Jon W. Finson
Jon W. Finson is an American musicologist and author.
Education and Academic Career
Finson grew up on the North Shore of the Chicago suburbs. He attended New Trier High School West, electing in his junior year an advanced curriculum using Great Books of the Western World developed at University of Chicago by Robert Maynard Hutchins and Mortimer Adler. He evinced a keen interest in orchestral music as well, studying contrabass with Harold Siegel at New Trier and with Daniel Swaim at the short-lived Reston Summer Music Center in 1967. Finson subsequently enrolled at the University Colorado, Boulder, College of Music, where he took a Bachelor of Music degree with a major in musicology, graduating with honors in 1973. While at Colorado, he furthered his study of conducting with Abraham Chavez, serving as assistant conductor and principal bassist of the CU Symphony. He selected a minor in voice with Barbara Sable, who inspired in him a passion for Schumann's and Mahler's lieder, as well as for American popular song of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In 2016 Finson received a Distinguished Alumni Award from the CU College of Music.Finson continued his study of musicology at the University of Wisconsin—Madison with Lawrence Gushee, who served as his advisor for a master's thesis on "The Performance Practice of Four String Quartets Active in the
First Twenty-five Years of the Twentieth Century as Documented on Direct-cut Macrogroove Discs". At Wisconsin he minored in linguistics and also studied early music and viola da gamba with visiting professor David Fallows. He played contrabass professionally for the Madison Symphony Orchestra during the 1973–74 season.
Finson wrote his doctoral dissertation, "Robert Schumann: The Creation of the Symphonic Works," at the University of Chicago under the supervision of Philip Gossett, with the support of a fellowship from the Martha Baird Rockefeller Fund for Music. Subvened by the Fund for a year abroad, Finson examined Schumann autographs in Vienna at the Archive of the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde, at the Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris, and at the Berlin State Library. During his Berlin residence, he attended lectures by Carl Dahlhaus on theories of musical form. Finson's work on the philology of nineteenth-century music, in addition to his interest in early music and viola da gamba, garnered him a professorship with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he taught musicology and American Studies from 1978 to 2013. He directed the UNC Collegium Musicum instrumental ensemble and choir from 1978 to 1988.
Scholarly Writing
Finson wrote his first article at UW Madison for The Galpin Society Journal on "The Violone in Bach's Brandenburg Concerti". His second article, "Music and Medium: Two Versions of Manilow's 'Could It Be Magic'," exploring the phenomenon of time limits in the radio broadcast of popular songs, appeared in The Musical Quarterly. He contributed many subsequent articles on the symphonic works of Robert Schumann to The Musical Quarterly, The Journal of Musicology, and The Journal of the American Musicological Society, also authoring a number of book chapters for scholarly collections. Other articles addressed the performing practice of late nineteenth-century music, with particular reference to Brahms, in The Musical Quarterly and the politico-cultural implications of Gustav Mahler's Wunderhorn lieder in The Journal of Musicology.
Two of his nine books published to date figure prominently in research on Robert Schumann:Robert Schumann and the Study of Orchestral Composition: The Genesis of the First Symphony; Op. 38 . Clarendon Press, Oxford (1989
Fiction
In retirement, Finson has published five novels on LGBTQ+ subjects, two of more general interest:- A Time of Confidences: Novel of Summer, Kindle Publishing, Seattle.
- A Chosen Landscape: Adventures in the Gay Academy, Kindle Publishing, Seattle.
- Death on the Drive, Kindle Publishing, Seattle.
- Mortality Watch, Kindle Publishing, Seattle.
- In Death's Shade, Kindle Publishing, Seattle.