Narada Productions
Narada Productions | |
---|---|
Parent company | The Blue Note Label Group |
Founded | 1983 |
Distributor(s) | Blue Note |
Genre | New age, smooth jazz, world, acoustic |
Country of origin | U.S. |
Location | New York City |
Narada is a record label formed in 1983 as an independent new-age music label and distributed by MCA Records. Now a fully owned subsidiary of Universal Music Group and distributed by Capitol Music Group's Blue Note Records, the label evolved through an expansion of formats to include world music, jazz, Celtic music, new flamenco, acoustic guita,r and piano genre releases.
Label history
During the late 1980s and early 1990s, Narada created several sub-label imprints to differentiate its offerings, in particular Sona Gaia, Antiquity Records, Rising Sun Records, Narada World, Narada Equinox, Narada Jazz, and Narada Mystique. In 1997, with its affiliated companies, Narada was purchased by EMI and put under the aegis of Virgin Records.
Since the acquisition, Narada was the principal US licensee for Peter Gabriel's Real World Records until 2008, and the various sub-labels of Narada were retired and their albums folded into the company's main imprint, Narada. Higher Octave, also acquired by EMI in 1997 was absorbed into Narada in 2004 as a sub-label retaining its imprint but not its staff. Higher Octave's roster of artists and albums was significantly reduced as part of this merger.[1][2] During the first few years of the decade, Narada created a short-lived sub-label titled Shakti Records for releasing electronic chill-out music, but this imprint did not see much activity and was dropped as Narada's focus on contemporary jazz releases increased.[3] Back Porch Records (folk and Americana music) was also acquired by EMI in 1997 and became a sub-label imprint under the Narada umbrella.[4]
In 2005, Narada was named as No. 4 in the 2005 top four contemporary jazz labels in Billboard magazine's year-end charts.
In 2006, Narada was moved by EMI from its original location in the Milwaukee suburb of Glendale, Wisconsin, to EMI's New York City headquarters, to become part of the newly expanded role for Blue Note Records with EMI, which is to function as EMI's consolidated label group for music for adults.[5] Additional labels joining Blue Note in this new function are Mosaic Records, Capitol Jazz, Roulette Jazz, Pacific Jazz, Manhattan Records, Angel Records, and Metro Blue. They will continue to use their existing imprints. As part of this consolidation, Narada's involvement with new-age music was reduced with Narada's focus narrowed to mainly contemporary jazz, while Narada's new-age music content migrated to sister label Higher Octave.
Roster
- Alasdair Fraser
- Altan
- Artie Traum
- Azam Ali
- Bernardo Rubaja
- Billy McLaughlin
- Bradley Joseph
- Carol Nethen
- Colin Chin
- David Arkenstone
- David Lanz
- Dean Evenson
- Don Ross
- Doug Cameron
- Down to the Bone
- Eric Tingstad
- Friedemann Witecka
- Hans Zimmer
- Jeff Lorber
- Jesse Cook
- Jim Jacobsen
- John Doan
- Joyce Cooling
- David Sylvian
- Robert Miles
- Judith Pintar
- Kate Price
- Kathy Mattea
- Keiko Matsui
- Kim Robertson
- Kostia
- Lila Downs
- Michael Gettel
- Michael Jones
- Miriam Stockley
- Nancy Rumbel
- Oscar Lopez
- Paul Cardall
- Paul Speer
- Peter Buffett
- Ralf Illenberger
- Richard Souther
- Spencer Brewer
- Tingstad & Rumbel
- Tony Levin
- Trapezoid
- Vas
- Wayne Gratz
- William Ellwood
- Martin Kolbe
- Andrew White
- Gabriel Lee
- Ancient Future
- Ira Stein
- Simon Wynberg
- Nando Lauria
- Randy Roos
- Peter Maunu
Compilation albums
- 20 Years of Narada Piano
- Grand Piano (Narada Anniversary Collection)
- Gypsy Passion: New Flamenco
- Narada Smooth Jazz
- Stories (Narada Artist Collection)
- The Next Generation – Narada Sampler
- Narada Film and Television Music Sampler (1998)