When distinguished professor Jo Ann Miller ’74 was in graduate school, she made two important discoveries that would set a course for her career. First, she found a talent for conducting.
“I was never the best singer, never the best pianist, but I figured out pretty quickly that I had good ears, and I could hear what was going on. I learned how to work with a choir so they would get better and would enjoy the music. I think when I realized my musical expression came out of my hands and arms, I discovered that that was where my musicianship was the strongest,” Jo Ann recalled.
The second discovery came when Jo Ann encountered a new, challenging repertoire of music that motivated her to earn her doctorate and pursue a career in higher education.
“I got into some repertoire that I hadn’t experienced before, and I realized that I couldn’t teach that music at the high school level — they would never be able to do it. That challenging repertoire was something that challenged and inspired me,” Jo Ann said. “When we started the graduate programs at NDSU, that sort of solidified everything. It’s been really wonderful working with master’s and doctoral students in choral conducting.”
In 2013, Jo Ann was selected for the NDSU 53rd Faculty Lectureship Award, which recognizes sustained professional excellence in teaching, scholarly and creative achievement, and service. During her lecture, “A Conductor’s Art,” Jo Ann discusses the work of a conductor and demonstrates that work with the support of the NDSU Concert Choir. She notes three broad responsibilities the conductor must master: developing technique, leadership, and inspiration. A conductor’s skillset, Jo Ann says, includes vocal technique, language and listening skills, keyboard ability, analytical and theoretical skills, music history knowledge, conducting skills, and repertoire knowledge to interpret the composer’s intent. The ensemble must, in turn, internalize that intent in order to communicate it to the audience.
“We [conductors] have no instrument without our students,” Jo Ann said. “We invest in them in order to realize our own artistic aspirations so they, in turn, will be able to realize some of their own.”
Jo Ann completed her master’s degree at the University of North Dakota and earned her doctorate at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. She returned to NDSU in 1989 as the director of choral activities. For 34 years, she has inspired students and future music educators. She’s traveled with NDSU choirs across the country and on European tours, conducted choral orchestral works, performed at major choral conferences, and organized three international NDSU Choral Symposia with colleagues Mike Weber and Charlette Moe.