Don Michael Randel
President, University of Chicago
Randel is a music scholar of international reputation and
the president of the University of Chicago.
Raised in Panama, where his father operated a small business,
Randel attended Princeton University, where he received his bachelor’s, M.F.A.,
and Ph.D. degrees in music.
He joined the Cornell University faculty in the department
of music in 1968. In his many years at Cornell, he served as music department
chair, vice-provost, associate dean, and dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences. In 1995 he was named provost of the university. He became president
of the University of Chicago in July 2000.
His scholarly specialty is the music of the Middle Ages and
Renaissance in Spain and France, but his interests incorporate music as
diverse as Latin pop and jazz.
Under Randel’s editorship, the New Harvard Dictionary of
Music was published in 1986, and he completed the companion Harvard Biographical
Dictionary of Music in 1996. Randel also edited the Harvard Concise Dictionary of
Music and Musicians, which was published in 1999.
Among the cornerstones of Randel's first years at Chicago have
been the Chicago Initiative, an ambitious, two-billion-dollar fund-raising effort
aimed at expanding the university and its activities dramatically; and a partnership
with the Chicago Public Schools to provide scholarships to the university for local
public-school students.
Photo credit: Peter Kiar/University of Chicago News Office
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