[Microsound-announce] New Music Culural Crisis
Kim Cascone
kim at anechoicmedia.com
Thu Apr 12 23:23:07 EDT 2007
> From: Ned Rothenberg <ned at nedrothenberg.com>
> Date: April 12, 2007 6:22:56 PM PDT
> To: bridge3 at takeittothebridge.com, marco at marcocappelli.com
> Subject: New Music Culural Crisis
>
>
> Dear Friends in Europe,
> I'm writing you because New York is in a cultural crisis
> which has reached a breaking point very close to home for
> enthusiasts and players of creative music. Tonic, the last sizable
> club where this music is played nightly will be closing tomorrow
> night as its owners can no longer afford to operate it. I'm sure
> you know that there is a long history of NYC's real estate market
> driving artists and musicians from place to place, now we see the
> loss of a key foothold on the central island of Manhattan. The
> following press release explains the situation and the actions that
> are being taken. I hope you have time to read it and if you can
> help us either by communications of direct support or, even better,
> creating articles in the press there, for which we would be most
> grateful. Europe, which has always supported this music, has a
> great role to play because New York's political leadership is well
> aware that European (and Canadian tourists) are central to the
> strength of NYC's economy. Some of you are journalists, some
> promoters, some musicians - whatever you may be, the most important
> thing is that you let us know your response - we will be meeting
> with the city's politician's in an attempt to secure a viable
> venue. If we can show strong support from culturally concerned
> folks throughout Europe it would help us immeasurably. I am also
> sending this to a number of journalists who have extensive European
> contacts with the hope that you will forward it to your
> colleagues. It is best that your respond not to me, but to the
> email address in the release (feel free to 'cc' me on any
> communications).
>
> Thank You For Your Time and Consideration,
> Ned Rothenberg
>
> This release is also viewable on the web at http://
> www.takeittothebridge.com/forums/?q=node/21
>
> April 12th, 2007
> For immediate release
> Contact:
> Norman Yamada: 646-244-1886 or
> 646-250-8361
> Via email:<bridge3 at takeittothebridge.com>
> Avant Jazz/Indie/New Music Cultural Crisis
> Responding to community outrage at the eviction of Tonic - a center
> of New York City's new music cultural life on the Lower East Side
> for the last 9 years - an ad hoc committee of musicians, cultural
> activists, and supporters are convening to call for public
> political intervention.
> When: 11:00 am this Saturday april 14th
> Where: Tonic, 107 Norfolk street between Rivington and Delancey
> Why: To ask for public political intervention to protect new
> music/indie/avant/jazz in New York City and to ask the city to
> provide a minimum 200 capacity, centrally located venue for
> experimental music.
> What: from 11 am on, musicians and other performers will stage
> a musical protest against the planned closing of Tonic, a vital NYC
> new music resource.
> Tonic, located at 107 Norfolk Street, has been unable to afford a
> series of rent increases imposed by landlord William Gottleib Inc,
> and will be forced to close its doors this April 14th.
> Coming on the heels of the closing of CBGB's, Sin-e, Fez, the
> Continental, and numerous other downtown venues, the closing of
> Tonic represents the continued shutting down of NYC's hugely
> important live music experimental jazz, indie, and new music scene.
> This wave of club closings constitutes a market failure. If there
> is not immediate and sufficient public intervention, either in the
> form of limiting rents or supplying alternate space and funding -
> or both - New York City will lose an essential part of its
> heritage, culture, and economy.
> Tonic is the last new music/indie/avant jazz venue in Manhattan
> with a capacity above 90, presenting concerts on a nightly basis.
> It is also the last such venue in the city with the relatively
> musician friendly policy of paying 75% of door receipts.
> In the words of Steven Bernstein, (leader of the band Sex Mob):
> "My band plays some of the biggest festivals in Europe...Meanwhile
> there's only one club I can play in New York and it's about to
> close." (New York Times)
> According to Patricia Nicholson-Parker, organizer of the Vision
> Festival:
> "We have come together to say we deserve a space and in essence, we
> have already paid for our space. Musicians contribute to the
> economy of this city every day with world class performances. In
> the case of Tonic, many musicians came together and invested in the
> space. Through benefits and organizing they raised significant
> sums of money (100+ grand) for the venue, 'Tonic.' The city needs
> to acknowledge this. It is good for the city and good for the
> artists and their audiences that the city make available a musician-
> friendly community club/space which holds up to 200 audience
> members. It is important that it not be in the outer boroughs but
> be centrally located in the LES where this serious alternative
> music has been birthed and where it can be easily accessed by
> audiences."
> This press release is being issued by an ad hoc coalition of
> musicians and supporters of new/experimental jazz/indie music. We
> represent a racially and culturally diverse community united in our
> desire to preserve the cultural legacy and future viability of the
> progressive jazz, experimental rock, and new music historically
> based in the LES.
> Saturday's action will be the first of an ongoing series of actions
> towards this goal.
> Further information and contacts are available at
> www.takeittothebridge.com
> The coalition is asking:
> 1. That the city council adopt a general principle similar to
> European cultural policy; that NYC's new music and experimental
> jazz/indie musical culture is a unique asset, an essential part of
> the city's history, economy, and identity, and not to be left
> entirely at the mercy of market forces.
> 2. That the city recognize the damage done to its cultural heritage
> and status as a 'cultural capitol' by the displacement of venues
> central to experimental music, and act now to protect those venues
> still left from displacement either by providing funding sufficient
> to allow them to withstand the explosion of commercial rents, or by
> legislation forcing landlords to restrict rents of culturally
> valuable venues, or both.
> 3. That New York City intervene to preserve 107 Norfolk street as
> an experimental music venue, or make available a comparably sized
> and centrally located space for that purpose.
>
>
>
> BACKGROUND
> Economic impact:
> There has been little discussion of the economic impact of shutting
> down nightly new music venues in NYC. Beyond its own inherent value
> as art, new/experimental/ indie/jazz music also serves as crucial
> research and development for a much larger music industry-
> entertainment products, including music, are a major New York City
> export, and live entertainment in NYC is a major factor in
> restaurant, tourism, and hotel industries.
> The reason people come here from all over the world to hear music,
> and hire ensembles from New York to tour all over the world,
> derives from the unique sound of the city's music. This uniqueness
> derives in turn from the historic interaction between NYC's
> mainstream and its avant garde and other indigenous scenes.
> The proximity, the mutual artistic influence, the trading back and
> forth of players between mainstream and the avant garde is what has
> created the competitive advantage of NYC music- its world famous
> "edge." The avant garde draws from a pool of excellent
> professionals also working in NYC pop, classical, and mainstream
> jazz and rock: these are enriched by the cultural ideas of its
> avant garde. This "edge" brings millions in local club and
> restaurant business, music and film production, and tourism to New
> York annually, in addition to creating employment for the thousands
> of NYC-based musicians who tour world markets on a yearly basis.
> The Mostly Mozart festival is a wonderful experience for many New
> Yorkers. However it is neither an export nor the type of music
> representing New York City's musical culture abroad. Europeans can
> travel to Salzburg or Vienna to hear Mozart. New York's indigenous
> forms, however, are being presented every night of the year in
> cities throughout Europe, Asia and around the world. New music/
> experimental/indie/jazz has support abroad completely
> disproportionate with its profile in NYC, as even a brief visit to
> http://www.europejazz.net/, the European jazz network website will
> confirm. And tourists from abroad can and do travel to New York to
> hear this music in its local setting.
> But all this depends on its having a local setting: including a
> viable new indie and experimental music nightly club scene. It is
> not only culturally barbarous, but also incredibly short-sighted
> economic policy that the internationally and critically recognized
> value of this music should be without an adequate, well-advertised,
> and easily accessible showcase in its place of birth: one funded
> well enough to be able to both nurture new talent and present
> established musicians.
>
> --
> ....................................................................
> Ned Rothenberg
> ned at nedrothenberg.com
> http://www.nedrothenberg.com
>
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