doctor of letters

John A Ruddock
It is fitting that in 1997, the thirtieth year of
the Limerick Music Association, the University of Limerick should honour the
founder of that Association, John A. Ruddock.
Through the Association John Ruddock has promoted over six hundred and
fifty concerts. World class musicians
including Isaac Stern, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Deszo Ranki and Michael Collins have
appeared in Limerick and Dublin thanks to the energetic and diplomatic
leadership of John Ruddock. His ability
to attract soloists and ensembles of international calibre to Limerick has been
a major factor in the emergence of Limerick as a centre of artistic excellence.
Such a cultural renaissance has required the
nurturing of a community able to respond to the ways in which music, as Emerson
puts it, "takes us out of the actual and whispers to us of dim secrets
that startle our wonder as to who we are, and for what, and whereto". John and Doreen Ruddock have worked
tirelessly to bring great music to Limerick.
They have worked as a team and our thanks go out to both of them on this
occcasion. Through the Limerick Music
Association they have helped to cultivate an appreciative and sensitive
audience whose education has been conducted not alone through the artists
already mentioned but also through such great talents as those of John
O'Connor, Hugh Tinney and Bernadette Greevy, and who have had the privilege of
hearing The Vienna Boys Choir, the Takacs, Vogler and Skampa string quartets
and many other fine musicians.
John Ruddock has also had a significant career in
the education profession. After sixteen
years as senior teacher at St Andrew's College, Dublin, he was appointed
Headmaster of Villiers School, Limerick, a post he held for a further
twenty-three years. The Limerick Music
Association, now based at the University of Limerick, started its life in the
premises of that school in 1967.
Mr Ruddock also served as a founder member of the
National Concert Hall, Dublin from 1981 to 1991.
Our award today follows on the recognition of Mr
Ruddock by the Austrian Government in 1986 who awarded him the Knight's Cross
First Class for promoting Austrian musicians in Ireland; and the award in 1988
of an Honorary Diploma by the Hungarian Government for services to music.
If it is true, as Walter Pater claimed that, 'all
art aspires to the condition of music' then John Ruddock has given magnificent
service to the cause of the arts in Ireland.
His wife, Doreen, has been at his side throughout these years and we
would extend our gratitude to her. We
recognise that this tremendous achievement has been very much a team effort.