He was born in Everett, Washington, but raised in Merrill, Wisconsin, from early childhood.[2] He earned a B.Mus. degree in piano performance at the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1981 and also studied piano as a non-degree candidate at Indiana University with James Tocco. He studied musicology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (M.Mus, 1983, Ph.D., 1987), where his teachers included Bruno Nettl, John Walter Hill, Nicholas Temperley, and Herbert Kellman. His dissertation "The Opera Theater of Count Franz Anton von Sporck in Prague (1724–1735)" was revised and published in 1992 as the first monograph devoted to the musical cultural of eighteenth-century Prague or the Bohemian lands ever written in English. This work has been followed by two other books concerned with music-making in eighteenth-century Prague: Josef Mysliveček, "Il Boemo" (2009)[3] and Mozart in Prague (2013). No other musicologist of any nationality has succeeded in completing three separate monographs on the same subject matter.
Freeman's essay "An 18th-Century Singer’s Commission of ‘Baggage’ Arias," originally published in the journal Early Music in 1992, was re-printed as a classic study about baroque opera in Opera Remade, 1700–1750 (Farnham: Ashgate, 2010).
In October 2022, Freeman was awarded a silver medal from the Faculty of Arts of Charles University in Prague for his efforts in promoting the music of Czech composers outside of the Czech homelands.[5]
Books
The Opera Theater of Count Franz Anton von Sporck in Prague (1992), ISBN0945193173
Josef Mysliveček, "Il Boemo" (2009), ISBN0899901484; condensed version in Czech as Il Boemo: průvodce po životě a díle Josefa Myslivečka, translated by Petra Johana Poncarová (2021), ISBN9788076015432; updated full biography in Czech as Josef Mysliveček, translated by Petra Johana Poncarová (2022), ISBN9788076017160; revised, updated edition in English (2022), ISBN1950743977
^Freeman's activities as a ballet accompanist and approach to the art of ballet accompaniment on piano are highlighted in Georgia Finnegan, Grace & Grit: a History of Ballet in Minnesota (Edina: Afton Press, 2024), pp. 168-69, ISBN9781736102138.