
Janelle McCoy, the controversial executive director of the Oregon Bach Festival at the University of Oregon, is to be laid off and her job eliminated at the end of this summer’s fest, it was announced Friday afternoon.
The announcement, emailed to UO faculty and signed by Sabrina Madison-Cannon, the dean of the School of Music and Dance, says McCoy’s job, with its $170,000 annual salary, is to be cut in order for OBF to meet a $250,000 budget cut imposed by the university.
In 2017 McCoy led the move to fire OBF Artistic Director Matthew Halls, a popular and charismatic British musician and scholar who had been brought in to succeed founding Artistic Director Helmuth Rilling. Halls’ dismissal drew unflattering news coverage around the world for the UO.
The university has never clearly explained the basis for Halls’ firing, but a story in Eugene Weekly made it clear that he and McCoy did not get along in the months leading up to his dismissal. Because Halls was hired as an independent contractor to lead OBF he had little or no recourse when he was let go.
Madison-Cannon is away from her office and unavailable for comment, according to her email autoresponse. We’ve also reached out to McCoy and will update this post with any comment.
This year’s festival opens for a three-week run June 28 and runs through July 13.
Here is the dean’s email:
Sabrina Madison-Cannon
A Note From the Publisher

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