Richard Johnson felt music in his bones, and enabled countless teenagers to feel it in their hearts.
From 1963 to 1983, Johnson led the band and orchestra programs at Roosevelt High School in Minneapolis, with a high point in 1974 of taking second place in an international music festival in Vienna, competing against bands from around the world.
"He was probably the best teacher we had in the entire time we were in high school," said Deb Elliott-Pearson, now a doctor in Montana, who was on that trip. "He made us feel like we knew what we were doing, but that we could also improve. He was the kind of person who pushed you enough to think, 'Yeah, I can.' "
Johnson, 92, of Minneapolis, died Feb. 2 after emergency hip surgery.
His daughter, Heidi Stokes of Minneapolis, said her father was a private man with guarded emotions when she was young, "but when he turned his talents toward conducting, that's where I saw his soul, or his spirit. What he was able to pull out of a high school choir or band was incredible."
Johnson grew up in Brandon, S.D., the sixth and youngest of a Lutheran pastor's family. Music was a part of his life early on, and he was known for his beautiful baritone voice. Stokes once found a letter that Johnson's father had sent to him while he served as a radioman aboard the Navy flagship USS Argonne in World War II.
"My grandfather told him to sing it out, to get through whatever the war presented through singing," Stokes said. "For my dad, music became an almost spiritual place to be."
Johnson graduated from Augustana College in Sioux Falls, S.D., with a double major in history and music, and was active in band, choir and orchestra. There, he met fellow music major Joyce Van Steenwyk; they were married for 65 years. He taught high school history and led bands in Rock Valley, Iowa; Luverne, Minn., and South High School in Minneapolis before arriving at Roosevelt.