There’s more to Jeffrey Hansen ’18 than the fact that he’s never seen without his iconic name tag. In fact, when asked about the reasons behind the name tag, he responds, “You know, a lot of people ask me this question, and I always wonder why people don’t ask me other questions, like, ‘Why do you always wear blue polos to class?’”
What people might not know about Hansen is that he is “the sole remaining undergraduate music composition major,” with minors in linguistics and philosophy, and that he is formally “the philosopher-king of the Gadfly Society, Houghton’s Philosophy Club, and also the president of the instrumental council of the Houghton Symphony Orchestra.”
His main “duty” as the president of the Gadfly society is, as he described, “to be infuriatingly annoying.” Although, Hansen admits that he seems “to be doing poorly at that job in general, seeing that I haven’t been sentenced to death by the Athenian Parliament, or even kicked out of Rothenbuhler by Residence Life.” In this position, he gets “to decide the least convenient time of the week to have meetings and choose topics which I hope will get people to vehemently disagree with each other in a manner which is conducive enough for civil discussion, but meaningful enough that you stay up at night wondering if that person was being serious or just playing devil’s advocate.”
As a man with many musical talents, including being an organ and horn player as well as a choir member, Hansen gets to participate in “chapel music and other campus worship events fairly frequently.” As president of the Houghton Symphony Orchestra (HSO), Hansen takes on “a somewhat different role” than his presidential role in the Gadfly Society, due to the fact that the orchestra “is actually formally a class, which has graduate students and multiple professors, so a lot of what would normally be associated with a typical president of a club is not formally ascribed to the president of the orchestra.” Hansen has led devotionals, given interviews for the STAR, and assumes that he “would be involved with the planning of a reception if our concerts needed such things.” The HSO is currently working on music for upcoming chapels and planning for various concerts.
Hansen is also involved in “slightly less formal roles” which include his participation “in numerous musical ensembles for the duration of my tenure, including the Houghton Wind Ensemble, the Houghton Symphony Orchestra, Men’s Choir, Gospel Choir, and College Choir. In College Choir, for example, I have been given the mighty power of having my own daily entertainment segment on the Tour Bus called ‘Curious Quips With Jeff,’ a power I have used solely for nefarious self-serving ends.”
“My time at Houghton has been very interesting,” Hansen explained. He came to Houghton with the intention of studying Physics and Music Composition, maybe with “a little study of linguistics on the side. I certainly was not expecting to be applying to linguistics school.” As a freshman, Hansen said that he “was not initially accepted into first year honors (for more than good reasons; could you imagine a poor human doing Physics, Music, and East Meets West all at the same time?).” Hansen participated in the Highlander Program during his first year, then joined the Gadfly Society, which led him to his philosophy minor. Although he didn’t plan to join choir, he explained how “Men’s Choir ‘mysteriously’ showed up last second on my transcript, and that turned out to be smashingly successful.” Hansen was in the first cohort of Scholastica Honors “because I had done well my first year and adopted more realistic educational aspirations (dropping down solely to a music composition major, freeing up a lot of free time) and I got hit like the brick by the plight of those without their own cultural access to Christianity, despite formal inclusion in the Church, and that messed my perspective on a lot of things up.”
The skills Hansen has acquired at Houghton have helped him prosper in his musical endeavors, including an experience with the Youth Orchestra of the Southern Finger Lakes, his attendance at various music festivals, and his employment as an accompanist for the Presbyterian Church of Wellsville.
After graduation, Hansen hopes to attend the Graduate Institute of Applied Linguistics in Dallas, Texas “to take part in their Master in World Arts Program.” He wants to study music at a linguistics school because of his interests in “the fields of Ethnomusicology, and Ethnodoxology, especially in regards to how the Christian faith might be manifested within particular cultural contexts. Perhaps the most important work done in this field is done in the field of Bible Translation, but the process of Bible Translation involves an entire community. Not only are literacy and language development essential for the effectiveness of a translation,” he added, “it is essential that cultural objects such as music and art likewise become adapted culturally. I am really interested in the Bible Translation movement and all of the disciplines that can serve and function in aid of Bible Translation, particularly in the discipline of music.”
In a few words of advice to underclassmen, Hansen would like to “tell all substatuspeople to not sacrifice their roommates to Marduk as burnt offerings. There is probably at least one ethical problem with such an action, maybe even two.” In addition to that, Hansen believes in the importance of having “a good sense of humor in regards to oneself.” This, he would argue, “helps you realize your own faults and sins, and to confess them to others. It also leaves you open to relationships with others you might not necessarily suspect or plan. In other words, be confident in oneself to be open to dialogue with ideas which will change you and your perception of other ideas. Acknowledging ones’ vices and failures very frequently paves the way for its corresponding virtues and successes.”