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| Berklee College of Music Inaugurates its 3rd President, Roger H. Brown Boston, MA- On Friday, December 3, Berklee College of Music inaugurated its third president, Roger H. Brown, who revealed an ambitious set of goals for the Berklee of 2015. Before a packed Hynes Convention Center auditorium full of higher education, business, and music industry leaders, as well as the Berklee community, Brown vowed to build more state-of-the-art facilities, create access to music education for underprivileged students, and produce future leaders in the global music community to help re-imagine and rebuild the industry. At the ceremony, vocal icon Chaka Khan and master drummer Dennis Chambers received honorary doctor of music degrees. Brown was “introduced” to those assembled by a variety of leaders, including performer James Taylor, educator and author Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot, and Securities and Exchange Commission Chair William Donaldson, who was Brown’s mentor while Brown was a graduate student at Yale University. James Taylor, in his role as introducer, said, “Berklee's choice of Roger H. Brown, and Brown's choice of Berklee, is a creative stroke of genius. Here is a man who walks tall in two different worlds. Proven over and again in the hard edged world of business, he has had a constant calling to be of service to humanity. He has followed his heart to Kenya, Sudan, and Cambodia, and now to our great benefit, he comes home to our beloved Berklee. The right man, in the right place, at the right time. And may I say,” Taylor continued, to raucous laughter from the audience, “at the very least, the search committee have (also) avoided letting a professional musician run things here.” Donaldson, harking back to his days running the Yale MBA program, said, “Roger represents my dream of what could happen to those students as they moved out into in the real world, as well as some of the words I’ve been using: leadership, integrity, entrepreneurial zest, intelligence, willingness to question, social responsibility. That’s Roger Brown.” In his inaugural address Brown noted the college’s long tradition of attracting students from around the world, a group that has included jazz pianist Toshiko Akiyoshi, Grammy-winning producer Arif Mardin, Latin music superstar Juan Luis Guerra, among many others, Brown emphasized Berklee’s role on a global level: “We must become the best we can be not only because the music we teach and create is such a powerful force in changing the world … but because the world needs music and its ability to connect across culture and ethnicity more today than perhaps ever in our lifetimes.” Brown also quoted Berklee Professor Livingston Taylor, saying, “when a student goes to Harvard, it’s the result of a concerted, 18-year effort on the part of the entire extended family to get that young person admitted. When a student comes to Berklee, it is often despite a concerted effort to talk her/him out it!” Completing the thought, Brown explained that fully 70% of the college’s entering class had applied only to Berklee, reflecting its singular position in higher education. Pledging to continue the college's history of innovation, he said, “Our students count on us to work hard, stay strong, and recommit to the revolutionary ideas that got us to the dance in the first place, and to keep dancing to the music, even when others cannot hear it.” Roger Brown assumed the Berklee presidency on June 1, 2004, succeeding Lee Eliot Berk. He is the first non-member of the Berk family in the college’s 60-year history to take the helm at Berklee. Brown cofounded Bright Horizons Family Solutions in 1986 with his wife, Linda Mason, and served as its chief executive officer until January 2002. write your comments about the article :: © 2004 Jazz News :: home page |