Tributes for a Legend
Kenneth Kuchler, a violinist with an astounding 64-year tenure (1941-1943; 1946-2008) in the Utah Symphony passed away recently. Uniquely, Ken was both a legendary figure in Utah’s musical community but also an individual that few people knew well. He was a fiercely independent and private person, and if people attempted to overstep the bounds of his privacy, they were made to know it in no uncertain terms. During his tenure in the Utah Symphony, he served as both Associate Concertmaster and as general member of the first violin section. Ken was born in Ogden and received his higher education at Weber College, the University of Utah and obtained a graduate degree at the University of California—Berkeley. While in California, he studied with the eminent Russian violin virtuoso Toscha Seidel (a protégé of Leopold Auer) who immigrated to the US in the 1930’s.
There were two annual events each symphony season at which Ken stood up to be acknowledged. The first was an education concert at Ogden High School—his alma mater. The second was during a military medley performed by the Utah Symphony every summer. Ken served in the US Army from 1943-1946, and was stationed in Stuttgart as a radio operator. Ken drove a tank briefly in Dresden and also participated in the Ardennes Offensive—the nefarious German attack on the Allies that occurred at the border of Germany and Belgium. This conflict later became known as the Battle of the Bulge. On the Utah Symphony European tour in 2005, as the buses drove through Germany, Ken spoke extensively to me about various landmarks as we passed them. He was most assuredly proud of his service to his country. Ken joined the Utah Symphony in 1941, performed for two seasons and then enlisted in the US Army. Upon returning to the US after World War II in 1946, Ken reassumed his position in the Utah Symphony and became an active free-lancer and esteemed music educator in Salt Lake City. He played both violin and tenor saxophone in the KSL Radio Orchestra, and developed an enormous roster of students over the decades with whom he left a profound love for music. For many years he served as Chairman of the Department of Music at Westminster College and received an honorary degree from that institution. While at Westminster he conducted the college orchestra, which he expanded to include members of the community who were interested in orchestral playing. The Westminster Music Department was disbanded for a short time in the 1980’s during a non-Arts friendly administration. The indefatigable Ken took his orchestra with him when he left Westminster, and he re-named the ensemble the Wasatch Community Orchestra. This ensemble is currently in its 54th season, and has members whose families represent three generations of loyal affiliation. Additionally, Ken was a fixture in the orchestra of the Peninsula Music Festival in Fish Creek, Wisconsin. Ken developed a long-standing friendship with the festival’s founder, Thor Johnson. Johnson was the Music Director of the Cincinnati Symphony in the late 1940’s, and also served as director of the Interlochen Arts Academy and Orchestra and as chair of conducting studies at Northwestern University. Ken often recalled Johnson’s efficacious leadership. Ken was also a strong advocate of Baroque music. He spoke fondly about his friendship with Carl Dolmetsch–the son of the esteemed recorder maker.
When I joined the Utah Symphony in 1976 at age 28, I came to know Ken almost immediately because my bus travel seat-of-choice was across from his. He was very kind to me--an orchestrally young and naïve Erich Graf. Ken was always willing to listen with me to the music that I brought on cassette tape for the bus trip. More recently, he invited me on several occasions to perform as flute soloist with his community orchestra and also enticed me into the conducting role. Thanks to Ken and a little help from Max Rudolf’s Art of Conducting, I enjoyed this experience more than I thought I would. Ken was very encouraging and assisted me to expand my musical realm. I felt his passion for music despite his somewhat gruff exterior. I respected Ken profoundly and solicited his advice on several occasions. He had uncanny intuition. When I was agonizing about whether to assume the presidency of Local 104, I called Ken for advice. When he answered the phone, before I finished saying “Hi, it’s Erich,” he said “Do it.” He was also one of the most intensely moral and ethical people I have ever known. He was incapable of saying anything but what he truly believed. During labor and union stress in the early 90’s, Ken was the union stalwart, even though it caused him a loss of income. Adherence to his own unalienable ethics made him angry at both himself and his colleagues. His commitment to his ethic can only be admired. This fact was further substantiated when Ken’s brother Ralph (who furnished some information for this article) told me that Ken exhibited a love for music from the time he was six years old. At that time, Ken’s mother bought him a piano, and the rest is history.
Ken Kuchler’s Utah Symphony colleagues have indeed been privileged to know and work with him. I will miss this Gentle Lion from the core of my being.
Erich Graf
Principal flutist, Utah Symphony President, Local 104, American Federation of Musicians
There were two annual events each symphony season at which Ken stood up to be acknowledged. The first was an education concert at Ogden High School—his alma mater. The second was during a military medley performed by the Utah Symphony every summer. Ken served in the US Army from 1943-1946, and was stationed in Stuttgart as a radio operator. Ken drove a tank briefly in Dresden and also participated in the Ardennes Offensive—the nefarious German attack on the Allies that occurred at the border of Germany and Belgium. This conflict later became known as the Battle of the Bulge. On the Utah Symphony European tour in 2005, as the buses drove through Germany, Ken spoke extensively to me about various landmarks as we passed them. He was most assuredly proud of his service to his country. Ken joined the Utah Symphony in 1941, performed for two seasons and then enlisted in the US Army. Upon returning to the US after World War II in 1946, Ken reassumed his position in the Utah Symphony and became an active free-lancer and esteemed music educator in Salt Lake City. He played both violin and tenor saxophone in the KSL Radio Orchestra, and developed an enormous roster of students over the decades with whom he left a profound love for music. For many years he served as Chairman of the Department of Music at Westminster College and received an honorary degree from that institution. While at Westminster he conducted the college orchestra, which he expanded to include members of the community who were interested in orchestral playing. The Westminster Music Department was disbanded for a short time in the 1980’s during a non-Arts friendly administration. The indefatigable Ken took his orchestra with him when he left Westminster, and he re-named the ensemble the Wasatch Community Orchestra. This ensemble is currently in its 54th season, and has members whose families represent three generations of loyal affiliation. Additionally, Ken was a fixture in the orchestra of the Peninsula Music Festival in Fish Creek, Wisconsin. Ken developed a long-standing friendship with the festival’s founder, Thor Johnson. Johnson was the Music Director of the Cincinnati Symphony in the late 1940’s, and also served as director of the Interlochen Arts Academy and Orchestra and as chair of conducting studies at Northwestern University. Ken often recalled Johnson’s efficacious leadership. Ken was also a strong advocate of Baroque music. He spoke fondly about his friendship with Carl Dolmetsch–the son of the esteemed recorder maker.
When I joined the Utah Symphony in 1976 at age 28, I came to know Ken almost immediately because my bus travel seat-of-choice was across from his. He was very kind to me--an orchestrally young and naïve Erich Graf. Ken was always willing to listen with me to the music that I brought on cassette tape for the bus trip. More recently, he invited me on several occasions to perform as flute soloist with his community orchestra and also enticed me into the conducting role. Thanks to Ken and a little help from Max Rudolf’s Art of Conducting, I enjoyed this experience more than I thought I would. Ken was very encouraging and assisted me to expand my musical realm. I felt his passion for music despite his somewhat gruff exterior. I respected Ken profoundly and solicited his advice on several occasions. He had uncanny intuition. When I was agonizing about whether to assume the presidency of Local 104, I called Ken for advice. When he answered the phone, before I finished saying “Hi, it’s Erich,” he said “Do it.” He was also one of the most intensely moral and ethical people I have ever known. He was incapable of saying anything but what he truly believed. During labor and union stress in the early 90’s, Ken was the union stalwart, even though it caused him a loss of income. Adherence to his own unalienable ethics made him angry at both himself and his colleagues. His commitment to his ethic can only be admired. This fact was further substantiated when Ken’s brother Ralph (who furnished some information for this article) told me that Ken exhibited a love for music from the time he was six years old. At that time, Ken’s mother bought him a piano, and the rest is history.
Ken Kuchler’s Utah Symphony colleagues have indeed been privileged to know and work with him. I will miss this Gentle Lion from the core of my being.
Erich Graf
Principal flutist, Utah Symphony President, Local 104, American Federation of Musicians
Symphony loses longtime violinist By Edward Reichel
Deseret Morning News
The Utah Symphony lost one of its oldest members when Kenneth Kuchler passed away just a month shy of his 86th birthday.
A member of the first violin section, Mr. Kuchler died Feb. 23, 2008 of congestive heart failure. He joined the symphony in 1942, five years before Maurice Abravanel became music director. He left a year later to join the Army. After his discharge from the service in 1947, Mr. Kuchler returned to Salt Lake City and rejoined the symphony. He played with the orchestra until a few weeks before his death.
"To my knowledge, he was the longest-tenured musician in the Utah Symphony," said colleague Erich Graf. "And he probably held one of the longest tenures in the nation."
Graf, who is the symphony's principal flute as well as the president of Local 104 of the American Federation of Musicians, was a close friend of Mr. Kuchler. Frequently, Graf turned to the older musician for advice. "He was always very encouraging. When I agonized over whether or not to accept the position of union president, I called up Kenny to get his advice. I only managed to say 'Hi' when he interrupted and said, 'Do it!' He had an uncanny sense of intuition."
Mr. Kuchler was fiercely loyal to his friends and to the Utah Symphony, Graf said. Back when Mr. Kuchler rejoined the symphony in 1946, the situation was a lot different for American orchestras than it is today. "In those days, the WPA was just getting started, and the arts organizations were just getting through some hard times." Times were lean for the Utah Symphony as well. Not long after Abravanel took over the helm, there wasn't any money to pay the musicians, many of whom left to go elsewhere. "But not Kenny," Graf said. "Even though the musicians couldn't be paid for a while, Kenny stayed. He was a real stalwart and extremely loyal."
The Ogden native was passionate about music. "It was his life, from a young age." When he was about 6, Mr. Kuchler began showing an interest in music. His mother bought him a piano, and he started taking lessons. He studied at Weber State College and the University of Utah before going to the University of California at Berkeley to pursue a graduate degree. There he studied with Toscha Seidel, who was a student of the legendary Leopold Auer.
A love for music remained with Mr. Kuchler his entire life, and not just classical music. He played both violin and tenor saxophone in the KSL Radio Orchestra, and he was interested in ethnic music. "When he died, he was working on transcribing and preparing a book on Shoshone music," Graf said.
Mr. Kuchler was also a conductor and served as the chairman of the department of music at Westminster College. When Westminster disbanded its music department for a short while in the 1980s, Kuchler took his orchestra with him, renamed it the Wasatch Community Orchestra, and continued conducting it until his illness curtailed his activities. "He had such intense concentration and focus when it came to music," Graf said. "Nothing came in the way between him and his music."
Mr. Kuchler had a reputation for being gruff. "He had a gruff exterior, but sometimes when we would listen to music together when we were on the bus to some concert, he would turn to me and say, 'That's beautiful.' I thought that was out of character for him, but he was really quite passionate.
"He lived his life exactly the way he wanted," Graf said. "And I'm better for everything he did."
Deseret Morning News
The Utah Symphony lost one of its oldest members when Kenneth Kuchler passed away just a month shy of his 86th birthday.
A member of the first violin section, Mr. Kuchler died Feb. 23, 2008 of congestive heart failure. He joined the symphony in 1942, five years before Maurice Abravanel became music director. He left a year later to join the Army. After his discharge from the service in 1947, Mr. Kuchler returned to Salt Lake City and rejoined the symphony. He played with the orchestra until a few weeks before his death.
"To my knowledge, he was the longest-tenured musician in the Utah Symphony," said colleague Erich Graf. "And he probably held one of the longest tenures in the nation."
Graf, who is the symphony's principal flute as well as the president of Local 104 of the American Federation of Musicians, was a close friend of Mr. Kuchler. Frequently, Graf turned to the older musician for advice. "He was always very encouraging. When I agonized over whether or not to accept the position of union president, I called up Kenny to get his advice. I only managed to say 'Hi' when he interrupted and said, 'Do it!' He had an uncanny sense of intuition."
Mr. Kuchler was fiercely loyal to his friends and to the Utah Symphony, Graf said. Back when Mr. Kuchler rejoined the symphony in 1946, the situation was a lot different for American orchestras than it is today. "In those days, the WPA was just getting started, and the arts organizations were just getting through some hard times." Times were lean for the Utah Symphony as well. Not long after Abravanel took over the helm, there wasn't any money to pay the musicians, many of whom left to go elsewhere. "But not Kenny," Graf said. "Even though the musicians couldn't be paid for a while, Kenny stayed. He was a real stalwart and extremely loyal."
The Ogden native was passionate about music. "It was his life, from a young age." When he was about 6, Mr. Kuchler began showing an interest in music. His mother bought him a piano, and he started taking lessons. He studied at Weber State College and the University of Utah before going to the University of California at Berkeley to pursue a graduate degree. There he studied with Toscha Seidel, who was a student of the legendary Leopold Auer.
A love for music remained with Mr. Kuchler his entire life, and not just classical music. He played both violin and tenor saxophone in the KSL Radio Orchestra, and he was interested in ethnic music. "When he died, he was working on transcribing and preparing a book on Shoshone music," Graf said.
Mr. Kuchler was also a conductor and served as the chairman of the department of music at Westminster College. When Westminster disbanded its music department for a short while in the 1980s, Kuchler took his orchestra with him, renamed it the Wasatch Community Orchestra, and continued conducting it until his illness curtailed his activities. "He had such intense concentration and focus when it came to music," Graf said. "Nothing came in the way between him and his music."
Mr. Kuchler had a reputation for being gruff. "He had a gruff exterior, but sometimes when we would listen to music together when we were on the bus to some concert, he would turn to me and say, 'That's beautiful.' I thought that was out of character for him, but he was really quite passionate.
"He lived his life exactly the way he wanted," Graf said. "And I'm better for everything he did."
Utah Symphony loses 'Gentle Lion', violinist Kenneth Kuchler By Anne Wilson
The Salt Lake Tribune
·
The Utah Symphony lost its longest tenured member Saturday when violinist Kenneth G. Kuchler, who joined the orchestra in 1942, succumbed to congestive heart failure. He was 85.
The symphony hired Kuchler, who was born in Ogden in 1922, as the nation was becoming embroiled in World War II. He interrupted his budding career to spend three years in the U.S. Army, including a stint in Germany, where he was a radio operator and fought in the Battle of the Bulge.
But the orchestra held his spot and Kuchler returned to rehearse and perform until about six weeks before his death. During his tenure, he was a member of the first violin section and associate concertmaster. A lifelong bachelor, his world revolved around music: He taught it while chairing Westminster College's music department and conducted the Wasatch Community Orchestra.
"It was his life from about 6 years old," said his younger brother Ralph, an attorney in Monterey, Calif. "Music was everything."
Kuchler, who attended Weber State College and the University of Utah before earning a graduate degree at the University of California-Berkeley, was a veteran performer when Harold Wolf joined the orchestra in 1952. The two were stand partners during the 14 years Wolf was concertmaster.
"He was an excellent violinist, musician and educator," Wolf said via e-mail. "He had a wonderful dry sense of humor. One time at a particularly strenuous rehearsal, I remarked, 'What a way to make a living,' to which he responded, 'There must be a way to make a living.' That was typical of Kenny. He always made remarks like that with a perfectly straight face."
Friends and colleagues describe him as quiet, private and focused, with yeoman work habits.
"He was a consummate professional and he had an incredible work ethic," said Llewellyn Humphreys, a horn player and the orchestra's personnel manager. The Salt Lake City apartment where he lived for more than 50 years was emblematic of his life.
"It's all music and instruments," Humphreys said.
Doug Wolf, a music professor at the University of Utah and a percussionist who regularly performs with the Utah Symphony, shared a passion with Kuchler for American Indian flute music. Kuchler was involved in transcribing traditional Shoshone music, including lyrics, Wolf said. "He used to tell me writing out the music was the easier part of it all." Some of his work is included in Newe Hupai, Shoshoni Poetry Songs, published by Utah State University Press, according to Ralph Kuchler.
In a written tribute to his colleague, flutist Erich Graf, president of the musicians union, described Kuchler as "one of the most intensely moral and ethical people I have ever known. He was incapable of saying anything but what he truly believed."
While Kuchler sometimes came off as "gruff," Graf found in him a friend and mentor.
"I will miss this Gentle Lion from the core of my being," Graf wrote.
The Salt Lake Tribune
·
The Utah Symphony lost its longest tenured member Saturday when violinist Kenneth G. Kuchler, who joined the orchestra in 1942, succumbed to congestive heart failure. He was 85.
The symphony hired Kuchler, who was born in Ogden in 1922, as the nation was becoming embroiled in World War II. He interrupted his budding career to spend three years in the U.S. Army, including a stint in Germany, where he was a radio operator and fought in the Battle of the Bulge.
But the orchestra held his spot and Kuchler returned to rehearse and perform until about six weeks before his death. During his tenure, he was a member of the first violin section and associate concertmaster. A lifelong bachelor, his world revolved around music: He taught it while chairing Westminster College's music department and conducted the Wasatch Community Orchestra.
"It was his life from about 6 years old," said his younger brother Ralph, an attorney in Monterey, Calif. "Music was everything."
Kuchler, who attended Weber State College and the University of Utah before earning a graduate degree at the University of California-Berkeley, was a veteran performer when Harold Wolf joined the orchestra in 1952. The two were stand partners during the 14 years Wolf was concertmaster.
"He was an excellent violinist, musician and educator," Wolf said via e-mail. "He had a wonderful dry sense of humor. One time at a particularly strenuous rehearsal, I remarked, 'What a way to make a living,' to which he responded, 'There must be a way to make a living.' That was typical of Kenny. He always made remarks like that with a perfectly straight face."
Friends and colleagues describe him as quiet, private and focused, with yeoman work habits.
"He was a consummate professional and he had an incredible work ethic," said Llewellyn Humphreys, a horn player and the orchestra's personnel manager. The Salt Lake City apartment where he lived for more than 50 years was emblematic of his life.
"It's all music and instruments," Humphreys said.
Doug Wolf, a music professor at the University of Utah and a percussionist who regularly performs with the Utah Symphony, shared a passion with Kuchler for American Indian flute music. Kuchler was involved in transcribing traditional Shoshone music, including lyrics, Wolf said. "He used to tell me writing out the music was the easier part of it all." Some of his work is included in Newe Hupai, Shoshoni Poetry Songs, published by Utah State University Press, according to Ralph Kuchler.
In a written tribute to his colleague, flutist Erich Graf, president of the musicians union, described Kuchler as "one of the most intensely moral and ethical people I have ever known. He was incapable of saying anything but what he truly believed."
While Kuchler sometimes came off as "gruff," Graf found in him a friend and mentor.
"I will miss this Gentle Lion from the core of my being," Graf wrote.
Wasatch Community Symphony | P.O. Box 9145, Millcreek, UT 84109 | Photo Credits to Kevin Buckingham at [email protected]