HOME

Join Us
REGISTER
SCHOLARSHIPS
PRESS CREDENTIALING
VOLUNTEER

About the Event
PRESENTERS
SCHEDULE

General Info
DIRECTIONS
IMAGES/FLYERS
ABOUT
CONTACT

Facebook  Twitter   MySpace 



FMC HOMEPAGE

Other Events
CHICAGO
CREATIVE LICENSE



Today's music landscape is filled with both excitement and foreboding. With so many new technologies and ways to promote and distribute music, how do performers, composers, songwriters and independent labels know how to participate, who to trust, and what is most effective?

FMC is working with The Public Theater and other musician organizations to program our sixth "What's the Future for Musicians?" educational event, this one in New York City on October 6, 2008.

This seminar will educate musicians and label owners from a range of genres – classical, jazz, rock, folk and hip-hop – about the critical issues at the intersection of music, law, technology and policy, with the goal of better preparing musicians to participate in the issues that affect their livelihood.

register | apply for scholarship

Update 09/09/08: Your registration for this event also guarantees you access to a 6:00 PM cocktail party in the lobby of the Public Theater, and our evening event, Creative License: A Conversation about Music, Sampling and Fair Use.

Programming

Panels on:

  • how musicians can use emerging technologies to promote and distribute their work

  • health insurance for musicians

  • the state and federal policies that are affecting how musicians access media, and how they will be compensated in the future

Breakouts and roundtables on:

  • new revenue review

  • podcasting/webcasting

  • international touring and visas

  • New York based initiatives and funding opportunities

See programming details

Panelists

Dee Dee Acquisto Senior Director, Health & Human Services, MusiCares

Richard Bengloff President , American Association of Independent Music

Michael Bracy Policy Director, Future of Music Coalition

Michael Bracy Policy Director, Future of Music Coalition

Jim Brown Director of Health Services, The Actors Fund

Brian Camelio CEO/Founder, ArtistShare

Ann Chaitovitz Executive Director, Future of Music Coalition

Jennifer Wright Cook Executive Director, The Field

Matthew Covey Executive Director, Tamizdat Inc.

Matthew DeFilippis Vice President, New Media & Technology, ASCAP

Ken Freedman Station Manager, WFMU

Joel Hamilton Engineer, Producer, Studio Owner, Studio G Brooklyn

Jim Hannen Contract Administration Supervisor, American Federation of Musicians of Greater New York

Dick Huey CEO, Toolshed

Ariel Hyatt President , Ariel Publicity and Cyber PR

Frannie Kelley NPR Music Production Coordinator, NPR

Zoe Knight Associate Director/Consultant, Artist Mangement & Publishing

Alex Maiolo Project Director, HINT

Charles McEnerney Host + Producer, Well-Rounded Radio

Molly Neuman Director/Manager, eMusic/Indivision Management

Marie Ortiz Program Director, Healthcare, Fractured Atlas

Hal Ponder Director of Government Relations, American Federation of Musicians

Hal Ponder Director of Government Relations, American Federation of Musicians

Jeff Price CEO/Founder, TuneCore

Casey Rae-Hunter Communications Director, Future of Music Coalition

Neeta Ragoowansi Director of Artist-Label Relations, SoundExchange

Molly Sheridan Managing Editor, NewMusicBox.org/Director, CounterstreamRadio.org, American Music Center

David Terry Senior Officer, NYFA

Kristin Thomson Education Director, Future of Music Coalition

Kristin Thomson Education Director, Future of Music Coalition

Marcy Rauer Wagman Associate Professor/CEO, Drexel University/MAD Dragon UNLTD

Scott Winship Program Manager, Meet The Composer


More panelists to be announced shortly.

Building a Musicians' Middle Class

Eight years ago, Future of Music Coalition was conceived as an organization that would work to build structures to create a musicians' middle class. It was clear to us that, while the music industry has made a handful of artists very wealthy, the vast majority of musicians live gig-to-gig, unable to afford the basic protections and securities of life that allow them to continue making their art and, equally important, without a way to educate themselves to break out of this cycle.

Since our 2000 founding, we have focused on elements that would allow musicians to better participate in the issues that affect their livelihood: encouraging the development of digital distribution models that reduce costs and increase connections between musicians and their fans; examining new business models that create more equal partnerships between creators, labels and consumers; fighting against payola and media consolidation that reduce artists' chances of radio airplay; advocating for net neutrality provisions to ensure that all legal Internet traffic is treated equally; and helping musicians navigate the often-confusing world of health insurance coverage. We want musicians' labor to be valued, we want them to be compensated for their work, we want them to understand how the myriad laws and regulations affect them, and we want them to have access to basic health insurance and medical services.

About FMC Events

Since 2001, FMC has organized seven Policy Summits and two DC Policy Days in Washington, DC, each bringing together a spectacular mixture of technologists, attorneys, musicians, managers and industry leaders for discussions about the most compelling music/technology/policy matters. In October 2006 we held our sixth annual Policy Summit in Montreal, Quebec in partnership with McGill University's Schulich School of Music and Pop Montreal where, over the course of three days, 120 panelists and 550 participants debated the issues that are emerging as music promotion and distribution moves to a global, digital platform. In September 2007, the Future of Music Policy Summit returned to Washington, DC. For updates about FMC events, subscribe to our newsletters.

 

Some great moments from past FMC events...

George Clinton and
Hank Shocklee
talk about sampling at
2005 Policy Summit
Rhapsody's Tim Quirk on making sure your music reaches its audience at 2008's What's the Future for Musicians?
FMC's Michael Bracy on Low Power FM Radio at 2008's What's the Future for Musicians?

 


Event Partners

The Public Theater


Sponsors

Google


Merge Records


American Federation of Musicians


SESAC


National Endowment for the Arts

This project is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts

Free Press


Public Knowledge



musicFIRST


SoundExchange


WFMU


KEXP


A2IM


Just Plain Folks



Help us spread the word!

Posters, flyers, PSAs, and web images


Materials

Fact sheets for musicians on resources, health insurance, traveling with instruments, touring internationally, SoundExchange, HD radio, low power FM and stations in NY State

 


Press

FMC reveals programming for fall events
September 9, 2008


Subscribe

FMC Events News
FMC Newsletter



Event Archives

Policy Summit 07
DC Policy Day 07
Policy Summit 2006
Policy Summit 2005
Policy Summit 2004
Hastings Music Law Summit West 2004
Policy Summit 2003
Policy Summit 2002
Policy Summit 2001