Peter Damm is a musician who served as principal horn of the Staatskapelle Dresden, one of the world’s greatest orchestras. If you are not yet familiar with the horn, please don’t worry — I’ll explain everything gently.
What Kind of Instrument Is the Horn?
An orchestra is a team made up of three families of instruments: strings, winds, and percussion. The winds are further divided into woodwinds and brass. The horn belongs to the brass family, alongside the trumpet and trombone.
Shape and Sound

Have you ever seen one? It looks round and tangled, but if you were to uncoil all that tubing it would stretch to nearly five metres — not easy to carry around. The coiled shape originated so that hunters and postal riders could use it on horseback. In Europe, the horn is still used as a postal symbol to this day. It is known for its remarkably warm, soft tone, though it is considered one of the most difficult instruments to play, as notes can easily go astray.
Why Is Peter Damm So Extraordinary?
Within an orchestra, the horn does sometimes play solos, but more often it works behind the scenes — filling out harmonies, marking the rhythm. In recent years, instruments and playing styles have become increasingly standardised around the world, to the point where it is often impossible to tell one player from another just by listening. Perhaps suppressing one’s individuality has come to be seen as a virtue.
Peter Damm’s era was different. Each country had its own horn sound, and individual players stood out sharply from one another. Among them, Peter Damm had an exceptionally strong and unmistakable personality. Fans went to concerts and bought records not to hear the horn in general, but to hear the sound of Damm specifically.
What makes Peter Damm extraordinary goes beyond tone alone. He sings with his entire being. In solo passages, he applies a rich, full vibrato — like a tenor — and pours himself into the music with deep emotion. Most players today perform with a straight, direct sound, but no other horn player has ever immersed himself so completely in a work and committed so fully to singing through it.
In an age when people seem to find reassurance only through comparison with others, and when we are increasingly overwhelmed by the power of convenient AI, the music of Peter Damm — who strove simply to express himself in the enclosed world of Cold War East Germany — still has much to teach us.

I can’t believe a horn player like this actually existed!
Peter Damm: A Timeline
Let’s look back at Peter Damm’s career. (Ages are given as of his birthday in that year.)
Germany was divided into East and West until reunification in 1990. Peter Damm is known as an “East German horn player.” Yet looking at the timeline, he was born in an undivided Germany, spent his childhood under the Nazi regime and through the Second World War, built his career in East Germany, and then lived to see Germany reunified — a generation that lived through an era of extraordinary upheaval.
He turned 88 in 2025 and continues to live in good health in Dresden to this day.
| Year | Age | Events / Career |
| 1937 | 0 | Born in Meiningen, Germany |
| c. 1948 | 11 | Begins violin studies |
| 1951 | 14 | Begins studying horn with Franz Nauber |
| 1951–1957 | 14–20 | Studies at the music conservatory in Weimar under Karl Biehlig |
| 1953 | 16 | First orchestral performance (Hänsel und Gretel) |
| 1955 | 18 | Solo debut performing Mozart’s Horn Concerto KV 447 (No. 4) |
| 1957 | 20 | Begins career as principal horn of the Orchestra of Gera |
| 1959 | 22 | Appointed principal horn of the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra |
| 1969 | 32 | Appointed principal horn of the Staatskapelle Dresden |
| 2002 | 64 | Retires from the orchestra after approximately 33 years |
| 2002–2007 | 64–70 | Teaches at the Carl Maria von Weber Hochschule für Musik Dresden |
| 2007 | 70 | Retires from teaching, true to his motto: “Retire while people still regret it” |

He’s not just a representative of East Germany — he’s a musician who represents all of Germany!
Related Links
For those who would like to learn more about Peter Damm, here are two recommended sites.
1. Peter Damm | Official Website
The official website of Peter Damm himself, featuring a detailed biography written by him personally, along with his discography, publications, and more.
2. Staatskapelle Dresden | Official Website
The official website of the Staatskapelle Dresden, the orchestra where Peter Damm made his name. Carrying on his spirit, it remains one of the world’s greatest orchestras. Concert information and more can be found here.