Tiny Dust-to-Digital record label gathers big attention
ATLANTA — When college student and roots music fan Lance Ledbetter grew frustrated at the near impossibility of buying 78 rpm gospel records from the 1920s and ’30s, he began to ponder a question: What would it take to reissue those old tunes and put them in stores?
Answering that question has become a career for Ledbetter and his wife, April, at their record label, Dust-to-Digital .
Since its first release in 2003, the tiny company run from their modest brick house in a quiet Atlanta neighbourhood has become a powerhouse in the niche market of music that’s been gathering dust, waiting to find or regain an audience: antique 78 recordings of blues, gospel, jazz and other styles, along with musicologists’ field recordings of rural musicians and indigenous people all over the world.
Nine of the label’s releases have been nominated for Grammy Awards, and one actually won.

