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Ninja Tune | |
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Founded | 1990 |
Founder | |
Distributor(s) | |
Genre | |
Country of origin | England, United Kingdom |
Location | London |
Official website | www |
Ninja Tune is an English independent record label[1] based in London with a satellite office in Los Angeles. It was founded by Matt Black and Jonathan More (professionally known as Coldcut[2]) and managed by Peter Quicke and others.
Inspired by a visit to Japan, Black and More created Ninja Tune in 1990. According to Billboard magazine it was created as a means "to escape the creative control of major labels,"[3] and as a vehicle to release music of an underground nature,[4] free from the constraints they experienced in their brief stints with Arista and Big Life.[5] The label has been called "visionary"[6] and "reliably excellent."[7] It has signed a diverse range of artists,[8] has created its own publishing company named Just Isn't Music.[9] It also makes innovative uses of software.[10]
The label's first releases – the first five volumes of DJ Food's Jazz Brakes – were produced by Coldcut in the early 1990s.[11][page needed] They were composed of instrumental sample-based cuts that led the duo to help pioneer new instrumental hip hop beats genres (alongside the Mo'Wax label and Ninja Tune artists such as Funki Porcini, The Herbaliser, and DJ Vadim).[12]
The label has released music from many artists, including: The Cinematic Orchestra, Amon Tobin, Bonobo, Kelis, BICEP, The Bug, Machinedrum, and Lee Bannon. It distributes for other record labels – including Big Dada, Brainfeeder (Flying Lotus' label)[13] and Technicolour Records.