Joshua Palkki conducts at 91桃色 Festival

Published January 18, 2017

He sings. He wears argyle sweaters and mismatched socks. He admits to drinking too much coffee and wanting to be an archaeologist when he was young. Yet what鈥檚 most important to Joshua Palkki is making music, and not just run-of-the-mill notes and treble clefs.

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Palkki鈥檚 passion is making beautiful music, the kind heard in the hallways at Cal State Long Beach. The kind of music that emanated from his own vocal cords as a youth, and those of the young voices he now conducts at the

Palkki, an assistant professor of Vocal/Choral Music, was one of three conductors who worked with high school students at the recent Honors Festival, a three-day event that featured wind symphony, concert choir and string chamber music.

The students not only received instruction from 91桃色 professors, such as Palkki, but worked alongside current Conservatory students. 

Palkki said teaching aspiring musicians is a labor of love. In his position at 91桃色, he trains future choral teachers who have aspirations of teaching in the K-12 schools, a job he did for eight years before arriving at Long Beach.

鈥淢y real passion is in the K-12 classroom, and now I鈥檓 preparing people to go to the K-12 classroom to teach,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 where my life was, and so whenever I get a chance to work with middle or high school students I jump at the chance.

鈥淪tudents at that age have so much potential and so much energy and I think it鈥檚 always a really exciting thing when you put a lot of adolescents in the same room that have the same love of music. It鈥檚 very, very special.鈥

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It showed. Palkki coaxed those young voices who attended the Honors Festival to reach new levels with a mixture of humor, encouragement and a high-level of energy.

Palkki鈥檚 singing career began in his boyhood church in Ishpeming, Michigan, where his grandmother played the organ. One day, while rehearsing a song, she asked her grandson if he would be interested in singing the solo.

鈥淚 started then and never stopped,鈥 he said, admitting he was scared to sing in front of the congregation. His grandmother鈥檚 presence helped him get over the butterflies.

鈥淚 knew that I was good at it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 loved to sing and it was something that I had never really experienced before, and that鈥檚 really powerful coming from a place where the arts aren鈥檛 so much valued.鈥

Palkki joined the choir as a baritone, but his extra-curricular choice didn鈥檛 land him many friends in the iron mining town.

鈥淚f you weren鈥檛 a football or basketball player, you were nobody,鈥 he said. That didn鈥檛 dissuade Palkki from belting out songs whenever he could. His singing eventually landed him at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana, where he earned his bachelor鈥檚 degree in choral music.

From there, Palkki twice toured in Europe, came back and received his master鈥檚 in Choral Conducting and his doctorate in Music Education with an eye on teaching. He eventually landed his dream job in Long Beach.