Heather Armstrong

Heather Armstrong is Associate Professor of Oboe, Double Reed Methods, and Theory at Luther College. She is the principal oboist of Waterloo-Cedar Falls Symphony and is a founding member of the Talus Trio, a Luther College faculty woodwind trio that has performed around the Midwest. In the summer she serves on the faculty of Luther’s Dorian Summer Music Camps for middle school and high school students.

Heather is enthusiastic about collaborating with living composers and performing their music. She has received grants from the Hanson Institute of American Music and Luther College’s Ylvisaker Endowment for Faculty Growth to support the commissioning and performing of new pieces. She regularly performs with the Iowa Composers Forum (ICF), and recently participated in an ICF project that took new music outside its usual home in the concert hall and presented it in smaller venues – at the Porter House Museum in Decorah, Iowa, and at the Figge Art Museum in Davenport, IA. Heather premiered Cast Me Away, a piece for oboe and percussion by Sun Mi Ro, at the International Double Reed Conference in Provo, UT, and in 2014 she collaborated with composer Brooke Joyce and the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Symphony to premiere Brooke's oboe concerto Une Cité Moderne. She performed the concerto during the IDRS conference at Lawrence University in June 2017.

Armstrong received her Doctor of Musical Arts and Master of Music degrees from the Eastman School of Music, where she studied with Richard Killmer, who remains a great inspiration. She received her Bachelor of Music degree from Houghton College and has also studied at the Banff Centre and the Chautauqua Institution. Before teaching at Luther College she held teaching positions at Houghton College, Hochstein School of Music and Dance, Roberts Wesleyan College, and Eastman Community Music School. She has performed with the La Crosse Symphony, Dubuque Symphony, Erie Philharmonic, and Binghamton Philharmonic, and has appeared in solo and chamber music recitals throughout the country, most recently at the Rochester Chamber Music Society, Cedar Valley Chamber Music Festival, Lutheran Summer Music, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, University of Iowa, Augsburg College, the University of Northern Iowa, and Winona State University.

Heather’s interest in the Alexander Technique and Body Mapping informs her oboe teaching and has inspired her to attend workshops throughout the country and to organize workshops in AT and Body Mapping for students at Luther. She believes the pursuit of musical excellence in a liberal arts environment like Luther College helps to shape well rounded musicians who are prepared to create connections between their music making and the communities with whom they share their music.