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Wilfred Conwell Bain : ウィキペディア英語版
Wilfred Conwell Bain

Wilfred Conwell Bain (January 20, 1908 – March 7, 1997) was an American music educator, a university level music school administrator (former Dean of two major music schools spanning 35 years), and an opera theater director at the collegiate level. Bain is widely credited for rapidly transforming to national prominence both the University of North Texas College of Music as Dean from 1938 to 1947, and later, Indiana University School of Music as Dean from 1947 to 1973. Both institutions are major comprehensive music schools with the largest and second largest enrollments, respectively, of all music schools accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music. He was born in Shawville, Quebec, and died in Bloomington, Indiana.〔''HEADS Data – Special Report, 2009–10'', National Association of Schools of Music Note: For more than 20 years, North Texas Music enrollment has tracked closely to that of Indiana. Institutions that include Berklee, Juilliard, Manhattan School of Music are not among the 627 NASM members. One non-NASM music school has a student enrollment larger than North Texas – Berklee.

James R. Oestreich, classical music critic for The New York Times, referred to Bain as a ''legend'' who lifted the Jacobs School of Music to national prominence from 1947 to 1973.〔James R. Oestreich, ''Innovative New Baton Keeps A School's Faculty Aquiver; Still, Indiana's Dean Emphasizes Grace Notes In Adjusting a Venerable Institution's Themes'', The New York Times, April 16, 1998〕
==Contributions to collegiate schools of music==
Created a new model
Bain’s major contribution to higher music education was uniting what formerly (pre World War II) had been three different kinds of music learning centers:
# Conservatories, a European model where student musicians trained exclusively in music to become music makers – instrumentalists, singers, composers, and conductors;
#Music Departments at liberal arts colleges – including those of Harvard, Stanford, Columbia, and Chicago – that had two basic functions: (a) preparing young music scholars for futures in higher education, as functioning scholars in musicology, music history, and music theory, and (b) serving as curricular enrichments for general students;
#Teachers Colleges (aka "Normal Schools"), that trained young musicians expressly to be teachers of pre-collegiate music, the K-12 curricula of the nation.
At two public institutions, Bain put all three models together into comprehensive music schools with the critical mass (large enrollments) needed for major productions in opera, large chorus, and symphony orchestras. And, Bain integrated these large, comprehensive music schools within their host colleges: first at the University of North Texas (then the nation’s largest public teachers college that was emerging as a liberal arts university), second at Indiana University at Bloomington.〔William Ennis Thomson ("Ennis Williams"), ''Wilfred C. Bain: A Reminiscence In Memoriam'', College Music Symposium, Vol. 38, College Music Society (1998)〕 Putting talent aside, Bain strongly felt that a music degree from a comprehensive music school that was embedded within a liberal arts university was a more powerful degree (from an interdisciplinary, rounding perspective), for both undergraduate and graduate students. Bain capitalized on the intellectual assets inherent of a university. The science core requirement, for example, might offer musical acoustics taught by physics professors. The English departments and theater wings might collaborate with the composition department. The music schools of North Texas and Indiana, often, were beneficiaries of talented students not majoring in music (Michael Brecker, while at Indiana, declared English as his major).
Presided over the first college degree in jazz studies
While at the University of North Texas College of Music (1938–47), Bain, as dean, presided over, advocated, and spearheaded the country's first degree program in jazz studies during the 1946–47 school-year.
Stressed vocal and opera to galvanize a wide spectrum of music disciplines
Until Bain, opera education (capable of producing fully mounted operas) was a discipline relegated to conservatories in urban settings. While at North Texas, and more so while at Indiana University, Bain not only stressed opera, he built enrollments, quality, and performance-frequency to levels never witnessed in their respective regions (audiences were, of course, familiar with professional touring companies, such as the Charles Wagner Company). Bain viewed opera as the "perfect vehicle for the musical experience – for the student, for the faculty, and for the audience." He said that "Opera is the crossroads where they all meet." "And, opera is the public review of a music school's total work." Bain believed that, at Indiana, he had built a great music school, in part because of its size, which allowed it to achieve the critical mass, the power and drive of a faculty and hundreds of talented students.〔John Ardoin, ''Arts Bloom in Indiana'', ''The Dallas Morning News'', pg. 1, April 23, 1972〕
Presided over the construction of an opera hall of unparalleled quality at a university
When the Musical Arts Center at Indiana officially opened in April 1972, it was the first of its kind at a university. Before then, there were performance venues at universities with great aesthetics and acoustics (such as Frank Lloyd Wright's Gammage at Arizona State University), but few equipped specifically for both education and state-of-the-art professional level opera productions. The hall's proscenium is 69 feet (15 feet longer than that of the Met). Like the Met, the hall has four stages: The main (90 by 60 feet), two side stages (50 by 50 by 28), and a rear stage (which holds a 48-foot turntable and allows the front stage to increase its depth by an additional 55 feet). The side and rear stages are equipped electrically controlled wagons on which complete sets can be assembled and them moved onto the main stage. And on the main stage, there are traps every 6 feet. The house's pit is on elevators and is 55 by 60 feet. The lighting equipment was, at the time, sophisticated, capable of presetting over 200 cues. The hall has a full audio/visual recording studio with facilities for live radio and TV broadcasts. Bain saw the facility not as a gigantic auditorium, but as a giant, varied classroom. There are dozens of rooms for rehearsals and classrooms (two that are large enough for orchestra and chorus), three for ballet, and several of identical size for staging rehearsals. A typical production could involve 200 students, faculty and staff. And, while one work is being performed, several others can be in rehearsal simultaneously. Bain felt that the hall was as good as that of the Metropolitan Opera, if not in many ways superior. Although the Met seats 3,700 while IU's hall seats 1,450, Bain regarded it as an advantage because (i) it makes possible a more intimate theatrical experience for the audience, (ii) it doubles the need for performances (good for double casting and student musicians needing experience), and (iii) it puts less strain on young voices.〔John Ardoin, ''Arts Bloom in Indiana'', ''The Dallas Morning News'', pg. 1, April 23, 1972〕
Dean of deans
Bain has been called "The Dean of Deans," for various reasons, including the fact that several students under him at both North Texas and Indiana went on to become heads of music at notable institutions of higher learning. Some of these people include:
* William Franklin Lee III, former long-time dean of the University of Miami School of Music
* William Ennis Thomson, former long-time dean of the USC Thornton School of Music
* Eugene Hall, jazz education pioneer at the University of North Texas College of Music and Michigan State University
* Thomas Owen Mastroianni (DMA Indiana; born 1934), concert pianist and pedagogue, served as Dean of Music at Catholic University of America from 1972 to 1981

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