Even smaller labels with well-known artists on their rosters are hitting the decks – the demise of21/08/10

 

Even smaller labels with well-known artists on their rosters are hitting the decks – the demise of Alan McGee’s Creation label has prompted Oasis and Super Furry Animals to release ...


Even smaller labels with well-known artists on their rosters are hitting the decks – the demise of Alan McGee’s Creation label has prompted Oasis and Super Furry Animals to release albums on their own respective labels until they find new deals. But, as many abandoned and unsigned bands are discovering, there is a whole alternative industry operating in parallel with the majors, where a less ruthless approach to music-making prevails.Christof Ellinghaus, head of City Slang, the Berlin-based label which is about to celebrate 10 years in the business, is very positive about the future of the independent sector. “Because of these mergers there will be a lot more talent out there as loads of artists have been dropped. Now is a really good time to start up a new label.”For more than a decade, Ellinghaus has been quietly serving the interests of a range of acts through a label that he sees as a vehicle for his own musical taste. Perhaps his most recent success is Lambchop, the Nashville-based 12-piece whose latest album Nixon was joyously received earlier this year.He began life in the music industry as a tour manager in 1987, a job which he laughingly describes as “a disaster” The following year he became a booking agent.

“I was booking American bands on the German leg of their European tours. It was just before grunge exploded so I was booking bands like Mudhoney, Nirvana and Lemonheads. I made some wonderful contacts.”Ellinghaus alighted on the idea of starting City Slang after the Flaming Lips asked if he could find them a European label. He initially got financial backing from the German indie label Vielklang, and after just 18 months he bought them out.Lemonheads were the first to release a record on City Slang, an EP called Favourite Spanish Dishes. This was followed by Yo La Tengo’s Fakebook, an album of semi-acoustic cover versions. “That was our first proper album, and it remains a pearl in our catalogue,” says Ellinghaus.The Flaming Lips’ In A Priest Driven Ambulance arrived in 1990, though soon afterwards they signed a deal with Warner. “I didn’t have a chequebook to wave at them,” Ellinghaus explains.

“It’s sad, but as much as you wish it was about the music, at the end of the day it comes down to money.”Where other labels strive to create their own definitive sound – grunge was associated with Sub Pop in the early Nineties, big beat is now synonymous with Skint – City Slang has a more circumspect approach. Ellinghaus’s eclectic musical preferences are reflected in the label’s catalogue, from the mariachi flavours of Calexico and the gentle guitars of Wheat to the minimalist electronica of To Rococo Rot.For Ellinghaus, starting a label is less about championing a particular sound than supporting the bands you love “The tie between all these bands is quality. Maybe we should be looking at getting chart entries, but that would probably mean dealing with bands we didn’t admire. Our ambition is to seek out music out that we like.”It appears that Ellinghaus’s benevolent approach is appreciated by his artists, who rarely feel the need to employ a manager (the luckless individual who usually acts as a mediator between the artist and the label).


You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.