Can OKC be the next “Music Town?”
November 18th, 2008
Journal Record
The question that hung in the air today 24 stories above OKC at the swanky Beacon Club was, can Oklahoma City be a music town – in the vain of other greats such as Seattle, Nashville and Austin?
According to the panel at today’s Chamber-sponsored Breaking Through event, the answer is “yes we can!”
On the panel were Scott Booker, manager of the Flaming Lips and Executive Director of the Academy of Contemporary Music at the University of Central Oklahoma, Director of Oklahoma Film and Music Office Jill Simpson, Dean of Music at Oklahoma City University Mark Parker, and Jay Shanker, entertainment lawyer with McAfee and Taft.
All were there to discuss what this town can do to cultivate our future local musical talent (our next Flaming Lips, American Rejects, JJ. Cale, Roy Clark, Vince Gill, Leon Russell, Tony Keith or Garth Brooks) so that when they make the “big time,” they don’t leave our area.
Jill Simpson spoke of the Oklahoma Film and Music’s efforts to incubate music and film projects in the metro by proposing tax breaks and financial incentives to those who do their creative business here. Simpson said this would create jobs, draw in musical mentors for young talent and re-characterize our city as a creative hub – conveniently located between both coasts.
They also made a pitch for the soon-to-come Academy for Contemporary Music at UCO in Bricktown. Here, students will be able to learn not just riffs and stage presence, but the nuts-and-bolts skills that it takes to successfully make a move from the garage into the music industry.
Check out the Kelley Chambers’ story in the Journal Record for the full scoop.
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