David Fenwick Wilson | |
Birth Date: | 31 August 1929 |
Birth Place: | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Notable Works: | Music of the Middle Ages |
Occupation: | Organist |
David Fenwick Wilson (born August 31, 1929) is an American-born Canadian music scholar, educator, and organist whose academic contributions include a treatise on music of the Middle Ages.
Wilson was born on August 31, 1929, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He received his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Carnegie Mellon University, his Master of Music from Eastman School of Music of the University of Rochester in New York, and his Doctor of Philosophy from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio.
Wilson moved to Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 1957. In 1961, he became the first full-time professor of music at Dalhousie University. Wilson's work led to the formation of the Department of Music, and he served as the Founding Chairman from 1968 to 1971. During his academic tenure, Wilson directed the Dalhousie Chorale and also established an early music ensemble, which eventually grew into Musica Antiqua, an umbrella group of vocal and instrumental groups, involving students and interested members of the wider community, with a repertoire that included Baroque opera.[1]
In 1978, Wilson co-founded the Early Music Society of Nova Scotia (EMSNS) with a view to providing focus, disseminating information, promoting concerts of early music and the playing of period instruments. By 1980, Wilson published the EMSNS newsletters, which within three years grew into "Consort", an illustrated magazine of some 20 pages, featuring both music news and musicological articles. Consort continued to appear at least three times a year until Wilson retired.[2]
Wilson's other contributions to musical life include Music Director of the Halifax Baroque Ensemble, member of the Halifax Symphony Orchestra (1957–61), President of Musique Royale, President of the Royal Canadian College of Organists (RCCO Halifax Branch), Lecturer on French Organ Music at the Schola Cantorum in Paris (1999), and Organist/Choir Director at Saint James Anglican Church, Armdale (1992-2018).
Wilson's 1990 book on medieval music represents an approach that focuses on the compositional process. Wilson's preface asserts "the belief that the historical study of music begins with the music itself". The combined publication comes in three parts: the text, Style and Structure,[3] which includes 124 musical examples; An Anthology for Performance and Study,[4] with 80 compositions; and two 90-minute cassettes of music[5] recorded by the Hilliard Ensemble and specifically produced for the set.[6] [7] Wilson also contributed a chapter on "English notation of the 13th and 14th centuries" in a 2007 compendium.[8]