Debra Jo Driskell Lynn was born in Independence, Missouri on September 22, 1963 to Joseph and Barbara Driskell. Debra’s mother guided her piano study from the age of 5. Her brother Gary (1957-2008), a church musician and a two-time Dove Award-winning composer, started teaching Debra to take musical dictation from recordings when she was 10. This sparked her interest in creating arrangements of existing songs. She attended Truman High School where her choir director, Phil Dunham programmed many of her choral arrangements and encouraged Debra to try composing original works. She has been exploring that outlet ever since.

Debra holds a Doctor of Arts in Music degree from Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana with emphases in conducting and voice performance. Prior degrees from Truman State University and William Jewell College include emphases in conducting, voice performance, and music education. Debra studied composition with Warren Gooch at Truman State University. She has studied conducting under the tutelage of maestros Paul Vermel, Douglas Amman, Fred Stoltzfus, R. Paul Crabb, and Arnold Epley. Debra studied voice with Mary Hagopian, Nicholas DiVirgilio, R. Paul Crabb, Arnold Epley, Dean Wilder, and Millicent Daugherty. Debra’s special research interests include Colonial American Music, Requiem Masses, Film Music, and the compositions of Charles Ives, Benjamin Britten, and Stewart Copeland, with whom she often collaborates. 

Debra taught at Manchester University from 1998-2024, where she served as Chair of the Music Department, as well as Director of Choral Organizations and Vocal Studies. Her course load includes applied voice, conducting, vocal pedagogy, opera workshop, music for stage & film, and history of the Requiem Mass.  Ensembles under her direction include A Cappella Choir, Chamber Singers, Manchester Symphony Orchestra, and Manchester Symphony Chorus. Her ensembles have performed at various locations throughout the U.S. including Carnegie Hall in New York, Sacred Heart Basilica at Notre Dame University, and Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida. Her A Cappella Choir has traveled to Italy, Austria, and London.  Whether domestic or international, her tours carry a theme of world peace.

Debra recently founded Opera Today!, Inc., a professional opera company in Fort Wayne, Indiana, whose primary goal includes making opera accessible and relatable for everyone. She serves as Executive and Artistic Director of the company and is embarking on several innovative operatic collaborations and productions. Early projects have included the world premiere of a chamber opera by Chicago-based composer, Philip Seward entitled “A House Divided,” which will be performed at the Ft. Wayne Library main branch with the intent toward encouraging the public to vote in the 2024 election. Other collaborations include a live exhibit at the city’s science center about the anatomy of the human voice, including laryngoscopic video images of singers as they perform, as well as a presentation of “Everest,” the world’s first graphic novel opera during the grand opening of the city’s new planetarium. Future productions will feature Purcell’s “The Faery Queen” at the botanical gardens, Menotti’s “Amahl and the Night Visitors” in a round barn, as well as Morganelli’s “Hercules vs. Vampires” at a local movie theater. Debra remains conductor of the Manchester Symphony Orchestra. 

As a composer, Debra writes both instrumental and vocal music and has received several commissions including Lily and Plowshares Foundation requests. She serves as guest conductor and clinician for various composer forums, choral festivals, and voice and conducting master classes throughout the U.S. Debra is married to cellist, Robert Lynn. They have four children, Bethany, Abby, and twins: Emily and Leo.  Debra and Robert reside in North Manchester with four cats: Ella Fitzgerald, Hildegard von Bingen (Hildy), and Chiara Margarita Cozzolani (Marge), plus varying combinations of their offspring, depending on the time of year.