Gardiner Chair of Music University of Glasgow |
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Formation | 1928 |
Founder | William and Frederick Gardiner |
First holder | William Whittaker |
Website | www.gla.ac.uk/music |
The Gardiner Professor of Music at the University of Glasgow was founded in 1928 and endowed by the gift of William Guthrie Gardiner and Sir Frederick Crombie Gardiner, shipowners in Glasgow. The Chair was previously a joint appointment with the directorship of the Scottish National Academy of Music (now the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland), although this practice ceased on the retirement of Sir Ernest Bullock in 1952. The current professor is John Butt.
The Chair of Music was established in 1928 with funds provided by brothers William and Sir Frederick Gardiner, Glasgow shipping merchants. The brothers endowed a number of other appointments at the University, including Chairs in Physiological Chemistry (now Biochemistry), Bacteriology (now Immunology) and Organic Chemistry (now Chemistry), and the Gardiner Institute of Medicine.
William Whittaker was the first man appointed to the Chair, in 1930. Whittaker had originally intended studying science but switched to music, and taught at Armstrong College of Durham University before his appointment to the Chair. Whittaker expanded the teaching of music in the University such that full degrees became awardable. During this time he was also Principal of the Scottish National Academy of Music. He retired in 1941 and died in 1944. His successor, Sir Ernest Bullock, was also from Durham. He was a composer of church music, and had been organist at Westminster Abbey, where he was musical director of the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. He was appointed to the Chair in 1941, and received a knighthood in 1951 in recognition of his services to music in Scotland. He resigned in 1952 to become Director of the Royal College of Music.
One Glasgow professor left to the Royal College of Music, but one was soon sent back in the form of Robin Orr, Professor of Theory and Composition at the College, appointed to the Chair in 1956. He was from Brechin, Angus, although was in fact adopted and originally of Swiss nationality. He was a noted composer, writing three operas and three symphonies alongside other works. He had previously been organist of St John's College, Cambridge, and it was to Cambridge that he returned in 1964 as the Professor of Music. He was Chair of Scottish Opera from 1962 to 1976 and Director of Welsh National Opera from 1971 to 1983, and was awarded a CBE in 1972.