New Amsterdam photography Kelsey bennett interview Jay Wadley styling Ashley Pruitt
In the wake of orchestra bankruptcies, diminishing arts funding, and a huge barrier to entry into a long established and often insular community, how do young composers draw from the rapidly changing and diverse world of art and music to find a voice and place to flourish? In less than 4 years, with 2 Grammy nods, New Amsterdam Records and the young budding community of artists it supports is making waves in the NYC community and reaching out across the country. I sat down with composers, entrepreneurs and indie-classical record executives(?) Judd Greenstein, William Brittelle and Sarah Kirkland Snider to discuss Grammys, the role of the album in indie-classical music and the expansion of New Amsterdam Presents.
JAY: Thank you so much for meeting with us to talk about New Amsterdam Records and the current climate of New Music in New York. First off, congratulations on your 2nd Grammy nomination for Jefferson Friedman’s String Quartet No. 3! Could you talk a little bit about that album and the Matmos collaboration? BILL: There’s a mystery first quartet that I know exists but isn’t really out there. I think of [The Second and Third Quartet] as two masterworks of the century so far. I know they’ve been incredibly inspiring to me as a composer and I think they really capture the spirit of a lot of things that are going on right now. When we were approached about doing this record it was a no-brainer. We all knew that Jefferson knew his work and we hadn’t worked with Matmos before, although they worked a lot with So Percussion who we work with. Jeff had a relationship with Matmos, and part of the idea was to see it through this 10
electronic reflection, which put a really interesting slant on the album. JUDD: The quartets on that album are very much on the classical side of the spectrum that we represent. Even though I think most of the attention has rightly been on the quartets, I think the way that people have heard the quartets is very different for the presence of the Matmos tracks being there, even if people don’t think about it that way. Just the fact that they’re there as a juxtaposition, it’s like having a frame around the painting that you’re looking at or even the wall itself beyond the frame; it just changes the way that you perceive the art. They’re obviously wonderful works of art themselves, but the whole album takes on a different hue because of that mixture of the original material and then these refracted versions of it. I think it is an interesting project in that it is so far in the classical direction for the types of things that we tend to do.
SARAH: That’s what’s really interesting. You’ve got the quartets on one side and electronic refractions on the other. Together it shows those two very different sides of what we do. JAY: I think one of the really captivating things about New Amsterdam is the wide range of artists that you work with. From ensembles to composers, electronic music to classical, the way that you present each album is always unique based on how the composer or artists wanted to interact with the different elements. What prompted you to start the label and see New Amsterdam through as a concept? How did it blossom into what it has become today? SARAH: Well, there are only so many labels that release our kind of music. There is a lot of music that needs to get released, that doesn’t have a home. At that point in time, Judd didn’t want to wait around for a label to pick it up so he just decided 11