ATO Records Vinyl, CDs & Cassettes
Vida Blue – Crossing Lines (LP Vinyl) Jim James – Uniform Clarity (CD) Chicano Batman – Notebook Fantasy (CD) J. Roddy Walston & The Business – Destroyers Of The Soft Life (LP Vinyl) moe. – This Is Not, We Are (Blue Galaxy LP Vinyl) Danny Barnes – Rocket (CD) Chicano Batman – Freedom Is Free (LP Vinyl) Black Pumas – Black Pumas: Deluxe Edition (2-CD) Rodrigo Y Gabriela – Mettavolution (LP Vinyl) Ocote Soul Sounds – El Nino Y El Sol (LP Vinyl) Jessica Lea Mayfield – Make My Head Sing (CD) One More Ride - Old 97's Play Johnny Cash (LP Vinyl) Caitlin Rose – Own Side Now (CD) Natalie Prass – The Future And The Past (CD) Brother Wallace – Electric Love (CD) Jim James – Regions Of Light and Sound Of God (CD) Okkervil River – In The Rainbow Rain (LP Vinyl) Jim James – Tribute To (CD) Jonny Fritz – Sweet Creep (CD) Margaret Glaspy – Echo The Diamond (CD) Allen Stone – Allen Stone (LP Vinyl)
Sold outAllen Stone – Allen Stone (LP Vinyl)$ 29.95$ 29.95Unit price / perCIVIC – New Vietnam + Singles (LP Vinyl) They Are Gutting a Body of Water – LOTTO (LP Vinyl) Stars – No One Is Lost (CD)
ATO Records was founded in 2000 by Dave Matthews and manager Coran Capshaw, and the name, According to Our Records, tells you something about the attitude. This was never meant to be a machine. It was built by people who came up through the touring world, who understood how artists actually develop, and who had the patience and resources to let that happen without the pressure of a major label quarterly report bearing down on everything.
The roster reflects that origin pretty clearly. My Morning Jacket has been here since 2004, and the catalog of records they've made under this roof is as good an argument for the label's approach as anything. Drive-By Truckers. Alabama Shakes, whose debut landed like a lightning bolt. Brittany Howard's solo work after that. King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard, one of the most genuinely prolific and unpredictable bands working today. Black Pumas. Primus. Rodrigo y Gabriela. The early David Gray releases that first put the label on the map.
What these artists share isn't a genre, it's a work ethic and a certain commitment to doing things on their own terms. ATO has always attracted that kind of artist, and the label has held up its end by actually building careers rather than chasing moments.
For anyone who's spent time in the Relix universe, a significant portion of the bands you care about have called ATO home at some point. This is a good collection to spend time in.