| |
Comment on this article
A
gift of glee
January/February 2009
by Christopher
Arnott
For
more than half a century, Fenno Heath '50, '52MusM, was the personification of
glee and harmony at Yale. As an undergraduate, he sang the gamut: from the
Freshman Chorus and the Apollo Glee Club to the Yale Glee Club and the Whiffenpoofs.
After graduating from the School of Music in 1952, Heath stuck around for just
shy of four decades as director of the Yale Glee Club. (Along the way, he
brought women into the club in 1971, within two years of the advent of coeducation
in Yale College.) In 1992, when the Glee Club granted him retirement and the
title "conductor emeritus," he presided over the Friends of Music at Yale, a
group that supports undergraduate music-making.
| |
A list of "12 Pieces Fenno Felt Everyone Should Know" lurches from sacred to secular.
|
Heath's
death at the age of 81 on December 5, and the days that preceded it, were
marked by an inpouring of tributes from classmates and former students, in
person and in a kind of online scrapbook. Visitors to the site exalted Heath
both as a traditionalist who kept a broad repertoire of old-school
Yale-specific anthems alive for future generations, and as an open-minded
explorer of the latest musical forms. The poems he set to music included works
by A. E. Housman, William Blake, and greeting-card great Sandra Boynton '74. On
the website, Heath’s daughter Peggy Ogilvy posted a list of "12 Pieces Fenno
Felt Everyone Should Know," a list that lurches from sacred to secular, Bach to
Barber, elegant Elgar to minimalist John Adams, from jazz composer Neal Hefti
to twentieth-century contrapuntalist Paul Hindemith.
Such
a general, yet exacting, love of music lives on in Heath’s family, which includes
his wife Carol, four children (Ogilvy, Sarah Heath, Lucy McLellan, and Fenno
"Terry" Heath III), and six grandchildren. (His grandson Benjamin Ogilvy '11 is
a sophomore in his grandfather’s college, Timothy Dwight.) His three daughters
formed an acoustic folk group known as the Heaths, and his grandson Max was a
pop piano prodigy.
Fenno
Heath’s legacy is not limited to his well-known perfectionism as a director, or
the reams of his choral arrangements in music-class cupboards nationwide. It
will always consist, too, of his ability to use music as a tool to unite
uncertain, largely untrained undergraduate singers and their receptive
audiences into a single overwhelming sound of lux et veritas. |
|