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New Artists Records
Connie Crothers
piano1941 - 2016
New Artists being a cooperative, such a statement may contain an element of contradiction, but it stands at the heart of a label that has moved beyond simple categorization for nearly 30 years. The music produced blurs all manner of boundaries while maintaining a recognizable aesthetic, one in which spontaneous improvisation is fostered in ways that allow each contributor maximum freedom of expression.


Max Roach
drums1925 - 2007

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979
Almost immediately after the label's inception, Roach was offered a dream deal with Soul Note and his involvement with the fledgling company ceased. "Max was handling the label's financial matters, but after I released Concert at Cooper Union [recorded in 1984], the label was unsustainable as it was configured." Several years later, Crothers proposed the idea of a cooperative in which each artist would be free to produce whatever they saw fit, so long as each was prepared to share in labor and financial outlay to keep the label going. The first release was Duo Dimension, a

Lennie Tristano
piano1919 - 1978

Lee Konitz
saxophone, alto1927 - 2020
Richard Tabnik
saxophone, altoAs the label broadened in scope, so did its collective aims and ambitions. The New Artists moniker took on entirely new meaning when Dick Twardzik's 1954 Improvisations was released. "He's just fantastic," Crothers beams. "And his contributions are still not recognized as they should be. The short-lived genius had a harmonic style similar only to Tristano and to Herbie Nichols, approaching each tune with a freedom and invention born equally of reverence and adventure. He may still be a new artist to many, though he was also a sadly neglected pioneer."

That group, with

Ken Filiano
bassb.1952
Non-label artists will include the dynamic pianism of Ursel Schlicht and the violin work of Stefano Pastor, of whom Crothers says, "His playing is like nothing anyone has heard before." Bassist/violinist/poet

Henry Grimes
bass, acoustic1935 - 2020

Jemeel Moondoc
saxophone, altob.1951
As for the future of New Artists, Crothers is understandably non-committal. "It's hard to tell exactly where we're going, when anyone has the freedom to produce whatever is desired. We will continue doing what we've done since the cooperative came into being."
Tags
New Artists Records
Record Label Profiles
Marc Medwin
United States
New York
New York City
Connie Crothers
Max Roach
Charles Mingus
Lennie Tristano
Lee Konitz
Richard Tabnik
Dick Twardzik
Ken Filiano
Henry Grimes
Jemeel Moondoc
Chad Taylor
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