Album info

Album-Release:
2021

HRA-Release:
07.05.2021

Album including Album cover

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  • Nat Bartsch:
  • 1 Prologue 00:51
  • 2 For The Koalas 05:59
  • 3 The End Of The Decade 04:38
  • 4 Fight Not Flight 03:40
  • 5 Interlude 00:34
  • 6 Brightness In The Hills 04:09
  • 7 Searching For The Map 02:33
  • 8 Untitled 04:45
  • 9 For Now 01:48
  • 10 Over The River 05:42
  • 11 Emerging 01:44
  • 12 Hope 04:12
  • Total Runtime 40:35

Info for Hope



Multi-award-wining Australian pianist Nat Bartsch has always written music with the intention to comfort and soothe. 'It started with the very first composition I wrote, for a friend undergoing cancer treatment. It continued with my gentle jazz ballads for Nat Bartsch Trio, and further evolved, with renewed purpose, in my Forever albums: lullabies that support people in all stages of life.'

Her new album, Hope, took what she calls 'a slight detour' as she responded to the unexpected challenges of 2020. 'In January, the Black Summer bushfires ravaged Australia. I wrote For the Koalas, The End of the Decade and Searching for the Map with the smell of smoke in my house from fires hundreds of kilometres away, feeling immense frustration at our inaction on climate change. Then, just a few weeks later, Fight Not Flight was sketched as I realised the Covid-19 pandemic was upon us.'

In the long months of lockdown that followed, Bartsch found herself yearning for 'forward momentum': writing driving rhythms, faster tempos, percussive piano flourishes as the tracks For Now, Brightness in the Hills and her first string quartet, Over the River, came to life. Then, as Melbourne's second lockdown slowly lifted, her music returned to the slow and patient, with Emerging.

'My album's title is not just those four letters,' she explains. 'It's 'hope' as an abbreviation of both hopefulness and hopelessness, and this music explores the space between.

Nat Bartsch, piano

Kyla Matsuura-Miller, violin (track 6)
Madeleine Jevons, violin
William Clark, viola
James Morley, cello (track 6)



Nat Bartsch
is an ARIA-nominated, multi-award-winning Australian pianist and composer who creates lyrical, ethereal work that explores the space between classical and jazz genres. Her sound is influenced by Australian piano luminaries Luke Howard and Andrea Keller, studies with ECM pianists Tord Gustavsen and Nik Bärtsch, and the indie heroes of her upbringing: Sufjan Stevens, Elbow and Radiohead. She has released seven recordings of original music, toured domestically and internationally, and collaborated with some of Melbourne’s finest artists.

“Every note is chosen and played with the utmost love and care.” — BENJAMIN NORTHEY

“With anxiety and stress levels at their breaking points, soul-soothing music of its kind has never been more needed.” — TEXTURA

Nat has become most well known for her lullabies, which, during early motherhood, saw her translate her gentle aesthetic into music with purpose. Inspired by Max Richter’s Sleep project and the genre-crossing of the Teeny Tiny Stevies, Nat created a suite of lullabies designed to soothe babies to sleep, but also be meaningfully enjoyable for adults. After interviewing music therapists, she composed a series of pieces incorporating as many of their recommended parameters as possible (tempos similar to a mother’s heartbeat, gentle sounds, simple melodies and harmonies, ostinatos and repetition). Each piece is named after her newborn son’s stage of development at the time. The resulting album, Forever, and No Time At All was released in 2018 on ABC Classic. It is played regularly by many families, but also by people from all walks of life, supporting women in labour, people with mental illness, autism and grief. This album, as well as her 2017 solo debut solo Hometime, were produced by friend and pianist Luke Howard. In 2020, Nat released Forever More, a jazz sextet re-interpretation of her lullabies, which was nominated for an ARIA for Best Jazz Album. In May 2021 she will release another classical release, Hope, produced again by Howard.

Nat also composes chamber music, with commissions for Plexus Collective, Solstice Trio, The Muses Trio, Matt Withers & Sally Whitwell. She is currently studying a Masters of Composition at the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music with Stuart Greenbaum. She holds an Honours degree in music improvisation from the Victorian College of the Arts, and was bandleader of her own jazz piano trio for many years. This breadth of experience enables Nat to sit comfortably between genres, challenging assumptions of what a ‘classical’ or ‘jazz’ artist should be. She releases music both under ABC Jazz and ABC Classic labels.

Nat has been awarded the 2020 Catherine Mary Sullivan scholarship, 2020 Classical:NEXT Artistic Associate fellowship, 2019 Johnny Dennis Music Award, 2012 Will Poskitt Piano Scholarship, 2010 Melbourne Prize for Music Development Award and the 2007 Lionel Gell Travelling Fellowship. She was also a 2010 finalist for Young Australian Jazz Artist of the Year.

Nat has also worked as keyboardist/vocalist in many contemporary genres, with artists including Teeny Tiny Stevies, Whitaker, Thando, Timothy Coghill, Sweet Jean, Matt Corby, Ella Thompson and Circus Oz. She is also a mental health advocate, with a specific interest in promoting the health and wellbeing of performing artists. Nat has undertaken research exploring the two-way link between bipolar disorder and creativity which has been presented at a variety of conferences.

In 2021, Nat has also enjoyed touring as the pianist for Playschool!

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