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Robert
P. Fountain was a world-renowned choral conductor and a beloved
teacher of singing. Born in Niagara Falls, N.Y., on December 26,
1917, he was the only child of Robert H. Fountain (1878-1937),
a singing teacher and Choral Director, and Bessie M. Pratt Fountain
(1870-?), an organist and later Choir Director at the Delaware
Avenue Baptist Church (Buffalo, NY). He began singing lessons at
age eight. By age sixteen, he was recognized as a gifted young
baritone by the local music reviewers. After gaining attention
for winning a high school singing competition, he said that he
enjoyed music but did not believe that it would become his career.
Educated in the public schools of Buffalo, N.Y., he performed
as a soloist in local and regional productions. During this time
he
also served as a substitute conductor for his father with the Prospect
Avenue Baptist Church Choir in Buffalo. His father’s death
in 1937, led a young Bob to assume the leadership of the fifty-member
choir. He also commuted to the Eastman School of Music in Rochester,
N.Y. to continue his musical education where he was a “superior
student.” There he earned his Bachelor of Music in Voice degree
in 1941 and his Master of Music in Vocal Literature degree and Performer’s
Certificate in 1942.
After graduating from the Eastman School of Music he served on
the faculties of Mount Union College in Alliance, Ohio (1942-1946)
and
the Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio (1946-1948). Subsequently,
he joined the Oberlin Conservatory as an Assistant Professor of
Singing (1948-1954) where he would make his mark. Spanning 22 years,
he served
Oberlin College as Professor of Singing and Director of Choral
Organizations (1958-1965), Dean of the Conservatory (1965-1970)
and Professor of
Choral Conduction (1970-1971). During this time, Oberlin’s
choral program became one of the finest in the nation. The Oberlin
Choir made many tours across the nation and performed at various
venues such as New York City’s Town Hall and Philharmonic Hall,
as well as Boston’s Symphony Hall. In 1964, at the invitation
of the United States Department of State, the Oberlin College Choir
gave nearly 40 concerts in 55 days in the former Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics and Romania, in southeast Europe. Three days
after the Kent State University shootings in 1970, Dean Fountain
conducted 250 singers and 70 instrumentalists performing the Mozart
Requiem in Washington Cathedral to express dissent and concern in
what some have called one of Oberlin's finest hours (from the May
1970 Articles, Awards, Brooklyn, Yale scrapbook).
During his tenure at Oberlin College, Professor Fountain contributed
widely to the choral music field. In 1954-1955, during a sabbatical
leave to study at the Vienna Academy of Music and the Performing
Arts, he coached the Vienna State Opera. He taught summer courses
at the School of Sacred Music at the Union Theological Seminary
in New York City (c. 1950s). Professor Fountain also directed the
choir
of the First Congregational Church of Oberlin, the college’s
Chapel Choir and the 230-voice Musical Union. In 1970-1971, he held
a visiting Distinguished Professorship at Brooklyn College, Brooklyn,
New York. Later, he served on the choral panel for the National Endowment
of the Arts.
In 1971, he accepted the position of Director of Choral Activities
at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. (According to his son,
Robert H. Fountain, Wisconsin offered Professor Fountain both a
full time
position in choral conducting and the opportunity to work in a
graduate degree program). Under his direction, the University developed
graduate
degrees in choral conducting. Like the Oberlin College Choir, the
UW-Madison Choir toured throughout the Midwest and East Coast and
received a great many positive reviews. In 1973, they toured Venezuela
at that country’s invitation. During the 1973-1974 academic
year, Fountain directed the Battell Chapel Choir and the Collegium
Chorale as Visiting Professor of Conducting.
Throughout his career, Fountain received significant recognition
for his work in the field of music. In 1964, Mount Union College
awarded him an honorary Doctor of Music degree and it 1987, the
College of Wooster did the same. The Oberlin College Alumni Association
awarded
him the Alumni Medal for Distinguished Service to Oberlin College
in 1982. The University of Wisconsin awarded him the Distinguished
Teaching Award and the Chancellor’s Award in 1983 and the Board
of Regents named him a Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation Senior
Distinguished Professor. In March of 1996, he received the Weston
Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Choral Art from the North Central
Division of the American Choral Directories Association.
Professor Fountain’s contributions to the choral conducting
community crossed cultural boundaries in significant ways. His presentation
of the Ukrainian Bell Carol so inspired another conductor in the
audience, Irina Sablina (later conductor of the Schedrych Youth Choir
in Kiev), that she conducted the piece of music in the same manner.
Over the next thirty years, Professor Fountain’s interpretation
(of the Ukrainian Bell Carol) became the standard. A colleague, William
Weinert, described Fountain in his remarks at the Oberlin College
Tribute as a “concentrated, unstoppable force of nature” and “a
beam of pure musical energy at work.” He went on to say that
Fountain “was the ‘pull of infinity,’ pulling minds
and voices and spirits with him. After that force confronted us we
were never the same again.” Former students from both Oberlin
College and the University of Wisconsin-Madison in their notes echoed
this sentiment expressed by his colleague in 1996.
Mr. Fountain married Clara E. Cox (b. 1919) of Minerva, Ohio
in 1941. Together they had one son, Robert H. Fountain (b. 1943).
In 1994, Robert P. Fountain retired from the University of Wisconsin-Madison
and returned to Oberlin. He and his wife resided at the Kendal
at Oberlin retirement community. He died there in May of 1996.
His contributions
as a faculty member were so significant that both Oberlin College
and the University of Wisconsin-Madison held tribute concerts.
The Oberlin Tribute Concert (1996), led by award winning conductor
Robert
Shaw, resulted in the creation of an endowed scholarship fund in
Robert P. Fountain’s name.
Mrs. Clara Cox Fountain died on November 1, 2005, at Kendal in Oberlin, Ohio.
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