WASHINGTON – Top names in music, technology, law, academia and
policy will convene in Washington, DC on May 2 – 3, 2004 to discuss
crucial issues facing musicians and the music/tech industry. Over 70 panelists
and 700 to 1000 participants will come together for the fourth annual
Future of Music Policy Summit, being held in George Washington University’s
Lisner Auditorium. Over the course of the Summit, experts and audience
members will debate such issues as the explosive growth of online music
stores, the impact of increased media consolidation on citizens and musicians,
the effect of data on policy, the value of treating your band as a business,
the impact activist musicians can have on political discourse, and the
changing nature of the music industry as distribution and sales continue
to go digital.
What: Future of Music Policy
Summit
Where: GWU’s Lisner Auditorium
21st and H Streets, NW, Washington, DC
When: May 2 – 3, 2004
Confirmed keynote speakers include Senator Norm Coleman (R-MN)
and
FCC Commissioner Michael Copps.
Panelists include Danny Goldberg (Chairman and CEO, Artemis Records),
Janeane Garofalo (Actor and Comedian), Mike Dreese (CEO and Co-Founder,
Newbury Comics), Kim Coletta (Desoto Records and band Jawbox), Derek Sivers
(CD Baby), William Terry Fisher (Professor of Law, Harvard Law School),
Gigi Sohn (President, Public Knowledge), Ann Chaitovitz (Director of Sound
Recordings, AFTRA), Thomas Frank (Author and Editor, The Baffler), Ron
Gertz (President and CEO, Music Reports), Seth Hurwitz (9:30 Club), Dave
Meinert (PNW Chapter of Recording Academy, Owner/President of Blue Team
Management), John Nichols (Writer, The Nation), Tim Quirk (Executive Editor,
Music, Real Networks and band Too Much Joy), John Simson (Executive Director,
SoundExchange), Koleman Strumpf (Department of Economics, UNC), and many
more. A complete list is online here.
"At its best this conference is a crash course in the history of
music/technology, a Cliff Notes on the up- to-the-minute issues, and a
blueprint for the emerging future, all at the same time," said Jenny
Toomey, Executive Director of the Future of Music Coalition. "Experts
wrestle over detailed arguments, novices get a lay of the land, contentious
industries build bridges and everyone leaves the two-day event inspired
and prepared to build better technologies, write better laws, make better
music and have more rewarding careers. We hope that this event continues
to provide musicians, technologists, industry representatives, policymakers
and the music-loving public with an opportunity to understand these changes,
and the effects that new technologies are having on musicians and the
music industry."
Registration for the event is $149 for a two-day pass or $99 for a one-day
pass. Students can attend at the discounted rate of $99 for a two-day
pass or $66 for a one-day pass.
One of the Summit’s unique aspects is its determination to involve artists
as active participants in the ongoing policy debate. Thanks to contributions
from foundations, corporations and individuals, over 200 artists attend
the Summit at no charge every year.
More information about the Summit, including the schedule, a complete
list of current panelists, and musician scholarships is available online:
Event home page
Online
registration
Musician scholarships
Press credentialing
Confirmed panelists
Proposed schedule
About the Future of Music Coalition
The Future of Music Coalition is a not-for-profit, grassroots collaboration
between leading independent musicians and experts from the worlds of technology,
public policy and intellectual property law. The FMC seeks to educate
the media and policymakers about music/technology issues, while also bringing
together key stakeholders in an effort to come up with creative solutions
to the challenges in this space. The FMC also aims to identify and promote
innovative business models that will help independent musicians benefit
from new technologies, and work to organize underrepresented musicians
from the independent music community to speak out on issues that impact
the value of their labor.
# # #
To request more information, press passes, and interviews, please contact:
Megan Wendell, Canary Promotion
215-242-6393 megan [at] canarypromo [dot] com?subject=FMC%20Policy%20Summit:%20press%20question">megan [at] canarypromo [dot] com