Thomas Stumpf
Thomas Stumpf received his degrees in piano performance
from the Mozarteum in Salzburg, Austria, and the New England Conservatory of
Music in Boston, and was awarded the Bösendorfer Prize and the Lilli Lehmann
Medal. His performing career has taken him across four continents and he is
featured on seven CDs. His repertoire ranges from Bach to the avant-garde; he
has conducted several Mozart concerti from the keyboard, and performed the
complete solo piano works of Mozart at Boston University and at UMassLowell. He
has premiered many compositions by contemporary American composers and has
performed with such luminaries as Rita Streich, Edith Mathis, D'Anna Fortunato,
Richard Stoltzman, Jack Brymer, Walter Trampler and Leslie Parnas. He has also
appeared with the HongKong Philharmonic, the Boston Pops Orchestra (under
Arthur Fiedler), Alea III, the Lexington Symphony and numerous other ensembles.
His compositions have appeared on concert programs in
Boston, throughout the U.S. as well as in Germany and the U.S.S.R.; in 1992 he
won the Kahn Award for his music theater project Dark Lady, one section of
which was recorded on the Neuma label by soprano Joan Heller. His choral work
though I walk was performed in New York City by the Pharos Music Project and by
C4.
Stumpf is Director of Music at Follen Church, where he
has conducted works ranging from Bach’s St. Matthew Passion and Mozart’s
Requiem to the music of Arvo Pärt, Olivier Messiaen and Duke Ellington. He also
conducts the Youth Choir and directs the Youth and Junior Choirs’ productions
of Gilbert and Sullivan operas every June. His experience at Follen has led to
his first book: a collection of essays entitled A Sounding Mirror: Courage and
Music in our Time, published in 2005 by Higganum Hill Books. Stumpf was also
the Artistic Director of Prism Opera, and conducted and directed Mozart's La
Clemenza di Tito (in his own translation and adaptation), as well as operas by
Britten, Vaughan-Williams and Holst.
Stumpf has taught at the New England Conservatory,
UMassLowell (where he was head of the keyboard department), and Boston
University (where he was Chair of the
Collaborative Piano Department) as well as Tufts University. He regularly gives
master-classes, lectures and recitals at the Musikschule in Mannheim, Germany,
and has been a guest at many conservatories, colleges and universities in the
U.S.
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