David & Steve Gordon

David & Steve Gordon are new-age and chill-out music recording duo, record producers and founders of the independent label Sequoia Records.[1][2] They have recorded more than 25 albums ranging from traditional new-age music and ambient meditative soundscapes to shamanic drumming with Native American flute, Celtic music and world music-influenced electronica.

Career

The Gordons' first album, Misty Forest Morning, was released in 1982, featuring mainly piano and acoustic guitars, with some synthesizer and sounds of nature they recorded in Sequoia National Forest, the location that was the inspiration for the name of their record label, Sequoia Records[2][3] Their second album Peaceful Evening and several more albums in a similar style followed soon after, then in 1985 they branched out into electronic spacemusic with Astral Journey and Celestial Suite.[2]

In 1987 they returned to nature-inspired music with Garden of Serenity, the first of several releases in their Inner Music series of albums that featured longer meditative compositions.[4] (A sequel, Garden of Serenity II, followed in 1998.) The early 1990s saw another of their electronic spacemusic releases with Music of the Tarot.[2]

Beginning in 1994 with Sacred Earth Drums, David & Steve Gordon branched out into world fusion music, adding African, Middle Eastern and Native American drums and percussion plus Native American flute and Incan pan pipes to the mix, along with acoustic and electric guitars, synthesizers, and continuing their use of sounds of nature as musical elements.[3][5] The song titles and liner notes portrayed the story of a mythical shaman who journeys to the spirit world to find healing for his people and for the Earth.[6] Sacred Earth Drums became the top-selling drumming album in the New Age market for both 1994 and 1995[2] and by 2002 had sold over 300,000 units.[7] Following a sequel in 1996 titled Sacred Spirit Drums, their 1999 release Drum Medicine entered Billboard's Top New Age Albums chart in April, 2000,[1] and also in 2000, received the Coalition of Visionary Retailers Record of the Year and Best World Album awards and the New Age Voice Native Heart Award[8] and was listed in the top 5 albums of New Age specialty distributors for two years.[2]

From the mid-1990s and into the 2000s, David & Steve Gordon produced albums by recording artists Zingaia, Sophia Songhealer, EverStar and Jaya Lakshmi.[8] Through their record label Sequoia Records, they released albums by recording artists Gary Stadler, Wendy Rule, Shajan, Christina Lux, Alquimia and Gleisberg;[5][9] and several compilations of meditative and world-influenced New Age music including Musical Healing in 2001 and Perfect Balance in 2006.

In 2006, the Gordon brothers released Soothing Sanctuary, ambient music with nature sounds, a re-version of the earlier release "Sanctuary" (so stated in the liner notes) with new arrangements and remastering. Also in 2006 came Shaman's Vision Journey, featuring shamanic drum beats and mantras in the languages of cultures from around the world, including Mayan, Sanskrit, Lakota and Tibetan chants. In 2007 and 2008, they released a pair of 25th anniversary retrospectives, Sound Peace, focusing on meditative selections, and Earth Drum, a collection of drum and native flute tracks packaged with a DVD of wilderness scenery from national parks around the USA set to the music of the compilation album. Earth Drum was awarded the 2009 Coalition of Visionary Retailers awards for Album of the Year and Best World Album.[10]

Also in the early 2000s, the Gordons introduced a second record label imprint, Sequoia Groove, specializing in chill-out music compilations, including the Buddha-Lounge series that charted in Billboard in 2004,[11] Cafe de Luna, Hotel Tara, and others; and world music influenced electronica artists including Tya, and Achillea (featuring Jens Gad of Enigma).[12] New recordings by the Gordon brothers in the chillout genre were included in several of these compilations, and in 2008 they released their first album of downtempo electronic music, Yoga Planet, followed by their second album of chillout music in 2009, Nirvana Groove.[13]

David & Steve Gordon released two albums of world drum and percussion music in 2009, an upbeat recording titled Drum Cargo: Rhythms of Fire, and an album of quiet drum beats with crystal bowls and native flutes titled Meditation Drum, that according to the liner notes is intended to encourage meditation and relaxation. In 2010 they returned to Native American flute music with the album Gratitude.

Discography

Full-length albums

DVD

Compilations produced

References

  1. 1 2 "Top New Age Music Albums Chart". Billboard Magazine (Vol. 112, No. 16). Nielsen Business Media, Inc. April 15, 2000. p. 18. ISSN 0006-2510.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 David & Steve Gordon at AllMusic
  3. 1 2 "Top New Age Music Albums Chart". Billboard Magazine (Vol. 109, No. 12). Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Mar 22, 1997. p. 46. ISSN 0006-2510.
  4. Birosik, P.J. (1989). The New Age Music Guide. MacMillan Publishing Company. pp. 67–68.
  5. 1 2 Randy Alberts (May 2006). "From the Roots of a Redwood". New Age Retailer Magazine. Continuity Publishing.
  6. Carl McColman (May 1999). "Musical Healing with David & Steve Gordon". New Age Voice Magazine.
  7. Michael Weaver (July–Aug 2002). "Market News and Views". Napra ReView. New Age Publishers and Retailers Alliance. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  8. 1 2 Carl McColman (September 2002). "The Label of Brotherly Love - Sequoia Records Celebrates 20 Years of Music". New Age Voice Magazine.
  9. "Sequoia Records Recording Artists". Sequoia Records. Retrieved September 30, 2009.
  10. "COVR Awards". Coalition of Visionary Retailers. Retrieved October 3, 2009.
  11. "Top New Age Music Albums Chart". Billboard Magazine (Vol. 116, No. 22). Nielsen Business Media, Inc. May 29, 2004. p. 70. ISSN 0006-2510.
  12. "Sequoia Groove and the Chillout Phenomenon". In Review. Music Design. September 2005.
  13. Bill Binkleman (August 2009). "Play List". New Age Retailer Magazine. Continuity Publishing. p. 92.

External links

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