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Wesleyan University Music Department records

 Collection
Identifier: 1000-182

Scope and Contents

The records in Series 1, the Ethnomusicology Doctoral Program, relate to the establishment of the Music Department's advanced degree program in world music. The proposal drafts and notes, created in large part by David McAllester, describe the program and its requirements, including budget information. McAllester's proposal for an anthropology department, dating to roughly the same period, is also included. The meeting minutes, memoranda, correspondence, and grant proposals relate to the creation of the ethnomusicology doctoral program. An NDEA fellowship application and a report entitled Program for Advanced Studies in World Music are also included. The Creative Arts Program documents contain information on the ethnic music component of the music program.

Series 2, Photographs, comprises images and printed material relating to music performances by members of the Wesleyan community or artists visiting the university, circa 1947 to 1988. Approximately 400 print photographs--as well as contact sheets, negatives, and slides--are included. The photographs are arranged in two subseries: Faculty and Student Groups, and World Music Performers. The Faculty and Student Groups subseries includes images of Music Department staff and student music group members, either posed or during concerts. Photographs in the World Music Performers subseries show visiting artists who specialized in African, Indian, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, and Native American music. Instruments shown include the Indian been, kanjira, mrdangam, sarangi, sarod, sitar, tabla, tambura, and vina; the Javanese gender and gamelan; and the Japanese koto, shakuhachi, and shamisen. Photographs of ethnic dance performances and Javanese shadow plays are also included. A third subseries, Printed Material, consists of biographies and resumes of world music performers. A fourth subseries, Oversized Material, includes a drawing of Professor Richard Winslow as well as programs and explanatory notes for world music performances.

Materials in Series 3, Concert correspondence files; Series 4, Events scrapbooks; and Series 5, Additional records and programs, have not been processed.

Dates

  • Creation: 1952-1988

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Collection is open for research.

Conditions Governing Use

University records - Copyright held by Wesleyan University; all other copyright is retained by the creator - In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted

Biographical / Historical

Music has been part of the Wesleyan University experience since the early days of the institution. Known as a "singing college," Wesleyan inherited a tradition of music from the hymnody of its Methodist roots (see David B. Potts's Wesleyan University, 1831-1910: Collegiate Enterprise in New England). The first music performances at the university were organized by volunteers and sponsored by groups such as the Middlesex Musical Association. Beginning in the 1840s, glee clubs were created for special occasions, and in 1862 Wesleyan singers had their first public tour. In 1882 the university hired a professional musician as glee club coach, and the group gave standing-room-only public appearances, including an 1888 concert at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City. From the 1880s on, undergraduate students as well as alumni composed songs; these were collected in the Wesleyan Song Book, first published in 1901. Weekly sings took place on the chapel steps beginning in about 1901, and in about 1913 the university began offering a small stipend to students who participated in the chapel choir.

During the 1920s, the music program at Wesleyan became more formalized. In 1921, the Music and Dramatics Board was created to supervise musical and dramatic organizations and arrange concerts and trips. The university also offered its first course work in music. In the academic year 1925/26, Hugh L. Smith (class of 1915), an assistant professor in the Department of Romance Languages, offered a course on the history and appreciation of music. In 1928/29, courses in dramatic music and harmony were added. Then, in 1929, alumnus John Spencer Camp (class of 1878) donated a large sum to set up a chair of music at the university. Joseph Stephen Daltry was appointed to the newly endowed chair, and the Music Department was established.

The music program at Wesleyan continued to expand over the years. By the late 1940s, two professors--Joseph Daltry and George McManus--were offering about ten courses a year. In 1949, Richard Winslow (class of 1940) joined the staff. By the mid-1950s, singers performed not only with the Chapel Choir and Glee Club but also with the Choral Society, a male quartet called the Jibers, and a group of eight or nine called the Cardinals. The Wesleyan Band performed at football games and various campus affairs, and a woodwind and brass ensemble played several recitals a year. The Music Department, at that time housed in Judd Hall, had several sound-proof studios and an extensive collection of phonograph records. By the late 1960s, musical opportunities at the university included private lessons; the Wesleyan University concert series; the college orchestra, a "town-gown" organization; the Wesleyan String Quartet; and the Collegium Musicum, which performed medieval and Renaissance music.

A significant development in the music program that occurred around the middle of the twentieth century was the introduction of the study of music "as a universal phenomenon beyond the confines of Western European tradition" (Wesleyan University Bulletin, 1956/57). In 1956/57, associate professor David McAllester, an anthropologist whose specialty was the culture and music of the Navajo, first offered Music 31, Ethnic and Folk Music, in addition to the anthropology courses he taught in the Department of Psychology. In 1961, McAllester teamed up with Robert E. Brown, a specialist in the music of India, to teach classes in the university's new World Music Program. McAllester and Richard Winslow proposed an advanced program of study, and in 1966 the department began offering a doctorate in ethnomusicology in addition to undergraduate and master's degrees. By the 1970s, courses taught by resident and visiting members of the department's faculty covered Western classical, Afro-American, South Indian, North Indian, and Japanese music; the 1970/71 catalog listed some thirty-two courses and seminars in non-Western music. Study groups were organized focusing on the music of South India, Japan, Persia, Korea, and the Javanese gamelan.

In 1973, Wesleyan opened its Center for the Arts, a complex of eleven buildings housing undergraduate programs in art and art history, dance, theater, and music, as well as the graduate program in ethnomusicology. The Center comprises classrooms, galleries, and studios, and its music facilities include a recording studio, a computer and experimental music studio, Crowell Concert Hall, and World Music Hall.

The Music Department currently provides course work and performing opportunities in music from around the world. More than sixty courses are offered. A number of activities--including a variety of chamber ensembles and ensembles in Asian, African, American, and European traditions--are available to students. Music facilities include a collection of instruments from many different cultures; a music-instrument manufacturing workshop; a scores and recordings collection; and a world music archives. An ongoing departmental colloquium presents lectures on issues in the world of music by students, faculty, and outside speakers. In addition, the department sponsors events such as concerts by world-renowned jazz artists, the Wesleyan World Percussion Festival (2000), New England Gamelan Weekend (2002), the Celtic Routes Festival (2003), and the annual Navaratri Festival.

Extent

4 Linear Feet (5 hollinger boxes, 2 half hollinger boxes, and 1 flat hollinger box (addition includes 14 paige boxes and 1 hollinger box))

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

The collection includes proposals, meeting minutes, memoranda, correspondence, and reports relating to the establishment of the ethnomusicology doctoral program. It also contains photographs and printed material relating to music performances by faculty, student groups, and visiting world music artists, including concert programs. Materials in the Concert Correspondence Files, Events Scrapbooks, and Programs and Records series have not been processed.

Arrangement

Collection is arranged into 5 series.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Series 1 materials given by David McAllester, August 1976. Series 2 received in 1990 from the Music Department. Other materials received in 1992, 1993, 2007 and at additional dates from the Music Department.

Related Materials

Wesleyan University Music Department concert programs, 1853-

Title
Wesleyan University Music Department records, 1952-1988
Status
Completed
Author
Processed by Doreen E. Mangels, November 2009 Encoded by Doreen E. Mangels, November 2009 Migrated to ArchivesSpace by Amanda Nelson, July 2020
Date
July 7, 2020
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script
Language of description note
English

Repository Details

Part of the University Archives Repository

Contact:
Olin Library
252 Church Street
Middletown CT 06459 USA
860-685-3864