A loosely defined genre of relaxing music that combines electronic and ethnic instuments.
1The music ranges from impressionistic to new-age, consistently finding stillness in movement.
2In 1999 Cleveland was again awarded and the new-age Browns were born.
3They weren't a new-age scam that you could buy in any Waterstone's.
4I was peddling my new-age nonsense apparently, trying to defend the indefensible.
5Ryan and his team didn't just create a new-age speaker system.
6Lukatmi didn't look much like a new-age politically correct do-no-evil-to-anyone corporation to Peroni.
7Dyer, 39, and six foot three, has the look of a new-age monk.
8In talking about putting his life back together, Sanford gives off new-age vibrations.
9In a stupid life-altering, change your destiny, new-age sort of way.
10When it comes to Oz's new-age enthusiasms, Chodzko-Zajko is circumspect.
11Shiho's jet-black curls flowed over her shoulders; she had nicely thick thighs and new-age conversation.
12There's an encounter with a new-age couples therapy group.
13With nine movements tracking some sort of nebulous new-age narrative, it's more of a suite.
14Sugary pop melts into frantic tribal flute; new-age chimes sit alongside squalls of improvised drumming.
15And unlike warm, fuzzy, new-age Renaissance, there was no shying away from differences and disagreements.
16He acknowledged he was never going to be "a new-age kind of guy".