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Thursday, September 8, 2005
Writer: Larry B. Dendy, 706/542-8078, ldendy@uga.edu
Contact: Donald Lowe, 706/542-3737, dlowe@uga.edu
Ceremony set for Sept. 16 to name UGA music school for Hugh Hodgson
Athens, Ga. – A ceremony will be held Friday, Sept. 16, to
formally name the University of Georgia’s School of Music in
honor of the late Hugh Hodgson, who started the university’s
music program and whose name became synonymous with music education
and appreciation in Georgia.
The 2 p.m. ceremony will be in the Performing
Arts Center in Hodgson Hall, which also is named for the Athens
native who in 1928 became UGA’s first music professor and remained
on the faculty for 32 years.
The ceremony will include performances
by the University Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, and pianist Evgeny
Rivkin. UGA President Michael F. Adams and Donald R. Lowe, director
of the music school, will speak briefly.
Two of Hodgson’s students, Charles Wadsworth
and Robert G. Edge, will also speak. Wadsworth was founding artistic
director of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and is
artistic director for chamber music of the Spoleto USA Festival.
Edge, an Atlanta attorney and arts patron, has been a managing
director of the Metropolitan Opera Association and president of
the Atlanta Music Festival Association.
Members of Hodgson’s family will
attend the ceremony including his son, Daniel B. Hodgson, a retired
attorney in Atlanta.
An exhibit
in the music school library will include photos, newspaper and
magazine clippings, recordings and other memorabilia of Hodgson’s
career and life.
Following the ceremony a reception will be held
on the lawn in front of the music building. The ceremony is free
and open to everyone interested.
Hodgson, who was born in 1893, graduated from
UGA in 1915. After studying music in Germany, and music and mathematics
in New York, he returned to Athens and in 1925 became musical
director of the Lucy Cobb Institute.
His appointment to the UGA faculty three years later is considered
the start of the university’s music department. He also was
the first chairman of the division of fine arts and was named a Regents
Professor of Music by the University System Board of Regents.
Lowe said the school is pleased to recognize Hodgson’s many
contributions to UGA and to Georgia.
“The naming of the school for Professor Hodgson is entirely
appropriate given the importance and historical significance of his
leadership in developing music and the other fine arts within the
university and throughout the state,” Lowe said. “The
name, Hugh Hodgson School of Music, will serve as a lasting tribute
to him and to his work.”
Hodgson developed four degree programs in music including the first
graduate degree, a master’s in fine arts in music. He conducted
the Men’s Glee Club for 14 years and also conducted an ensemble
known as the University Little Symphony for nine years.
He was instrumental
in construction of the fine arts building in 1941. The building
was the music school’s home for more than
50 years until it moved to the new music building on East Campus
in 1995.
Hodgson, who also composed the arrangement for UGA’s
Alma Mater and wrote the words for the fight song “Glory to
Old Georgia,” earned the nickname “Johnny Appleseed
of music” for
his tireless efforts to promote understanding and appreciation of
music in Georgia and throughout the Southeast. He helped establish
the Atlanta and Savannah symphony orchestras, and he performed and
spoke for audiences in many cities. He also started a high school
music festival that annually brought promising Georgia high school
musicians to UGA, and he also helped start what became the department
of music at Georgia State University.
In the late 1920s Hodgson began
offering Thursday evening musical programs at UGA known as “Music
Appreciation Hour.” The
popular event continues today as the School of Music Second Thursday
Concert Series.
Hodgson also is credited with discovering artist
Lamar Dodd and persuading him to join UGA’s faculty in 1937.
Dodd was head of the university’s art department for 40 years
and is the namesake of the art school. A $39 million building to
house the school is being constructed adjacent to the Hodgson music
school.
With
50 faculty members, 55 graduate assistants, 350 undergraduates
and about 150 graduate students, the Hodgson School is one of the
largest units in UGA’s Franklin College of Arts and Sciences.
The school offers majors in music composition, music education,
music performance, conducting, musicology, music theory and music
therapy. It is also home to more than 30 faculty and student instrumental
and vocal ensembles.
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