Karl Michael Komma (24 December 1913, Asch, Austria-Hungary (now Aš, Czech Republic) – 23 September 2012, Memmingen, Germany) was a German composer and music-publicist.
Komma studied at the German Music Academy in Prague with George Szell, Fidelio F. Finke and Theodor Veidl [de] before he went to Heidelberg in 1934 to study music with Heinrich Besseler.
During this time he also conducted composition studies with Wolfgang Fortner, who became a conductor for Komma (Donaueschingen, premiere of the "German Dances" for string orchestra, 1938).
He also appeared in 1935 with a cantata for a NSDStB-Kundgebung in appearance, composed by a jubilant chorus for the annexation of Czechoslovakia by Hitler in 1938 and came with a pamphlet against Gustav Mahler in 1939 (Fred Prieberg [de] in Musik im NS-Staat), 1982, and Macht und Musik, 1992).
In 1952, he received the Nordgau Culture Prize of the city of Amberg in the category of music.