Music

Troy Carter Leading Daily Online Panel Discussion on How Music Industry Can Cope With New Reality

As the entire country reels in the wake of the rapidly spreading coronavirus pandemic, the music industry is just one business that has been devastatingly affected. While many organizations and musicians have found ways to raise money to help and embrace online performances, there hasn’t been much talk about how we all cope with this new reality, however long it continues.

Every day this week at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT, veteran executive Troy Carter, former manager of Lady Gaga and cofounder of music and tech company Q&A, will lead an online discussion panel called “The Panel by Q&A” on exactly that topic — via Zoom.

“We want to know how labels, managers, and artists are readjusting. Does this change how our business moves forward or create new opportunities,” Carter tells Variety. “It’s not directly about coping during the crisis but I’m sure that’ll be one of the topics we discuss.

“We also made it open so that people outside of the industry can ask the panel questions.”

https://resources.lnk.to/ThePanel #QandA #ThePanel

The meeting’s ID number is 4214134928.

Joining him on the panel at Motown Records chief Ethiopia Habtemariam, Shawn Gee of Live Nation Urban, Ryan Press of Warner Chappell Publishing, J Erving of Human Re Sources, Tiffany Kumar of Beat House, Damien Granderson of Granderson Des Rochers, Maria Gironas and Suzy Ryoo of Q&A and more TBD.

Last week, MusiCares, the Recording Academy’s charitable foundation, established the COVID-19 Relief Fund with a $2 million donation to help people in the music industry affected by the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak and subsequent cancellation of thousands of music events.

According to the announcement, the fund, administered through MusiCares, will be used to directly support those in the music community with the greatest need. To establish the fund, both the Recording Academy and MusiCares have contributed an initial donation of $1 million each, totaling $2 million. Additionally, all Recording Academy Chapters have committed to fundraising in their local communities. Further updates and announcements will be made in the coming days.

Since it was founded in 1989, MusiCares has distributed more than $60 million to musicians and music people in need.

If you wish to support its efforts to assist music people in need, visit: https://www.grammy.com/MusiCares/CoronavirusReliefFund

If you are a member of the music industry in need of assistance, visit: musicares.org.

Articles You May Like

Drake Doubles Down: Rapper Sues His Label, Universal Music, for Defamation Over Kendrick Lamar’s ‘Not Like Us’ Diss Track
‘Winx Club’ Creator Rainbow Group Looks to Expand With Multimillion Cash Injection From Investors
Box Office: ‘Den of Thieves 2: Pantera’ Chugs $5.8 Million Opening Day
Hoda Kotb’s Final Day at ‘Today’ Celebrated With Laughs and Tears: ‘One Last Time, Let’s Do This’
Susan Zirinsky Returns to CBS News in Interim Executive Editor Role

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *