Clemens Christian Poetzsch Poetzsch: Remember Tomorrow

Release date:
March 1, 2019
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Pianist Clemens Christian Poetzsch has always known what he wanted from music freedom. Freedom to improvise, to create new musical worlds, and to follow his instincts wherever they take him. As a child in Dresden, Germany, Poetzsch received his first piano lessons from his opera singer grandfather, and was soon immersed in the world of Bach, Schubert, and Clementi. But aged ten, a birthday gift from his father a sheet music book of Frank Sinatra standards opened his ears to wider musical possibilities, and he was soon playing in the bar next door to his house, improvising and messing around with the structure of songs. Such formative experiences stayed with Poetzsch through his classical training at the Conservatory of Music in Dresden. While studying piano and composition, his spare time was spent playing in jazz and free improvisation bands with friends and colleagues. The result is Remember Tomorrow, an expansive collection of thirteen songs that stand as self-contained worlds; a house with thirteen rooms, and every composition is a little room, says Poetzsch. Music stirs up memories and fragments of remembrance too, and Remember Tomorrow is an attempt to make sense of it all, of bridging that gap between the past and the present. To do so, he stepped out of his comfort zone, adding new elements and instruments to his compositional mix, and simply let his ideas bloom. His approach to experimentation, as with collaboration, is simply to dive in and see what works, to discover through trial and error. Ditto with electronics and his use of samples; despite admitting that hes no expert, the austere, monochromatic moods he captures are far more important than any technical proficiency or purity. It comes back to freedom to create without restrictions, and to dissolve preconceived notions around genres and instruments. And so Remember Tomorrow is Poetzschs first step away from the staid world of concert halls and a classically harmonic language towards something more contemporary, more individual. My goal was just to take the next step as a composer, and to form a language out of electronics and piano. Thats the best language I can speak.