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2003 Summit Schedule

SATURDAY, JANUARY 4 | SUNDAY, JANUARY 5 | MONDAY, JANUARY 6 | TUESDAY, JANUARY 7

SATURDAY, JANUARY 4

6:00 PM

Patti Smith performs at the Kennedy Center Millennium Stage
Free/No tickets required
Visit here for more information about the Kennedy Center's Performing Arts for Everyone initiative.

7:00 PM

Pho Dinner at Nam Viet, Arlington VA. Go here to RSVP or for directions to the restaurant


SUNDAY, JANUARY 5

New this year, Sunday will include an afternoon program that includes three panels focusing on issues that are of particular interest to working musicians. This program is free for working musicians. To register, pleae visit this page.

1:00 PM

Welcome by Jose Bowen Caestecker Chair of Music, Georgetown University

1:00 - 2:30 PM

Panel 101: The Business of Music
This panel tackles some of the cloudy subjects that confound even music veterans. Who registers copyrights? What are digital royalties and who collects them? How can you make smarter choices about booking a tour, recording music, being insured, using the web, avoiding fatal mistakes, keeping control? Artists will ultimately make their own choices, and this panel seeks to introduce the full range of options.

Suzette Becker Attorney, Becker Entertainment/Internet Law [moderator]
Whitney Broussard Partner, Selverne Mandelbaum & Mintz
Dina LaPolt Attorney, LaPolt Law
Derek Sivers President & Programmer, CD Baby
Brian Austin Whitney Founder, Just Plain Folks

2:30 - 2:45 PM

Music by BanjerDan [Dan Mazer] Wow! Banjos ROCK!

2:45 - 4:15 PM

Making Your Laws
Every year policies and laws are made that directly impact the lives of musicians. In this upcoming congressional session there are no less than six bills that will affect your access to the radio, the ownership of your copyrights, the structures and rates of your future royalties and your freedom to speak, sing and perform publicly. Meanwhile, the FCC is considering lifting ownership caps that would lead to further consolidation. How can musicians connect with these issues in a way that brings change on a local, state and national level? We’ll discuss the political issues you need to care about in 2003 before they impact your livelihood, creativity and speech in 2004 and beyond.

Johnny Temple Musician and Publisher [moderator]
Michael Bracy Director of Government Relations, FMC
Jim Burger Member, Dow Lohnes and Albertson
David Meinert Chair of the Advocacy Committee for The Pacific Northwest Branch of the Recording Academyand Owner/ President of Fuzed Music
Steve Picou Assistant Director, Louisiana Music Commission
Patricia Polach Attorney, Bredhoff & Kaiser
Tim Raduca-Grace Office of Senator Feingold
Jay Rosenthal Attorney, Recording Artists Coalition, Berliner, Corcoran & Rowe, LLP

4:15 - 4:30 PM

Music by Method and Result [guitar/keyboards duo]

4:30 - 6:00 PM

Artist Roundtable panel
Moderated by Ian MacKaye of Dischord Records and the band Fugazi, this panel will bring together a half-dozen musicians to talk about the choices they have made and are making about touring, recording, ownership and control, the simple power of saying no and saying yes, and their definitions of success.

Ian MacKaye Dischord Records/Fugazi [moderator]
Bob Mould Musician and songwriter
Vernon Reid Musician and songwriter
Patti Smith
Musician and Songwriter

 

6:00 PM

Cocktail party hosted by ASCAP with special guest Eric Bazilian

6:00 PM

Lester Chambers of the Chambers Brothers performs at the Kennedy Center Millennium Stage
Free/No tickets required
Visit here for more information about the Kennedy Center's Performing Arts for Everyone initiative.

 


MONDAY, JANUARY 6
to register for the Summit, go here

7:30 - 9:00 AM

Check in and breakfast snacks at Georgetown University's Healy Hall.
Directions are here. Breakfast sponsored by Microsoft

9:00 AM

Welcome by David W. Lightfoot Dean, Georgetown University Graduate School of Arts & Sciences

9:05 - 9:15 AM

Welcome by Jenny Toomey Executive Director, Future of Music Coalition

9:15 - 9:45 AM

Keynote Speaker 1: FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein

9:45 - 10:45 AM

Panel 1: State of the Union
2002 saw the launch of Musicnet and Pressplay, while legal and PR efforts to counteract the effects of P2P continued. But there are bigger issues on the table including the rise of artists’ voices through the organizations like FMC, RAC, and AEC about major label practices, the constitutionality of copyright extension, privacy issues, and a sinking music economy. What does 2003 hold in store for musicians, consumers, and the music community?

Rick Karr Cultural Trends Correspondent, NPR News [moderator]
Eric Bazilian Musician and Songwriter
Yochai Benkler Professor, NYU School of Law
L. Londell McMillan Attorney, L. Londell McMillan PC
Vernon Reid Musician and Songwriter
Robert Santelli Director and CEO, Experience Music Project
Cary Sherman President and General Counsel, RIAA
JennyToomey Executive Director, Future of Music Coalition

10:45 - 11:00 AM

Music by Randye Jones [Art of the Negro Spiritual]

11:00 - 12:00 PM

Panel 2: The Tangled Web of Webcasting
We’ve had legislation, negotiation, arbitration, litigation…and now, more legislation in the effort to develop a usable framework to collect and distribute royalties for digital performance of recorded works. What is the status of this issue? Where is it heading in 2003? And why has this been so difficult to resolve? This panel brings together some of the most influential voices in the debate to talk about the future of webcasting.

Dawn Chmielewski Staff Writer, San Jose Mercury News [moderator]
Cassandra Cummings Business Development Manager, Microsoft
Marshall Eubanks CEO, Multicast Technologies
William Terry Fisher Professor of Law, Harvard Law School
Bill Goldsmith Partner, Radioparadise.com
Kurt Hanson Publisher, Radio and Internet Newsletter
Marybeth Peters Register, US Copyright Office
John Simson Executive Director, SoundExchange

12:00 - 12:30 PM

Roundtable Discussion on the Public Performance Royalty

Peter Jenner Chairman, AURA and Chairman, IMMF [moderator]
Ken Kaufman Partner, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP
Steven Metalitz Senior Vice President, International Intellectual Property Alliance
Richard Owens Head, Copyright E-Commerce, Technology and Management Division, World Intellectual Property Organization
Perry Resnick RZO/Music Managers Forum - US
Eamon Shackleton Head of Legal Affairs, Irish Music Rights Organization

12:45 - 1:45 PM

Lunch sponsored by The Recording Academy
with special guest
Representative Mark Foley
(R-FL) Chair of the Entertainment Industry Task Force

2:00 - 3:00 PM

Panel 3: Illegal Imagination
Who benefits from recent trends in copyright aggregation and extension and how do these functioning models compare with international copyright law and the vision of the founders? Do these changes have an impact on innovation, imagination, and competition, and if so is the impact a positive or a negative one?

Ira Glass Host, This American Life [moderator]
Alfonzo Blackwell Saxophonist/Recording Artist and Songwriter
Glenn Otis Brown Executive Director, Creative Commons
Doug E Fresh Musician
Gigi Sohn President, Public Knowledge
Siva Vaidhyanathan
Assistant Professor, Department of Culture and Communication, New York University

3:00 - 3:15 PM

Music by the Nitrate Hymnal [opera]

3:15 - 4:15 PM

Panel 4: Retail in the 21st Century
Three years ago it looked like digital distribution and P2P networks would lead to grave consequences for traditional retail. With the industry showing its lowest sales numbers in years we want to look at the impact of technology on retail. What’s the future of retail – both online and offline? How can terrestrial retail and distribution use the web to attract music fans and survive in this new era?

Kristin Thomson Organizer, FMC [moderator]
Mike Dreese CEO and Co-Founder, Newbury Comics
John Flansburgh
Musician, They Might Be Giants
Michael Hausman President, SuperEgo Records/United Musicians
Pam Horovitz President, NARM
Patrick Monaghan President, CTD Limited
Tim Quirk Director of Editorial/Music Programming, Listen.com


4:15 - 4:30 PM

Music by From Quagmire

4:30 - 5:30 PM

Panel 5: Major Labels: Can they Innovate?
Major labels rely on time-tested techniques when signing and dealing with artists. Many of these structures are increasingly criticized as leading to inequitable partnerships. In response, some labels are taking bold steps, signing bands to unique deals, offering health insurance, sharing profits. Are these labels setting new precedents, or just finding ways to attract musicians in a competitive marketplace? Major label representatives and top-level artist managers discuss ways that the major labels can – and should – innovate.

Jim Griffin CEO, Cherry Lane Digital/Pho [moderator]
David Benjamin Senior Vice President, Anti-Piracy, Universal Music Group
Jim Cooperman Vice President of Legal and Business Affairs, BMG
Peter Jenner Chairman, AURA and Chairman, IMMF
Sandy Pearlman Vice President, Media Development, Multicast Technologies

6:00 PM



TUESDAY, JANUARY 7
to register for the Summit, go here

7:30 - 9:00 AM

Check in at Georgetown University's Healy Hall. Directions are here.
Breakfast sponsored by Microsoft

9:00 AM

Welcome by James O'Donnell Provost, Georgetown University

9:05 - 9:15 AM

Welcome by Michael Bracy Director of Government Relations, Future of Music Coalition

9:15 - 9:45 AM

Keynote Speaker 2: Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI)

9:45 - 10:00 AM

Coffee Break

10:00 - 10:30 AM

Keynote Speaker 3: Representative Howard Berman (D-CA)

10:30 - 11:30 AM

Panel 6: Complete Control
In an environment where digital copying and distribution threaten existing business models, the entertainment industry is pushing for legislative and technological solutions to protect its content. Consumer groups and telecommunications companies reply that the entertainment industries are going too far. What does this fight mean for artists and the public? What about the balance with privacy issues? And where does the digital rights management debate go in 2003?

Brian Zisk Technologies Director, Future of Music Coalition [moderator]
Mark Cooper Director of Research, Consumer Federation of America
Sarah Deutsch Vice President & Associate General Counsel, Verizon Communications
Jane Ginsburg Morton L. Janklow Professor of Literary and Artistic Property, Columbia University Law School
Joe Kraus Co-Founder, Digitalconsumer.org
Bruce Lehman President, International Intellectual Property Institute
Andy Moss Director of Technical Policy, Microsoft

11:45 - 12:45 PM

Panel 7: Musicians and Health Insurance
Not a week goes by that you don’t hear about a benefit being organized to help a musician with no health insurance cover medical bills. Some musicians work extra jobs just to afford or obtain coverage, requiring them to juggle a music career with a full-time job to maintain benefits. Others give up, brushing off this necessity as a “luxury.” Why are musicians far less likely to be covered by basic health insurance? Is the problem economics, structures, or access to information? What can we do to improve musicians’ ability to secure affordable health insurance?

Tim Quirk Director of Editorial/Music Programming, Listen.com [moderator]
Jim Brown Director, Artists' Health Insurance Resource Center
Ann Chaitovitz Director of Sound Recordings, AFTRA
Alex Maiolo Co-owner, Lee-Moore Insurance
Linda Phillips President, Nuçi Phillips Memorial Foundation
Dr. Susan Raeburn Licensed Clinical Psychologist
David Sterling President, MusicPro Insurance
Peyton Wimmer Director, Doug Sahm Musicians' Health Clinic

12:45 - 1:45 PM

Lunch

2:00 - 3:00 PM

Panel 8: Radio: Consolidate or Regulate?
Corporate consolidation is not unique to the entertainment industry, but it’s certainly having a profound effect on musicians. In November 2002, the FMC released a study of the impact of radio consolidation on artists and citizens. This panel uses the study as a starting point to discuss radio consolidation – is it a plus or minus for artists, music fans and citizens? Is the deregulation of radio a blueprint for other media, a cautionary tale, or both? And can radio be reformed, or will new technologies simply step in to replace it?

John Nichols Writer, The Nation [moderator]
Lee Abrams Chief Programming Officer, XM Satellite Radio
Pat Aufderheide Professor and Director, Center for Social Media, American University
Peter DiCola
Director of Economic Analysis, Future of Music Coalition
Adam Thierer Director of Telecommunications Studies, Cato Institute
George Williams Senior Economist, Federal Communications Commission

3:00 - 3:15 PM Music by Jon Kaplan of Bicycle Thieves [guitar/vocals]

3:15 - 4:15 PM

Panel 9: 2003 Policy Agenda
2003 will be a critical year as a wide range of issues of concern to musicians and music fans are debated in Congress, the Administration and at the FCC. In addition, some state legislatures are weighing in on issues like major label accounting and California’s seven-year statue. Where are these issues heading? How does this impact the various interests in the music community? How can musicians impact these policy decisions?

Bill Holland Washington Bureau Chief, Billboard Magazine [moderator]
Kevin Murray California State Senator. Chair, Select Committee on Entertainment Industry
Michael Remington Attorney, Drinker Biddle & Reath
Debra Rose Counsel, Subcommittee on the Courts, Internet and Intellectual Property
Andy Schwartzman President and CEO, Media Access Project 

 

4:30 - 5:30 PM

Panel 10: The Search for A Legitimate Digital Marketplace
A full 30 months after “Napster Summer”, the music industry is slowly coming forward with legitimately licensed subscription services to compete with unlicensed peer-to-peer networks. Is the industry doing enough to respond to demand? If so, can they “compete with free?” If not, is it time to explore compulsory licenses for certain digital transmissions? How would these licenses work and who would they most serve?

Walter McDonough General Counsel, FMC [moderator]
Chris Amenita Senior Vice President, Enterprises Group, ASCAP
Richard Conlon VP of Marketing and Business Development, BMI
Chris Israel Assistant Deputy Secretary for Technology Policy, Department of Commerce
Vincent Peppe Legal Counsel, Licensing, SESAC
David Post Professor of Law, Temple University

 

 

 

 




 

 



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Policy Summit 2002 Archive

2003 Panelists
and Speakers

last update: 02/10/2003

Keynote Speakers:

Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI)
Rep. Howard Berman (D-CA)
Rep. Mark Foley (R-FL)
FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein



Panelists:

Lee Abrams
Chief Programming Officer,
XM Satellite Radio


Chris Amenita
Senior Vice President, Enterprises Group, ASCAP

Pat Aufderheide
Professor and Director, Center for Social Media, American University

Eric Bazilian
Musician and Songwriter

Suzette Becker
Attorney, Becker Entertainment/Internet Law

David Benjamin
Senior Vice President, Anti-Piracy, Universal Music Group

Yochai Benkler
Professor, NYU School of Law

Alfonzo Blackwell
Saxophonist/Recording Artist and Songwriter

Michael Bracy
Director of Government Relations,
Future of Music Coalition


Whitney Broussard
Partner, Selverne Mandelbaum & Mintz

Jim Brown
Director, Artists' Health Insurance Resource Center

Glenn Otis Brown
Executive Director, Creative Commons

Jim Burger
Member, Dow Lohnes and Albertson

David Carson
General Counsel, US Copyright Office

Ann Chaitovitz
Director of Sound Recordings, AFTRA

Dawn C. Chmielewski
Staff Writer, San Jose Mercury News

Richard Conlon
Vice President of Marketing and Business Development, BMI


Mark Cooper
Director of Research, Consumer Federation of America

Jim Cooperman
Vice President of Legal and Business Affairs, BMG


Cassandra Cummings
Business Development Manager, Microsoft

Peter DiCola
Director of Economic Analysis,
Future of Music Coalition


Sarah B. Deutsch
Vice President & Associate General Counsel,
Verizon Communications

Mike Dreese
CEO and Co-Founder, Newbury Comics

Marshall Eubanks
CEO, Multicast Technologies

William Terry Fisher
Professor of Law, Harvard Law School

John Flansburgh
Musician, They Might Be Giants

Jane Ginsburg
Morton L. Janklow Professor of Literary and Artistic Property, Columbia University Law School

Ira Glass
Host, This American Life

Bill Goldsmith
Partner, Radioparadise.com

Jim Griffin
CEO, Cherry Lane Digital /Pho

Kurt Hanson
Publisher, Radio and
Internet Newsletter


Michael Hausman
President, SuperEgo Records/United Musicians

Bill Holland
Washington Bureau Chief, Billboard Magazine

Pam Horovitz
President, NARM

Chris Israel
Assistant Deputy Secretary for Technology Policy
, Department of Commerce

Peter Jenner
Chairman, AURA and Chairman, IMMF

Rick Karr
Cultural Trends Correspondent,
NPR News

Ken Kaufman
Partner, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP

Joe Kraus
Co-Founder, Digitalconsumer.org

Dina LaPolt
Attorney, LaPolt Law

Bruce Lehman
President, International Intellectual Property Institute

Ian MacKaye
Dischord Records/Fugazi

Alex Maiolo
Co-owner, Lee-Moore Insurance

David Meinert
Chair of the Advocacy Committee for The Pacific Northwest Branch of the Recording Academy
Owner/ President of Fuzed Music


Walter McDonough
General Counsel,
Future of Music Coalition

L. Londell McMillan
Attorney, L. Londell McMillan PC

Patrick Monaghan
President, CTD Limited

Andy Moss
Director of Technical Policy, Microsoft

Bob Mould
Musician and Songwriter

Kevin Murray
California State Senator. Chair, Select Committee on Entertainment Industry

John Nichols
Writer, The Nation

Richard Owens
Head, Copyright E-Commerce, Technology and Management Division, World Intellectual Property Organization


Sandy Pearlman
Vice President, Media Development, Multicast Technologies

Vincent Peppe
Legal Counsel, Licensing, SESAC

Linda Phillips
President, Nuçi Phillips Memorial Foundation

Steve Picou
Assistant Director, Louisiana Music Commission

Patricia Polach
Attorney, Bredhoff & Kaiser

David Post
Professor of Law, Temple University

Tim Quirk
Director of Editorial/Music Programming, Listen.com

Dr. Susan Raeburn
Licensed Clinical Psychologist

Tim Raduca-Grace
Office of Senator Feingold

Vernon Reid
Musician and Songwriter

Michael Remington
Attorney, Drinker Biddle & Reath

Perry Resnick
Music Managers Forum - US

Debra Rose
Counsel for House Subcommittee on Courts, Internet, and
Intellectual Property

Jay Rosenthal, Esq.
Attorney, Recording Artists Coalition, Berliner, Corcoran & Rowe, LLP

Robert Santelli
Director and CEO, Experience Music Project

Andy Schwartzman
President and CEO, Media Access Project 


Eamon Shackleton
Head of Legal Affairs, Irish Music Rights Organization

Cary Sherman
President and General Counsel, Recording Industry Association of America

John Simson
Executive Director, SoundExchange

Derek Sivers
President & Programmer, CD Baby

Patti Smith
Musician and Songwriter

Gigi Sohn
President, Public Knowledge

David Sterling
President, MusicPro Insurance

Johnny Temple
Musician, Girls Against Boys/New Wet Kojak and Publisher, Akashic Books

Adam Thierer
Director of Telecommunications Studies, Cato Institute

Jenny Toomey
Executive Director, Future of Music Coalition

Siva Vaidhyanathan
Assistant Professor, Department of Culture and Communication,
New York University

Brian Austin Whitney
Founder, Just Plain Folks

George Williams
Senior Economist, Federal Communications Commission

Peyton Wimmer
Director, Doug Sahm Musicians' Health Clinic

Brian Zisk
Technologies Director,
Future of Music Coalitio
n

2003 Sponsors