
Jonathan Øverby
Ethnomusicologist, Radio Host, and Concert Artist
Dr. Øverby is the host and executive producer of the annual State of Wisconsin Tribute and Ceremony Honoring the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the oldest state celebration of Dr. King in the nation. He has formed and conducted numerous music ensembles throughout his career and performed as a concert artist throughout the U.S., Europe and Japan. Before joining WPR, Dr. Øverby produced and hosted a weekly gospel music program on Madison’s WORT community radio for more than twenty years. He was appointed to the Wisconsin State Arts Board by Governor Tommy Thompson and served multiple terms as Vice Chair.
This is the second year in a row that Dr. Øverby has been honored with a hall of fame induction. In 2022, he was inducted into Folk Alliance International’s Folk DJ Hall of Fame at a ceremony in Kansas City. He was named a distinguished broadcaster at the University of Wisconsin in 2013 and honored with the U.W. Colleges and Extension “Wisconsin Idea Award” in 2016 for his “outstanding contributions to service and education to society, and the quality of life in Wisconsin, the nation, and the world.”
Dr. Øverby holds a doctorate in Administrative Leadership in Higher Education from Edgewood College in Madison and was the first post-doctoral fellow in the history of the college. As an ethnomusicologist and a Smithsonian Journeys expert, he continues to lead and lecture for international group trips for research and experiential education. He was born and raised in Milwaukee where he attended Rufus King High School.
He is the first African American in the history of Wisconsin Public Radio to create and produce a music program and one of only a few to produce and host his own radio program on both the Ideas Network and the Music Network Of WPR. Øverby composed the “Higher Ground” theme song in 1976 while serving as music director at the Hunter’s Point Naval Shipyard chapel in San Francisco, CA, while he was yet a music student at San Francisco State University. The choral work, originally written for a children’s chorus opens each broadcast and features the Lighthouse Chamber Singers. Øverby is also the conductor and artistic director of the Columbus Chamber Choir.
Access “The Road To Higher Ground with Jonathan Øverby” here.
