Wastl Fanderl

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Wastl Fanderl (born June 24, 1915 in Bergen (Chiemgau) ; † April 25, 1991 in Frasdorf ; actually Sebastian Fanderl ) was a German musician, folk song collector and mediator.

Life

Fanderl learned his father's trade, hairdresser and bath . This was followed by his military service with the mountain hunters , the war (including as a base sergeant at the training base for mountain training on the Eppzirler Alm ) and prisoner of war. In 1945 he married the forester's daughter and home economics teacher Elisabeth Mayer (1922–1999) from Leogang . In 1963 the Fanderl family moved from Bergen, where they ran a stationery shop, to Frasdorf.

Fanderl's folk music career began in 1927 when he met Kiem Pauli for the first time , played him on the zither and was inspired by him to collect songs. Wastl Fanderl played in various ensembles, "Die Vier vom Gamsstadl", the "Wastl-Fanderl-Quartett" and the "Stelzenberger Hausmusik". The first recordings for Bayerischer Rundfunk were made as early as 1931 . Wastl Fanderl was a sought-after speaker at singing lessons, singing weeks, and singing meetings, he produced over 100 radio and television programs, and his television series Baierisches Bilder- und Notenbüchl on Bavarian radio is considered a classic documentary on folk music. He published song books, from 1973 to 1981 he was the first folk music curator in the Upper Bavaria district . He is buried in the Frasdorf cemetery.

Awards

Fanderl was honored with the Bavarian Order of Merit , the Frasdorf Citizen Medal , the Bavarian Poetentaler (1968), the Upper Bavarian Culture Prize (1980) and posthumously in 1992 with the Tobi Reiser Prize .

The elementary school in Frasdorf was named after him to celebrate his 100th birthday "Wastl-Fanderl-Elementary School".

family

Wastl Fanderl and his wife Elisabeth are parents of three daughters (Moni, Liserl and Regina). The youngest daughter Regina Fanderl is an employee of Bayerischer Rundfunk in Munich and is known to a wide audience as one of the moderators of folk music on BR Heimat, or formerly Bayern 1 .

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Fanderl, Wastl (1915–1991), singer - BMLO. Retrieved November 11, 2019 .
  2. Gerd Otto-Rieke: Graves in Bavaria . Munich 2000, p. 72
  3. Wastl-Fanderl-Grundschule, accessed on June 30, 2015 ( Memento of the original from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.grundschule-frasdorf.de