
Some artists play notes.
Jürgen Reimann plays what words can’t hold.
In a world overflowing with noise, speed, and spectacle, Reimann’s music arrives like a whisper—delicate, precise, and deeply human. He doesn’t write to impress. He writes for those who have felt something too vast, too fragile, or too real to say out loud. His compositions, often born in the quiet hours of the night, feel like conversations with the soul—unspoken, unresolved, but understood.
“My name is Jürgen Reimann,” he says. “And I write music for people who feel what you can’t say.”
A Piano That Becomes a Place
For Reimann, the piano is not an instrument. It’s a place.
A place where silence lives. A place where memories surface. A place where emotions breathe. His music is not composed in the traditional sense—it is released. Most of his pieces are improvisations, created in moments when the world is asleep and only thoughts and echoes remain. It is during these silent hours that his truest work emerges: raw, minimal, emotional.
In his words: “With my pieces, I try to capture feelings that many people know—but almost no one can describe: the moment you detach from your fears, your expectations, and the old voices in your head.”
And if you’ve ever felt something while listening? Then that was the moment he composed for you.
A Classical Education, A Free Soul
Born in 1967 and based in Düren, Germany, Jürgen studied piano at the Robert Schumann Hochschule in Düsseldorf, under the guidance of Professor Szcezepanska. He also trained in clarinet as a second instrument and later pursued postgraduate studies with world-renowned concert pianist Mario Ratko Delorko. In 1994, he officially graduated as a qualified music educator.
Throughout his early years, he received multiple awards—including the first prize at the 2nd International Music Competition in Ancona, Italy, and honors at the respected German youth competition Jugend musiziert. His classical foundation is impeccable, yet his heart always leaned toward something more personal, more reflective, and more intimate.
From Grand Orchestras to Intimate Moments
Reimann’s career is filled with remarkable chapters. From 1998 to 2021, he led the Salonorchester Rurland e.V., and between 2010 and 2021, he served as conductor for the Harmonieverein St. Petrus Baesweiler. He’s even performed aboard the legendary ZDF cruise ship, MS Deutschland, bringing his music to seas and shores alike.
And yet, despite the stages and the prestige, he never lost sight of his most sacred space: the one between a listener and a single note. This philosophy extends into his teaching. Under the name Pianorama, he now offers individual piano lessons in Düren, Baesweiler, and Aachen—guiding students not just in skill, but in emotional connection.
New Projects: Infra Relax and Beyond
As a composer in the world of New Age and Classical Crossover, Reimann has released deeply resonant works including Soul of Freedom, and most recently, Infra Relax—a project designed to calm, soothe, and elevate. His newest album, Peace and Freedom, is not just a title—it’s a destination. A meditative space. A state of being.
His music is now available worldwide on Spotify, Amazon Music, Deezer, Tidal, Pandora, and other major platforms. On Instagram and TikTok, he shares glimpses into his musical world—whether it’s the process behind a piece or a quiet improvisation in the stillness of his studio.
Not Meant to Impress, But to Stay
In a time when everything is rushed and overproduced, Jürgen Reimann offers something that lingers: quietude. Clarity. Feeling.
His music doesn’t demand attention—it invites it. It doesn’t push or scream—it waits. And when it finds the right person, it stays with them like a memory that can’t be put into words.
Because when you can’t say it,
Jürgen Reimann might already be playing it.
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