In 2004, Edgar Bronfman Jr., the enfant terrible of the family of Canadian liquor magnates, engaged in the third major entertainment multinational restructuring of his career. As with the PolyGram/Universal merger he engineered in 1998, and the disastrous acquisition of Universal by the French waste management corporation Vivendi in 2000, in which Bronfman participated, the establishment of the Warner Music Group (WMG) in 2004 mobilized a process of financial leverage that imposed onerous conditions upon the new company's corporate subsidiaries.Footnote 1 The end result was the downsizing of thousands of employees and the slashing of artist rosters across each of the company's major divisions.
The corporate restructuring that accompanied the acquisition of Time/Warner's music division by a Bronfman-led private equity consortium had decisive implications for jazz artists located throughout the Warner Music corporate umbrella. One casualty of the leveraged buyout (LBO) was the Warner Jazz subsidiary, a unit under the direction of accomplished producer and artist-and-repertory executive Matt Pierson, with a well-regarded roster of both “straightahead” and “smooth jazz” artists. While the formation of Warner Brothers’ jazz division dates to 1978, Warner Jazz saw dramatic growth under Pierson, who joined Warner as director of A&R in the early 1990s and whose stewardship of Warner Jazz through the following decade saw the subsidiary signing prominent artists such as Joshua Redman, Brad Mehldau, and Kenny Garrett.Footnote 2 The 2004 WMG restructuring saw the shuttering of Warner Jazz and the relocation of its most prominent jazz artists to Nonesuch Records, a distinctive classical subsidiary of Elektra under the direction of Bob Hurwitz. The Warner Jazz transplants would find themselves in the company of a singularly eclectic and “arty” label roster, comprising such disparate artists as Steve Reich, the Kronos Quartet, Wilco, the Buena Vista Social Club, k.d. lang, David Byrne, Emmylou Harris, and Youssou N'Dour.Footnote 3
The question that interests me here is a deceptively simple one. Why were these jazz artists moved to Nonesuch? In what sense did Hurwitz's boutique label provide a more congenial ecology for Warner Music's jazz roster, at a moment of turbulence brought on by the financial restructuring of Warner's music holdings? At stake is our understanding of how longstanding label subsidiaries navigate the corporate volatility that has become a central feature of the era of financialization. The LBO of WMG reflects a contemporary market logic in which value extraction has become the overriding goal of corporate restructuring.Footnote 4 Whether through share repurchase programs, issuing of special dividends, or the debt accrued via LBOs, financial deals enacted at the uppermost reaches of major label corporate hierarchies pass along significant costs to label subsidiaries, installing precarity at their very core.
The Bronfman WMG acquisition demonstrates how logics of financialization shape the conditions of possibility for creativity in a capitalist society. As Marianna Ritchey has argued, the field of musicology, despite having produced sophisticated close readings of the structures of feeling through which dynamics of gender, sexuality, and race are imbricated in musical practices, has until recently been somewhat inattentive to the material conditions in which these structures of feeling are brought into being.Footnote 5 But even as musicologists have come to devote sustained attention to political economy, there is more work to be done on the financialization of the music industry.Footnote 6 Our analysis here must extend beyond music scholars’ laudable recent focus on the dynamics of distribution, marketing, and consumption at independent and major labels.Footnote 7 In the early twenty-first century, these concrete, front-line determinations of which music makes it to what audience, of who has access to and/or ownership of music, are all directly shaped by the music industry's intimate alignment with the structural contours and cultural logics of the financial markets. In this context, our understanding of the financial stability of an entity such as Nonesuch Records has to be as attentive to its efficacious navigation of its parent corporation's culture of financialization as it is to its branding, A&R, and distribution strategies. As I hope to demonstrate, Nonesuch accomplishes this successful navigation through its deft balancing of the neoliberalized fiscal demands of its parent corporation, on the one hand, and its thoughtful approach to the curation of its artist roster, on the other.
I speak here of a “neoliberalized” music industry, and yet, as I hope the following discussion makes clear, the reach of neoliberalism is not always as totalizing as the scholarship on the subject may imply. Our assessments of neoliberalized institutions in contemporary scholarship are perhaps indebted to a picture of the ruthlessly dehumanized, metrics-driven practices at work on the shop floor of an Amazon fulfillment center or the trading floor of the Wall Street investment bank.Footnote 8 By contrast, this case study of Nonesuch and Warner Jazz indicates the extent to which human relationships continue to mediate many aspects of the day-to-day operations of the music multinationals, shaping and in some cases mitigating the worst aspects of capital's ethos of “creative destruction.”Footnote 9 As Eduardo Herrera reminds us in a different context, the large institutions that we scholars habitually treat as faceless monoliths are in fact peopled, their actions and strategies together constituting “an [ever-]emerging domain of complex entanglements and webs of relations and ideas, all being mediated and enacted as the result of human, institutional, discursive, and even material actors.”Footnote 10 Such entanglements, shaped by the decisions of human actors, must be understood as complicating our picture of the ubiquity of neoliberalism's instrumentalism, as I hope to demonstrate here.
My discussion here will also complicate our sense of how jazz is positioned within the twenty-first century music industry. Jazz historiography tends to have us look at the jazz record business through the lens of the “jazz label,” whether that label is an independent (Verve or Blue Note, in their original incarnations) or major label subsidiary (such as Columbia Records's jazz division). The genre homogeneity overseen by A&R executives at such labels leads to a certain set of assumptions, specific to that genre space, about how best to recruit artists, develop repertory, produce recordings, and market albums.Footnote 11 We can see this, for instance, with Blue Note's strategy of paying artists to rehearse the hard bop arrangements on its midcentury recordings, or CTI Records's cultivation of a cohesive house “sound,” at the intersection of jazz and pop, in the 1960s and 1970s.Footnote 12 By contrast, we might see Nonesuch's incorporation of the former Warner Jazz artist roster into its eclectic genre space as a manifestation of a different model, more appropriate to twenty-first century music industry priorities, where the assembly of a more diversified portfolio of artists serves as a strategy of risk management.Footnote 13
Proceeding by way of an account of the LBO of WMG in 2004, “Private Equity Blues” briefly examines the operation of WMG subsidiary Warner Jazz under Matt Pierson throughout the 1990s, and then moves on to a short corporate history of Nonesuch Records under Teresa Sterne and Robert Hurwitz. Since Hurwitz's departure in 2017, Nonesuch has been managed by former Senior Vice President David Bither; while this study, in the conclusion, will touch upon, in passing, some questions facing Nonesuch in the moment of Bither's corporate oversight, my focus here is on the period of the mid-aughts, and on the resilient label that Hurwitz managed to steer through the tumultuous period of WMG's private equity acquisition.Footnote 14
The Leveraged Buyout of WMG
In 2003, Bronfman Jr. formed a partnership with several private equity groups, including Thomas H. Lee Partners, Bain Capital, and Providence Equity Partners, to make a bid for the WMG, the music subsidiary of AOL Time Warner.Footnote 15 In the post-Napster environment, as media conglomerates became aware of the vulnerability of their music divisions in the face of new file-sharing technologies, AOL Time Warner sought to divest itself of its music holdings; the move towards corporate deconsolidation had also become necessary in the context of continued fallout from Time Warner's merger with America Online in 2000, which by 2003 had landed the conglomerate $29 billion in debt, with a 90 percent depreciation of its stock price.Footnote 16 For his part, Bronfman (who may have been looking to redeem himself following the calamitous acquisition of UMG by Vivendi) approached the WMG deal as an opportunity to establish an aggressive precedent for major label involvement in the emerging digital music environment.Footnote 17
The LBO of WMG in 2004 took place during a period of tremendous instability for the music industry. In the early 2000s, the emergence of peer-to-peer file-sharing platforms like Napster raised questions about the long-term profitability of music divisions at the media multinationals, who taken together had, by one account, seen a 20 percent decline in sales between 2000 and 2003.Footnote 18 In this context, the music multinationals sought expanded market share, which would provide a measure of insulation against the new volatility in record sales; at the same time, mergers would allow these companies to cut costs, and absorb part of the impact of reduced profits.Footnote 19
Consequently, before the private equity play by the Bronfman group, both EMI and Bertelsmann Music Group were in talks throughout 2003 about the possibility of a merger with Warner Music. Negotiations with Bertelsmann, Bertelsmann Music Group's (BMG) German parent corporation, in the summer of 2003 proceeded initially from the possibility of a side deal in which AOL Time Warner would sell its book publishing business to Bertelsmann, on the condition that there would be an exclusive 60-day period to discuss a merger of the two company's music divisions. The complexity of a BMG/WMG merger, though, stood as an obstacle to the deal's realization, with uncertainty regarding the potential status of AOL Time Warner's music publishing arm, Warner Chappell, together with its CD manufacturing business. EMI, in talks with AOL Time Warner later in the year, potentially stood to add more value than BMG in the case of a merger with WMG, given its formidable artist roster, but a prospective EMI/WMG merger faced problems of its own. The likelihood that an EMI merger would grant WMG the desired cost savings was undercut by the fact that EMI had already restructured extensively in 2001, and thus an EMI/WMG merger would offer less in the way of potential “synergies” than a BMG merger.Footnote 20 Moreover, in the wake of a previous effort to merge EMI and WMG in 2000, when the deal was blocked by EU antitrust officials, AOL Time Warner remained skittish about the potential regulatory issues raised by a new EMI/WMG merger initiative.Footnote 21 Ultimately, this latter consideration proved decisive for AOL Time Warner. In spinning off its music division to Bronfman's private equity consortium, it could avoid any merger-related antitrust issues.Footnote 22 In late 2003, EMI withdrew its merger offer, and AOL Time Warner agreed to proceed with the sale of WMG to Edgar Bronfman Jr.'s private equity group.Footnote 23
Understanding the financial mechanism through which Bronfman's group obtained control over WMG is necessary in order for us to get a sense of the conditions facing staff and artists at the company's jazz-related subsidiaries. The purchase of the music entity by a group of private investors would turn WMG into the world's largest independent record company, and this led many observers, inside and outside the company, to emphasize its putative “independence.” These prognostications leaned heavily on the implication that taking WMG private would shield the company from the pressure of quarterly reports, allowing a more artist-friendly environment to flourish. Andy Allen, who was then president of the Alternative Distribution Alliance, an organization formed to provide independent labels with access to more powerful distribution networks, argued that the separation of WMG from AOL Time Warner could only be a positive development, providing a space in which Warner artists would no longer be subject to the diffuse priorities of a larger media conglomerate:
I love the idea of a privately held music company and a music company only
[…] The business will prosper doing things that make sense for a music company and not just doing things that make sense for a larger company that a music company is part of.Footnote 24
In a similar fashion, Michael Lippman, manager for the Atlantic Records act Matchbox Twenty (Atlantic had been a Warner subsidiary since 1967), argued that “an independent company that doesn't report to shareholders is much better suited to develop artists.”Footnote 25 Here, both Allen and Lippman extrapolate a nurturing, artist-friendly A&R environment from the twin facts of WMG's stand-alone independence as a record company and its private ownership under a consortium of investors.
However, to have hailed the newly privatized WMG as a “superindie,” with all of the supportive, artist-centered associations that such a designation was meant to imply, is to have quite likely ignored the structural contours of the Bronfman Jr.-led WMG purchase itself. The procedure Bronfman and his partners used to secure control of the company was that of a LBO, a debt-laden approach to acquisition favored among private equity firms. In an LBO, the purchase of a company is secured through debt financing (leverage) well in excess of the initial commitment floated by the investors. Leverage allows private equity firms to obtain control over a company with only a fraction of the capital necessary to purchase it outright. Because they've used debt to enact the purchase, private equity investors usually only seek to hold the company in question for a finite period before unloading it, often only three to five years.Footnote 26 This short time horizon ensures that investors will seek to maximize the return on their investment at a concentrated rate, without devoting much attention to the long-term prospects of the company. Private equity firms maximize revenue from the target company through the sale and dissolution of company assets, the accumulation of further corporate debt in the form of junk bonds (with the accumulated financing paid to investors as special dividends), and the issuing of public stock via an initial public offering. Because of the debt that needs to be recouped, mass layoffs are practically a non-negotiable feature of many recent private equity takeovers.Footnote 27 The result is a model of corporate acquisition that is often enormously destructive to the stakeholders associated with a given company.
It is this decidedly artist-unfriendly business model that Bronfman Jr. brought to the acquisition of WMG in late 2003. Bronfman Jr., Bain Capital, Lee Partners, and Providence Equity collectively fronted $1.25 billion of the $2.6 billion necessary to purchase WMG from Time-Warner. The day after the purchase was complete in March 2004, Bronfman implemented a restructuring plan that would achieve $277 million in cost savings through staff reductions, salary cuts, a slashed artist roster, and the consolidation and dissolution of underperforming divisions. All told, WMG let go 20 percent of its global workforce, totaling over 1,000 employees.Footnote 28 Even as these draconian austerity measures were being enacted, Bronfman Jr. and his partners enjoyed a banner year, recouping almost the entirety of their initial $1.25 billion investment in under twelve months. This was achieved in part through the accumulation of additional debt, in the form of junk bonds. By issuing this debt through a separate holding company, Bronfman Jr. and his partners kept it separate from the actual existing debt of WMG proper, thereby possibly avoiding a downgrading of Warner Music from the rating agencies.Footnote 29 One of the most controversial moves of the investment group overseeing WMG was to draw $350 million straight out of the company's cash flow to pay investors “special” dividends not subject to public disclosure requirements. In the meantime, the cost-cutting measures of the restructuring plan continued apace, as the company lumbered along under an onerous debt load.Footnote 30 As Matthew Crain has noted, neither special dividends nor debt repayments add any value to a firm, and usually come at the expense of critical investments in capital and labor.Footnote 31
In addition to these measures, Bronfman Jr. et al. would soon seek additional finances through the introduction of an initial public offering of stock (an IPO) in May 2005, transforming the company into a publicly traded corporation.Footnote 32 (It is common for private equity firms, having taken a company private, to capitalize upon their restructuring of the company with an IPO. As Crain notes, the act of “delisting and reorganizing” a company is seen to potentially raise its value in anticipation of its re-listing on the stock exchange.)Footnote 33 Beyond its surface acquisitiveness, the move also returned WMG to the scrutiny of shareholders and quarterly reports, negating its appeal for those who hailed the “superindie” company (however unconvincingly) as a potential site of creative refuge from the pressures of the market. For artists under the WMG umbrella, this additional concession to investors seemed to demonstrate the company's indifference to the difficulties that Warner artists had faced under the restructuring. In a move that sent ripples through the financial markets, the rap-rock band Linkin Park, a key signatory to the Warner Brothers imprint, refused to perform for Bronfman Jr.'s celebration of the Warner IPO in front of the New York Stock Exchange, and subsequently asked to be released from their contract. As guitarist and band spokesman Brad Delson argued, the request that Linkin Park perform at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) revealed a fundamental disconnect between the label's artists and the investor class:
[The request to play at the NYSE] just exemplifies how out of touch the ownership of the Warner Music Group is with our band […] It doesn't make any sense to us why we would play a show at the New York Stock Exchange. I don't know what was going through their minds.Footnote 34
Financially, Linkin Park had done very well under Warner Brothers, and WMG's management characterized Linkin Park's statements as a set of “unfortunate negotiating tactics” inconsistent with the “requests for unreasonably large sums of money” that the band had ostensibly made during contract negotiations.Footnote 35 Nevertheless, it seems clear that the Linkin missive, timed to have tremendous impact on the eve of the IPO, served as a powerful and genuine expression of artists’ frustration with what they saw as the skewed priorities of Bronfman Jr.'s investor group.Footnote 36
Warner Jazz and Matt Pierson
The turbulence produced by the LBO of WMG provides the larger context against which we can come to understand the movement of the parent company's core jazz roster from Warner Jazz, the company's dedicated jazz subsidiary, to Nonesuch, an eclectic boutique label with a primarily classical lineage, operating within the same Warner corporate umbrella. Because of the immense pressures to restructure precipitated by developments at the uppermost levels in the corporate hierarchy, the relative fates of WMG's jazz-related subsidiaries seemed to have less to do with their market performance in the abstract than with their different levels of vulnerability in relation to structural upheaval in their parent corporation. In order to grasp the dynamics of this shift, it will be helpful here for us to explore the internal label cultures associated with Warner Jazz and Nonesuch Records, respectively.
Warner Jazz came under the direction of noted jazz producer and A&R executive Matt Pierson in the early 1990s. Before his arrival, the label roster primarily featured a lineup of crossover jazz artists such as Earl Klugh or George Benson; the only more “straightahead” acoustic jazz performer on the label at that time was Mark Whitfield.Footnote 37 Upon arriving at Warner Jazz, Pierson set about remaking the label through a series of new signings in the domain of mainstream or “straightahead” jazz, including Kenny Garrett, Joshua Redman, Brad Mehldau, and Wallace Roney; the move emulated a trend that was already pervasive at other major label jazz imprints, where George Butler at Columbia Records and Richard Seidel at Verve Records had set about pairing the aggressive reissuing of back catalog with the equally aggressive recruitment of an emerging generation of the so-called “young lions.”Footnote 38
Perhaps the paradigmatic signing of Pierson's early days at Warner was his recruitment of Joshua Redman, the son of the celebrated saxophonist Dewey Redman. Whereas Dewey Redman is best known as one of the key figures of the 1960s avant-garde, having performed alongside Ornette Coleman and Charlie Haden's Liberation Orchestra, Joshua Redman's initial direction at Warner Jazz (as evidenced, for example, on his self-titled Warner album, released in 1993) was much more in keeping with the acoustic postbop of the 1990s “young lions”; Redman's collaborators on these early discs featured figures such as the bassist Christian McBride and drummers Gregory Hutchinson and Kenny Washington.Footnote 39
Matt Pierson clearly heard something intrinsically compelling in Redman's work, but an anecdote that Pierson tells about the moment of Redman's recruitment at the Thelonious Monk International Jazz Competition in 1991 indicates the degree to which the atmosphere of major label jazz artist recruitment in that era had already become about “benchmarking” artists in relation to other artists, and looking to external metrics for making A&R decisions:
When I went to the Monk competition and heard Joshua Redman at the finals—it was the night of the […] semi-finals, I heard him, and of everyone there, I was like, “I gotta work with this guy, I gotta sign him.” So I met with him in the lobby of the hotel that night—it was before he won—and we're hanging out, talking about music, talking about records, and I'm saying, “man, I'd love to work with you, man, it would be wonderful to have you with Warner Brothers” […] And he goes, “but what if I don't win tomorrow?”
[laughs] I don't care! You're Joshua Redman, I'm gonna sign you!Footnote 40
Pierson's anecdote indicates the degree to which Redman had already internalized a logic of “other-directed” artist valuation pervasive at the jazz labels. If he didn't win the competition, if A&R executives didn't have a pseudo-objective measure to legitimate their strategic choices with their colleagues, then could the label really take the risk? Richard Seidel, the key A&R executive at Verve Records during the 1990s and one of Pierson's contemporaneous rivals, also noted the prominent role of the Monk competition as a recruiting site for major label jazz subsidiaries during this period, and as a means of arriving at the market valuation of artists; he notes that, “there is an auction mentality at work. The competitions, with all their publicity and with all the A&R attention, have helped to create a trading-floor atmosphere.”Footnote 41
Elsewhere, Pierson himself chronicles the slow absorption of this metrics-driven discourse into A&R conversations at Warner. While he recalls that his very first A&R meeting with Warner saw noted industry figures actively listening to demo tapes and kicking around ideas for producers, Pierson asserts that,
Over time, those A&R meetings changed to a point where I would go into an A&R meeting, and one of these new A&R guys would be talking about, “hey man, this band is really great, and everyone's talking about ‘em, they're all the buzz, they're playing in front of this many people, and it looks like they have an offer on the table from A&M, but I think we can get ‘em” […] and I'm going, “what the fuck are you guys talking about?” And I would be the guy finally after the guy does his presentation to go, “Could we hear the music?” […] So that's what happened. And that's one of the things I think that killed the music business.Footnote 42
Keith Negus and Travis Jackson have each talked about this period in terms of portfolio management, where each label subsidiary, treating its artist roster like a diversified portfolio of assets, was responsible for demonstrating a sales trajectory of consistently profitable quarterly earnings.Footnote 43 In this context, Pierson himself was increasingly pressed to render the narrow, genre-based focus of Warner Jazz legible to the market. He worked to develop such concepts as Brad Mehldau's Art of the Trio series, in order to establish a consistent “brand” for the artist across several piano trio releases. Pierson also harnessed Mehldau's propensity (later emulated by the Bad Plus) towards pop and rock crossover settings of music by Radiohead or Nick Drake: Settings of songs such as “Exit Music (For a Film)” or “Paranoid Android” served as a compelling means of repackaging the jazz standard for pre-millennial audiences.Footnote 44
With WMG's restructuring in early 2004, Pierson departed as head of Warner Jazz, and the subsidiary itself was axed as an active label, its back catalog taken up by the parent company's Warner Strategic Marketing UK division.Footnote 45 When the division was shuttered, and its artists dispersed to other parts of the Warner Music organization, Nonesuch was among those labels who reached out to the jazz division's artists; all those who Nonesuch approached, including Redman, Mehldau, and Pat Metheny, the most high-profile figures on the Warner Jazz imprint, agreed to join Hurwitz's label.Footnote 46
In spite of the care with which the artist roster of Warner Jazz was assembled over the course of the 1990s, the label's relatively uniform genre focus, which ranges across “straightahead” and “smooth” instrumental jazz artists, could likely have made it vulnerable to restructuring, particularly at a moment when dedicated jazz subsidiaries at all of the major labels were either downsizing entirely or retooling to focus on the trend in more commercially successful vocal jazz.Footnote 47 By contrast, the comparative eclecticism of the Nonesuch artist roster makes it not entirely different from the way that a label such as Universal's Verve Music Group was operating at that time. In the early to mid-2000s, Verve's continued inclusion of jazz artists such as Diana Krall or Trombone Shorty was less a function of the label's storied legacy as a jazz imprint than its strategic rebranding as a generalized adult contemporary label, with newly signed artists like Sarah McLaughlin, Andrea Bocelli, and Smokey Robinson serving to diversify Verve's portfolio.Footnote 48
However, what distinguishes Nonesuch's identity from a conventional “adult contemporary” sensibility, and what likely rendered it such an attractive new home for former Warner Jazz artists, was its wielding of an entirely different sort of cultural capital, owing to its careful cultivation of a powerful brand identity over several decades. At this point, it will be useful to turn to an overview of the history of Nonesuch Records, beginning with its earlier period of management under Teresa Sterne, to get a sense of the conditions of possibility in which the label could come to sign several of Warner Jazz's most prestigious jazz alumni.
“Good Sandwiches”: Nonesuch Records and Teresa Sterne
Nonesuch was founded in 1964 by Jack Holzman, head of the then-independent Elektra Records, who was initially seeking to capitalize upon an early music revival in the world of classical performance. Holzman envisioned Nonesuch as a new kind of discount classical label, marketed specifically to a younger demographic. Repackaged in colorful, accessible sleeves, and sold at an affordable price point just slightly above “budget line” classical releases, the high-quality label would serve as a “‘bridge’ to a receptive new audience—a generation that grew up with the phonograph and was open to fresh sounds and experiences.”Footnote 49
From 1965 to 1979, Nonesuch was overseen by Teresa Sterne, a producer and former concert pianist who brought an adventurous and forward-looking sensibility to the label.Footnote 50 Sterne oversaw an exciting period of innovation in the development of classical A&R. In the context of early music in particular, Nonesuch under Sterne benefitted from the work of Joshua Rifkin, a pianist, composer, and musicologist whose Even Dozen Jug Band had been recording under Nonesuch's parent division of Elektra. In addition to conducting seventeenth-century repertory, directing a Renaissance vocal-instrumental ensemble called the Nonesuch Consort, and writing scholarly liner notes for Nonesuch classical releases, Rifkin was commissioned by Holzman at Elektra to arrange and direct a series of Baroque settings of Beatles songs titled The Baroque Beatles Book. Rifkin's work for Nonesuch also anticipated its later embrace of jazz, as the pianist's recordings of piano rags in 1970 pretty much singlehandedly precipitated a rediscovery of ragtime and of Scott Joplin's work.Footnote 51 At the same time, Sterne had been instrumental in commissioning experimental new music works at the leading edge of U.S. concert music, including Morton Subotnick's groundbreaking 1967 album Silver Apples of the Moon.Footnote 52 As Jack Egan would note, Sterne's classical recordings established a distinct niche for Nonesuch, at a remove from the programming of “opera and symphonic warhorses” by more conventional classical imprints.Footnote 53
Alongside its critically acclaimed classical offerings, Nonesuch under Sterne pioneered the recording of global musical traditions with the introduction of the Nonesuch Explorer Series in 1967, under the direction of Peter Siegel (Rifkin's bandmate in the Even Dozen Jug Band). The Explorer Series, which released titles featuring North Indian classical music, Balkan traditional folk music, and recordings of Javanese and Balinese gamelan by Wesleyan University's ensembles, would lay the groundwork for later so-called “world music” initiatives such as Peter Gabriel's Real World label or David Byrne's Luaka Bop imprint.Footnote 54
What is crucial to note, as we look to understand the long-term impact of Sterne on the culture of Nonesuch, is the degree to which she accomplished much of the A&R, production, and promotional work for Nonesuch on a very stripped-down budget. In a 1979 interview, Sterne addresses her inexpensive and expedient approach to staffing, and to choosing performers:
“We have just about the smallest staff to run a label of this dimension I know of,”
says Sterne. “We also keep budgets down by working between the cracks,” she adds.
The company hires engineers as it needs them. It records in an Upper West Side
church instead of in a well-known recital hall. And it keeps its initial pressings
small.
Sterne has meanwhile nurtured a roster of top artists […] who, while critically
acclaimed, work with the knowledge that stratospheric recording fees are not
possible with a label like Nonesuch.
“The prima donnas are working on a different wavelength. We can't afford
them, and it's not the kind of musicmaking we're involved with. We are people
living on good sandwiches, and not haute cuisine.”Footnote 55
The fact that Nonesuch operated with a skeleton crew of label executives and consultants, and that it depended for much of its A&R development on Sterne's distinctive aesthetic vision, points to a continuity that we will see with respect to Bob Hurwitz's long tenure at the label in subsequent decades, which also saw a small number of executives overseeing the curation of an eclectic, adventurous range of acts.Footnote 56 Moreover, the distinctiveness of Sterne's vision did not preclude commercial successes for the label, with Rifkin's Joplin recordings seeing sales in the hundreds of thousands, and even experimental titles like Subotnick's Silver Apples of the Moon selling decently to an unexpected countercultural audience.Footnote 57
In its current incarnation, Nonesuch has acquired a reputation in the industry as somewhat miraculously removed from the worst vicissitudes of the market, having somehow located a sweet spot between profitability and aesthetic quality. As such, Nonesuch is granted a degree of latitude not always extended to other label subsidiaries.Footnote 58 However, Nonesuch did not always lead such a charmed existence, where corporate autonomy is concerned. The period of Sterne's tenure, despite its many achievements, saw one of the most turbulent moments in Nonesuch's relationship with its parent corporation, with important ramifications for its managerial staff and its future identity as a label. This episode provides us with an instructive window onto Nonesuch's subsequent efforts to balance creative production and market position. It also sheds light on developments that were beginning to reshape expectations for record sales in jazz and classical music in the era of emergent media consolidation.
In December of 1979, in a meeting with two executives from the parent company Elektra, Sterne was dismissed from the position that she had held since 1965. Save for the label's marketing director and his secretary, Sterne's entire Nonesuch staff was let go, and all twenty-five recording projects in the planning stages were cancelled. Sterne was invited to maintain a relationship with Nonesuch as an independent producer; while the company's press release claimed she had agreed to stay on in such a capacity, Sterne had in fact expressed shock at the dismissal and declined to continue the relationship.Footnote 59 The firing precipitated an immediate response from composers, critics, performers, and classical music enthusiasts, who saw the move as part of a larger attack on the position of classical music in the recording industry.Footnote 60
When asked about the decision to release Sterne, Elektra president Joe Smith cited a decline in sales at Nonesuch over the previous two years, and argued that Sterne's vision for the label had become too narrowly focused and obscure, asserting that “we [at Elektra] can't make records that sell only outside the Russian Tea Room.”Footnote 61 A similar justification for the dismissal was provided by Sterne's replacement, Keith Holzman (brother to label founder Jac Holzman), who also argued that “the scope of Nonesuch had become very narrow in the past couple of years.”Footnote 62 Even Holzman's explanation of the label's relocation to Los Angeles was accompanied by an indirect swipe at Sterne's ostensible elitism. He caustically noted that what Elektra was seeking for its subsidiary was for it to establish its identity “west of the Hudson” river, a clear insinuation that Sterne's Nonesuch catalog was unintelligible to a broader U.S. market beyond Manhattan's confines.Footnote 63 (Here and elsewhere, I would suggest that a barely disguised sexism seems to inform the way in which Warner/Elektra executives spoke of Sterne. Even the official twenty-year retrospective on the Nonesuch label seems, despite her directorship of Nonesuch from 1965 to 1979 and her 1971 ascension to the position of VP of Elektra, to present her innovative management as an afterthought. The brochure's truncated career biography of Sterne is saved until the second-to-last page, and seems to present Sterne as an almost clerical adjunct to Jac Holzman's visionary oversight.)Footnote 64
As I mentioned above, Joe Smith and Keith Holzman argued that Sterne's firing was attributable to Nonesuch's financial underperformance in the 2 years before her departure. However, according to several industry observers, Elektra's justifications for letting Sterne go did not hold up to scrutiny. While Nonesuch had seen a decline in sales, they insisted that Sterne had been consistent in her oversight of the label, and that there had been no decline in the caliber or appeal of its offerings.Footnote 65 From their standpoint, what had changed was the way in which Elektra/Nonesuch's parent company, Warner Communications, approached the question of distribution. Beginning in the mid-1970s, Warner imposed new conditions on the record stores that had historically stocked classical recordings. If specialty boutiques had previously been allowed to order a few records at a time, based upon specific customer preferences, Warner now insisted that they make bulk orders totaling $200 or more, and reserved the right to check their credit ratings.Footnote 66 Warner's new distribution policies were more congenial to rock sales than those of classical music. To cite a contemporaneous example, the recording of an Eagles album that coincided with the Sterne dismissal had resulted in studio cost overruns roughly totaling $400,000. In these circumstances, the record company needed immediate and copious sales to make good on its investment. By contrast, sales of both classical and jazz recordings have tended to follow a much longer-term trajectory, with catalog titles selling gradually over a course of many years.Footnote 67 Recall, too, that as Sterne has noted, limiting the pressings of Nonesuch releases was a method that the label used to keep expenses manageable; Elektra's new policy was effectively punishing Sterne for keeping her costs in line.Footnote 68 These limited pressing runs, paired with a strategy calibrated towards modest, long-term sales, ensured that under the new policy, Nonesuch recordings would be squeezed out of all but the largest markets.Footnote 69 What had been held up as a problem of marketing or artist development at the subsidiary level was more likely a matter of shifting institutional culture at the highest levels of Nonesuch's parent corporation.Footnote 70
Nonesuch Records and Bob Hurwitz
The circumstances surrounding Sterne's departure provide us with a useful point of departure for understanding Nonesuch's subsequent direction under Bob Hurwitz, an A&R executive recruited by Elektra label head Bob Krasnow.Footnote 71 Upon his arrival in 1984, Hurwitz was tasked with putting a storied and highly adventurous classical label on a sound financial footing, in a business environment that had become increasingly calibrated to pop's bloated economies of scale. Hurwitz's approach was to pursue a strategy of diversification that adhered to the spirit, if not the precise stylistic parameters, of Sterne's Nonesuch. Even as Hurwitz maintained the label's longstanding commitment to classical music, Americana, and “world music” titles, he altered the specific contours of this commitment in interesting ways, tapping into unexpected sites of commercial potential in experimental and contemporary repertories. The new avenues that Hurwitz pursued in the early years of his tenure would also allow the label to significantly expand the stylistic ambit of its catalog over the subsequent decades: presently, the Nonesuch roster encompasses such wildly disparate artists as neo-folk singer-songwriter Conor Oberst, the Dutch composer Louis Andriessen (until his recent passing), the country singer Emmylou Harris, and Malian kora musician Toumani Diabaté.Footnote 72
Before Hurwitz became president of Nonesuch, he served as head of American operations for ECM (Edition of Contemporary Music), the Munich-based independent jazz label headed by Manfred Eicher. Hurwitz's tenure at ECM helps us to make sense of the strategy he employed in establishing a new footing for Nonesuch. By the mid-1980s, ECM had already established one of the most distinctive label identities of any jazz imprint, known as widely for its signature aesthetic as for its prestigious roster. With its starkly minimalist cover design, its ethereal, “reverb-drenched” production, and its use of an instantly recognizable sans-serif typeface, ECM presented an exquisitely cultivated brand identity, an appealing frame for the introspective and “pastoral” music that Eicher committed to disk. As David Ake has argued, ECM's house aesthetic, memorably realized in Keith Jarrett's tremendously successful album The Köln Concert, was suggestive of a bucolic ethos of “wide open spaces.” In the 1970s, ECM recordings by Jan Garbarek, Gary Burton, Ralph Towner and others situated themselves at a remove from prevailing hard bop, jazz-rock, and avant-garde sensibilities.Footnote 73
ECM would become an important point of reference for critics as they sought to position Nonesuch, after Hurwitz's arrival, in the broader context of the 1980s music industry. One critic in Musician magazine in 1987 asserted that “Hurwitz [… ] seems to be turning Nonesuch into a slightly hipper version of ECM for American tastes,” and the two labels would often be held up as similarly shrewd managers of cultural capital.Footnote 74 As highly autonomous labels catering to a specific portion of the adult music market, ECM and Nonesuch share a lot of common ground. They have in many instances drawn upon an overlapping pool of artists. While at ECM, Hurwitz developed relationships with a number of artists who would eventually record for Nonesuch, whether as part of its emergent lineup in the 1980s (Steve Reich and John Adams had each recorded for ECM prior to joining Nonesuch), or in some cases, several decades later. (Having worked with Hurwitz at ECM in the 1970s, Pat Metheny signed to Nonesuch in 2004.)Footnote 75
At the same time, the resemblance of Hurwitz's Nonesuch to Eicher's ECM also had a lot to do with their similar visions and methodologies. Both ECM and Nonesuch devoted considerable attention to visual aesthetics and packaging, and in its album cover design Nonesuch has often seemed to emulate the stark austerity of ECM's minimalist design aesthetic.Footnote 76 (Here, attention to detail on the “front end” of the production process, i.e., at the level of high-quality packaging and liner notes, reduces the need for additional advertising expenditures on the “back end.”)Footnote 77 With programming, Nonesuch closely resembled ECM in its ability to identify a previously undiscovered audience, and to cultivate an identity that resonates with that audience in unexpected ways. One profile in the New York Times from 1986 noted that Nonesuch's commercial success could in large part be attributed to the label's ability to reach a “new audience for serious music—an audience that's familiar with Talking Heads and ‘Miami Vice’ along with Mozart and John Coltrane.”Footnote 78 An important factor here is Nonesuch's astute recognition of the “downtown” aesthetic of New York's contemporaneous avant-garde, with its intuitive linkage of “high-art” and “vernacular” experimentalisms. With its signing of Steve Reich, the World Saxophone Quartet (WSQ), and John Zorn, the label signaled its awareness of a new kind of hip consumer, a listener equally invested in concert-hall minimalism and CBGBs (Country, Bluegrass, Blues, and Other Music For Uplifting Gormandizers).Footnote 79 Both ECM and Nonesuch succeeded through targeting listeners by sensibility, rather than by genre. The catalogs for both labels straddled neat boundary demarcations between classical, jazz, and “world music.”Footnote 80 Much in the same way that ECM built a following in the early 1970s by identifying itself with a pastoral aestheticism, Nonesuch built its following by localizing itself as the predominant label for a variety of arty urbanisms in the 1980s.
Upon his arrival at Nonesuch, Hurwitz set about remolding the label in the image of this “arty” urbanity, situating the imprint at the interstices of new music, No Wave, and the period's experimental jazz avant-garde. Here, Hurwitz credits Bob Krasnow, then label head of Elektra, with giving him considerable latitude for reshaping the Nonesuch brand. Having approached Krasnow in his earliest days under Elektra to ask about the minutiae of contract negotiations, he remembers being told, “I'll talk to you in five years.”Footnote 81 Elektra's management of Nonesuch under Joe Smith had cited Sterne's “esoteric” programming choices to justify her dismissal. Hurwitz's artistic choices were not necessarily less “esoteric” than Sterne's, but they did soon reveal his aptitude for locating a balance between aesthetic provocation and commercial success. Among the first projects Hurwitz pursued at Nonesuch were recordings of works by minimalist composers Steve Reich (Desert Music), Philip Glass (the soundtrack to Paul Schrader's 1985 film Mishima: A Life in Four Acts), and John Adams (Harmonielehre); a recording by the groundbreaking Kronos Quartet, juxtaposing Conlon Nancarrow's String Quartet No. 1 against Jimi Hendrix's “Purple Haze”; and a self-titled LP by singer and composer Caetano Veloso, a key figure in the Brazilian Tropicalismo movement. The new music titles, in particular, enjoyed extended placement on the Billboard Top Classical Albums chart, a development that likely reflects their success in connecting to consumers of popular music, whether through crossover appeal, or via the mutual affinities of process music and ostinato-based pop.Footnote 82
As I noted above, under Teresa Sterne's management, Nonesuch had contributed to a revisitation of ragtime composer Scott Joplin through its groundbreaking recordings. However, it was under Hurwitz, the erstwhile ECM executive, that Nonesuch made important forays into contemporary jazz and improvised music. The signing of John Zorn to the label linked Nonesuch to the exciting cross-currents of jazz, No Wave, punk, and experimental music on offer at clubs such as the Knitting Factory: Nonesuch's Zorn recordings include the 1987 album Spillane, with its cultivation of a hard-boiled, neo-noir sensibility, and Naked City (1989), in which the album's eponymous band (comprising such artists as Bill Frisell, Fred Frith, and Joey Baron) assembles a jarring, fragmented superimposition of knowing pop culture allusions.Footnote 83 Guitarist Frisell, who met Hurwitz in 1983 while still at ECM, would record the first of over twenty recordings for Nonesuch in 1989.Footnote 84
One of Hurwitz's earliest and most interesting excursions into the jazz world was his signing of the WSQ to the label in 1985. The WSQ, initially comprising Hamiet Bluiett, Julius Hemphill, Oliver Lake, and David Murray, was first brought together in 1976 for a series of seminars and concerts at the Southern University campus in New Orleans.Footnote 85 Hemphill, Bluiett, and Lake had each been key figures in the founding of the Black Artists Group, a St. Louis collective in part modeled after the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM).Footnote 86 Murray was a California saxophonist with a background in gospel music and jazz organ trio, who had become associated with the Los Angeles avant-garde community by way of his affiliation with Stanley Crouch's Black Music Infinity (while Crouch was still affiliated with the Black avant-garde).Footnote 87 The music of the WSQ represented a more capacious take on jazz neoclassicism than what the term later came to represent. For artists such as Hemphill, Murray, or Arthur Blythe (who would join the quartet later on), interpreting “the tradition” meant embracing its complete historical legacy, a sonic palate extending from New Orleans polyphony to the radically multivalent avant-garde aesthetic of the AACM. Its revisitation of the jazz canon was an expansive conception of “neoclassicism” that rejected some “young lions’” suspicion of the experimental avant-garde.Footnote 88
The catholicity of stylistic impulses represented in the WSQ's output positioned them as vital avatars of a postmodern jazz sensibility during the 1980s. It also proved to be a key source of the group's commercial appeal. In 1985, Bob Hurwitz approached the group, who were then recording for the Italian independent label Black Saint, about the idea of putting together a Nonesuch record based around the compositions of Duke Ellington. Historically, the group had mostly written its own music, and so an all-Ellington album would have constituted a dramatic change in direction. Nevertheless, Hurwitz's proposal was attractive to the group, for both economic and aesthetic reasons. A Nonesuch relationship held out the promise of circumventing the distribution problems they were encountering with Black Saint. Moreover, as Bluiett and Lake pointed out in a 1989 Down Beat interview, the WSQ saw the prospect of an Ellington-themed album as an intuitive choice:
Hamiet Bluiett: When Hurwitz said Duke Ellington, it was the one name where there was no problem—absolutely no problem. In fact, we wondered, ‘Damn, why didn't we think of that?’ See, our whole thing had been to do our own music because one of the frustrations for musicians is not being able to do their own music. But Duke Ellington—he's like the grandfather, the great granddaddy; it's impossible to get around him. […] So for me, doing Duke was no problem; he represented creativity to me. […]
Oliver Lake: I thought it was a great idea, myself. Duke Ellington had been my idol for a long time, and David [Murray's] too, so we were excited about that. I also understood where the record company was coming from, to have some kinda marketing angle. We already had a string of albums that were all originals, so maybe it would bring some more people to us if they heard us interpreting one of the masters.Footnote 89
Lake's point is worth emphasizing. In pairing current performers with classic repertory, WSQ's 1986 Nonesuch album Plays Duke Ellington anticipates the marketing strategy that Verve and other major label jazz affiliates would take up in the 1990s. To give an album thematic focus, producers would pair an artist on the label's current roster with songs composed or performed by a second, more well-known artist. This concept-driven focus of album programming by major label jazz subsidiaries in the 1990s had become such an established technique that the bassist Christian McBride would summarize the process, sardonically, as “X plays the music of Y, X plays love songs, X plays music for driving to.”Footnote 90 Joe Henderson's Verve recordings from the early 1990s, produced by Richard Seidel (including Lush Life: The Music of Billy Strayhorn [1991], So Near, So Far (Musings for Miles) [1992], and Double Rainbow: The Music of Antonio Carlos Jobim [1994]), together constituted an especially successful iteration of this strategy, with the first two Henderson albums achieving unit sales of 450,000 copies.Footnote 91 The WSQ Ellington project anticipates Henderson's Lush Life project in more ways than one. Owing to the common misidentification of Ellington as the author of numerous Billy Strayhorn songs, World Saxophone Quartet Plays Duke Ellington, released in 1986, covers much of the same ground that Joe Henderson would revisit on Lush Life in 1991.Footnote 92
Nevertheless, if the WSQ's tribute to Ellington could be read as a version of what McBride later derides as “X plays the music of Y,” the quartet's angular, jarring textures animated the music with an energy well-removed from the more conventional musical settings that McBride is referring to. The WSQ's setting of “I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart,” for instance, almost entirely eschews the form of Ellington's original, basing its relentless ostinato on the syncopated chromatic figure from the fifth bar of the song's repeated “A” section (understood here in relation to the AABA sections of the 32-bar popular song form) and yielding a reading of the song that is radically transformative. As with many subsequent WSQ tracks, this formal shift substitutes an absorbing groove for the conventional Tin Pan Alley contours of the conventional jazz standard, immersing the listener in a thorny, turbulent extended present.Footnote 93 In this respect, Nonesuch releases by WSQ or then-labelmate John Zorn cultivate an experimental edge that is more aligned with Nonesuch's distinctive classical new music legacy than with the relatively homogenous “straightahead” and crossover releases that would be put out by conventional jazz subsidiaries over the subsequent decade.
Conclusion: Nonesuch's Business Model in the Age of Financialization
Several decades on from the first WSQ release, what accounts for Nonesuch Records’ ability to maintain adventurous releases of this kind, relatively free from the kinds of structural pressures that Matt Pierson faced at Warner? What is the A&R context at Nonesuch that would allow those artists whose contracts migrated from Warner Jazz in the early 2000s, including Joshua Redman, Pat Metheny, and Brad Mehldau, to flourish on the Nonesuch artist roster to this day?
The answer here does not reside in any dramatic break with the approach to artist development that Pierson would have taken on individual projects with Redman, Metheny, and other Warner Jazz labelmates. In their post-restructuring releases for these artists, Nonesuch sometimes emulated Pierson's tendency to “brand” a project by giving it a conceptual theme, if in a slightly more subtle form. For instance, while Hurwitz may not have worked with Mehldau to cultivate as overtly defined a set of projects as the Art of the Trio series under Pierson, Nonesuch has positioned Mehldau in the context of thematically coherent records, as for instance with the 2005 Brad Mehldau/Pat Metheny collaboration titled Metheny Mehldau, a record whose promotional copy presents the album as the culmination of a longstanding collaborative friendship based upon “shared inspiration”:
For Brad Mehldau, this collaboration started at that “life-changing moment” when, as a 13-year-old, a friend played him “Are You Going With Me” from the Pat Metheny Group's 1982 live double-album, Travels. Years later, Pat Metheny heard “Chill” from saxophonist Joshua Redman's 1994 album Moodswing that featured Brad Mehldau on piano. Since, the two artists have forged an artistic partnership based on shared inspiration, not just mutual admiration.Footnote 94
Elsewhere, Nonesuch has released albums for both Mehldau and Joshua Redman setting the compositions of Patrick Zimmerli, a move that invites consumers enamored with Zimmerli's work on one album to check out the other one.Footnote 95 Such projects demonstrate that there is not a complete break with Warner Jazz in the way that Nonesuch approached the question of programming individual jazz albums.
What may have been far more instrumental in establishing a base of stability for Redman, Metheny, or Mehldau's work at Nonesuch is the broader context established by the sheer stylistic diversity of the Nonesuch roster. As I have noted throughout this discussion, a pattern established by Teresa Sterne, and developed further by Hurwitz, is a commitment to programming in which artists from such radically divergent genre spaces as those occupied by Laurie Anderson, Nicholas Payton, or the Bulgarian State Television Female Vocal Choir could coexist on the same label. If there is a branding strategy at work in this arty, urbane eclecticism, there is a more brutally financialized logic here, too. Unlike the tight genre focus of the 1990s-era Warner Jazz imprint, Hurwitz's Nonesuch was nothing if not a pointed realization of a “diversified portfolio” of artists. What may superficially present itself as an appealing polyglot inclusivity tends to have considerable value in establishing a stable risk profile for the label, with each distinctive intellectual property potentially absorbing financial losses incurred through the portfolio's less lucrative properties.Footnote 96
Nonesuch's eclecticism is in some ways the product of a stripped down, parsimonious approach to financial oversight. In contrast to the situation at other comparable label subsidiaries, Hurwitz reportedly made virtually all artist and repertory decisions by himself. Hurwitz's tenure at Nonesuch began with only two full-time employees; at the time of the 2004 LBO, Hurwitz's Nonesuch staff consisted of just twelve out of WMG's 4,400 employees.Footnote 97 A profile of Nonesuch in the early 2000s asserts that Hurwitz's typical approach to A&R decisions was to take a pile of demo CDs, hop into his Audi, and drive—sometimes as far as Vermont—before returning to the Upper West Side with a sense of those artists he found sufficiently striking and original to sign to the label. This decision-making process, pursued without intermediaries, and light on overhead, was apparently sound enough that, in the 2003 runup to the Bronfman-led acquisition of WMG, he got through a meeting with the other WMG label heads without incident, even as other subsidiaries were being asked to slash their rosters.Footnote 98
The Nonesuch approach to financial oversight, which Hurwitz describes in another context, aligned with what Keith Negus has described as the loose-tight strategic vision characteristic of the modern, federated music multinational, loose in oversight of artistic decisions, while tight in its oversight of the bottom line:Footnote 99
[Y]ou know, I would be glad to do an infomercial, I have to say, about Warner—having been there since 1978, first with ECM, then with Nonesuch—that in the entire time I've been at Nonesuch, I have never been told that, we had to sign an artist, or we had to drop an artist, you couldn't make this record, the budget was too high. And I think that the reason was just the reality that it was our responsibility to make sure the numbers took care of themselves, and if that happened, no one was going to question any of our artistic decisions.Footnote 100
Here, Hurwitz's prudent fiscal management of Nonesuch at the time of the WMG buyout sounds, if anything, indistinguishable from what Teresa Sterne had to say about her approach to running Nonesuch in the 1960s and 1970s. Like Sterne, Hurwitz was happy to work within reduced economies of scale, keeping costs down by eschewing production of music videos, placing ads and promotion in carefully chosen contexts, and not exceeding a marketing budget of $50,000 for a given recording. For promotion, Nonesuch under Hurwitz privileged niche publications and media venues targeting a liberal, upscale market, such as the New Yorker, Harper's, and NPR, over television and commercial radio, and it deliberately cultivated long-term relationships with media, critics, and fans, so that buzz about a given title anticipates its arrival in retail stores.Footnote 101
Every now and again, the very frugality of the Nonesuch operation, which essentially kept artist recruitment in the hands of one A&R executive with a reputation for exceptional good judgement (rather than the “committee mentality […] short on conviction” that one profile of Nonesuch attributes to its competitor labels), resulted in an astounding commercial breakthrough.Footnote 102 Nonesuch has encountered this several times, whether in the unexpected case of the 1992 release of Henryk Górecki's Symphony No. 3 (which sold hundreds of thousands of copies in a short period of time, precipitating a new music boomlet at major label classical subsidiaries), or in the runaway success in 1997 of Buena Vista Social Club, an album of Afro-Cuban son music recorded in Havana and featuring a group of local veteran musicians. (BVSC was the best-selling release in Nonesuch's history, already at more than 3 million copies as of 2004.)Footnote 103 Nonesuch's successful signing of Wilco in the early 2000s (after the band's former label, the Warner-owned Reprise, dismissed their new record as “horrible”) resulted in the subsequent release of an arty post-rock classic, the 2002 release Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, which sold some 600,000 units over a 2-year period.Footnote 104 In such cases, Hurwitz's judicious picks upended the kinds of conventional wisdom that would dismiss the lucrative commercial prospects of a classical release, or the sales potential of an experimental, noise-inflected album reflecting a band's mid-career shift in sensibility.
To be sure, any label vision that is so closely tied to one person is going to be shaped by the personal prerogatives and aesthetic prejudices—and, by extension, the ideological positioning—of that one person. Despite the considerable diversity of the Nonesuch artist roster, there are some genre orientations that did not seem to find their way into Robert Hurwitz's conception of an eclectic, “arty” and urbane label identity. Hip hop, for instance, seemed to fall outside of Nonesuch's remit. When the jazz clarinetist Don Byron sought to go in what he called an “urban music” direction, Hurwitz, with whom Byron had what he described as a “thorny” relationship, became less invested in his work, and Byron subsequently decamped for other labels.Footnote 105
Nonesuch markets its recordings predominantly to a middle-aged demographic, and so generational considerations are clearly important here. But it is also worth meditating on what race and class dynamics potentially inform this generation gap, discouraging the incorporation of genres like hip-hop into the Nonesuch “brand.” In the case of hip hop, its continued exclusion from more “serious” musical institutions (the music for which Nonesuch has been key in documenting) has been shaped by, among other things, the lingering impact of respectability politics, which plays an outsized role in official culture's understanding of Black cultural production.Footnote 106 Nonetheless, while such ideologies potentially factor into the exclusion of a range of popular music genres from the Nonesuch catalog, the most salient point here is perhaps the envisioned target market of a label whose primary promotional venues have historically consisted of such outlets as the New Yorker, Harper's magazine, or NPR. Whatever the diversity of Nonesuch's lineup of recording artists may be, the media sites where Nonesuch has placed their ads suggests that their anticipated audience, in addition to being somewhat older than pop music's core demographic, is potentially more homogenous on race and class lines, comprising the mostly white, mostly affluent and college-educated middle-class listenership hailed by NPR's programming and the thinkpieces of the Atlantic monthly.Footnote 107 All of which is to say that, even in the period of Bob Hurwitz's oversight (and that of his longtime collaborator David Bither, who became sole President following Hurwitz's departure in 2017), the label has perhaps not entirely shed the aura of cultural elitism attributed to it by Teresa Sterne's onetime antagonists.Footnote 108
With respect to Nonesuch's studied eclecticism, there are aspects of this aesthetic that dovetail with what Andrea Moore, in a recent context, has pointed to as the utility of genre-boundary transgression, realized as a kind of “market-friendly multiculturalism,” in reinforcing neoliberal value systems. In much the same way that Benetton's iconic “United Colors of Benetton” campaign, with its striking iconography of racial and ethnic inclusivity, constructed a powerful brand for the clothing line in which the consumer was invited to identify with Benetton's performance of cultural difference, Nonesuch could be accused of enacting a similar move, inviting listeners to see their own liberal pluralism commodified and reflected back to them, in the guise of a record collection (or Spotify playlist, at least) in which Brazilian Tropicalismo and Senegalese mbalax rubs shoulders with “holy minimalism” and contemporary jazz.Footnote 109
Alongside the ideological and market conditions that shape Nonesuch's recent past, the label (like so many of its peers) must also contend with an uncertain future. As Nonesuch proceeds under David Bither's direction, one important consideration is that in the music streaming economy, younger listeners’ relation to music is increasingly shaped by the consumption pattern of the curated, algorithmic, or user-generated playlist, rather than that of the album; this shift has clear implications for a label that has shaped its identity around the production of well-curated albums.Footnote 110 By extension, the Spotify algorithm's dismantling of patterns of listening shaped around the album also potentially undermines the listener's investment in the label identities that have often historically led consumers to purchase albums under a particular imprimatur. For artists looking to sign on to a supportive label culture, the appeal of entities like Nonesuch may well continue, but on the consumer end, there may in the future be little to incentivize the listener's loyalty to a label whose product the streaming algorithm semi-randomly intersperses with that of other labels on its playlists.Footnote 111
At the very least, though, Nonesuch's pairing of fiscal prudence and aesthetic adventurousness models a kind of major-label curation that is surprisingly adaptive to the structural turbulence of music multinationals in the age of financialization. As such, it suggests an admittedly partial and imperfect means for carving out certain kinds of creative potentialities at the core of otherwise inhospitable institutions. In a context where the business model of the music multinational depends upon the production of near-ubiquitous hit songs, and where the brainstorming, writing, recording, mastering, and marketing rollout of a single hit may in some cases cost millions of dollars, the ongoing success of an entity like Nonesuch may seem unfathomable. With such reduced economies of scale, it must operate according to entirely different market logics, reliant upon word of mouth, niche marketing, and the cultivation of an artist roster sufficiently attractive to convince listeners to check out other Nonesuch artists.Footnote 112
In effect, Nonesuch's business model suggests the continued resilience in the music industry of sensibilities that we have, perhaps prematurely, consigned to a closed chapter in its history. Even as neoliberal market logics clearly govern aspects of WMG's operations at the uppermost reaches of the corporate hierarchy, Nonesuch demonstrates how a different logic may shape conditions “on the ground,” one more closely aligned with the practices of an earlier iteration of Warner Music. Warner's own historical incarnation as WEA, a federated structure comprising semi-autonomous Warner-Reprise, Elektra-Asylum, and Atlantic divisions, suggests what kinds of work could be accomplished when constituent divisions were left to forge their own creative directions, under the guidance of strong personalities whose curatorial visions were somewhat protected from market pressures.Footnote 113 As former Talking Heads singer David Byrne points out, Hurwitz's Nonesuch could be understood as having retained some of the best attributes of an erstwhile Warner Bros. label culture; in this, it has much in common with those contemporary indie labels that continue to cultivate compelling artists and advocate for their work:
Talking Heads spent many years with Warner Bros., and in 2004 I released Grown Backwards through their boutique Nonesuch label. Part of the attraction of Nonesuch was that we felt in good company with their eclectic roster of acts, like John Adams, the Black Keys, Laurie Anderson, Caetano Veloso, Wilco […]. Like the Warner Bros. of old and indie labels today like Warp, 4AD, Tomlab, Daptone, and Thrill Jockey, Nonesuch's taste is reflected in their roster of artists. If you like one record on the label, you just might like another.Footnote 114
One of the most oft-repeated assessments of neoliberal capitalism is the claim, circulated as often by its celebrants as its detractors, that “there is no alternative” to contemporary free market logics, no “outside” to capital in its present incarnation.Footnote 115 In many ways, Nonesuch Records flies in the face of such claims to an absolute, totalizing hegemony. It suggests that the music industry continues to offer spaces for cultural production that resists the most mercenary impulses of late capitalism. Nonesuch, along with other like-minded labels, has succeeded in doing what Scott DeVeaux, writing of bebop artists’ navigation of the institutional hegemons of their day, referred to as locating “cracks in the monolith,” spaces where creative work is permitted to flourish in the teeth of otherwise insurmountable structural forces.Footnote 116 In the context of the music industry's present domination by financial capitalism, a viable artist response to this situation is perhaps, as Nonesuch artists have clearly done, to find institutional niches that serve as beacons for those looking to do unhurried, thoughtful cultural work, even as so much that is solid melts into air.
Acknowledgments
The author would like to acknowledge the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts for access to archival materials pertinent to this manuscript. The author is also grateful to colleagues who provided useful feedback on an early version of this work, presented at the annual meeting of the American Musicological Society in Boston in November of 2019.
Dale Chapman is associate professor of music at Bates College. He is the author of The Jazz Bubble: Neoclassical Jazz in Neoliberal Culture, published with the University of California Press. His work has appeared in JPMS, JSAM, Popular Music, the Oxford Handbook of Sound and Image in Digital Media, the Oxford Handbook of Music and Advertising, Cybermedia: Science, Sound, and Vision, and Transmedia Directors: Artistry, Industry, and New Audiovisual Aesthetics.