New-age music
Template:Short description Template:Distinguish {{#invoke:Infobox|infobox}}Template:Template other{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:Infobox music genre with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| alt | caption | cultural_origins | current_year | current_year_override | current_year_title | derivatives | etymology | footnotes | fusiongenres | image | image_size | instruments | local_scenes | name | native_name | native_name_lang | other_names | other_topics | regional_scenes | stylistic_origins | subgenrelist | subgenres |showblankpositional=1}} New-age is a genre of music intended to create artistic inspiration, relaxation, and optimism. It is used by listeners for yoga, massage, meditation,<ref name=allmusicnewage/> and reading as a method of stress management<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> to bring about a state of ecstasy rather than trance,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn or to create a peaceful atmosphere in homes or other environments. It is sometimes associated with environmentalism and New Age spirituality;Template:Sfn<ref name=allmusicnewage>{{#ifeq: | yes | https://www.allmusic.com/explore/genre/d117{{
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}}</ref> however, most of its artists have nothing to do with "New Age spirituality", and some even reject the term.Template:Citation needed
New-age music includes both acoustic forms, featuring instruments such as flutes, piano, acoustic guitar, non-Western acoustic instruments, while also engaging with electronic forms, frequently relying on sustained synth pads or long sequencer-based runs. New-age artists often combine these approaches to create electroacoustic music. Vocal arrangements were initially rare in the genre, but as it has evolved, vocals have become more common, especially those featuring Native American-, Sanskrit-, or Tibetan-influenced chants, or lyrics based on mythology such as Celtic legends.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref name="PopView"/>
There is no exact definition of new-age music. However, it is often judged by its intent according to the Grammy screening committee in that category.Template:Sfn An article in Billboard magazine in 1987 commented that "New Age music may be the most startling successful non-defined music ever to hit the public consciousness".Template:Sfn Many consider it to be an umbrella term<ref name="Spin">Template:Cite magazine</ref> for marketing rather than a musical category,Template:Sfn<ref name="Philly">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="LATimes19940227">Template:Cite news</ref> and to be part of a complex cultural trend.Template:Sfn
New-age music was influenced by a wide range of artists from a variety of genres. Tony Scott's Music for Zen Meditation (1964) is considered the first new-age recording.<ref name="LATimes19940227"/><ref name="Heart">Template:Cite episode</ref> Paul Horn (beginning with 1968's Inside) was one of the important predecessors.<ref name="LATimes19881202"/> Irv Teibel's Environments series (1969–1979) featured natural soundscapes, tintinnabulation, and "Om" chants and were some of the first publicly available psychoacoustic recordings.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Steven Halpern's 1975 Spectrum Suite was a key work that began the new-age music movement.<ref name="Spectrum Suite – Steven Halpern">Wright, Carol. Spectrum Suite—Steven Halpern. AllMusic.</ref>
DefinitionEdit
New-age music is defined more by the use and effect or feeling it produces rather than the instruments and genre used in its creation;Template:Sfn it may be acoustic, electronic, or a mixture of both. New-age artists range from solo or ensemble performances using classical-music instruments ranging from the piano, acoustic guitar, flute, or harp to electronic musical instruments, or from Eastern instruments such as the sitar, tabla and tamboura. There is also a significant overlap of sectors of new-age music with ambient, classical, jazz, electronica, world, chillout, pop, and space music, among others.<ref name="Philly"/><ref name="LATimes19940227"/><ref name="Courant19920426">Template:Cite news</ref>
The two definitions typically associated with the new-age genre are:
- New-age music with an ambient sound that has the explicit purpose of aiding meditation and relaxation, or aiding and enabling various alternative spiritual practices, such as alternative healing, yoga practice, guided meditation, or chakra auditing. The proponents of this definition are almost always musicians who create their music expressly for these purposes.<ref name="NAV">Steven Halpern, New Age Voice Magazine, June 1999 issue</ref> To be useful for meditation, music must have repetitive dynamic and texture without sudden loud chords or improvisation, which could disturb the meditator.Template:Sfn<ref name="PopView"/> It is minimalist in conception, and musicians in the genre are mostly instrumentalists rather than vocalists.Template:Sfn Subliminal messages are also used in new-age music, and the use of instruments along with sounds of animals (like whales, wolves and eagles) and nature (waterfalls, ocean waves, rain) is also popular. Flautist Dean Evenson was one of the first musicians to combine peaceful music with the sounds of nature, launching a genre that became popular for massage and yoga.Template:Sfn Other prominent artists who create new-age music expressly for healing or meditation include Irv Teibel, Paul Horn, Deuter, Steven Halpern, Paul Winter, Lawrence Ball, Karunesh, Krishna Das, Deva Premal, Bhagavan Das, and Snatam Kaur.Template:Sfn<ref name="Spin"/>
- Music found in the new-age sections of record stores.<ref name="NAV"/> This is largely a definition of practicality, given the breadth of music classified as "new age" by retailers that are often less interested in finely grained distinctions between musical styles than are fans of those styles. Music that falls into this definition usually cannot be easily classified into other, more common definitions, but can contain almost any kind of music; it is more of a marketing slogan rather than musical category.Template:Sfn
Debate and criticismEdit
Stephen Hill, founder of Hearts of Space, considers that "many of the artists are very sincerely and fully committed to New Age ideas and ways of life".Template:Sfn Some composers like Kitarō consider their music to be part of their spiritual growth, as well as expressing values and shaping the culture.Template:Sfn Douglas Groothuis stated that from a Christian perspective, rejection of all music labeled as "new age" would be to fall prey to a taboo mentality, as most of the music belongs to the "progressive" side of new-age music, where composers necessarily do not always have a New Age worldview.Template:Sfn
However, it is often noted that "new-age music" is a mere popular designation that successfully sells records.Template:Sfn J. Gordon Melton argued that it does not refer to a specific genre of music, but to music used for therapeutic or other new-age purposes.Template:Sfn Kay Gardner considered the label "new age" an inauthentic commercial intention of so-called new-age music, saying, "a lot of new age music is schlock", and how due to record sales, everyone with a home studio put in sounds of crickets, oceans or rivers as a guarantee of sales.Template:Sfn What started as ambient mood music related with new-age activity became a term for a musical conglomeration of jazz, folk, rock, ethnic, classical, and electronica, among other styles, with the former, markedly different musical and theoretical movement.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref name="PopView"/><ref name="LATimes19940227"/>
Under the umbrella term, some consider Mike Oldfield's 1973 progressive rock album Tubular Bells one of the first albums to be referred to under the genre description of new-age.<ref name="Birosik 1989 138">Template:Cite book</ref> Others consider music by Greek composer Vangelis and general modern jazz-rock fusion as exemplifing the progressive side of new-age music.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Other artists included are Jean-Michel Jarre (even though his electronic excursions predate the term), Andreas Vollenweider, George Winston, Mark Isham, Michael Hedges, Shadowfax, Mannheim Steamroller, Kitarō, Yanni, Enya, Clannad, Era, Tangerine Dream and Enigma.<ref name="Spin"/><ref name="Philly"/><ref name="LATimes19940227"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
However, many musicians and composers dismiss the labeling of their music as "new age". When the Grammy Award for Best New Age Album was first created in 1987, its first winner, Andreas Vollenweider, said, "I don't have any intention to label my music... It's ridiculous to give a name to anything that is timeless". Peter Bryant, music director of WHYY-FM and host of a new-age program, noted that "I don't care for the term... New-age has a negative connotation... In the circles I come in contact with, people working in music, 'new-age' is almost an insult", that it refers to "very vapid, dreamy kinds of dull music... with no substance or form or interest", and that the term has "stuck".<ref name="Philly"/> Template:Quote box
Harold Budd said, "When I hear the term 'new-age' I reach for my revolver... I don't think of myself as making music that is only supposed to be in the background. It's embarrassing to inadvertently be associated with something that you know in your guts is vacuous." Vangelis considers it to be a style that "gave the opportunity for untalented people to make very boring music".<ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Cbignore</ref> Yanni stated that "I don't want to relax the audience; I want to engage them in the music, get them interested",<ref name="LATimes19881202">Template:Cite news</ref> and that "New age implies a more subdued, more relaxed music than what I do. My music can be very rhythmic, very energetic, even very ethnic."<ref name="LATimes19940227"/> David Van Tieghem, George Winston and Kitarō also rejected the label of new-age artist.<ref name="PopView"/><ref name="LATimes19881202"/><ref name="LAT2">Template:Cite news</ref> David Lanz said that he "finally figured out that the main reason people don't like the term new age is because it's the only musical category that isn't a musical term".<ref name="LATimes19940227"/> Andreas Vollenweider noted that "we have sold millions of records worldwide before the category new age was actually a category", and shared the concern that "the stores are having this problem with categorization".<ref name="Courant19920426"/> Template:Quote box
Ron Goldstein, president of Private Music, agreed with such a standpoint, and explained that "Windham Hill was the hub of this whole thing. Because of that association, new-age has come to be perceived as this West Coast thing". However, Windham Hill's managing director Sam Sutherland argued that even the label's founders William Ackerman and Anne Robinson "shied away from using any idiomatic or generic term at all. It's always seemed a little synthetic", and they stopped making any kind of deliberate protests to the use of the term simply because it was inappropriate. Both Goldstein and Sutherland concluded that the tag helped move merchandise, and that new-age music would be absorbed into the general body of pop music within a few years after 1987.<ref name="Philly"/>
The New York Times music critic Jon Pareles noted that "new-age music" absorbed other styles in more softer form, but those same, well-defined styles do not need the new-age category, and that "new-age music" resembles other music because it is aimed as a marketing niche—to be a "formula show" designated for urban "ultra-consumers" as status accessory; he also said the Andean, Asian and African traditional music influences evoke the sense of "cosmopolitanism", while nature in the album artwork and sound evoke the "connection to unspoiled landscapes".
Alternative termsEdit
The borders of this umbrella genre are not well-defined, but music retail stores will include artists in the "new-age" category even if they belong to different genre, and those artists themselves use different names for their style of music.
Kay Gardner called the original new-age music "healing music" or "women's spirituality".Template:Sfn Paul Winter, considered a new-age music pioneer, also dismissed the term, preferring "earth music".<ref name="Courant19920426"/>
The term "instrumental music" or "contemporary instrumental" can include artists who do not use electronic instruments, such as solo pianist David Lanz.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Similarly, pianists such as Yanni<ref name="Yanni in Words">Template:Cite book {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Bradley Joseph<ref name="Indie Journal Interview">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> use this term as well, although they use keyboards to incorporate layered orchestral textures into their compositions. Yanni has distinguished the music genre from the spiritual movement bearing the same name.<ref name="CourierJournal20120426">Puckett, Jeffrey Lee, "Yanni up close: Musician known for larger-than-life venues also loves the Louisville Palace", The Courier-Journal, April 26, 2012.</ref> The term "contemporary instrumental music" was also suggested by Andreas Vollenweider, while "adult alternative" by Gary L. Chappell, which was the term by which Billboard called the new-age and world-music album charts.<ref name="Courant19920426"/>
HistoryEdit
{{ safesubst:#invoke:Unsubst||date=__DATE__ |$B= Template:Ambox }} The concept arose with the involvement of professional musicians in the New-Age movement. Initially, it was of no interest to the musical industry, so the musicians and related staff founded their own small independent recording businesses. Sales reached significant numbers in unusual outlets such as bookstores, gift stores, health-food stores and boutiques, as well as by direct mail.Template:Sfn<ref name="PopView"/> With the demand of a large market, the major recording companies began promoting new-age music in the 1980s.<ref name="Philly"/>Template:Sfn
New-age music was influenced by a wide range of artists from a variety of genres—for example, folk-instrumentalists John Fahey and Leo Kottke, minimalists Terry Riley, Steve Reich, La Monte Young, and Philip Glass, progressive rock acts such as Pink Floyd, ambient pioneer Brian Eno, synthesizer performer Klaus Schulze, and jazz artists Keith Jarrett, Weather Report, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Paul Horn (beginning with 1968's Inside), Paul Winter (beginning in the mid-1960s with the Paul Winter Consort) and Pat Metheny.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn<ref name="PopView"/><ref name="LATimes19881202"/><ref name=motherjones>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=Birosik>Birosik, Patti Jean (1989). The New Age Music Guide. Collier Books. Template:ISBN.</ref><ref name=Werkhoven>Werkhoven, Henk N. (1997). The International Guide to New Age Music. Billboard Books / Crown Publishing Group. Template:ISBN.</ref>
Tony Scott's Music for Zen Meditation (1964) is sometimes considered the first new-age recording,<ref>Template:Cite episode</ref> but initially it was popular mostly in California, and was not sold nationally until the 1980s.Template:Sfn Another school of meditation music arose among the followers of Rajneesh; Deuter recorded D (1971) and Aum (1972), which mixed acoustic and electronic instruments with sounds of the sea.Template:Sfn Kay Gardner's song "Lunamuse" (1974) and first recording Mooncircles (1975), which were a synthesis of music, sexuality and Wiccan spirituality, were "new-age music before it got to be new-age music". Her A Rainbow Path (1984) embraced Halpern's theory of healing music from that time with women's spirituality, and she became one of the most popular new-age sacred-music artists.Template:Sfn Mike Orme of Stylus Magazine writes that many key Berlin school musicians helped popularise new-age.<ref name="Orme">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Paul Winter's Missa Gaia/Earth Mass (1982) is described as "a masterpiece of New Age ecological consciousness that celebrates the sacredness of land, sky, and sea".Template:Sfn His work on the East Coast is considered to be one of the most important musical expressions of new-age spirituality.Template:Sfn On the West Coast, musicians concentrated more on music for healing and meditation. The most notable early work was Steven Halpern's Spectrum Suite (1975), the musical purpose of which was described as to "resonate specific areas of the body... it quiets the mind and body", and whose title relates "to the seven tones of the musical scale and the seven colors of the rainbow to the seven etheric energy sources (chakras) in our bodies". In the 1970s his music work, and the theoretical book Tuning the Human Instrument (1979), pioneered the contemporary practice of musical healing in the United States.Template:Sfn
In 1976 the record label Windham Hill Records was founded, with an initial $300 investment, and would gross over $26 million annually ten years later. Over the years many record labels were formed that embraced or rejected the new-age designation, such as Narada Productions, Private Music, Music West, Lifestyle, Audion, Sonic Atmospheres, Living Music, Terra (Vanguard Records), Novus Records (which mainly recorded jazz music), FM (CBS Masterworks) and Cinema (Capitol Records).<ref name="PopView">Template:Cite news</ref>
Between the intentional extremes of the U.S.' coasts are some of the most successful new-age artists, like George Winston and R. Carlos Nakai. Winston's million-selling December (1982), released by Windham Hill Records, was highly popular.<ref name="PopView"/> Most of Nakai's work, with his first release Changes in 1983, consists of improvised songs in native North American style. During the 1990s, his music became virtual anthems for new-age spirituality.Template:Sfn
In 1981, Tower Records in Mountain View, California added a "new age" bin.<ref name=billboard1986/> By 1985, independent and chain record retail stores were adding sections for new age, and major labels began showing interest in the genre, both through acquisition of some existing new-age labels such as Paul Winter's Living Music and through signing of so-called "new-age" artists such as Japanese electronic composer Kitarō and American crossover jazz musician Pat Metheny, both signed by Geffen Records.<ref name=billboard1986>Template:Cite news</ref> Most of the major record labels accepted new age artists by the beginning of the next year.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In the late 1980s the umbrella genre was the fastest-growing genre with significant radio broadcast. It was seen as an attractive business due to low recording costs.<ref name="PopView"/>
Stephen Hill founded the new-age radio show Hearts of Space in 1973. In 1983, it was picked up by NPR for syndication to 230 affiliates nationally,<ref name=Balfe/> and a year later Hill started a record label, Hearts of Space Records. On Valentine's Day in 1987, the former Los Angeles rock radio station KMET changed to a full-time new-age music format with new call letters KTWV, branded as The Wave.<ref name="PopView"/><ref name=Balfe>Template:Cite book</ref> During The Wave's new-age period, management told the station employees to refer to The Wave as a "mood service" rather than a "radio station". DJs stopped announcing the titles of the songs, and instead, to maintain an uninterrupted mood, listeners could call a 1–800 phone number to find out what song was playing. News breaks were also re-branded and referred to as "wave breaks".<ref name=Balfe/> Other new-age-specialty radio programs included Forest's Musical Starstreams and John Diliberto's Echoes. Most major cable television networks have channels that play music without visuals, including channels for New age, such as the "Soundscapes" channel on Music Choice. The two satellite radio companies Sirius Satellite Radio & XM Satellite Radio each had their own channels that played new-age music. Sirius—Spa (Sirius XM) (73), XM—Audio Visions (77). When the two merged in November 2008 and became SiriusXM, the Spa name was retained for the music channel with the majority of Audio Vision's music library being used.
In 1987, the Grammy Award for Best New Age Album was introduced,<ref name="Philly"/> while in 1988 the Billboard's New Age weekly charts.Template:Sfn In 1989, Suzanne Doucet produced and held the first international New-Age Music Conference in Los Angeles.Template:Sfn By the end of 1989, there were over 150 small independent record labels releasing new-age music, while new-age and adult-alternative programs were carried on hundreds of commercial and college radio stations in the U.S., and over 40 distributors were selling new-age music through mail-order catalogs.<ref name=pjyoga>Template:Cite news</ref>
In the 1990s, many small labels of new-age style music emerged in Japan, but for this kind of instrumental music the terms "relaxing" or "healing" music were more popular. Enigma's "Sadeness (Part I)" became an international hit, reaching number one in 24 countries, including the UK, and number five on the US Billboard Hot 100, selling over 5 million worldwide.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> At the time Holland was the home of two leading European new-age labels—Oreade and Narada Media. Oreade reported that in 1997 the latest trend was "angelic" music, while Narada Media predicted that the genre would develop in the direction of world music (with Celtic, Irish and African influences).<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> In 1995 some "new-age" composers like Kitarō, Suzanne Ciani and Patrick O'Hearn moved from major to independent record labels due to lack of promotion, diminishing sales or limited freedom of creativity.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
In 2001, Windham Hill celebrated its 25th anniversary, Narada and Higher Octave Music continued to move into world and ethno-techno music, and Hearts of Space Records were bought by Valley Entertainment. Enya's "Only Time" peaked at #10 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, and the album A Day Without Rain at #2 on the Billboard 200, making Enya the number one new-age artist of the year.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
See alsoEdit
- Adult contemporary music
- Biomusic (natural soundscapes and animal songs)
- List of new-age music artists
- Lounge music
- Music and sleep
- Pure Moods, a popular 1990s new-age music compilation album
- Sentimental ballad
ReferencesEdit
SourcesEdit
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External linksEdit
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