MURFREESBORO — MTSU students took advantage of an opportunity to ask questions of
several recording industry executives during a special workshop conducted on
campus by digital music distributor TuneCore.
The event,
coordinated by Shelby Kennedy, TuneCore vice president of executive relations,
brought three more industry professionals to the Bragg Mass Communication
Building to advise student singers, songwriters, musicians and future
executives.
Kennedy, Chris
Oglesby of BMG/Chrysalis, Carnival Music’s Courtney Gregg and publisher/artist
manager Scott Gunter sat down with students nearing the end of the spring 2015
semester for a "New Artist Consultation" workshop.
“With MTSU having
so much talent on campus and TuneCore’s passion to educate, equip and empower
today’s recording artists and songwriters, I wanted to take the opportunity to
assemble generous professional executives to provide industry expertise and
feedback for the university’s artists in development,” Kennedy said.
“The exchange was
personal in addressing the specific concerns and questions of each artist that
often go unanswered. It was a special event where executives shared information
as ‘catalysts’ more than ‘gatekeepers.’"
MTSU's College of
Mass Communication has its own student-run label, Match Records, which
showcases and develops artists. An increasing number of students also have been
working toward their own publishing and recording careers.
TuneCore and its
competitors, which include CDBaby, Reverbnation and OneRPM, distribute an
artist's music to digital music stores like iTunes, Amazon, Spotify, Google
Play, Rdio, Pandora and Rhapsody for a fee. Some distributors also charge a
percentage of music sales. TuneCore also operates a music publishing
administration arm to license artists' work and collect royalties.
"We are so
grateful to TuneCore and to Shelby, Chris, Courtney and Scott for the time they
spent with our students," said Beverly Keel, chair of MTSU's Department of
Recording Industry. "They were enthusiastic, patient and thorough as they
offered advice to our singers, songwriters and musicians.
"They’ll
never know the true influence they had on our students. This is just another
example of how special the Nashville music business is.”
MTSU's Department
of Recording Industry was included last fall on the international "Top 25
Music Schools 2014" list of acclaimed schools touted by The Hollywood
Reporter that includes Juilliard, Berklee, Yale and London's Royal College of
Music.
Almost 20 MTSU
alumni or former students and faculty from around the university have been
nominated for Grammy Awards in the last five years. Nine have won Grammys so
far, including some repeat recipients, in categories from classical to gospel to
bluegrass.
You can learn more
about MTSU’s recording industry program at http://recordingindustry.mtsu.edu.
No comments:
Post a Comment