William Ethaniel Thomas (1950-2013)
Chevalier de Saint-Georges [World Premiere Recording]
Coleridge String Quartet
AFKA SK 557 (2003)
Coleridge String Quartet
AFKA SK 557 (2003)
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor: Chamber Music[World Premiere Recording]
The Coleridge Ensemble
AFKA SK-543 (1998)
The Coleridge Ensemble
AFKA SK-543 (1998)
We first knew William E. Thomas as a cellist on two significant CDs containing world premiere recordings of works of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and Le Chevalier de Saint-Georges, who are both featured at AfriClassical.com.
Service for Andover’s beloved conductor and music department icon set for June 16
April 29, 2013
--“When
I think of the PA music scene before William, I have an image of a kind
of dim grayness. When William arrived it suddenly became bright
sunlight with trumpets.” Those words of a former student reflect the way
many members of the Phillips Academy community will remember faculty
emeritus William Thomas, who passed away on Sunday, April 28 in his home
state of Kentucky.
Born December 9, 1950 in Lexington, Kentucky to Jeanette and William E.
Thomas, Sr., Thomas came to Andover in 1974 after earning a bachelor’s
degree in music at Oberlin College and a MFA at Penn State University.
Within a year of his coming to Andover, he was named the chair of the PA
music department, a position he held for 15 years.
Following his retirement in 2008, Thomas’s colleague Christopher Walter
described the impact Thomas had on Andover’s music program this way in
an article for the Andover Bulletin: “In the mid-1970s, the orchestra
was populated only by a handful of students—several from the same
family…Under William’s direction, the music department was transformed.
The summer music program, the chamber music program, and tours with the
Cantata Choir and Academy Chamber Orchestra were perhaps the first
remarkable results of William’s energies. Many more were to follow,
including the Gospel Choir and a program dedicated to teaching string
instruments to children from nearby Lawrence. Mass.”
Thanks to Thomas’s vision, passion and larger-than-life personality, the
music program blossomed dramatically. Participation rates rose and the
school became a preferred destination for growing numbers of serious
music students. During the 34 years Thomas spent at Andover, hundreds of
students have delighted in performing in his orchestras, ensembles, and
choirs, and have had life-changing experiences as they traveled with
him to give performances around the world. Certainly one of the
highlights of Thomas’s career was his 2001 trip to China during which he
led a group of 134 students and 42 faculty and parents on a music and
cultural sharing adventure to Beijing, Shanghai, and Hong Kong.
Among his many interests, Thomas had a life-long desire to raise
awareness of the many contributions the black community has made to the
country’s musical culture. Toward that end, he founded the Academy’s
Black Arts Weekend, and was instrumental in bringing to campus such
great artists as Dizzy Gillespie and the Alvin Ailey Dancers. He also
helped found the Sojourner Truth Scholarship Fund and was an active
participant in Andover’s AfLatAm Society. Thomas made his last trip to
Phillips Academy in early April of this year to attend the AfLatAm 45th
Anniversary celebration. On April 6, he was in the audience at Cochran
Chapel, joyfully cheering the performance of former student and fellow
cellist Kevin Olusola ’06 and his a capella group Pentatonix.
Following his retirement from Andover, Thomas threw himself into an
effort to save his childhood church in Kentucky, a significant black
history landmark building constructed and paid for by slaves in the
1850s. His vision for the project, which was outlined in an article
about Thomas in the fall 2012 issue of Andover Magazine,
included converting the old building into a multi-purpose cultural
center that would contain a concert hall and museum devoted to
spotlighting the work of black artists. As of this writing, it remains
uncertain whether The First African Foundation he established to raise funds for the project will be able to bring that vision to fruition without Thomas’s leadership.
...
The family is planning a service in Lexington, KY on Monday, May 20, at 1 p.m.
Phillips Academy will hold a memorial service and musical tribute
during Reunion Weekend at Cochran Chapel on Sunday, June 16 at 11:30
a.m. A formal obituary for Thomas was published in the Lexington Herald-Leader.
No comments:
Post a Comment