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Songlines Recordings
ByThe dream time isn't the past, it's not the future, it's now, it's always, it's the eternal...
"I was quite enthusiastic about it," said Songlines founder Tony Reif, "being a big fan of Richter's work and having seen the paintings in San Francisco. But I thought the relationship between the music and the art is kind of a point here; is there some way we can give people who don't have the book but buy the CD a better way to see what the art is about and better assess the relationship on their own?" There was. To accompany the CD, Reif produced a CD-ROM that included the Richter paintings.
Producing Richter 858, as the album is called, has been a highlight for Reif. But as an audiophile he gets a lot of joy out of pretty much every project he works on, especially since acquiring the equipment necessary to produce Super Audio CDs (SACD), in 2001. "This is the way music should be presented," he said of the high-resolution format. "I really feel that multi- channel sound is so much more engrossing than stereo can ever be." But to achieve that quality, Reif has to sacrifice a lot of expense (extra costs for mixing, mastering, etc) and a bit of heartache (most people don't have the setup to hear the high-resolution recording properly). Combine that with the fact that digital downloads are the main point of access for music consumers these days and Reif's got himself quite a predicament. "These are niche products that audiophiles are supporting for the moment but it's hard to say what the future of these formats is going to be." He's hanging on to the hope of a technological advancement that would enable "high-resolution, multi-channel, digital downloads." Until then or, until he runs out of funds, he aims to put out about six albums a year.
The artists Reif selects have a strong identity and clear vision for their music. Take a stack of Songlines records and a range of styles pop out, from the free intensity of the label's very first album, clarinetist François Houle's live disc Et Cetera (1992), to the poetic structures of its most recent release, 24-year-old guitarist Ryan Blotnick's debut Music Needs You.
In between, there's a long list of fantastic artists, from trumpet player Dave Douglas to guitarist Hillmar Jensson to pianist Wayne Horvitz. The common ground is strikingly clear. Each album entices with a fresh alacrity. They're dynamic even when they're meant to sound calm. Take pianist Chris Gestrin's recently released After the City Has Gone: Quiet, for example. Prepared piano and percussion embark on a series of solos, duos and trios with cello, trumpet, trombone and other instruments, creating a two-disc set that invents something new with each track. The album's an impressive followup to the previous year's CD Gestrin did with guitarist Ben Monder and drummer Dylan van der Schyff, called The Distance, and the first disc he released on Songlines, Stillpoint, which Down Beat called "commensurate to Gestrin's rare and far-reaching vision." Not bad for a guy still in his 30s. Like Gestrin, many young players have found their footing with Songlines. Guitarist Brad Shepik has put out several releases on the label since the early '90s, including three with his power trio Babkas (with altoist Briggan Krauss and drummer Aaron Alexander). And 31-year-old guitarist Gordon Grdina recorded a trio album, Think Like The Waves, with his mentor, bassist Gary Peacock, and drummer Paul Motian, which came out in 2006.
Reif likes to maintain a close relationship with all of his artists. Five albums from the Songlines catalog bear the name of the highly adventurous French pianist Benoît Delbecq, who Reif calls a good friend. "I think he's a genius," Reif said. " I like working with people whose music I really like and I guess people I like too. It does play a part in one's decision. I find it easier to work with people I know or at least I have met. If you're trying to sell someone's music and marketing it and promoting it, it helps to know something about them and have a rapport with them. I try to work really closely with the musicians."
If Reif can be at a recording session he will be. And when it's time for mixing and mastering he'll most likely be there alongside the engineer. But when it comes to the cover art, artists have free reign. "When you're trying to market musicians, you try to create a label identity, something that maybe someone flipping through bins would stop and take a look at instead of passing it by. But you won't know [Songlines] from the front because I never believed in creating a house image for the label. I felt the graphics should be too personally related to the music." That diverse array of images, names, sounds, instruments and ideas that Songlines represents all come together under the label's apt name. The term refers to an ancient cultural concept of the Aborigines, which originates during dreamtime. Stories that occur in dreams are reenacted through song and dance, at the places where they originally occurred.
"The dream time isn't the past, it's not the future, it's now, it's always, it's the eternal," explained Reif. "It's a term that came into use and had a particular meaning to a particular culture. It seemed to me that the world could be like a songline. It seemed like the songline was an interesting metaphor for our globalized world culture. And once I started, after the first year or two it became clear to me that I definitely wasn't going to just be working in Vancouver, that I wasn't going to be doing anything that was just going to be called jazz. It just confirmed my belief that this was a good choice for a name."
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