Moritz Eggert's oeuvre includes 7 operas as well as ballets and works for dance and music theatre, often with unusual performance elements. In 1997, a German TV station produced a feature-length film portrait about his music.[2]
As a pianist he has collaborated with many artists, as soloist with orchestra, as chamber music partner in various formations and as a Lied accompanist. In 1996 he presented the complete works for piano solo by Hans Werner Henze for the first time in one concert.[3] In 1989 he was a prize winner at the International Gaudeamus Competition for Performers of Contemporary Music.
In 1991 he founded – together with Sandeep Bhagwati – the A*Devantgarde festival for new music. The festival continues today[when?] as a biennial and is directed by Alexander Strauch and Samuel Penderbayne, the next edition having the motto 'Corragio' (courage).
His concert-length cycle for piano solo, "Haemmerklavier", is among his best known works.
Moritz Eggert has written 7 operas and several more works for music and dance theatre. In 2004, his opera "The Snail" was premiered in Mannheim (directed and written by Hans Neuenfels).
His large "soccer oratorio" for the Ruhrtriennale 2005 and the Soccer World Championship in Germany 2006 experienced widespread media coverage in German as well as foreign media.
Eggert is an avid board game player, and was at one point a contributor to The Dice Tower podcast, a podcast about all aspects of boardgaming, and also the podcast "Point 2 Point," a gaming podcast that focuses exclusively on wargames.[7]