Records, 1999 in Ann Arbor News (November 27, 1999).

"The lovely and emotional opening flute solo planted the seed for everything that followed. You could clearly hear the passage breaking into a beautiful chaos as the other instruments came in. Harmonics played a large part in this piece, and added to the overall feeling of suspense." -- Lia Pas, review of Sixth Edmonton Music Festival in Musicworks-Toronto 70 (Spring 1998): 48.

"The first four works, by Ross Moyer, Kenneth Girard, Robert Fleisher, and Helva Sastock were tightly crafted and accessible." -- David Gobeil Taylor, review of Sixth Edmonton New Music Festival, in Vue Weekly (November 6 - November 12, 1997): 19.

"The program performed by the instrumental ensemble Tone Road Ramblers was one of the festival's finest." "Phyllotaxis by Robert Fleisher employed astoundingly attractive vertical sonorities." -- Lisa R. Dominick, review of ASUC 1983 national conference, in Perspectives of New Music 21 (Fall-Winter 1982 and Spring-Summer 1983): 380.

SELECTED WORKS

Minims for Max (2023) - solo piano

Parallel (1968/2021) - fixed media

BACH (for Jan) (2021) - toy piano (37-key, F-F)

Six Little Piano Pieces (2018)

Beginning and Ending (2016) - solo flute

Five Pieces for Flute and Percussion (2016)

Dumkyana (2013) - violin, cello, and piano

Altro Alfresco (1970/2010) - fixed media

Gig Harbor (2010) - solo piano

Loretto Alfresco piccolo (1970/2009) - fixed media

Dans le piano (1970/2010) - fixed media

Maniondala (2009) - solo malletKAT

Loretto Alfresco (1970/2009) - fixed media

Memoranda (2005) - solo cello

Ma mère (2004) - solo cello

Five Songs from Carl Sandburg's "Prairie" (2004) - soprano voice and piano

Second Thoughts (2003) - soprano saxophone and Bb clarinet

Billabongs (2000) - two pianos

On Your Mark (1999) - solo trumpet

Oblique Motions (1994) - soprano/alto saxophone, alto/tenor saxophone

In Any Language (1993) - baritone voice and French horn

Meditations (1988) - soprano saxophone, Bb trumpet

Present Tense (1985) - oboe, Eng. horn, Bb clar., A clar., alto sax, tenor sax, 2 French hns, 2 perc, 2 cond.

Corners (1982) - solo trumpet

Phyllotaxis (1982) - flute/picc, Bb clar, tpt, 2 tbns, marimba

Mandala 3: Trigon (1979) - amplified oboe, soprano saxophone, A clarinet

Mandala 2: Radius (1979) - trombone and 12 cassette tapes

Mandala 1: Synchron (1979) - percussion quartet

32 Bars (1978/2021) - string quartet

Quartets (1977) - of strings, winds, brass, perc, and conds.

A Song of War (1976) - sop, fl/picc, contrabsn, tpt, tbn, org, va, db, 2 perc

Secrets (1974) - solo piano

Quintet (1973) - flute, violin, cello, vibraphone, piano

Two Movements (1972) - solo cello/bsn

Compositions

32 Bars (1978/2021)
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This miniature resulted from a preliminary exam question for my doctoral degree at the University of Illinois in 1978. Premiered at Northern Illinois University in 2002 by violinists Kara Eubanks and Anne Phelan, violist Geoffrey Baker, and cellist Monika Kulkowska, the score was revised in 2021 for this recorded performance by ÉxQuartet (Monika Sawczuk violin I, Łukasz Górewicz violin II, Grzegorz Sadowski viola, Tomasz Szczęsny cello), included on the 2022 CD, SQ (Phasma-Music).
Six Little Piano Pieces (2018)
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The Six Little Piano Pieces were composed (mostly in 2018) for the noted British pianist Martin Jones, who premiered them at Radford University. His recordings of this work and my Gig Harbor (2010) are included in Vol. 5 of PnOVA’s American Piano Music Series. The outer movements largely date from the early 1970s, when I was a University of Colorado undergraduate. No. 1 has a new middle section derived from the movement’s opening phrase. No. 2 begins with a brief gesture from the middle of a piece in Op. 19. No. 3 comprises multiple encryptions of Martin Jones’ name. No. 4 combines material from a mass Mr. Jones composed while studying at London’s Royal Academy of Music and Schoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht. No. 5 recalls a familiar melody and another of Schoenberg’s solo piano works. No. 6, largely unchanged, has one new pitch and a chord from Op. 19. This outstanding live performance was given by my longtime NIU colleague and dear friend, William Koehler, during the 2019 SCI Region 5 (Eastern Illinois University) conference.
Loretto Alfresco (1970/2009)--fixed media
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Loretto Alfresco is one of several tape pieces created in my teens. Recorded under a tree on a small Wisconsin farm, it features my childhood friend Thomas Loretto (1953-2016) playing an array of "found” percussion objects. Premiered four decades later during the inaugural NYCEMF (2009), more than 60 performances have followed, including the American Composers Alliance festival (NYC), ÆPEX (Ann Arbor, MI), CMS national, Electronic Music Midwest, SEAMUS, SoundCrawl: Nashville, VU Symposium, and Earth Day Art Model (IUPUI) in the U.S. International performances include the Noise Floor Festival (U.K.), Toronto Electroacoustic Symposium, Forum Wallis Ars Electronica (Switzerland), and BEAST FEaST (University of Birmingham, U.K.). The slightly shorter (“piccolo”) version included in several “60x60” mixes has also been heard in the U.S. (including ICMC) as well as in Australia, Canada, Italy, Mexico, and Taiwan. Loretto Alfresco was first released in the SEAMUS digital album, “Electroacoustic Miniatures 2012: Re-Caged”--and was recently re-released on a CD of flute and percussion music, ILTA (Neuma, 2022). Featuring flutist Stefanie Abderhalden and percussionists Kyle Flens, Malika Green, Katie (Wiegman) Burdett, and Thomas Loretto, ILTA also features works by Robert Honstein, David Maki, and Iannis Xenakis. ILTA also includes the first commercial release of Altro Alfresco (also featuring Tom Loretto).
Five Songs from Carl Sandburg's "Prairie" (2004)
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Texts for the Five Songs were selected from the expansive poem, “Prairie,” which opens Carl Sandburg’s second published collection, Cornhuskers (1918). Sandburg (1878-1967) was born and raised in Illinois. A Pulitzer Prize recipient both for his poetry and his multi-volume biography of Abraham Lincoln, Sandburg was also a journalist, political activist, and folk singer who accompanied himself on guitar. Under the influence of his evocative language, this song cycle explores a completely different musical world than that inhabited by my earlier works. The Five Songs are dedicated to my wife, Darsha, who introduced me to Sandburg’s “Prairie.” Performed by soprano Lynn Eustis and pianist Elvia Puccinelli on the CD, Portraits (Capstone, 2008), the Five Songs are appreciatively reviewed in the March/April 2011 issue of the National Association of Teachers of Singing (NATS) Journal. (That same lovely recorded performance is heard here as well.)