Dahlhaus was born in
Hanover on 10 June 1928. The Second World War interrupted his early education; he served on the front and as an anti-aircraft auxiliary. He completed school exams through a special program designed for those engaged in combat. After a brief stint studying law, Dahlhaus first engaged in musicology from 1947 to 1952, studying with
Wilibald Gurlitt at the
University of Freiburg and
Rudolf Gerber at the
University of Göttingen. His 1953 dissertation at the latter concerned the masses of
Josquin des Prez. Instead of seeking an academic career, he engaged in the theatre and journalism worlds. Having begun as a student, he worked as
dramaturg for the Deutsches Theater in
Göttingen from 1950 to 1958;
Bertolt Brecht had encouraged him to take the post. From 1960 to 1962 he worked as musical editor for the
Stuttgarter Zeitung newspaper, acting as a relentless promoter of the
Darmstadt school. His first academic position came in 1962, when he served as a research assistant at the
University of Kiel until 1966. That year he completed his a work for his
Habilitation,
Untersuchungen über die Entstehung der harmonischen Tonalität (
Studies on the Origin of Harmonic Tonality), published in 1968. The work was a seminal study on the origins of
tonality, reaching back to the
Renaissance and
Baroque periods. Originally in German,
Robert Gjerdingen has published a translated version in 1990 through the
Princeton University Press. After working at
Saarland University for less than a year, he was hired in 1967 to succeed
Hans Heinz Stuckenschmidt as the head of the
TU Berlin's musicology department. He would remain there until his death, gradually expanding and developing the university's previously minuscule musicology program to one of international renown. Though many universities offered him positions throughout his tenure, he rejected them all; the only exception was the two semesters he spent as a visiting professor at
Princeton University. Dahlhaus was honored with the
Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (Grand Cross with Star), a
Blue Max, and accepted into the
German Academy. In 1987, he was awarded the
Frankfurter Musikpreis. After being ill for some time, which he mostly kept private from his colleagues, he died in Berlin on 13 March 1989, from
kidney failure. He had been working on a succinct history of Western music in English at the time, which was left unfinished. ==Musicological scholarship==