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William Skelton, 86, launched music, India initiatives

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William Skelton, who took generations of Colgate students on the India Study Group that he created and who founded the Colgate Concert Orchestra, passed away Sept. 23.

Skelton, Robert Ho Professor of Asian studies and professor of music emeritus, joined the Colgate faculty in 1954 as a music professor. He directed the chamber band, 65-voice glee club, chapel choir, and marching band.

Music became a major at Colgate during Skelton's tenure as chair of the music department in the 1960s. He founded the concert orchestra in 1965, and also directed Colgate's first venture into electronic music with the installation of a Moog synthesizer in 1967.

A teacher, conductor, and solo performer in Western traditions, Skelton became increasingly involved in programs to advance understanding and performance of Indian music. A bassoonist, he also became adept on the instruments of India, particularly the vina and nagaswaram.

bill skelton
William Skelton (center) attends a special event held for him at the Ho Reading Room last year. He passed away Sept. 23 at the age of 86.

Beginning in the early 1960s, after sitarist Ravi Shankar first visited campus, Skelton regularly brought the music of South India to Colgate. Indian musicians and dancers performed on campus at his invitation and took part in summer session Indian arts festivals that he coordinated.

Colgate was among the first American colleges to introduce the study of Carnatic music, thanks to Skelton.

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Skelton, who also taught a core course on India, led the first India Study Group informally in 1969 and developed it over the years.

Following his retirement in 1993, Skelton was named Colgate's first Robert H.N. Ho Professor of Asian studies and continued to direct the study group, most recently in fall 2005.

A 1946 graduate of the University of Illinois, Skelton earned BMus and MMus degrees at Yale University. He was a student of composer Paul Hindemith. As an 8th Air Force captain during World War II, he served as a group leader and was awarded an Air Medal with four oak leaf clusters. He later piloted his own plane.

Before joining the Colgate faculty, Skelton taught at Wesleyan College in Macon, Ga., and in secondary schools in Connecticut and Wisconsin. He was conductor of the Macon Symphony and solo bassoonist with the Connecticut Symphony and the Tanglewood Summer Orchestra.

He was born May 25, 1923, in Chicago Heights, Ill., the son of Frank L. and Emily Litchfield Skelton. He was preceded in death by his wife, Mary Lou, in 1995. He is survived by his children Bruce, Linda, and Keith, four grandchildren, and companion Georgia Head.

At Skelton's request, a memorial service will be held in India, on the banks of the Kaveri River near Srirangapatna in Karnataka, on a date to be determined.

19 Comments

miss u so much already, you're the greatest person i've ever known in my entire life. you'll always be in my heart. love u

October 25, 2009 8:45 PM
Michael Davie, '61 said:

Professor Skelton's musicianship contributed much to the success of the Glee Club and Chapel Choir. I continue to use many skills I learned in those groups.

October 24, 2009 9:00 AM
Ron Richardson '71 said:

A sad day to learn of the passing of Bill Skelton... I was counting on stopping by for another visit with him.

I guess my first encounter with Bill was in my first week as a freshman in 1967, either because I was going to play (last stand) second violin in the fledgling orchestra, or because I really wanted to play with the new Moog Synthesizer that he brought to the new art center. He said I could play with the synthesizer anytime, even at night, as long as the night watchman, Henry, was there to open up the room.

Over the next four years Bill kept me on with some very enjoyable orchestra activities, and working with him and Atlee Sproul on production of “The Good Soldier Schweik,” and occasionally pressing me into service playing drone on tambura behind his veena. I even joined, along with his daughter, Linda, a string quartet, which practiced at his wonderful home... the only home in Hamilton with peafowl wandering in the yard. And Lou, too, became another great presence for me... with an ample helping of excellent and very spicy Indian cuisine - buttermilk handy for the weak of heart.

The Skeltons invited me to join them for my junior year in Madras. Though I didn’t decide to go, it would certainly be a year's experience I wish I could add.

I would stop by Preston Hill Road for visits after graduation, not surprised to find Lou and Bill out by the garage, building an airplane... so multi-faceted were they. Years later, living in Kyoto, I ran across a tape of a lecture that Bill had given there.

Adventurous and brawny, thoughtful and sensitive, Bill Skelton continues to be one of the great Colgate influences for me.

October 23, 2009 9:23 PM
Mary Hill '83 said:

Reading the comments and memories here, I smile and recollect my own proud moments on the Chapel Stage, playing the Shostakovitch 2nd piano concerto with the Colgate orchestra, thanks to Bill. I journeyed to his beloved India through the "India course," and wished I could join friends on the study group, to experience the culture he conveyed so effectively through his teaching. Amazed he still led the group in 2005. What an example of life, vitality and passion.

October 22, 2009 9:40 AM
Robert Barton Clegg '58 said:

I remember writing a paper for Bill in 1956 on music he suggested I listen to: Beethoven's Ninth. I wrote it by hand in the wee small hours in the Outing Club office and slipped it under his office door before eight AM. He gave me an A-, perhaps the only "A" I got at Colgate. Bill was a great guy and taught me to love music. He'll be missed at Colgate and Hamilton.

October 21, 2009 10:47 PM
Carlos Mercado '68 said:

January 1965 was the inaugural "Jan Plan" at Colgate during my freshman year. By chance, I took Mr. Skelton's course in Karnatic Music of South India, which was held at 7:00am in his home on Johnnycake Hill. Although classes in India are held early in the morning to avoid the mid-day heat, the typical January dawn temperature in Hamilton, NY is about -10 F. And getting up at 7am is not typical for a Colgate freshman. No matter, it was one of the pivotal experiences of my undergraduate years. Not only did I learn ragas, talas, and the rudiments of several instruments, but a rather unflattering photo of me playing the veena made the rounds of newpapers and journals for months afterwards. My Junior year, I took his Collegium Musicum study in early medieval music. I almost set the Chapel basement on fire converting a trombone into a sackbut, but that is a story best left untold. May your soul and all your goodness live forever good teacher!

October 21, 2009 5:53 PM
Suzi Weintraub Varnhagen '84 said:

I was lucky enough to play in the Colgate University Orchestra all four years I was at Colgate. Playing either as the 1st or 2nd chair flute I remember the wonderful eye contact under Professor Skelton's baton. Woodwinds enjoy front and center placement in a concert orchestra and with Professor Skelton you could feel his connection to the music and the orchestra members. I remember my first time to dinner at his home. It was my initial introduction to eastern music and thought. All fond memories.

A true loss for the Colgate community and the world of music. I shall never forget his kindnesses and encouragements to me as a music/drama student at Colgate, or how he so enthusiastically opened up the world of Eastern music to so many of us. May he rest in peace. He will not be forgotten.

October 21, 2009 5:08 PM
Joseph Shapiro '76 said:

Bill Skelton was one of those extraordinary professors who enabled me to understand what a quality liberal arts education was all about. I came to Colgate with an interest in music, and in playing the violin. Four years later, thanks to Bill, my eyes had been opened to the world of ethnomusicology, the culture of India, and to the demands of playing my instrument in the university's newly formed Concert Orchestra. Bill also asked me to be the first manager for that group, which was an experience that has stayed with me and served me well to this day.

Thank you, Bill. You are appreciated, and will be missed.

Professor Skelton auditioned me as a double bassist when I was applying to colleges, and was impressed enough to write a letter of recommendation for me. I received my acceptance letter from Colgate a week later! Out of loyalty to him, I never missed a Colgate Orchestra rehearsal or concert in my 4 years at Colgate, and I also became stage manager of the orchestra. If it weren't for Professor Skelton, I would not have gone to Colgate, and my life would be much different than it is today. He was a profound influence and great mentor to me, and he will be missed.

October 21, 2009 3:20 PM
Sophie Connolly, '07 said:

Besides being a wonderful musician and teacher, William Skelton gave the world an insight of how to achieve happiness: Bill figured out what he loved and lived his life accordingly. It’s a simple, important lesson, yet still rare to find a person who followed his heart as passionately and consistently, or with such style! Bill was so full of mischief, humor, grace, strength and wit that one forgot he was into his 80s when he led his last Colgate study group to India in 2005. I was fortunate enough to be a student in his last group. To suggest an inkling of what he was made of, I fondly remember how one morning I realized I was covered in bedbug bites when I walked into breakfast and saw Bill there, barefoot and laughing with another student, covered head to toe with bites himself. To honor a man who knew when to keep it clear and brief—Bill, you will be greatly missed. Namaste.

October 16, 2009 1:35 AM
Dani '07 said:

I would simply like to second what Peter Juran said so elegantly. No other person or experience has so greatly changed my life, my identity, or my outlook as Bill and our trip to India did. The world has suffered a great loss in his passing.

October 10, 2009 3:42 PM
Mike Hayes said:

Bill Skelton directed the Colgate Glee Club in the early 1960s. One week night we had a concert at a high school in the Utica area. As we were warming up before the show, Bill sensed that the group was not particularly excited about performing. He said: "This is the most important concert of your lives. Because this is the concert you are doing right now." We received a standing ovation that night and I will never forget his exhortation. Thank you Bill.
Mike Hayes '65

To Colgate University,

Shocked to know the sad demise of Shriman, Mr.William Skelton, who was Indian among Indians.

May His Soul Rest in Peace.

Newwoodlands Hotel, which hosted "Bill" and his students for several years in Chennai, India, joins you all in sharing the Sadness.

Its Time to Salute the Great Man for his work. We salute.

All the staff of Newwoodlands,
Babu-Manager-9840099512
Newwoodlands Hotel
Mylapore, Chennai, India

October 8, 2009 8:06 PM
Peter Juran '83 said:

As I watch my children apply for college, one great hope I have for them is that they will find a professor, or some other mentor or guru along the line, who will open their eyes to the beauty and the ecstasy of humanity and its marvelously varied response to life. Book learning is important, and career preparation essential, but to be invigorated by the spectacular richness of another culture, and to better understand one's own place here on earth as a result is a rare gift. Bill gave many of us that gift.

I do not believe he was unusually generous or a particularly great teacher, but what he was able to impart to his students was his own thrill at having discovered the rituals and music of India. That discovery was for him a challenge to live his own life with energy and joy and to grab the opportunities to share his excitement with those who followed, to ask them to reach outside themselves and to understand that this place and culture, so completely foreign to our experiences, had something to tell us about how we live. He didn't so much take us to India and teach us there, as drop us off in a world beyond our experience, dive in himself, inviting us to jump in after him.

I have been blessed with other mentors and teachers, but Bill remains special to me, and I suspect to more than a generation of those of us with the good fortune to travel to India with him. Our lives have been attuned to a different way of thinking, praying, and making music, and it will enrich us daily.

Thank you, Bill. Have a great next lifetime.

Larger than life matched by inner depth, Bill led me through one of the singular moments of my life – a performance of Beethoven's 4th Piano Concerto with the Concert Orchestra – a transcendent experience for which I am forever grateful. Thank you, Bill!

October 7, 2009 9:16 PM
Murray Decock said:

Bill taught me to play the mridangam, vina and shakuhachi as an undergrad, and later conducted Mark Williams and me in a performance of Mozart's double piano concerto in Eflat. His influence is boundless.

October 6, 2009 7:01 PM
Barri Shorey 03 said:

An unbelievable teacher whose influence I still feel today. Will miss him dearly!

October 6, 2009 4:23 PM
Philippe Aba '97 said:

A great educator. He will be missed.


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