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Charles G. "Skip" Snead
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Tuscaloosa, Ala. – Charles G. “Skip” Snead,
director of the School of Music and
professor of horn in The University of Alabama’s College
of Arts and Sciences, has been selected as this year’s recipient
of the Burnum Distinguished Faculty Award.
Snead was presented with the award during a ceremony on March
16 in the Recital Hall of the Moody Music Building. Dr. Ronald
Rogers, assistant vice president for academic affairs and dean
of the graduate school, opened the evening with remarks, and UA
President Robert E. Witt presented the award. Snead provided a
musical performance, and the evening concluded with a reception.
The Burnum Award is one of the highest honors the Capstone bestows
on its faculty. It is presented annually to a professor who is
judged by a faculty selection committee to have demonstrated superior
scholarly or artistic achievements and profound dedication to the
art of teaching.
Snead has served as professor of horn since 1988 in the UA School
of Music. He was appointed interim director on April 2004 and named
director of the School of Music in January 2005.
“The College of Arts and Sciences is blessed with a top-notch
faculty,” said Dr. Robert Olin, dean of the College of Arts
and Sciences. “The prominence of our faculty members is our
greatest strength. Skip Snead exemplifies this not only in his
performance and scholarship but also his superior administrative
skills. He will represent the prestigious Burnum Award well.”
“Professor Snead is one of the finest horn professors and
performers in the world,” said Dr. Ronald Rogers, assistant
vice president for academic affairs and dean of the graduate school,
who coordinates the nominations. “He not only teaches a large
number of students, but he has guided them to winning many national
and international awards. He personifies the ideals of the Burnum
Award: superior artistic achievements and a profound dedication
to the art of teaching.”
Chief among Snead’s accomplishments as performer is his
role as a founding member of the TransAtlantic Horn Quartet. Presently
this is the preeminent group of its kind in the world. The quartet
has performed at Tanglewood in Massachusetts and Wigmore Hall in
London. These venues represent the highest level of performance
in the world.
He also serves as principal horn with the Tuscaloosa Symphony
Orchestra and Macon Symphony of Macon, Georgia.
In addition to his work as a performer, he is internationally
recognized as a teacher and clinician. His teaching residencies
include at the Royal Academy of Music and The Royal College of
Music both in London, The Royal Welsh College in Cardiff Wales,
The Royal Northern College in Manchester England, The Gheorge Dima
Academy in Cluj-Napoca, Romania and The Tanglewood Music Festival
in Lennox, Mass.
He has given master classes and lectures throughout the Unites
States, including a recent residency as a Housewright Eminent Scholar
Endowed Chair at Florida State University. Snead also serves on
the executive board of the American Horn Competition and the Peer
Review Board of the Center for International Exchange, Fulbright
Senior Specialists Program.
“I am so very pleased and honored to have been selected
as the recipient of this year's Burnum Award,” said Snead. “To
be included in the company of the previous Burnum winners is a
distinction of which I will try to prove worthy. I am fortunate
to have the opportunity to work among outstanding colleagues at
UA who have supported and motivated me to achieve many of the goals
in my career.”
Snead continued, “In addition, this award would not have
come without the many hours of hard work and multiple impressive
achievements by a long list of talented students. I am grateful
to all of these people for their roles in making this possible.
I am very proud to be able to take my place among the Burnum Award
winners and look forward to serving the University for many years
to come.”
This is the 25th year the award had been given. The annual award
was established by Dr. and Mrs. John F. Burnum of Tuscaloosa to
recognize and promote excellence in research, scholarship and teaching.
Burnum Award honoree names are permanently displayed on a bronze
plaque in the lobby of UA’s Rose Administration Building.
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