His first success was a production of Haydn's IL MONDO DELLA LUNA at Charlottenburg Palace in his hometown of Berlin in 1974. Shortly thereafter, he won several first prizes in the concert selection of the German Music Council as well as at competitions in Siena and Vienna and was invited to Tanglewood, USA, (1978, 1988, 1997) by Seiji Ozawa as a Leonard Bernstein Fellow. As a result,
Antal Doráti also became aware of him and appointed Martin Fischer-Dieskau as his assistant conductor of the
Detroit Symphony Orchestra in the 1978/79 season. After positions in Augsburg,
Aachen and Hagen, Fischer-Dieskau became principal conductor at
Theater Bern in 1991 with responsibilities for the contemporary, Italian and Russian repertory. He was a frequent guest conductor at festivals in Berlin, Helsinki, Drottningholm, Oviedo and Granada, where he performed in collaboration with celebrity singers such as Ricciarelli, Obraztsova, Aliberti, Seiffert. In 1993 he served as the artistic leader of the Youth Festival at Bayreuth. He has held a professorship in conducting at the
University of the Arts Bremen since 1994 and produced and hosted his own television series of eleven musical "tours" that were telecast for ARD throughout Germany. In 2001 he was the initiator of an Israeli-Palestinian-German orchestral summit in Tel Aviv, Israel. He was chief conductor of the
Canadian KW Symphony Orchestra from 2000 to 2004. He expanded the standard repertoire and opened the concert hall to new audiences with this orchestra, whose sphere of influence covers the entire region around Toronto. The orchestra's first German-Canadian festival was one of the orchestra's most significant achievements in 2002 under his direction. ==Recordings==