She is not only missing in the Gelting band: Angelika Schuler died at the age of 58.
She also volunteered at the Poing Senior Citizens' Center.
Pliening - A place remains empty in the Gelting band: Angelika Schuler has been an active and committed member since 1998 - as part of the band and as part of the Schuler family, who have had a significant impact on the Gelting band since the beginning of the association.
Angelika Schuler is no longer experiencing the 30th birthday that the band is celebrating this year - after a long and serious illness, the 58-year-old from Plieningen has died.
Gelting: Music band remembers on website
Her daughter Stephanie Schuler, who plays the clarinet in the band, describes her mother as they have all experienced: “She was a kind-hearted person and did a lot for others.” In the band, she was the music manager and “worried for many years about order in our musicians' home ”, as the band writes in an obituary on their website.
The family music trio includes husband Gerhard, who plays the drums in the band.
His brother Günther Schuler jun.
is a conductor, together with his father Günther Schuler sen.
The music band Gelting was founded in 1991.
She was a good-hearted person.
Daughter Stephanie Schuler
In addition to music, Angelika Schuler worked as a volunteer at the Poing Senior Citizens' Center for many years.
She visited senior citizens, rattled and played with them, added variety and color to their everyday lives.
“It was a matter close to her heart,” says daughter Stephanie.
Her mother was diagnosed with breast cancer 15 years ago.
After operations and therapies, he seemed defeated.
Eight years was quiet.
But in 2014 the cancer returned.
Since then, Angelika Schuler had resisted.
Braced against cancer for many years
“Her death leaves a gap in our association, musically, but also above all personally,” writes the music band Gelting. Angelika Schuler was not only active in, but also behind the scenes, helping at concerts and events with assembly and dismantling as well as in the kitchen. Now your place is empty. Perhaps, says daughter Stephanie Schuler, she will switch from clarinet to saxophone - “and I'll keep playing your instrument”.