Dieter Acker Explained

Dieter Acker (3 November 1940 – 27 May 2006) was a German composer born in Sibiu, Romania.[1]

Career

Dieter Acker studied composition with Sigismund Toduță. In 1969, Acker moved from Transylvania (Romania) to Germany for political and artistic reasons. He later attended the Munich conservatory where in 1976 he received a professorship in composition. Acker taught a number of students that later became prominent composers, such as Wolfram Buchenberg, Ferran Cruixent, Oriol Cruixent, Marius Ruhlan, Florian Heigenhauser, Peter Wittrich and others. In 2000, the University of Cluj-Napoca awarded him an honorary doctorate. Dieter Acker wrote well over a hundred works, including orchestral compositions, six symphonies, instrumental concertos, and chamber music.[2] He died in Munich, Germany in 2006.

Selected works

Concertante
Chamber music

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.siebenbuerger.de/zeitung/artikel/interviews/6559-dieter-acker.html Biography of Dieter Acker at www.siebenbuerger.de
  2. Book: Composers in Bavaria. Volume 48: Dieter Acker. 2006. Christfried Brödel. H. Schneider . 978-3-7952-1218-6.