Private Music Explained

Private Music
Founder:Peter Baumann
Status:Defunct
Distributor:BMG
Genre:New age, jazz, blues
Country:U.S.
Location:New York City, Los Angeles

Private Music was an American independent record label founded in 1984 by musician Peter Baumann as a "home for instrumental music". Baumann signed Ravi Shankar, Yanni, Suzanne Ciani, Andy Summers, Patrick O'Hearn, Leo Kottke, and his former bandmates, Tangerine Dream. The label specialized in New age music[1] but made a sharp turn to the mainstream by signing Taj Mahal, Ringo Starr, Etta James, and A. J. Croce. Its albums were distributed by BMG (the label's earliest recordings having been distributed by RCA), which bought Private Music in 1996.

History

In 1989, Baumann hired veteran music executive Ron Goldstein of Warner Bros. Records as Private Music's president and CEO. Goldstein moved the offices from New York City to Los Angeles, hiring Karen Johnson to expand the label's image. Baumann recruited the well-respected, mainstream A&R executive Jamie Cohen. Visual image was important to Goldstein, who handpicked art director Melanie Penny, previously of Virgin Records and Warner Bros., as VP, Creative Services, through the life of Private Music.

Private Music emphasized its "artist re-development" efforts, supporting such eclectic veteran artists as Taj Mahal, Ringo Starr, Etta James, Jennifer Warnes, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Toots Thielemans, Jimmy Witherspoon, Kate & Anna McGarrigle, Eliza Gilkyson, Joy Askew, The Pahinui Brothers, and Kenny Rankin, while expanding the catalogs of Yanni, Leo Kottke, Andy Summers, and Ravi Shankar, with strong "debut support" for A. J. Croce and Susan Werner. An international marketing department was added, led by longtime Sony Music executive J.P. Bommel.

Private Music's recordings earned multiple Grammy Awards and nominations, including Etta James's first career win, in 1994, for best jazz vocal performance on Mystery Lady: Songs of Billie Holiday, her debut of three albums on the label. Private's roster achieved high recognition on national television. Numerous artist appearances included interviews and performances on late-night talk shows and morning shows, MTV, and VH1.

Private's Grammy winner Taj Mahal spawned the Grammy-winning Phantom Blues Band. With its increasing influence in blues and roots music, and at the peak of its performance in record sales, Private Music entered into a joint venture with House of Blues' record label, featuring such artists as Cissy Houston and John Mooney.

In 2001, Private Music became part of the short-lived Arista Associated Labels, which also included Windham Hill Records. By 2004, after Sony and BMG merged, the label's releases switched to RCA. Following his Private Music tenure, Goldstein served as president and CEO of the Verve Music Group label at Universal Music Group, in New York City.

Notable albums

Private Music has released a number of notable albums:[2]

Album Performer Year of release
Optimystique 1984
On the Future of Aviation 1985
Theme of Secrets 1985
A Shout Toward Noon 1986
Keys to Imagination 1986
Tana Mana 1987
Safety in Numbers 1987
Out of Silence 1987
Famous Blue Raincoat 1987
Optical Race 1988
Kristen Vigard 1988
Regards from Chuck Pink 1988
Chameleon Days 1988
New Green Clear Blue 1989
Lily on the Beach 1989
Miracle Mile 1989
Strange Cargo 1989
My Father's Face 1989
Niki Nana 1989
Passages 1990
Heartbeats Accelerating 1990
The Odd Get Even 1990
Melrose 1990
That's What 1990
Reflections of Passion 1990
World Gone Strange 1991
Like Never Before 1991
Great Big Boy 1991
In Celebration of Life 1991
Time Takes Time 1992
Dare to Dream 1992
The Hunter 1992
Dancing the Blues 1993
In My Time 1993
Peculiaroso 1994
Yanni Live at the Acropolis 1994
Getting Even with Dad 1994
Professional Dreamer 1994
That's Me in the Bar 1995
Roll of the Dice 1995
Time after Time 1995
Leo Kottke Live 1995
Sex 1995
Last of the Good Straight Girls 1995
Phantom Blues 1996
Love's Been Rough on Me 1997
Standing in My Shoes 1997
Various 2003

See also

Notes and References

  1. Maria Armoudian. Look for these New Age labels. Billboard. 6 April 1996. Nielsen Business Media, Inc.. 51–. 0006-2510.
  2. Web site: Private Music Credits AllMusic . AllMusic . 19 June 2018.