Skip to main content
Home
  • Magazine
  • News
  • New Organs
  • Videos
  • Resource Directory
  • 2020 Resource Directory
  • Classified ADS
  • Artists
  • Home
  • Events
  • 20 under 30
    • Nominate class of 2025
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Subscribe
Home
  • Magazine
  • News
  • New Organs
  • Videos
  • Resource Directory
  • Classified ADS
  • Artists
  • Events
  • 20 under 30
    • Nominate class of 2025

Harold Rutz dead at 90

Harold Rutz

Harold “Hal” Rutz, 90, died November 17, 2020. He was born March 20, 1930, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He graduated from Concordia University (then Concordia Teachers College), River Forest, Illinois, in 1952, and completed a Master of Music degree at Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, in 1960. In 1975 he studied further at Cambridge University, England, and in 1985 at the Royal School of Church Music, London.

In June 1954, Rutz married Viola Larkin of Tampa, Florida, whom he met while they were college students. They were married for 62 years.

Rutz taught in elementary school and was a parish musician in Detroit, Michigan, from 1954 to 1956 and in Kansas City, Missouri, from 1956 to 1964, during which time children Faith, Paul, and Hope were born. The Rutz family moved to Austin, Texas, in summer 1964 when he accepted a position as head of the music department at Concordia University (then Concordia Lutheran College). He taught music theory, music history, hymnology, piano and organ lessons, and conducted the college choir until retiring in 1996, receiving Concordia’s Martin J. Neeb Teaching Excellence Award by vote of the student body that year. His choirs toured annually in the southern United States, and in 1985 he was co-leader of a tour to Martin Luther and J. S. Bach sites in what was then East Germany.

Rutz frequently performed organ recitals and, on occasion, he and son Paul performed together. Among his organ teachers were Hugo Gehrke, Paul Bunjes, Thomas Matthews, Peter Hurford, and Michael Radulescu. Rutz composed organ and choral music, and many of his compositions are published by Wayne Leupold Editions. Upon his retirement, he was named Professor Emeritus at Concordia University.

He was active in the American Guild of Organists, the Association of Lutheran Church Musicians, and Hope Lutheran Church in Austin. In retirement he served on the board of La Follia Austin Baroque and was a volunteer for classical music station KMFA, Drive a Senior, and the Windsor Park Neighborhood Association.

Harold Rutz was preceded in death by his wife, Viola; brother Carl; grandson Matthew Kelley; and daughter-in-law Sandra Henry. He is survived by daughter Faith Kelley and husband David; son Paul; daughter Hope Bartolotta and husband Peter; four Bartolotta grandchildren, Joy, Pierce, Eden, and Asher; niece Patricia Wiedenhoeft; and nephew Gerald Rutz. Memorial contributions may be made to the Professor Harold and Viola Rutz Music Department Endowment on the website of Concordia University, Austin (www.concordia.edu), entering the name of the endowment in the Other Gift Designation box.

Related News

Philip Gehring dead at 94
Read more
Carl Schalk dead at 91
Read more
Charles Hendrickson dead at 85
Read more
Murray Burfeind dead at 89
Read more
Charles Huddleston Heaton dead at 92
Read more
Peter Hurford dead at 88
Read more
James Elwin McCray dead at 86
Read more
Raymond Brunner dead at 71
Read more
Len Berghaus dead at 84
Read more
Remembering Lorraine S. Brugh
Read more
Joseph Edgar (Joe) Clipp dead at 88
Read more
Fred Swann dead at 91
Read more
Ralph James Kneeream, Jr., dead at 91
Read more
Ralph Clarence Schultz dead at 92
Read more
John Brock dead at 83
Read more
Karel Paukert dead at 90
Read more
Donald C. Ingram dead at 92
Read more
James H. Litton dead at 87
Read more
December 2025
View All Issues
Copyright ©2026 The Diapason. All rights reserved.