The Cultural Value of Live Music from the Pub to the Stadium
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
ANDERTON Music Festival Capitalism
1 Music Festival Capitalism Chris Anderton Abstract: This chapter adds to a growing subfield of music festival studies by examining the business practices and cultures of the commercial outdoor sector, with a particular focus on rock, pop and dance music events. The events of this sector require substantial financial and other capital in order to be staged and achieve success, yet the market is highly volatile, with relatively few festivals managing to attain longevity. It is argued that these events must balance their commercial needs with the socio-cultural expectations of their audiences for hedonistic, carnivalesque experiences that draw on countercultural understanding of festival culture (the countercultural carnivalesque). This balancing act has come into increased focus as corporate promoters, brand sponsors and venture capitalists have sought to dominate the market in the neoliberal era of late capitalism. The chapter examines the riskiness and volatility of the sector before examining contemporary economic strategies for risk management and audience development, and critiques of these corporatizing and mainstreaming processes. Keywords: music festival; carnivalesque; counterculture; risk management; cool capitalism A popular music festival may be defined as a live event consisting of multiple musical performances, held over one or more days (Shuker, 2017, 131), though the connotations of 2 the word “festival” extend much further than this, as I will discuss below. For the purposes of this chapter, “popular music” is conceived as music that is produced by contemporary artists, has commercial appeal, and does not rely on public subsidies to exist, hence typically ranges from rock and pop through to rap and electronic dance music, but excludes most classical music and opera (Connolly and Krueger 2006, 667). -
Gifts and Hospitality
Gifts and Hospitality Offered by/ Offered to/ Service Date offered Effective Date Description of Gift / Hospitality Value Accepted Comments Provided by Provided to Leadership with MCR Mentoring Event CED 04/09/18 04/10/18 MCR Pathways Annemarie O'Donnell & Civic Reception - City Chambers, < £100 Accepted Glasdgow 21st Annual Awards Dinner - Hilton CED 23/05/18 04/10/18 Chamber of Commerce Annemarie O'Donnell < £100 Accepted Hotel, Glasgow GlasGLOW Preview - Botanic CED 09/10/18 26/10/18 Itison Annemarie O'Donnell < £100 Accepted Plus guest Gardens, Glasgow Opening of the new Prince and Prince and Princess of Wales CED 19/10/18 30/10/18 Annemarie O'Donnell Princess of Wales Hospice in < £100 Accepted Hospice Bellahouston Park, Glasgow Glasgow Children's Hospital Oor Wullie BIG Bucket Trail 2019 - CED 18/10/18 14/11/18 Annemarie O'Donnell < £100 Accepted Charity Glasgow Launch - City Chambers Lord Bob Kerslake Lecture and Dinner - CED 29/10/18 19/11/18 University of Glasgow Annemarie O'Donnell < £100 Accepted University of Glasgow Sports Council for Glasgow Annual CED 31/08/18 23/11/18 Sports Council for Glasgow Annemarie O'Donnell < £100 Accepted Awards 2018 - City Chambers Young Scot Awards - Solace hosting a CED 18/10/18 30/11/18 Solace Annemarie O'Donnell table at dinner and ceremony - SEC < £100 Accepted Glasgow Glasgow College Region Christmas Glasgow Colleges' Regional CED 06/12/18 11/12/18 Annemarie O'Donnell Reception - College Restaurant, City < £100 Accepted Board Campus, City of Glasgow College CED 12/11/18 04/01/19 Scottish -
Felix Issue 1103, 1998
COLOUR EXTRAVAGANZA SUMMER SOUNDS GOT SOME SPARE TIME? Sixty-page Guide to the Jumbo $f Bumper Issue Festivals Crossword Interview with the Rector Campus Renaissance Game y the Tunnels "of IC 1 'I ^ Trip to Le Mans 7 ' W- & the Embrace War Massive Film Preview Thailand Travel Diaries IN GO EOUS FULL C 4 2 GAME 24 June 1998 24 June 1998 GAME 59 Automatic seating in Great Hall opens 1 9 18 unexpectedly during The Rector nicks your exam, killing fff parking space. Miss a go. Felix finds out that you bunged the builders to you're fc Rich old fo work Faster. "start small antiques shop. £2 million. Back one. ii : 1 1 John Foster electro- cutes himself while cutting IC Radio's JCR feed. Go »zzle all the Forward one. nove to the is. The End. P©r/-D®(aia@ You Bung folders to TTafeDts iMmk faster. 213 [?®0B[jafi®Drjfl 40 is (SoOOogj® gtssrjiBGariy tsm<s5xps@G(§tlI ITCD® esiDDorpo/Js Bs a DDD®<3CM?GII (SDB(Sorjaai„ (pAsasamG aracil f?QflrjTi@Gfi®OTjaD Y®E]'RS fifelaL rpDaecsS V®QO wafccs (MJDDD Haglfe G® sGairGo (SRBarjDDo GBa@to G® §GapG„ i You give the Sheffield building a face-lift, it still looks horrible. Conference Hey ho, miss a go. Office doesn't buy new flow furniture. ir failing Take an extra I. Move go. steps back. start Place one Infamou chunk of asbestos raer shopS<ee| player on this square, », roll a die, and try your Southsid luck at the CAMPUS £0.5 mil nuclear reactor ^ RENAISSANCE GAME ^ ill. -
Live Music Matters Scottish Music Review
Live Music Matters Simon Frith Tovey Professor of Music, University of Edinburgh Scottish Music Review Abstract Economists and sociologists of music have long argued that the live music sector must lose out in the competition for leisure expenditure with the ever increasing variety of mediated musical goods and experiences. In the last decade, though, there is evidence that live music in the UK is one of the most buoyant parts of the music economy. In examining why this should be so this paper is divided into two parts. In the first I describe why and how live music remains an essential part of the music industry’s money making strategies. In the second I speculate about the social functions of performance by examining three examples of performance as entertainment: karaoke, tribute bands and the Pop Idol phenomenon. These are, I suggest, examples of secondary performance, which illuminate the social role of the musical performer in contemporary society. 1. The Economics of Performance Introduction It has long been an academic commonplace that the rise of mediated music (on record, radio and the film soundtrack) meant the decline of live music (in concert hall, music hall and the domestic parlour). For much of the last 50 years the UK’s live music sector, for example, has been analysed as a sector in decline. Two kinds of reason are adduced for this. On the one hand, economists, following the lead of Baumol and Bowen (1966), have assumed that live music can achieve neither the economies of scale nor the reduction of labour costs to compete with mass entertainment media. -
Omega Auctions Ltd Catalogue 28 Apr 2020
Omega Auctions Ltd Catalogue 28 Apr 2020 1 REGA PLANAR 3 TURNTABLE. A Rega Planar 3 8 ASSORTED INDIE/PUNK MEMORABILIA. turntable with Pro-Ject Phono box. £200.00 - Approximately 140 items to include: a Morrissey £300.00 Suedehead cassette tape (TCPOP 1618), a ticket 2 TECHNICS. Five items to include a Technics for Joe Strummer & Mescaleros at M.E.N. in Graphic Equalizer SH-8038, a Technics Stereo 2000, The Beta Band The Three E.P.'s set of 3 Cassette Deck RS-BX707, a Technics CD Player symbol window stickers, Lou Reed Fan Club SL-PG500A CD Player, a Columbia phonograph promotional sticker, Rock 'N' Roll Comics: R.E.M., player and a Sharp CP-304 speaker. £50.00 - Freak Brothers comic, a Mercenary Skank 1982 £80.00 A4 poster, a set of Kevin Cummins Archive 1: Liverpool postcards, some promo photographs to 3 ROKSAN XERXES TURNTABLE. A Roksan include: The Wedding Present, Teenage Fanclub, Xerxes turntable with Artemis tonearm. Includes The Grids, Flaming Lips, Lemonheads, all composite parts as issued, in original Therapy?The Wildhearts, The Playn Jayn, Ween, packaging and box. £500.00 - £800.00 72 repro Stone Roses/Inspiral Carpets 4 TECHNICS SU-8099K. A Technics Stereo photographs, a Global Underground promo pack Integrated Amplifier with cables. From the (luggage tag, sweets, soap, keyring bottle opener collection of former 10CC manager and music etc.), a Michael Jackson standee, a Universal industry veteran Ric Dixon - this is possibly a Studios Bates Motel promo shower cap, a prototype or one off model, with no information on Radiohead 'Meeting People Is Easy 10 Min Clip this specific serial number available. -
MAMA Brand Partnerships 2014
BRAND PARTNERSHIPS INTRODUCTION MAMA & Company is one of the U.K’s leading live entertainment businesses, operating an eclectic portfolio of both festival brands and live music venues. Its core strategy continues to focus on the development and delivery of consumer-built entertainment concepts that create unique platforms for all types of emerging artistic talent. ! Our four festivals span every genre from new music, lifestyle and arts through to contemporary pop and dance, and our 9 live music venues include both historic 2,000 capacity concert halls, as well as smaller, iconic music bars and performance spaces. This makes MAMA the perfect partner for any brand wishing to build and develop their audience and to engage with millions of 18 - 30 year old avid music fans. FESTIVALS VENUES MAMA BRAND PARTNERSHIPS We devise and deliver the most innovative, exciting and effective brand led, multi- platform solutions to millions of music fans every year. ! From unique content-lead (live music and curatorial) solutions on our festival sites, through to brand programming, promotion and media support, To create the most dynamic experiences, we interact closely with key talent across MAMA & Company to ensure the activity is authentic, credible and above all, effective. Over a decade of producing the UK’s leading, sell-out and award winning Festivals: The Great Escape Somersault 18-30 18-40 20,000 per day (3,000 Delegates) 15,000 per day New Music Seekers Outdoor Enthusiasts 3 days 4 days Lovebox Wilderness 18-34 25-45 40,000 per day 30,000 per day Urban Influencers ABC1 Opinion Formers 2 days 4 days Nine of the country’s most iconic live music venues, hosting 1.7 million gig-goers every year: The Jazz Cafe Hoxton Square Bar & Kitchen 350 cap. -
(Public Pack)Agenda Document for Council, 29/06/2016 13:00
Public Document Pack A meeting of the Council will be held in the Civic Hall, Leeds on Wednesday, 29th June, 2016 at 1.00 pm Members of the Council are invited to attend and transact the following business: 1 Minutes 1 - 6 To approve the minutes of the Council Meeting held on 19th May 2016. 2 Declarations of Interest To receive any declarations of interest from Members. 3 Communications To receive such communications as the Lord Mayor, the Leader, Members of the Executive Board or the Chief Executive consider appropriate 4 Deputations To receive deputations in accordance with Council Procedure Rule 10 5 Report on Appointments 7 - 10 To consider the report of the City Solicitor on appointments. 6 Recommendations of the Independent Remuneration Panel 11 - 18 - Members' Allowance Scheme To consider the report of the City Solicitor advising Council of the receipt of a report from the Independent Remuneration Panel (IRP) and asks Council to consider the recommendations of the IRP in relation to the Members’ Allowances Scheme. 7 Report on the Leeds Award 19 - 28 To consider the report of the City Solicitor in respect of the Leeds Award. 1 8 Report on Scrutiny Annual Report 29 - 46 To consider the report of the City Solicitor presenting the Scrutiny Boards’ Annual report to Council, prepared in accordance with Article 6 of the Constitution. 9 Questions To deal with questions in accordance with Council Procedure Rule 11 10 Minutes of the Health and Wellbeing Board and the 47 - 66 Executive Board To receive the minutes in accordance with Council Procedure Rule 2.2(i). -
Works List – September 2017 [email protected] Discography
Matthew Whiteside Discography and Works List – September 2017 [email protected] www.matthewwhiteside.co.uk Discography Dichroic Light – http://www.matthewwhiteside.co.uk/?page_id=1304 Piece for Violin and Bass Clarinet – http://www.matthewwhiteside.co.uk/?page_id=1852 Exhibition Music - http://www.matthewwhiteside.co.uk/?page_id=1386 Works List 2017 Little Black Lies [soprano, soloists (drawn from chorus), chorus and ensemble] (15 mins) Commissions by Scottish Opera, première in 2018 Repercussive [symphony orchestra] (10 mins) Premièred by RTÉ NSO, 9th May 2017, National Concert Hall, Dublin Piece for Violin and Bass Clarinet (10 mins) Premièred by Emma Lloyd and Joanna Nicholson, 2nd May 2017, The Hug and Pint, Glasgow 2016 Dry Vista [contrabass flute and electronics] (10 mins) Premiered by Carla Rees 5th November 2016 in I’Klectic Artlab, London Wave Function: Part One [2 channel, 2 screen audio visual work] (5 mins) In collaboration with Marisa Zanotti Always Ever Unknowable [female vocal trio, choir, trombone quartet] (15 mins) Premiered by Juice Vocal Ensemble, Dávur Juul Magnussen Quartet and the Glasgow Chapel Choir, 17th June 2016, University of Glasgow. Commissioned by Cottier’s Chamber Project. Nobilis Humilis [a cappella choir] (7 mins) Premiered by Cappella Nova, 31st August 2016, Dunfermline Abbey. Commissioned by Lorimer Productions. Matthew Whiteside Discography and Works List – September 2017 [email protected] www.matthewwhiteside.co.uk Unda Malacia [tape] (13 mins) Premiered Sonorities Festival 26th November, 2016 Piano Quintet [piano, violin, cello, alto flute, bass clarinet] (7 min) 2015 Solo for Viola D’amore and Electronics (12 mins) Premiered by Emma Lloyd 6th May 2015, Glasgow City Halls. -
DF Concerts 24/08/2010 19:27
DF Concerts 24/08/2010 19:27 Promoting Business Martin Cloonan (University of Glasgow) and Simon Frith (University of Edinburgh) We are presently in the final year of a three year AHRC funded project on the history of live music promotion in the UK since 1950. Our interest is in the ways in which both the economy and the experience of live music have been affected by the social, cultural and technological changes in Britain over the last 60 years and our project is thus deliberately ambitious in scope. Here we want to focus on one aspect of the research: the nature of live music as a business. This interests us partly because it is a neglected topic (in as far as people have examined the economic history of music in Britain since 1950 they have focused on the rise—and more recent fall—of the record industry) and partly because the common sense knowledge of live music is so contradictory. The anonymous peer reviewer of one of our team’s academic papers dismissed the claims we made for promoters’ economic importance, on the grounds that, as everyone knows, promoters are just crooks and chancers, an interesting remark in the light of the rise in the last decade of the US corporations, Live Nation and AEG, who are now the dominant players in British live entertainment. Even during the course of our research media reporting has moved from gloomy accounts of live music venues closing to excited assertions that they are booming. What is clear is that the live music is an unusual kind of business and in this paper we will examine its peculiarities and their effect on its history. -
Leeds Culture Strategy Draft Scrutiny Statement
Leeds Culture Strategy Draft Scrutiny Statement Introduction 1. In accordance with the remit of the Inclusive Growth, Culture and Sport Scrutiny Board, we agreed at the beginning of the 2017/18 municipal year to consider and monitor progress with the city’s European Capital of Culture 2023 Bid as well as monitoring the development of a delivery plan linked to the city’s new Culture Strategy 2017-2030, which was formally adopted in July 2017. 2. In July 2017, we therefore received a detailed overview of the work undertaken to develop the Leeds 2023 European Capital of Culture Bid and expressed our support, recognising the cultural and economic value a successful bid could have to the city and the wider region. 3. However, in December 2017 we received a further briefing from the Chief Executive, Chief Officer for Culture and Sport and the Leader of the Council in light of developments surrounding the eligibility of the UK to host European Capital of Culture 2023. 4. In February 2018, the Director of City Development then provided an interim update on the development of the Culture Strategy Delivery Plan following the adoption of the new Culture Strategy for Leeds 2017-2030 and also the implications of events relating to the city’s bid for European Capital of Culture. At that stage, we also welcomed contributions from external witnesses representing the business sector and musical arts. 5. In consideration of all this information presented to Scrutiny, we have set out within this Statement our key observations and conclusions regarding the situation with the 2023 European Capital of Culture Bid and in moving forward with the delivery of the city’s Culture Strategy for 2017-2030. -
Any Spares? I'll Buy Or Sell: an Ethnographic Study of Black Market Ticket Sales
Any spares? I’ll buy or sell: An ethnographic study of black market ticket sales ALESSANDRO MORETTI A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirement of the University of Greenwich for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy March 2017 DECLARATION “I certify that the work contained in this thesis, or any part of it, has not been accepted in substance for any previous degree awarded to me, and is not concurrently being submitted for any degree other than that of Doctor of Philosophy being studied at the University of Greenwich. I also declare that this work is the result of my own investigations, except where otherwise identified by references and that the contents are not the outcome of any form of research misconduct.” Signed: Date: Alessandro Moretti 31.03.2017 ___________________________ _______________________ Alessandro Moretti Darrick Jolliffe 31.03.2017 ___________________________ _______________________ Professor Darrick Jolliffe ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank, first and foremost, my family, and in particular my mother Giuliana, who has been immeasurably supportive, patient, and strong in all these years. Thank you to my friends, at home and abroad, who have always believed in me. I am grateful for the valuable inputs of my supervisor, Professor Darrick Jolliffe, and his ability to keep me motivated. One research participant deserves a special mention: thank you to “The Chameleon”, who is now a friend more than he is a tout. Finally, a special thank you to Lorna, without whom I would never have completed this work. iii ABSTRACT This thesis contributes to the limited knowledge on ticket touting and ticket touts. -
93 CANDLERIGGS Glasgow, G1 1NP
TO LET OFFICE SUITE 93 CANDLERIGGS Glasgow, G1 1NP Key Highlights • Merchant City Accommodation • High Level of Natural Lighting • High Quality Existing Fit Out • Demised Shower and Toilet Facilities • Open Plan Layout SAVILLS GLASGOW 163 West George Street Glasgow G2 2JJ +44 (0) 141 248 7342 savills.co.uk Location Rateable Value Candleriggs is one of the main streets in the Merchant The ingoing tenant will be responsible for the payment City. The fashionable area sits to the South East of of local authority rates in the usual manner. We George Square and is one of Glasgow’s most vibrant understand the subjects are currently entered into the locations. Regarded as the cultural heart of the city, it current valuation rolls as: has recently benefited from a huge surge of local bars, 3rd Floor - £28,250 (April 2017) businesses, award winning restaurants, designer shops and cafes. Energy Performance Linking Ingram Street to the North with Trongate to the This property has been graded as Exempt: EPC has been South, Candleriggs is one of the main streets and most commissioned, will be available in less than 28 days. recognised streets in the Merchant City. Situated directly opposite the property is the internationally renowned Lease Terms Glasgow City Halls, which is now the home of the BBC The suite is currently leased until the 21st October Scottish Symphony Orchestra. Also opposite is the 2022. It is our clients wish to sub-let the space for the atmospheric ‘Old Fruitmarket’ Venue, which along with remainder of their term. The current passing rent is the Halls received a £13m refurbishment.