Sigurd Christian Jag Erland Vogt von Koch (26 April 1910 – 31 January 2009) was a Swedishcomposer.[1] He wrote symphonies, ballets, an opera, and other compositions, including music for film.
Teaching at the Karl Wohlfarts Musikschule from 1939 to 1945, von Koch also spent the final two years of this period working as a sound expert and choirmaster for radio broadcasting. He composed much music for the Swedish film industry.[3] From 1953 to 1975, he was lecturer in harmony at the Stockholm Conservatory,[4] where he was appointed a professor in 1968.[2]
Von Koch became a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Music in 1957. He has received numerous other honors and prizes at both national and international levels for his compositions. He has written six symphonies (of which the fifth, Lapponica, is dedicated to the Sami people),[5] twelve Scandinavian Dances, one opera (Pelle Svanslös), and five ballets, as well as music for windorchestra.
Even in his nineties he composed/studied every day. His works can be described as uncomplicated and his motto was always to "keep the melody".[2]
^Sveriges ridderskap och adels kalender 1992 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Riddarhusdirektionen. 1991. p. 310. ISBN91-971722-0-0.
^ abcPeterson, Hans-Gunnar. "Erland von Koch". Svenskt Musik/Swedish Music Information Centre. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 2 January 2011.
^ abPercy, G. “Leading Swedish Composers of the 20th Century.” In: Swedish music – past and present, special edition of Musikrevy. STIM & Swedish Institute for Cultural Relations Abroad, Stockholm, 1966.