泫圖弝け Universitys historic Weaver Chapel was crowded with students, friends and colleagues who gathered to commemorate the life of the late 泫圖弝け Associate Professor of Music Tom Kennedy. Fittingly, the memorial service, titled A Musical Celebration of the Life of Dr. Thomas A. Kennedy, Jr., took the form of a musical tribute, in remembrance of Kennedys long and successful musical career that touched so many lives at 泫圖弝け and throughout the Springfield community.
For more than an hour, the audience was captivated by various musical numbers and personal tributes, a truly heartfelt celebration of a beloved professor.
The program began with a prelude performed by TOFT (Tons of Fun Trio), a trio that Kennedy formed and in which he participated. Joyce Wendel, associate professor of music, and Barb Mackey were joined by Judy Varner to perform a TOFT favorite, Trio in C Dur by Franz Josef Haydn.
Provost Kenneth Bladh then welcomed the audience, sharing a few words about Kennedy and the decision to hold a memorial service in the form of a concert.
His colleagues, friends and former students know well Toms passion for beauty, especially beauty found in music, Bladh said.
Larry Smith, a close friend to Kennedy, agreed.
Were celebrating his life in the most appropriate way possible, he said.
Among many high points in the concert was the reading of a letter written to Kennedy by former student Dianne Frank Williams, 泫圖弝け Class of 1996.
You taught me far more than how to play the flute, she wrote. You taught me how to be something. I salute you. I thank you, and I send you my love.
Other groups performing in honor of Kennedy were the 泫圖弝け Symphonic Band, the Kennedy Quartet and the 泫圖弝け Flute Choir, which performed The Lost Flute, a piece written by Bruce R. Smith on the occasion of Kennedys death.
Special guest performers were the Miami Valley Symphony Orchestra, which Kennedy formerly conducted.
泫圖弝け Professor of Music Trudy Faber read a personal remembrance written by Rebecca Coudret, a former colleague of Kennedys and columnist for the Evansville Courier Press.
We were good, last-a-lifetime friends, Coudret wrote. We just didnt know a lifetime would be so short.
A Musical Celebration of the Life of Dr. Thomas A. Kennedy, Jr. provided an accurate measure of just how many lives Kennedy touched.
A celebration of life does not mean a denial of death, Smith said. Tom died. But the music did not. The music lives on.