Frank Stähle | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1942-07-12)12 July 1942 Stuttgart |
| Died | 10 December 2015(2015-12-10) (aged 73) Frankfurt |
| Occupations |
|
| Organizations | |
Frank Stähle (12 July 1942 – 10 December 2015)[1] was a German musician, a choral conductor and the director ofDr. Hoch's Konservatorium in Frankfurt from 1979 to 2007.
Born in Stuttgart, Stähle went to schools in Hamburg and Wiesbaden where he received theAbitur in 1962. He studied church music in Frankfurt, including organ withHelmut Walcha, graduating in 1966.[2] Stähle was the church musician (cantor and organist) at theMarienstiftskirche inLich from 1966 to 1970,[3] then at theLutherkirche inWiesbaden, the capital of Hesse.[4]
He founded in 1977 theRheingauer Kantorei, the choir of theEvangelisches Dekanat Wiesbaden-Rheingau (Protestant deanery Wiesbaden-Rheingau), merging two groups, the church choir of the Protestant parish inGeisenheim and singers from Wiesbaden. The purpose of the choir was to sing in church services of the region and to singoratorios in concert. Main venues for the concerts were theMarktkirche in Wiesbaden and theRheingauer Dom in Geisenheim. The groups rehearsed separately in Geisenheim and performed the concerts together.[5]
In 1978 he conducted Handel'sMessias, in theRheingauer Dom and theLutherkirche in Wiesbaden, andEin deutsches Requiem by Johannes Brahms, in Geisenheim and theMarktkirche.[5] In 1979 he conducted Bach'sSt Matthew Passion inSt. Bonifatius, Wiesbaden, and inWorms, in a collaboration with theWormser Kurrende. He performed Mendelssohn'sElias with theRadiosinfonieorchester Frankfurt, in Geisenheim and theMarktkirche.[5]Erich Wenk performed the title role.[5] A reviewer wrote in theFAZ that the choir carried the dramatic action with great expressiveness in extremely differentiated grades of colour and articulation, based on a sensitive reading of text and score.[6]
In 1980 he conducted with the Geisenheim group Buxtehude'sMembra Jesu Nostri in Geisenheim.[5] He performed Honegger'sKönig David in theMarktkirche, with theRadiosinfonieorchester Frankfurt, and soloists Klesie Kelly,Claudia Eder as both young David and theWitch of Endor, andGerd Nienstedt as the narrator.[7]
On 13 June 1981 he conducted Bruckner'sMass No. 2 in E minor for eight-part choir and brass.[5] On 21 November 1981 he led the choir in a performance in the Marktkirche of Bach'sMass in B minor as part of the festivalVierteWiesbadener Bachwochen (Fourth Wiesbaden Bach Weeks), organized byMartin Lutz.[8] The reviewer Helmut Hampel of the Wiesbadener Kurier noted the large choir with many young singers, and described the tempos as "wahrhaft lebendig und erfüllt" (truly lively and appropriate), especially in the final movementDona nobis pacem.[9] He found Stähle's conducting style precise, not exaggerated and driven by inner tension ("genaue, unübertriebene und von innerer Spannung geprägte Zeichengebung".[9]

Stähle was director ofDr. Hoch's Konservatorium from 1979 to 2007. The traditional institution in Frankfurt dates back to 1878. Among its instructors wereClara Schumann,Engelbert Humperdinck, laterTheodor W. Adorno andPaul Hindemith.[10] Stähle was instrumental in restoring the training of professional musicians. In 1981 the subjects voice, instruments, ballet and jazz were expanded by preparation classes for university studies, Early Music and Contemporary Music. In 1982 a seminary for musical critic and comparing interpretation ("vergleichende Interpretation") were added. Stähle revived choir and orchestra,[11] and performed with them annually the anniversary of either birth or death of the founder.[11] In 1986 he prepared the groups in rehearsals of half a year for performances of Bach's cantataIch will den Kreuzstab gerne tragen, BWV 56, and Mozart'sRequiem at four locations of the region,[12] including the Lutherkirche which celebrated its centenary by inviting former church musicians to perform.[4] A reviewer noted the good preparation, which formed an ensemble able to create an impressive intense atmosphere by great dynamic contrasts.[4] The reviewer of theFrankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung noted the merits of instilling in the performers a personal relation to what they were doing, literally joy at work ("Freude am Werk").[12]
From 1985 Dr. Hoch's Conservatory trained music teachers, who could graduate with the diploma "Staatliche Musiklehrerprüfung". In 1986 the conservatory began moving to a location in the center of Frankfurt, thePhilanthropin, a former Jewish school. From 1995, a treaty of the Musikhochschule and the conservatory enables students from the conservatory to continue at the Hochschule (university).[11] The conservatory gained the status ofMusikakademie (Academy of Music) in 2002.[10] A new building was opened in 2005, serving around 1000 students.[13]
From 2010, Stähle helped as an organist at theDreikönigskirche in Frankfurt. He died in Frankfurt and was buried in Wiesbaden.[2]