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Dr. Anton E. Armstrong honored with MSUAA Distinguished Alumni Award

Friday, July 31, 2009  
Posted by: Linda Conradi
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CONGRATULATIONS, Dr. ANTON E. ARMSTRONG! 
MSU Alumni Association Distinguished Alumni Recipient

College of Music Alumnus Dr. Anton E. Armstrong ’87 has been selected by the MSU Alumni Association Awards Committee to receive the Michigan State University Distinguished Alumni Award to be presented at the Grand Awards Ceremony on
October 15, 2009.

Nominated by Dr. David Rayl, Associate Dean for Graduate Studies and Research at Michigan State University, “Dr. Armstrong’s exceptional career as a choral conductor makes him an exceptional candidate for this award honor.  He has attained the highest levels of artistic achievement and professional respect and admiration among his peers.”
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About Dr. Anton E. Armstrong

Dr. Anton E. Armstrong is the Harry R. and Thora H. Tosdal Professor of Music at St. Olaf College and Conductor of the St. Olaf Choir, a position he assumed in 1990. He came to this position following ten years in Grand Rapids, Michigan where he served on the faculty of Calvin College and conducted the Campus Choir, the Calvin College Alumni Choir and the Grand Rapids Symphony Chorus.

A graduate of St. Olaf College, Anton Armstrong earned a Master of Music degree at the University of Illinois and the Doctor of Musical Arts degree from Michigan State University. He holds membership in several professional societies including the American Choral Directors Association, Choristers Guild, Chorus America, and the International Federation for Choral Music. He also serves as editor of a multicultural choral series for Earthsongs Publications and co-editor of the revised St. Olaf Choral Series for Augsburg Fortress Publishers. He is featured with André Thomas on the instructional video dealing with adolescent singers entitled Body, Mind, Spirit, Voice. He is a contributing writer to Volume I of Teaching Music through Performance in Choir and a contributor to Way Over in Beulah Lan’ by André Thomas.

Dr. Armstrong is widely recognized for his work in the area of youth and children’s choral music. He served for over twenty years on the summer faculty of the American Boychoir School, Princeton, New Jersey and held the position of Conductor of the St. Cecilia Youth Chorale, a 75 voice treble chorus based in Grand Rapids, from 1981-1990. He has conducted the Troubadours, 30-voice boys’ ensemble of the Northfield Youth Choirs since 1991. He currently serves as a member of the Board of Trustees of the American Boychoir School. In June 1998, he began his tenure as founding conductor of the Oregon Bach Festival Stangeland Family Youth Choral Academy.

Anton Armstrong has conducted the St. Olaf Choir in critically acclaimed solo concert performances at the 59th National Conference of the Music Educators National Conference in April 2004, the Sixth World Symposium on Choral Music in August 2002, and at the 1999 National Convention of the American Choral Directors Association in Chicago, Illinois. In February 2005, The St. Olaf Choir shared the stage with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir in presenting the finale concert for the national conference of the American Choral Directors Association at the Walt Disney Hall in Los Angeles, California.

He has frequently conducted ensembles and appeared before regional and national gatherings of the American Choral Directors Association, Music Educators National Conference, Choristers Guild, American Guild of Organists, Association of Lutheran Church Musicians, Organization of American Kodaly Educators and the Orff-Schulwerk Association. In August 1996 he was featured as a clinician at the Fourth World Symposium on Choral Music in Sydney, Australia. In July 2008 he was a featured clinician at the Eighth World Symposium in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Dr. Armstrong is active as a guest conductor and lecturer throughout North America, Europe, Scandinavia, Korea, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, Venezuela, and the Caribbean. In June 2003, he was honored to serve as the first Peter Godfrey Visiting Professor of Choral Music at the University of Auckland, New Zealand and in Spring 2005, he served as the Visiting Housewright Scholar in the School of Music at Florida State University. In recent years he has guest conducted such noted ensembles as the Utah Symphony and Symphony Chorus, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, the Westminster Choir, the American Boychoir and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra. He has also collaborated in concert with Bobby McFerrin and Garrison Keillor.

In 1992 Anton Armstrong made his European conducting debut at the International Band and Choir Festival in Brussels, Belgium and returned to Vienna, Austria in March 2000 to conduct the 25th anniversary concerts of this festival. He led the St. Olaf Choir on a concert tour of Denmark and Norway in 1993, which included a performance at the Bergen International Festival, Norway and in January 1997, he conducted the ensemble in a four-week concert tour to New Zealand and Australia. In June 2001 he guided the St. Olaf Choir on a three-week concert tour of Central Europe and returned to Norway with the St. Olaf Choir for a three-week performance tour in June 2005, which included a performance for Queen Sonja of Norway.

In the summer of 2001, Dr. Armstrong conducted the World Youth Choir sponsored by the International Federation of Choral Music with concerts in Venezuela and the United States. In May 2005, the St. Olaf Choir and Anton Armstrong received a special invitation to perform for President George W. Bush, First Lady Laura Bush and their guests for the National Day of prayer held in the East Room of the White House.

In January 2006, Baylor University announced that Anton Armstrong was selected from a field of 118 distinguished nominees to receive the Robert Foster Cherry Award for Great Teaching. The award is designed to honor great teachers, to stimulate discussion in the academy about the value of teaching and to encourage departments and institutions to value their own great teachers. He spent February-June 2007 in residency at Baylor University as a visiting professor.

During 2008-2009 Dr. Armstrong will serve as conductor of All-State Choirs in Florida, Georgia, and Tennessee.   In December 2008, he presented a three-day seminar in Israel on the topic of “The Hebrew Characters in the African American Spiritual,” at the Invitation of the Israeli Choral Directors Association in Tel-Aviv and Jerusalem. Also, he is leading choral festivals in the Smetana Hall, Prague, Czech Republic, as well as Carnegie Hall, New York, and the Kennedy Center, Washington, D.C.  Additional guest conducting and lecturing engagements this season include appearances in Minnesota, North Carolina, Ohio, Michigan, Florida, South Carolina, Kansas, Texas, and Kentucky.

For more information about Dr. Anton Armstrong and the St. Olaf Choir, log on to www.stolafchoir.com.


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