Carl Wittrock was born in Goor (in the Dutch province of Overijssel) in 1966. His musical career started at the Goor music school, where he studied the violin and the clarinet. He then went on to attend the Conservatory in Enschede, graduating in music education (1990), orchestral conducting D.M. (1991),and orchestral conducting U.M. (1993) with Taijirō Iimori.
He then took both national and international conducting courses with Jan Cober, Eugene Corporon, Arie van Beek, and Gert Buitenhuis, among others. He has been conducting various orchestras since 1984 and teaches music at Twickel College secondary school in Hengelo.
He is currently the conductor for the Apollo Goor musical society and Twente’s youth symphony orchestra, with whom he won the national competition for youth symphony orchestras in June 2013. He was a guest conductor for orchestras in Belgium, Ukraine, Switzerland, Italy, Germany, the United States, Lithuania and Bulgaria, among other countries.
He began creating compositions for wind orchestras in 1985. In 1989, his work Antarctica drew the attention of music publishers, and titles such as Lord Tullamore, The Legend of Flathead Lake and Trimbeka found their way to orchestras both in the Netherlands and abroad. Many composition commissions followed, such as the Dutch Brass Band Competition, the Johan Willem Friso Royal Military Chapel, the 70th anniversary of Arnhem’s liberation, the Bernischer Kantonal-Musikverband and the Dutch Institute for Wind Music.
In 2013, Wittrock was charged with the honorable task of creating a composition to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. In 2014, Carl Wittrock was knighted in the Order of Orange-Nassau. In 2014, he was awarded the Overijssel province’s cultural award, and in 2015, the Buma Brass Award.