Monday, November 12, 2018

Kurt Kaiser obit

Kurt Kaiser, famed church music composer, dies at 82

 

He was not on the list.


Kurt Kaiser, an 82-year-old professional musician, died on Monday, according to DaySpring Baptist Church. He was the choir director for the church for the past 10 years.

Kaiser began playing for live radio at the age of 12 in 1946 for WMBI. He was heavily influenced by jazz music. At 16, he left home for another radio station in Montana. At the station, he wrote music and played the keyboards for a quartet.

That is where he met his wife Pat, of 61 years.

Kaiser studied at the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago an earned two degrees from Northwestern University. He met Jarrell McCracken through a mutual friend, and he then joined McCracken’s Christian music company, Word Inc.

In 1959, he moved to Waco and started as director of artists and repertoire. He later became the vice president and director of music for Word Inc.

Kaiser has more than 300 copyrighted songs to his name including Pass it On and Oh How He Loves You and Me. He is thought to be key in the growth of modern-day church music and many of his songs can be found in hymnals.

He has recorded numerous solo albums at the piano, also conducting choral workshops and performing solo concerts.

In 1992, he received a lifetime achievement award from the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. He also received the Hines Sims Award for Faithfulness in Service.

Kaiser helped found Waco’s DaySpring Baptist Church, where he directed the choir for 10 years.

Kurt and Pat Kaiser have supported the Baylor Bear Foundation, The Dick Baker Baylor Religious Hour Choir Fund and both men’s and women’s basketball excellence funds.

In 2001, Dr. W. Scott Livesay established The Kurt and Patricia Kaiser Endowed Music Scholarship Fund for Baylor students enrolled in the School of Music.

The Dayspring Church made a statement on his death:

Today we mourn the death of Kurt Kaiser.

This morning, Kurt peacefully passed from this life.  Please hold Pat in your prayers, along with their children, grandchildren, their families, and all of Kurt’s many friends who will miss him.  Kurt was very special to many, many people around the world through his music, and, in personal ways, to those who shared life at DaySpring.

In the coming days, if you feel led to write a note of thanksgiving or remembrance of Kurt, please share it by sending it to rebecca@ourdayspring.org.  We would like to share those remembrances with one another as we grieve his loss and celebrate his remarkable life.

Kurt met his future bride, Patricia Anderson, during this period and married her in 1956. After his time in Billings, Kaiser spent a year and a half traveling with basso Bill Carle before entering the American Conservatory of Music at age eighteen.

Kaiser joined Word, Inc. in 1959 as Director of Artists and Repertoire, and later became Vice President and Director of Music. With more than 300 copyrighted songs, he arranged and produced albums for many national and international artists, among them George Beverly Shea, Jerome Hines, Burl Ives, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Ethel Waters, Ken Medema, Joni Eareckson Tada, Anne Martindale Williams, Christopher Adkins & Stephen Nielson, Christopher Parkening, and Kathleen Battle.

Kaiser led innumerable choral workshops, performed concerts, and recorded eighteen solo albums at the piano. He received a Dove Award for his piano album, Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs on the Sparrow label.

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