The Changing Face of the New Age
An Interview with Steve Gordon by Robert Phoenix for his recent
eMusic.com
article.
RP: When you started Sequoia, how aware were you of the New
Age marketplace and did you have a strategy when it came to marketing
your music accordingly?
SG: When we started Sequoia in 1982 we were influenced by Brian
Eno's ambient music such as "Music for Airports." We
created ambient soundscapes of music and nature sounds and called
them "Environmental Music." At the time we noticed
there was some music being sold at metaphysical book and gift
stores so we tried selling there. Our music started to sell well
in these places so we continued to release more albums there
and slowed added record stores over time. Eventually the music
in these stores became known as "New Age" but we had
been doing it before it was called that.
RP: How has New Age music changed since you started the label?
SG: In the beginning New Age music meant ambient music for meditation
and healing. Then in the 90’s there started to be an inflow
of world fusion music into New Age, which is the time when we
recorded "Sacred Earth Drums" which became a very influential
world fusion recording; in addition there started to be Celtic,
Sanskrit chant and other styles. In recent years even Electronica
Chill/Lounge started to become sold in the New Age genre. We
have welcomed all of these changes because we never wanted to
be limited to one kind of music.
RP: Sequoia seems to be putting out more compilations that are
reminiscent of Buddha Bar series, with the Buddha Lounge compilations,
is this again a marketing move on your part, or have your own
tastes in music evolved more towards the down tempo and ambient
lounge experience?
SG: We've never really been motivated by marketing
and business. We're musicians and producers so we are guided
by our creative
tastes more than anything. The good part is that we seem to have
been in tune with what our audience has enjoyed as well and therefore
our business has continued to grow. In the 90s after doing many
years of ambient records we become drawn to drumming and Worldbeat
then in the last 5
years or so we discovered downtempo chill-out music. Both of
us are very into this kind of music now. We really enjoy the
combination of beats, electronica and world elements. We have
created some good relationships with some producers and artists
in Europe so we have access to some of the best chill/lounge
tracks around. With each chill/lounge release we put out we feel
that our quality level keeps going up and has really become world
class now that we have artists such as Jens Gad who is the co-creator
of ENIGMA.
RP: How much has the yoga boom changed New Age music?
SG: Yoga music has not so much changed new age music than become
a smaller sub-set of it. There is a whole selection of chant
and India-influenced releases out now that appeal to a certain
kind of yoga enthusiast. But there are also lots of people into
yoga who like to use world music such "Drum Prayer" or "Sacred
Earth Drums" or ambient new age such as "Perfect Balance" or
even chill/lounge releases like "Le Spa Sonique" or "Hotel
Tara."
RP: Do you think that New Age music as a genre still exists?
SG: This is an excellent question because new age music has expanded
now to include so many different styles of music that it is getting
to the point where calling it nNew Age music does not make much
sense any more. Where I see it going now if for the world fusion,
celtic and chill/lounge music to become a part of World and Electronica,
which then leaves only ambient meditation music and yoga-chant
left under the classification of New Age. To us this is a welcome
change. We now consider Sequoia to be a record label with releases
in many genres that span New Age, World, Chill/Lounge, Contemporary
Jazz and Folk rather than just New Age.
RP: What's been the greatest challenge as a label that was considered
to be in some ways emblematic of New Age music to evolve and
continue to have a relevant sound and vision?
SG: We have never felt constrained by the new age label which is
probably one of the reasons we have flourished. Since we started
before the term New Age, we never thought of ourselves as being
limited by it. Instead we just released music that we enjoyed
and thought that others would also enjoy. In doing this we ended
up expanding what people think of as New Age. The only common
thread which connects all the music we have released and will
continue to put out is that, whether it is music to chill out
to, do yoga to, put on at a party or dance to, all Sequoia music
makes you feel good.
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