Difference between revisions of "Jerold Ottley"

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He also formalized a requirement that would-be choir members hold a current temple recommend. He said that the choir "turned into a powerful spiritual organization."[https://www.thechurchnews.com/members/2020-12-05/jerold-ottley-tabernacle-choir-director-retired-innovative-leadership-199256?]
 
He also formalized a requirement that would-be choir members hold a current temple recommend. He said that the choir "turned into a powerful spiritual organization."[https://www.thechurchnews.com/members/2020-12-05/jerold-ottley-tabernacle-choir-director-retired-innovative-leadership-199256?]
  
Ottley is a member of [http://comeuntochrist.org The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]. He and his wife, soprano [[JoAnn Ottley|JoAnn]], are the parents of two children. She is a celebrated soprano and was a voice coach and soloist with the choir.
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Ottley was a member of [http://comeuntochrist.org The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]. He and his wife, soprano [[JoAnn Ottley|JoAnn]], two children. She is a celebrated soprano and was a voice coach and soloist with the choir.
  
 
[[Category:Mormon Life and Culture]]
 
[[Category:Mormon Life and Culture]]

Revision as of 17:36, 25 February 2021

Jerold Ottley.jpg

Jerold Ottley was the music director of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, a post he held from 1974 to 1999. After his retirement, he taught voluntarily for four years as administrator and teacher for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir Training School at Temple Square and as a staff volunteer revising the choral library computer database. He then directed the University Chorale at Brigham Young University-Hawaii from 2005 to 2008. He died on February 19, 2021, in Salt Lake City. He was 86 years old.

During his tenure with the Choir, he directed 1,300 Music & the Spoken Word broadcasts, 30 commercial recordings, more than 20 major tours around the world, and thousands of rehearsals and performances.[1]

Ottley was born on April 7, 1934, in Murray, Utah, and was musically gifted as a child. He became an accomplished pianist and in the fourth grade he began to play the trombone. His love for music was put on hold temporarily when he traveled with his parents to New Zealand, as they were called to serve a mission there. Ottley's education changed from excelling in music to no music program at the British boys’ school he attended. After high school he served a labor mission in New Zealand and was put in charge of entertainment. He directed a chorus that won the highest prize at the county fair.

When Ottley returned to the United States, he studied trombone at Brigham Young University and earned his bachelor’s degree in music education. He went on to obtain his Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Utah and a Doctor of Musical Arts degree from the University of Oregon. He was awarded a Fulbright fellowship with which he studied conducting, voice, and choral performance at the College of Music in Cologne, Germany.

He taught and conducted music in Salt Lake City briefly then became a music instructor at the University of Utah, where he spent the next thirty years, eventually becoming associate chair of the university’s School of Music. He split his time between the university and the Tabernacle Choir. He retired from the university in 2002.

During his leadership of the Tabernacle Choir, a few changes were made to ease the participation and retirement of members:

  • A pattern of twenty years in the choir or turning age 60, whichever came first.
  • Mandatory 75 percent attendance policy was put in place.
  • He rearranged the seating every three months.
  • Auditions became structured: recorded audition, theory exam, in-person audition.[2]

He also stressed music fundamentals. "We don’t have a lot of rehearsal time like some choirs, who practice for six to eight weeks for a concert. … We have a concert every Sunday, ripping and reading through music so fast that people need extra ability to keep up.”[3]

He also formalized a requirement that would-be choir members hold a current temple recommend. He said that the choir "turned into a powerful spiritual organization."[4]

Ottley was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He and his wife, soprano JoAnn, two children. She is a celebrated soprano and was a voice coach and soloist with the choir.