Johann Jochim Diedrich Stiehl

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Johann Jochim Diedrich Stiehl (2nd from right) 1848 with the Lübeck organists Hermann Jimmerthal (1809–1886), Johann Daniel Zacharias Burjam (1802–1879) and Joachim Christoph Mandischer (1774–1860)

Johann Jochim Diedrich Stiehl , also: Johann Joachim Dietrich Stiehl (born July 9, 1800 in Lübeck ; † June 27, 1872 there ) was a German organist and composer.

Life

Johann Jochim Diedrich Stiehl was a son of the Musicus Johann Carl Stiehl (1768–1839) and a student of Matthias Andreas Bauck , who in turn had been a student of Johann Wilhelm Cornelius von Königslöw . From 1819 to 1837 he worked as a clarinetist in the Lübeck theater and concert orchestra and as a private music teacher. Assistant to von Bauck since 1834, after his death in 1835 the rulers elected him as his successor as organist and foreman of the Jakobikirche .

He composed works for piano as well as for clarinet .

Since August 2, 1825 he was married to Maria Christina, b. Achenbach. Of the couple's four sons, Carl (1826–1911) became a music teacher, musicologist, conductor and music librarian, and Heinrich (1829–1886) became a composer, organist and conductor. Gustav Adolph († 1901) became a master baker in Lübeck.

His successor as organist at St. Jakobi was Emanuel Kemper . From 1802 until Hugo Distler took office in 1931, there were only three organists at the Jakobikirche.

Stiehl's clarinet and his flute have been part of the instrument collection of the Lübeck museums since 1892.

Works

literature

  • Carl Stiehl: Lübeckisches Tonkünstlerlexikon. Leipzig: Hesse 1887 ( digitized version ), p. 18
  • Stiehl , in: Salomon Kümmerle: Encyclopedia of Protestant Church Music. Volume 3, Gütersloh: Bertelsmann 1894, p. 522

Individual evidence

  1. In the lit. erroneously 1873 ; However, there is evidence that he was buried in the Burgtorfriedhof on July 1, 1872 , see chronological register of burials at the Burgtorfriedhof 1872, accessed via ancestry.com on March 4, 2018
  2. Clarinet: Inv.-No. 1892/180, flute: Inv.-No. 1892/181, see Ulrich Althöfer: Von Zinken, Serpenten and Giraffe pianos : historical musical instruments from four centuries in the Museum for Art and Cultural History of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck. Catalog for the special exhibition and the Behnhaus Lübeck collection directory, July 9th to October 15th, 2000. Lübeck: Museum for Art and Cultural History of the Hanseatic City of Lübeck 2000, p. 53