Nathan Haines

aka Sci-clone


In 1995 Nathan Haines released his debut album Shift Left, an album which revealed a fault-line between the previous generation of New Zealand jazz players and – because of its use of turntables and rappers – a new generation which had embraced hip-hop as much as the cool sounds of the 50s and 60s.

Shift Left – the title chosen from a roadworks sign which appealed to Haines’ left-leaning attitude – remains New Zealand’s biggest-selling jazz album. Yet, a year later, when it was awarded Jazz Album of the Year, Haines wasn’t interested in the accolade or the album anymore. He was only 22 when he recorded it and had, he said, “moved on into electronic music and found the album dated.”

Nathan Haines and Simon Grigg, Parnell, Auckland, 1995
Jazz Committee at Cause Celebre, 1990. Malcolm Taylor, Steve Harrop, Joel Haines, Nathan Haines.
Photo credit: Photo By Simon Grigg
Nathan Haines in a 1994 Shift Left photo shoot outtake
Photo credit: Photo by Karl Pierard. Simon Grigg Collection
Nathan Haines - 5 A Day
Nathan Haines & The Enforcers, Cause Celebre, Auckland circa 1994. Murray McNabb, Joel Haines, Ben Holmes and Nathan Haines.
Photo credit: Photo by Karl Pierard
Beda
UK's James Hardway with Nathan Haines, December 1997
Ancestral Dance
The Samsung Naked Sessions - Part 1 of 2
Daryn Karaitiana, Kevin Field, Nathan Haines, Sani Sagala on the Shift Left tour, Queenstown, 1995
Photo credit: Photo by Simon Grigg
Nathan Haines's Shift Left (1994): a landmark album, it was recorded by Steve Garden in live sessions at Auckland's Revolver Studios
Heaven and Earth 15-3-10 Radio Wammo Show
Nathan Haines and the Enforcers, Auckland Town Hall, July 1994 with Sani Sagala AKA Dei Hamo on vocals/raps
Doot Dude
Nathan Haines, 1999
Manuel Bundy, Nathan Haines, Sani Sagala on the Shift Left tour, Queenstown, 1995
Photo credit: Photo by Simon Grigg
Nathan Haines, Marcelle Churchman of Warners NZ, and Peter Urlich
The Making of Vermillion Skies
Nathan with producer (and Upper Hutt Posse manager) George Hubbard, 1995
Nathan Haines in the studio with his son, 2017
Pauly Fuemana, Nathan Haines, Parnell, Auckland, October 1995
Photo credit: Photo by Simon Grigg
Nathan Haines at the Civic Theatre, Auckland, 2001
Photo credit: Simon Grigg collection
The 2003 Squire For Hire cover 
Nathan Haines, sax by the sea
Photo credit: nathanhaines.com
The Samsung Naked Sessions - Part 2 of 2
Nathan Haines with his wife Jaimie Webster Haines and their son, Zoot
Photo credit: nathanhaines.com
Label from the Nathan Haines - Shift Left 2019 reissue.
Interview with Nathan Haines, 30 March 1995. Directed by Ross Cunningham. Directed by Ross Cunningham, DOP Mike Monten, edited by Gregor Boyd, art by Johnnie Pain. Huh! Records.
Hidden Fortress (feat. Kevin Mark Trail) (2016)
Nathan Haines, on the street
Nathan Haines - Shift Left 2019 reissue (Huh! / Universal Music New Zealand)
Nathan Haines, London, 1999
Photo credit: Photo by Kerry Brown
Lady J
Nathan Haines in New York in the mid-1990s
Kevin Field, Joel Haines and Nathan Haines
Lady Lwya (live at London's Lovebuzz Studios, 2014)
The Poet's Embrace EPK
Nathan Haines Family Album documentary (2005)
Pathway feat. Kevin Mark Trail
The second sleeve for Shift Left, December 1995.
Nathan Haines
Jazz Committee in Vulcan Lane circa 1990. Malcolm Taylor, Steve Harrop, Ben Harrop, Nathan Haines, Joel Haines. 
Photo credit: Photo by Chris Priestley
Tell Me What You're Feeling
Nathan Haines - Zoot Allure (remixes from 5 A Day - for release in Europe and Japan)
Nathan Haines in New York in the mid-1990s
Labels:

Huh!


Haven Music


Chillifunk


Warner Classics


Warner Jazz


Foliage Records

Trivia:

Nathan and his wife Jaimie often DJ together, with Nathan playing as part of the performance, as Mr & Mrs Haines.

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