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==Professional Work==
==Professional Work==
Upon completion of his doctorate, Armstrong worked for 10 years at [[Calvin College]] and conducted the Calvin Choir, the Campus Choir, the Grand Rapids Symphony Chorus and the Alumni Choir. He also conducted the St. Cecelia Youth Chorale from 1981 until his departure for St. Olaf in 1990.
Upon completion of his doctorate, Armstrong worked for 10 years at [[Calvin College]] and conducted the Calvin Choir, the Campus Choir, the Grand Rapids Symphony Chorus and the Alumni Choir. He also conducted the St. Cecilia Youth Chorale from 1981 until his departure for St. Olaf in 1990.


In 1990, Armstrong assumed the duties of Director of Choral Activities at St. Olaf College in [[Northfield, Minnesota|Northfield]], [[Minnesota]]. He is director of the [[St. Olaf Choir]] and Collegiate Chorale and also teaches advanced choral conducting and vocal pedagogy classes that focus on child and adolescent voice. He serves as the artistic director of the [[St. Olaf Christmas Festival]].
In 1990, Armstrong assumed the duties of Director of Choral Activities at St. Olaf College in [[Northfield, Minnesota|Northfield]], [[Minnesota]]. He is director of the [[St. Olaf Choir]] and Collegiate Chorale and also teaches advanced choral conducting and vocal pedagogy classes that focus on child and adolescent voice. He serves as the artistic director of the [[St. Olaf Christmas Festival]].

Revision as of 23:15, 17 January 2011

Dr. Anton Armstrong is the conductor of the St. Olaf Choir as well as the Harry R. and Thora H. Tosdal Professor of Music at St. Olaf College of Northfield, Minnesota in the USA. Armstrong became only the fourth director of the St. Olaf Choir in 1990, continuing the tradition begun by the choir's founder F. Melius Christiansen in 1911, sustained and developed by his son, Olaf C. Christiansen, and strengthened and enhanced by Kenneth Jennings. Armstrong also teaches conducting in the Sacred Music department at Luther Seminary. He also conducts some pieces in "Northfield Youth Choirs".

Early years

Anton’s parents migrated to Long Island, New York from the Caribbean. Armstrong grew up in Long Island where he and his mother were active singers in a local church choir. Armstrong joined the American Boychoir, based in Princeton, New Jersey. According to Armstrong, “That experience lit my fire for choral singing.”

Anton Armstrong was first made aware of the St. Olaf Choir when his pastor took him to a performance at Avery Fisher Hall despite the fact that Armstrong had tickets to see the Moody Blues at Madison Square Garden. His mother made the decision for him to attend the St. Olaf Choir concert.

Anton is the youngest of three brothers. Oldest brother Garry was (until 2001) a reporter for WHDH-TV, Channel 7 in Boston, MA, and next older brother William (Billy) is a printing professional on Long Island, New York.

Education

Armstrong earned his bachelor's degree at St. Olaf College. He was a member of the St. Olaf Choir from 1976–1978, under the leadership of Kenneth Jennings. Jennings became a mentor to Armstrong and 12 years after graduating from St. Olaf, Armstrong replaced Jennings as director of the St. Olaf Choir.

After graduating from St. Olaf, Armstrong attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where he earned a Masters of Music degree and Michigan State University where he completed a Doctorate of Musical Arts. His doctoral thesis was Celebrating 75 Years of Musical Excellence: the Evolution of the St. Olaf Choir.

Professional Work

Upon completion of his doctorate, Armstrong worked for 10 years at Calvin College and conducted the Calvin Choir, the Campus Choir, the Grand Rapids Symphony Chorus and the Alumni Choir. He also conducted the St. Cecilia Youth Chorale from 1981 until his departure for St. Olaf in 1990.

In 1990, Armstrong assumed the duties of Director of Choral Activities at St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota. He is director of the St. Olaf Choir and Collegiate Chorale and also teaches advanced choral conducting and vocal pedagogy classes that focus on child and adolescent voice. He serves as the artistic director of the St. Olaf Christmas Festival.

Armstrong is currently the summer music director of the Youth Choral Academy of the Oregon Bach Festival. The 10-day choral festival is based in Eugene, Oregon. He is an editor for Earthsongs Publications and co-editor of Augsburg Fortress Publishers. With Augsburg Fortress he is editing the revised St. Olaf Choral Series, which contains literature that was composed by F. Melius Christiansen and Kenneth Jennings, among others.

Past achievements include co-conductor of the World Youth Choir organized by the International Federation of Choral Music. He has been part of the summer faculty for the American Boychoir for the more than 20 years.

Accomplishments

Under Armstrong's direction, the St. Olaf Choir has toured extensively both domestically and abroad. International tours have taken the choir to Australia, New Zealand, Denmark, Austria, France, Germany, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Switzerland, England, and most recently Norway in 2005. In May 2005, the choir performed at the National Day of Prayer in front of President & Mrs. Bush in the White House. The choir frequently performs at conventions, including past performances at the national American Choral Directors Association convention in Chicago in 1999 and Los Angeles in 2005, and the Sixth World Symposium on Choral Music in Minneapolis. The annual St. Olaf Christmas Festival has become a popular PBS broadcast, and the choir has performed on Garrison Keillor’s A Prairie Home Companion.

During Dr. Armstrong’s tenure as director of the St. Olaf Choir, the choir has recorded 11 CDs. As of 2006, the most recent recording by the choir under the St. Olaf record label is A St. Olaf Christmas in Norway. The choir released its first international recording in 2003, completed by Linn Records of London, England.

Armstrong was awarded Baylor University's Robert Foster Cherry Award for Great Teaching in 2006.

Armstrong was the director of the New Jersey 2004 All-State Choir and 2008 National Youth Choir, the clinician of the TMEA 2007 Texas All-State Choir and Regional ACDA clinician, and the director of the 2008 Festival of Gold Honor Choir in Chicago, IL. He conducted the Florida All-State Concert Choir of 2009 in Tampa. He is scheduled as the conductor of the 2009 Georgia Music Educators Association Senior Mixed All State Choir.

References

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