Dieter Kalka


Dieter Kalka is a German writer, songwriter, poet, dramatist, musician, editor, translator and speech therapist.

Biography

Dieter Kalka began the study of electrical engineering and mathematics at the Technische Universität Ilmenau in 1978. In 1980 he was forced to abandon his studies due to the distribution and possession of illegal publications. He was a member of the folk group ":de:Feuertanz |Feuertanz", founded in 1978, while in 1984 he founded :de:Dieters Frohe Zukunft|Dieters Frohe Zukunft. He wrote his own folksongs, together with Uwe Schimmel on the French horn, Uta Mannweiler on the viola, while he himself played Bandoneon. With this group he organised the illegal artists' meeting ":de:Ringelfolk|Ringelfolk" in Wurzen, which was devoid of censorship. The unauthorized promotional material for this, and other actions, he copied at the photo lab of Petra Lux.
Dieter Kalka was "the fiercest among the :de:Leipziger Liederszene|Leipzig song singers". Since the mid-1980s he has worked as a freelance singer and has repeatedly participated in the Chanson days Kloster Michaelstein. He made samizdat productions in the private studio of Hubertus Schmidt in 1987, with Peter Gläser in 1988 and at the official Kölling studio in Leipzig in 1989. After collaborating with Werner Bernreuther in 1987, he received a professional certificate as a songwriter, won a prize at the :de:Chansontage der DDR|Chanson days of the GDR and a prize at the Leipzig Songwriter Workshop, which he later publicly returned as they wanted to dictate to him which song he should sing at the final concert. He has received several scholarships of Saxony and was, for a time, a member of the Independent Writers Association "ASSO" Dresden, the NGL/New Society for Literature, the Writers Association "VS" and the "Förderkreis Freie Literaturgesellschaft Leipzig".
Dieter Kalkas first published book was entitled "Eine übersensible Regung unterm Schuhabsatz" and released in 1987 as samizdat. In 1990 he prepared as project manager for the first :de:Erste Alternative Buchmesse Leipzig|Alternative Leipzig Book Fair. Within the Association of German writers he organized in 1995 in Leipzig, the German-Polish poets’ festival ":de:Lubliner Lift|wortlust". He has translated Polish poetry into German. The sunken GDR reality is the subject of his "Der ungepflückte Apfelbaum", published in 1998. Kalka's texts have been published in German, Polish, Austrian, Canadian and Belarusian literary magazines.
Kalka was twice in Belarus for the songwriter's festival "Bardentreffen", and appeared with his Belarusian colleague Victor Shalkevich. At the Saxon Literature Spring in 2003, he dedicated his "Freiheitslied Nr. 2" to his Belarusian colleague Victor Shalkevich in the hope that better times will come. He participated in the German-Polish poets steamer on the border river Oder and the :de:Orpheus Projekt|Orpheus Project in Wroclaw, Bad Muskau and Lwówek Śląski. At the poets steamer the Poet's wedding also took place in 1998 between Dieter Kalka and Zielona Góra fairy tale author, Agnieszka Haupe, at the Frankfurt Oderbrücke.
Kalka has appeared on various programs with his bandoneon and playing his own songs, such as in 1988 with the theme "Noch habe ich die Freiheit zu lieben". He also sang at times at the songwriter-festival :de:Burg-Waldeck-Festivals|Burg Waldeck. His songs "are not without a bitter aftertaste. He puts his finger on compromises that everybody engages in almost every day of their life, or feel compelled to close. Former ideals are often forgotten”. He has written lyrics for folk opera and has written about "The revival of the East German singer-songwriter scene". His concerts have taken him to Poland, Belarus, Czech Republic, Hungary, Switzerland, Austria and Denmark. His songs are on numerous CDs.
Dieter Kalka works as a speech therapist and lives in Leipzig and Meuselwitz.

Works

Books

CD/MC

Dieter Kalka translated Polish poets: :de:Marek Śnieciński|Marek Śnieciński, Jan Strządała, :de:Krzysztof Paczuski|Krzysztof Paczuski, :de:Waldemar Dras|Waldemar Dras, Józef Baran, :pl:Marta Fox|Marta Fox, :de:Katarzyna Jarosz-Rabiej|Katarzyna Jarosz-Rabiej, Agnieszka Haupe, Jolanta Pytel, :pl:Władysław Klępka|Wladyslaw Klepka, :de:Ludmiła Marjańska|Ludmiła Marjańska, :de:Bogdan Kos|Bogdan Kos, Grzegorz Stec, Jakub Malukow Danecki, Bohdan Zadura, Waldemar Michalski, Alekzander Rozenfeld and others. The poetry was published in :de:Ostragehege |Ostragehege, :de:Muschelhaufen |Muschelhaufen, the anthology Lubliner Lift/Lubelska winda, :de:manuskripte|manuskripte, the anthologies "Es ist Zeit, wechsle die Kleider", "Nach den Gewittern" and at PortalPolen.