Esther M. Morgan-Ellis is Professor of Music History at the University of North Georgia, where she also directs the orchestra and coaches the old-time string band. She studies participatory music-making traditions of the past and present, employing both historical and ethnographic methodologies. She is particularly interested in the ways that media have been used to facilitate participation and construct community. Her first monograph, Everybody Sing! Community Singing in the American Picture Palace (2018), explores the role of slides and films in movie theater sing-alongs of the 1920s and 1930s, while in recent musicological publications she has considered mid-century sing-along radio and television programs. She has also written extensively about the use of videoconferencing and livestreaming platforms to facilitate participatory music-making during the COVID-19 pandemic, with a focus on Sacred Harp singing and old-time jamming. She is co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Community Singing (2024), which includes her theorization of mediated community singing. Dr. Morgan-Ellis is also active as scholar of teaching and learning. She has published frequently in the Journal of Music History Pedagogy and is editor of both the open-access music appreciation textbook Resonances: Engaging Music in Its Cultural Context (UNG Press, 2020) and Navigating Stylistic Boundaries in the Music History Classroom: Crossover, Exchange, Appropriation (Routledge, 2024), which won the 2025 AMS Teaching Award from the American Musicological Society. As a fiddle player, Dr. Morgan-Ellis performs with various dance bands and teaches throughout the US South.