The Well-Tempered Ear

Public ‘autopsy’ of UW Choral Union is Monday, Oct. 23 | October 12, 2023

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By Jacob Stockinger

What was the cause of death?

Ever since last June — when the University of Wisconsin Mead Witter School of Music announced it was killing off the UW Choral Union after 130 years — the school has not issued any kind of public statement, specific explanation or response to the overwhelming negative reactions from the community.

That is finally about to change.

On Monday, Oct. 23, 2023 from 7:30 p.m. to 8:15 p.m. in the Mead Witter Foundation Concert Hall of the Hamel Music Center, the School of Music’s new director Dan Cavanagh will meet with former Choral Union singers and others members of the public to discuss the decision to cancel and to explore the future off campus-community choral activities.

Here is the email invitation that Cavanagh (below) sent out this week: 

October 10, 2023

Dear Choral Union Singers,

I have been fortunate to meet several of you in my first few months in Madison as the new Director of the Mead Witter School of Music (MWSoM). I have felt welcomed and excited to make Madison my home, both personally and professionally.

As you know well, I started my position during a time of change here at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. I have learned much over the past few months about the long history, impact, and value that the Choral Union has had here in Madison and beyond.

I understand that many have felt disappointed by the decision to discontinue the Choral Union (shown below under longtime but now retired choral director Beverly Taylor) as it has been a longstanding and stalwart example of the Wisconsin Idea in action. I have begun having discussions with the local choral community writ large to explore ways to serve the Madison area in a way that honors that tradition while ensuring that we are able to serve our students in the most pedagogically and fiscally responsible way.

 

With the above in mind, I am writing to invite you and those interested to a conversation on Monday, October 23, from 7:00 p.m.-8:15 p.m. in the Mead Witter Foundation Concert Hall in the Hamel Music Center.

 Janet Murphy has, in parallel, reached out to me about the new “Friends of the Choral Union” group, and I plan to meet with her and a few others prior to this larger meeting so that I can come prepared to be responsive and engaged in the discussion.

I hope to come away from our conversation having had a chance to explain in more detail why the original decision was made last spring before I arrived, as well as having had a chance to hear your concerns and hopes for how we can partner together in the future to serve the choral community around us.

When I interviewed for this position back in early March, I talked a lot about how Music is one of the “front doors” to the University, and how our public charge includes engaging outside the walls of the “ivory tower.” 

This philosophy is uniquely enacted through the Wisconsin Idea, and I do not use that phrase lightly. While our focus needs to remain first and foremost on our students and our ability (and resources) to adapt our pedagogical practices to a rapidly changing arts and cultural environment in this country, I am excited to work together with you and others to find ways to connect that pedagogical work with the wider community in our state and nationally.

Please consider joining me for this important conversation on October 23. No RSVP is needed. I look forward to meeting each of you in person and to hearing your passion, ideas, and concerns.

With deep respect,

Dan Cavanagh

Pamela O. Hamel/Board of Advisors Director; Mead Witter School of Music Professor of Jazz Studies and Composition

University of Wisconsin-Madison: music.wisc.edu

NOTE: If you want more to see more background and reader public reactions to it, here are links to three previous blog posts:

The Ear wonders how well attended the meeting will be?

Will you attend or not? Why or why not?

Will anything change about the future of the Choral Union?

Will Mariana Farah (below top) — the highly acclaimed new Director of Choral Activities — be on hand to answer questions and offer her perspective?

Will former music school director Susan C. Cook (below bottom), who made the decision, also be there?

How convincing will the explanations for the past decision and for possible future activities be?

Did it change your mind or thinking? How?

The Ear wants to hear.


7 Comments »

  1. Many years ago I was privileged to perform in Mendelssohn’s “Elijah” under the direction of Robert Fountain and with Sam Jones singing the part of Elijah. It was a landmark moment in my life. Was I shocked when the University chose to end the Choral Union? Absolutely. Will I attend the “autopsy” on Oct. 23? No. In the current political climate, I’m convinced that the powers that be have already buried the body, so to speak. This public meeting is nothing more than a palliative for the mourners.

    Kathleen Bergee

    Liked by 1 person

    Comment by frozentundrette — October 12, 2023 @ 8:09 am

    • Hi Kathleen
      Thank you for your reply.
      It gets right to the point.
      I hope you are wrong, but very much fear you are right: It is all for show.
      What you describe is certainly in keeping with how the decision has been handled from the start.
      Best wishes,
      The Ear

      Like

      Comment by welltemperedear — October 12, 2023 @ 8:57 am

  2. Please! Stop describing this decision as “killing off” the Choral Union, which only generates ill will towards our excellent MWSOM faculty and staff!

    I know (from personal communications with most of them) that the decision was reached only after a great deal of thought and discussion. That the news was delivered in a thoughtlessly worded press release from a “UW Spokesperson” — at a time when many School of Music administrators were off-campus and the transition to new Director was imminent — was quite unfortunate.

    I’ve met with Director Cavanagh and believe him to be sincere in his desire to find a way forward. I will go to the meeting and I hope many others do as well.

    Like

    Comment by Kathleen Otterson — October 12, 2023 @ 7:59 am

    • Hi Kathleen

      Thank you for your reply.

      The ill will was created by the decision, not by me.
      Killing off seems strong but appropriate.
      The Choral Union didn’t just die on its own.
      It was killed off, or ended if you prefer.

      As far as I can tell, the death of the Choral Union was handled in a very high-handed and patronizing way with little input from the community, participants and public.
      I understand you wanting to defend your friends at colleagues in the area of teaching voice.
      But what it at stake is what they did, not who they are.

      Best wishes,
      Jake

      Like

      Comment by welltemperedear — October 12, 2023 @ 9:12 am

  3. Thank you for this message.
    I did not receive a message from Dan Cavanaugh. I wonder how many Choral Union members did. I had been a Choral Union member since 1974 and am on the Choral Union Friends mailing list.

    I will be at the meeting. As I’ve said before the decision to end the Choral Union after 130 years was shocking and heartbreaking. Of course it ignores the Wisconsin Idea, but it also doesn’t serve the music students on whose behalf the SOM says they have made this decision.

    How will voice/conducting students learn and perform the big, choral/orchestral masterpieces from all musical eras? Will they have to go to other schools? How will the SOM address this big gap in the music program? While the University Chorus is available to non-music UW students the rehearsal schedule for 1 credit is demanding and and can not address the music students’ need to engage with major choral literature in the way the Choral Union did.

    How will music students experience the value of cross generational membership in a choral group performing oratorios? Then there’s the community. Under Mariana Farah’s direction the Choral Union performance (to an overflow crowd) of Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms and Mendelssohn’s Lauda Sion was wonderful.

    I wish there would be the opportunity to continue to bring the UW Choral Union to the University and to the Madison community. I read some of the previous comments about the Choral Union going downhill after Robert Fountain. I disagree. He was formidable but Beverly Taylor was a worthy successor and she meant a lot to me. She knew each and every one of us and inspired me in a way that Fountain never did.

    Liked by 1 person

    Comment by Dori Kalish — October 12, 2023 @ 5:53 am

    • Dear Dori,

      Thank you for your detailed reply.
      You make very good points.
      Perhaps you and others can help persuade them ti roll back the decision.
      Best wishes,
      The Ear

      Like

      Comment by welltemperedear — October 12, 2023 @ 9:01 am

    • Bev Taylor was a gem of a conductor for the Choral Union and the Madison Symphony Choir, both of which I was a member of. I haven’t followed this issue at all because I no longer live in Wisconsin, but I am extremely disappointed to hear that the Choral Union was cancelled.

      I’m sorry for all of the musicians who lost sometimes their only outlet to make something beautiful.

      Like

      Comment by Erica Chernysh — October 14, 2023 @ 11:17 am


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