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Calvin News

Calvin Remembers Howard Slenk

Wed, Jan 15, 2025

For more than a quarter century, Howard Slenk played an instrumental part in Calvin鈥檚 music department. On January 2, 2025, Slenk passed away. He was 93 years old.

Slenk鈥檚 love for music was stoked during his time as an undergraduate student at Calvin in the early 1950s. In fact, during the 1953-54 academic year, he was a Fulbright Scholar at the Amsterdam Conservatory of Music, after which he served in the United States Army in Germany.

Upon returning to the United States, Slenk completed a master鈥檚 degree and PhD in musicology from Ohio State University and, in 1965, he founded the music department at Trinity Christian College.

A few years later, he returned to his alma mater where he taught full-time for nearly three decades.

鈥淧rofessor Howard Slenk was an accomplished musicologist, choral conductor, organist, church musician, and author,鈥 said John Witvliet, the director of the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship. 鈥淗e expanded the horizons of the music department by recruiting excellent faculty colleagues, pioneering international tours for music ensembles, and pulling off some remarkably complex musical performances with student and community-based ensembles.鈥

Spreading enthusiasm and humor

鈥淗e was a live wire: he combined great enthusiasm for his areas of interest with a strong sense of what needed to be done, with a running vein of humor along the way,鈥 said Karin Maag, a former colleague of Slenk鈥檚.

Maag first met Slenk in the late 1990s when she was working with him on a project to hold a festival of Psalms and to put out a CD of Genevan Psalm singing.

鈥淗e was the narrator for our Psalms festival, and came in costume and character as a sixteenth century church member 鈥 he threw himself with complete enthusiasm in the part,鈥 said Maag.

Loved his craft and his students

Why he was so passionate about this work was two-fold. First, he loved his craft.

鈥淢usic is so important to us because of all the arts it is most like our lives,鈥 said Slenk upon his retirement in 1995. 鈥淚t moves in time, like we do, moment to moment. It speaks, like we do. It has a heartbeat, like we do. I believe that鈥檚 why it moves us the way it does, even without text. When there is a text, when you sing with an instrument in your body, and share it with people around you, it is the summit of human experience.鈥

And the other reason he directed every available choir, even beyond his formal retirement, and taught organ and music theory with such passion, is because he loved sharing this love of music with others.

鈥淲orking with students in the choirs and performing with them the music we have come to love so much has been the high point of my career here,鈥 said Slenk upon retirement.

聽鈥淗oward was a good friend and it was an honor to accompany him and Capella on their last spring tour. I will miss him,鈥 said Pete Tigchelaar, a former colleague of Slenk's.

Slenk is survived by his wife of 64 years, Marilyn, who also taught at 茄子视频, his children Catherine (Gale) Tien, Joel (Judith) Slenk, Jerome (Tammy) Slenk, Christiana (Todd) Barry, 13 grandchildren, and six great grandchildren.


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