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Photo
by Chris Hammond
On hand for the announcement of Petro-Canada’s
$1.2 million donation to support a new concert and
rehearsal hall at Memorial School of Music were: (L-R)
Dr. Axel Meisen, Memorial president; Gordon Carrick,
vice-president, East Coast Petro-Canada; Dr. Tom Gordon,
director of the School of Music; John Ottenheimer,
minister of education and minister of youth services
and post-secondary education, on his first official
visit to the university since his recent appointment;
Jane Crosbie and Dr. John Crosbie, chancellor of Memorial.
The hand-crafted music stand was presented to Petro-Canada
as a symbol of the university’s appreciation. |
One of the province's major players in the oil and gas sector
has made a significant contribution to the music and culture
of Newfoundland and Labrador. Petro-Canada, operator of
the Terra Nova offshore oil development and participant
in the White Rose project, has provided $1.2 million to
Memorial University so that a new music rehearsal and performance
hall can be added to the existing M.O. Morgan Music Building
on the university's St. John's campus.
Gordon Carrick, vice-president, East Coast Petro-Canada,
and Dr. Axel Meisen, president and vice-chancellor of Memorial
University, made the announcement Nov. 19 at a ceremony
held at the D. F. Cook Recital Hall at the university’s
music school. The $1.2 million donation — one of Petro-Canada's
largest — will fund the construction of the new facility,
to be known as the Petro-Canada Hall, and which is set to
open by early 2005.
“Memorial University’s School of Music is an
outstanding resource for the entire community, and Petro-Canada
is very pleased to invest in a critical addition to the
music education infrastructure available through Memorial,”
Mr. Carrick told the large gathering of university and government
officials, faculty, staff, students and members of the music
community. “The opportunity to invest in an educational
and cultural resource that continues to broaden the reach
of the university — to students, musicians and community-based
musical groups — is especially satisfying.”
Mr. Carrick also noted that the core of the company’s
approach to community investment is to support the development
of Canadian talent, innovation and expertise through education.
“This partnership with Memorial University's School
of Music is a natural fit with Petro-Canada's Community
Investment Program and further extends our support to education
and the arts in the community in this province,” said
Mr. Carrick.
“One way to meet the growing needs of the university
and the community is through creative collaboration with
the private sector,” Dr. Meisen said in thanking Petro-Canda
for its donation. “By funding the new rehearsal and
performance facility, Petro-Canada has demonstrated its
commitment to the cultural and community development of
Newfoundland and Labrador and to recognizing the important
role of Memorial in this development. It’s also excellent
to see Petro-Canada supporting music, an area not directly
related to its industrial activities, and to see the Canada-Newfoundland
Offshore Board endorsing Petro-Canada's commitment.”
John Ottenheimer, minister of education and minister of
youth services and post-secondary education, conveyed his
thanks to Petro-Canada and noted the far-reaching effect
this kind of support can have. “On behalf of the Government
of Newfoundland and Labrador, I thank Petro-Canada for its
generous support for this important expansion to the School
of Music,” he said. “This donation recognizes
that education and culture are integral to the functioning
and well-being of our society. It is an investment in the
creativity of our people — it really is ‘music
to our ears’.”
“The musicians of Newfoundland and Labrador are among
the greatest natural resources that this province has been
blessed with,” said Dr. Tom Gordon, director of the
School of Music. “Petro-Canada's foresight to invest
in the School of Music — and the community it serves
— will stimulate further growth of the cultural sector
and permit Memorial and the province to claim a leading
position in Canada as a dynamic musical community.”
Memorial’s School of Music has enjoyed much success
in recent years and that same success is putting pressure
on its infrastructure. The rehearsal and recording space
at the school is currently booked year round, and the demand
from students and community groups to access facilities
in the Music Building continues to grow.
The new 195 sq.m. (2,100 sq. ft) rehearsal and performance
facility will adjoin the M.O. Morgan Music Building near
the D. F. Cook Recital Hall, on the east side of the building.
With a performance area of approximately 56 sq.m. (600 sq.
ft.), an audience capacity of 120 people and a rehearsal
capacity of 150, the new Petro-Canada Hall will position
the School of Music to expand its performance and conference
capabilities to meet the needs of the community. It will
also include a small suite of offices that will be available
for university and community music organizations.
The Petro-Canada Hall will also enable the School of Music
to increase the range of services it can offer to the music
community, both within the St. John's metropolitan area
and through the extended reach of electronic communication.
Equipped for both recording and Web-casting, the facility
will link the School of Music to global communities for
real-time distance instruction and multi-site rehearsal.