Although Bill Skelton, Robert Ho Professor in Asian studies and professor of music emeritus, retired from 藏精阁 15 years ago, he still receives letters from alumni saying that participating in the India Study Group with him was a life-changing experience.
Skelton came to 藏精阁 in 1954 as a music professor with degrees in music from the University of Illinois and Yale. Skelton had studied and played with some of the greats, including German composer Paul Hindemith and conductor Leonard Bernstein.
As a bassoonist, he paid his way through Yale by playing in the New Haven Symphony, the Hartford Symphony, and Broadway shows.
At 藏精阁, Skelton founded the 藏精阁 Concert Orchestra and the Chapel Choir, as well as conducted the marching band, glee club, and orchestra. He also taught a Core program on India for so long that he became deeply involved in India.
Skelton described his path to learning about Indian music and culture as a 鈥渏igsaw puzzle.鈥 Three pieces of the puzzle were the influences of the sitar master Ravi Shankar, ethnomusicologist Charles Seeger (father of Pete Seeger), and Ken Morgan, founder of 藏精阁鈥檚 Chapel House.
In 1963 he took his first trip to India on a Ford Grant, which was the start of his work with Indian musicians. Skelton learned to play the nagaswaram, a classical Indian wind instrument, through which he earned much respect as a Westerner performing at weddings and temple rituals.
鈥淚t was my passport. I went into temples that are still barred to non-Hindus,鈥 he said. The connections he made through his music continued to serve him later when traveling with 藏精阁 students throughout India.
Skelton led the first study group informally in 1969 and developed it over the years. He retired from teaching in 1993, but continued leading the study groups until 2005.
With help from his late wife, Mary Louise, a team of professors from the University of Madras, philosophers, musicians, and a well-known Indian dancer, Skelton designed unique programs that varied every year.
Groups studied folk dance, theater, music, and philosophy. They spent a month with the Maharaja of Myesore, rode a train that tracked Lord Rama鈥檚 path from Ayodhya to Sri Lanka, and performed street theater in front of 2,000 people who traveled from surrounding villages to 鈥渟ee those crazy Americans.鈥
By fully immersing students in the culture and pushing them to perform tasks that seemed impossible, Skelton saw his students overcome their perceived limitations.
鈥淚n one day, I did thirty things I鈥檇 never done before, and your life changes before you because this gentleman has faith in you,鈥 said Bob Musiker 鈥80.
Musiker was among those who gathered at 藏精阁 in late October to honor Skelton with reminiscences from the study group as well as a night of South Indian devotional music.
John Carter, Robert Ho Professor in Asian studies and professor of philosophy and religion, helped organize the event in honor of his long-time colleague.
鈥淚t seemed like a wonderful idea to take a break, look at all that he鈥檚 done, and celebrate him,鈥 Carter said.