|
PROFILE OF FOUNDING DEAN SAMUEL JONES
When Jones was recruited for the position of dean of
the soon-to-becreated Shepherd School, he was a 38-year-old symphony
conductor. The opportunity to build a first-rate music school-and
to be there at its conception stage-was just too tempting to pass
up, Jones says. He signed on in 1973.
Based on his own experiences as an educator, composer and conductor,
he crafted a guiding philosophy: He wanted the school to be known
as one of the finest in the nation and he wanted it to focus on
music making and music training as opposed to an exclusively theoretical
or music educational approach. He wanted to emphasize a comprehensive
curriculum in orchestral studies. No other school in the country
had one. He wanted faculty members to be encouraged to continue
their artistic growth. The Shepherd School was also to be a place
where the performing artist/student could receive a liberal education.
Jones is pleased by the way in which the philosophy took hold,
and quick to note that the success of the Shepherd School has been
"a highly collaborative endeavor. Even though I am the founding
dean, one can't talk about the school without in the same breath
talking about the founding faculty, staff and students," he
says.
He also believes that each of the deans who succeeded him "has
been exactly the right person for the school at that time."
For example, he said of Michael Hammond, "will always be remembered
as the man who envisioned and built this building, for his strengthening
the ties between the school and the university and community-at-large,
for a series of spectacular faculty appointments, and for his knowledge,
brilliance and humanity-qualities which have endeared him forever
in the minds of his colleagues."
Rice President Malcolm Gillis said: "The entire Rice University
community owes a debt of gratitude to Sam Jones. He has played a
leading role in the success of the Shepherd School and its rise
to international prominence. We will miss him..."
Jones' colleague, Anne
Schnoebelen, the Joseph and Ida Kirkland Mullen Professor of
Music and a founding faculty member, says she admires the graceful
manner in which Jones gave up his position of dean and "just
folded back into the school in a wonderful contributory manner and
became one of the pillars of the faculty."
Raphael Fliegel, professor
emeritus of violin, has been impressed by Jones' devotion to his
students: "When he accepts a student he accepts responsibility
for them. He cares about what happens to them for the rest of their
lives. In that regard he's been my role model."
Sam Jones' own first role models were his musical parents. His
father Sam, a Mississippi school superintendent, "had a grand
Welsh bass voice" and directed a congregational church choir.
His mother Ella Mae studied piano and violin.
Fresh out of graduate school, at age 25, he taught at Alma College,
in Alma, Mich., while founding the Alma Symphony Orchestra and directing
the college band. He was then hired as conductor of the Saginaw
Symphony, and later, as assistant conductor of the Rochester Philharmonic.
He was subsequently promoted to associate conductor, residential
conductor, and finally the full conductor of that major orchestra.
|