The Story of Naxos: The
Extraordinary Story of the Independent Record Label That Changed Classical
Recording For Ever. By Nicolas Soames. Piatkus. $29.95.
The CD and its
higher-sound-quality cousin, the SACD, look as if they will be the last
physical forms on which music is made available. There will be a continuing
fondness for vinyl records, which have sonic advantages over all but the very
best digital recordings, and some people are likely to cling to audiocassettes
for a time, but other physical music formats – 78-rpm records, eight-track
tapes, open-reel tape – are essentially gone.
The advent of easy-to-carry portable MP3 players, with their ability to
hold thousands of music tracks and reproduce them with at least reasonably high
quality, has sounded the death knell for storage of music on physical media
that take up space and must be cared for.
But MP3 players and
all their variants are more suitable by far for pop music and short-form works
in general. Recorded classical music,
long regarded as a niche field by the industry, is best when heard in better
circumstances than pop music requires – that is, with higher-quality
reproduction and in a home environment, rather than as background to something
else or an afterthought while going through one’s daily activities.
If physical releases
of classical recordings are a niche, and if this is the twilight of physical
recordings in general, there is no doubt about the preeminent company in these
darkening days. It is Naxos, founded in
Hong Kong in 1987 by Klaus Heymann, a businessman who loves classical music but
is not himself a trained musician. By
any measure, Naxos, a private company, has amassed some extraordinary numbers
in its 25-year existence. It has sold
more than 115 million CDs, has a 7,000-plus-item catalogue, created an
“American Classics” series that now includes some 400 releases, and has
launched a slew of other specialty series as well – recently, Canadian
Classics, cycles of Sarasate, Shostakovich and Sibelius; earlier, the Naxos
Historical line and a series of White Box multi-CD recordings; and many
more. The company (its corporate parent
is HNH International) also owns more than a dozen additional labels and
distributes hundreds of others either worldwide or in specific geographic
areas. Naxos has Books and AudioBooks
divisions, a Web site that gets some 400,000 visitors monthly, and – lest
anyone think Heymann is ignoring the digitization of music – an online Naxos
Music Library with a million tracks from 70,000 albums, and apps for Android, iPad
and Kindle Fire. Naxos has jazz and
world-music divisions, too. And those who insist on digital distribution can
get it easily from Naxos at www.classicsonline.com.
Naxos also does
scholarship, through Artaria Editions (which it founded in 1995); a Hong Kong
violin studio run by Heymann’s wife, violinist Takako Nishizaki (whose
recording of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons
is the top-selling Naxos CD); and a foundation that promotes education and
research in classical music.
But back to the world
of CDs – the world through which Naxos remains best known to most music lovers,
and the one where it really made its mark.
The Story of Naxos is, not
surprisingly, more hagiography than critical biography: Nicolas Soames runs
Naxos AudioBooks and could scarcely be expected to bite the corporate hand that
feeds him. Soames gives some insight,
all of it positive, into Heymann’s personality, including the interesting fact
that he usually introduces himself as “Hay-man”
instead of pronouncing his name the correct German way, “Hei-mann.” He quotes
Heymann’s views on music, all of which are thoughtful and some of which are
quite interesting, such as his reasons for preferring Bruckner’s music to
Mahler’s. And Soames goes out of his way
to show that Heymann, who will be 76 this year, is comfortable with the latest
technology and tends to lead others to adopt it.
The meat of the book,
though, begins with Soames’ discussion of the way Naxos developed, from the
early days of the Marco Polo label (1982) to what Soames labels “the digital
age” of 1996-2011. Naxos has an
impressive stable of recording artists, and The
Story of Naxos features comments by many of them, from Nishizaki to pianist
Idil Biret and cellist Maria Kliegel to conductors Marin Alsop, Antoni Wit,
Helmut MΓΌller-Bruhl and Leonard
Slatkin. The comments from the artists
are appropriately adulatory, but the ins and outs of the business are of even
more interest. A little reading between
the lines can be helpful. For example,
Soames quotes Heymann as saying, in regard to meeting with George Mendelssohn –
the owner of Vox-Turnabout and Candide – that the famously stingy and
artist-unfriendly policies of Mendelssohn were ones that were reflected in poor
production quality and that Heymann would never emulate. That may be true regarding treatment of
artists, but a number of Naxos recordings, especially in the label’s early
years, were scarcely of the highest quality, and production decisions did tend
to get made and unmade in odd ways – for example, the much-touted Georg Tintner
Memorial Edition of 12 CDs turned into a 13-CD series in which volumes 8, 9 and
13 were available only as downloads; and the Hans Christian Lumbye series for
Marco Polo managed to make it to 11 volumes but then petered out far short of
completion. Soames does say that as
Heymann came up with multiple new ideas, “not all these new ventures went
well,” but the author tends to downplay problems and failures and play up
successes.
Luckily, there have been far more successes than
failures for Naxos and for Heymann. This
is lucky not only for the company and its employees but also for classical-music
lovers worldwide – and also for lovers of the other sorts of music that Naxos
produces, and those who like audiobooks and other items as well. The
Story of Naxos is really two stories, one about music (primarily classical
music) and one about a business. It is
in fact a more interesting business story than music story, although readers
are more likely to want the book because of its musical content. What Soames’ book does is show how
entrepreneurial spirit and the willingness to take risks in the cause of music
production and distribution have combined, at what may be the end of the line
for physical storage media, to make available a truly enormous amount of music,
from the well-known to the completely obscure, thanks to a business model that
is equally committed to creating composer-focused discs and “lifestyle and
introductory compilations” that “sometimes make the dedicated classical
collector go pale” but that produce the impressive sales necessary to keep the more-sober
offerings afloat. Naxos is an immensely
impressive business on any terms, and is well-positioned to continue growing
even if CDs go the way of vinyl or, in an unlikely scenario, are supplanted by
some other physical storage medium. The
reason is that Naxos is, foundationally, an idea – built on Heymann’s
distribution expertise in audio equipment rather than on musical repertoire
itself – and has the potential to continue to prosper for a long time, if not
necessarily “for ever” (per the book’s subtitle), as long as Heymann and his
top managers continue to show the flexibility and responsiveness to musical and
technical trends that have stood Naxos in such good stead for a quarter of a
century.
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