Heinz Röttger Explained

Heinz Martin Albert Röttger
Birth Date:6 November 1909
Birth Place:Herford, German Empire
Death Date:26 August 1977
Death Place:Dessau, East Germany
Nationality:German
Occupation:composer, musical director

Heinz Martin Albert Röttger (6 November 1909 – 26 August 1977) was a German composer.

From 1928 to 1931 Röttger attended the Akademie der Tonkunst in Munich, where he studied under Walter Courvoisier and Hugo Röhr. From 1930 to 1934 he studied under Alfred Lorenz and Adolf Sandberger at the University of Munich; his doctoral thesis was on problems of form in the work of Richard Strauss. Until the outbreak of the Second World War he was Kapellmeister in Augsburg, in Bavaria.

After the War he worked at the Stralsunder Theater, in Stralsund in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern; in 1951 he became music director of the Volkstheater Rostock and the municipal orchestra there. In 1954 he was made chief musical director of the, in Dessau in Sachsen-Anhalt, where he remained until his death in Dessau on 26 August 1977.

His works include Bellmann, 1946; Phaeton, 1957; Der Heiratsantrag, a comic opera after Anton Chekhov, 1960; Die Frauen von Troja, 1962; Der Weg nach Palermo, 1965; Spanisches Capriccio, 1976.

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