Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

BUILDING IS NOW GONE / 47 BATTLES NON-UNION WORK / EVENTS

Friday, July 14th, 2017

7/13/17
I.  LOCAL 47 BUILDING IS GONE AS OF JULY 15TH
II. LOCAL 47 BATTLES NON-UNION WORK
III. EVENTS

…Absolutely guaranteed anonymity – Former Musician’s Union officer

…The one voice of reason in a sea of insanity – Nashville ‘first call’
scoring musician
…Allows us to speak our minds without fear of reprisal – L.A. Symphonic musician

…Reporting issues the Musicians Union doesn’t dare to mention – National touring musician

===========================================

I.  LOCAL 47 BUILDING IS GONE AS OF JULY 15TH

Our building will be official gone tomorrow. Many still

don’t buy that the process was legit,.. and there will

always be 1000 ballots unaccounted for.  But no

matter, the building is now history.

Those who didn’t fight to save the building and

sat the process out can now choose to either fight

to make sure the Local gets more responsive to

the non-elites, or let the Local continue to wither

with only the greedy and /or self-interested coming

out ahead.

The choice is yours.

THE COMMITTEE

============================================

II. LOCAL 47 BATTLES NON-UNION WORK
Musicians Local 47 Vows To Battle Nonunion Work

“Done In The Shadows”

From Deadline Hollywood.

Saying that its contracts have been “put at serious risk”

by “work done in the shadows,” Local 47 of the American

Federation of Musicians is preparing to launch a campaign

“to ensure that musicians can earn a livable wage working

in Los Angeles.”

AFM Local 47
In a recent communique with its members, the local’s executive

board said more and more musicians “are being asked to record

music for major, well-funded projects without union contracts.

If union contracts are made irrelevant by work done in the

shadows, the floor for pay will drop for both union and non-union

musicians.”

Read the full message below.

In many cases, union musicians are forced to choose between

working nonunion or not working at all. “These employment

practices are especially divisive and pernicious,” the executive

board said, “because they exert enormous pressure on

individual union members.”

The local’s current contract with the major studios doesn’t

expire until next April, but it’s already gearing up for a tough

round of bargaining. One of the challenges it’s facing is the

trend toward using foreign orchestras to score films and TV

shows that were shot right here in Los Angeles. Another

problem is that the AFM’s multibillion-dollar pension plan

is in “critical” condition.

“The actuary certified that for the plan years beginning April

1, 2016, and 2015, respectively, the plan is in ‘critical’ status

under the Pension Protection Act of 2006,” according to the

AFM Pension Plan’s latest financial report. As such, the

Plan’s board of trustees was required by law to adopt a

rehabilitation plan designed to improve its financial health

and to allow it to emerge from critical status.

 

“We all know what it is like to wonder where your next

call is going to come from or how you are going to pay

your bills,” the executive board said. “No single musician

can stop the forces that undermine our profession, but

as a union we have always been able to push back. We

believe that it is now necessary to take action together.”

Here is the board’s full message to Local 47 members:
To all members of the American Federation of Musicians

Local 47: Our contracts are the heart of our union. Whatever

we achieve through collective action and collective bargaining

is secured because management signs agreements. Our contracts

allow us to make sure employers do what they are obligated to do.

They raise the expectations of all musicians for pay, benefits,

and professional treatment.

Recently, those contracts have been put at serious risk. Members

of Local 47 are being asked to record music for major, well-funded

projects without union contracts. If union contracts are made

irrelevant by work done in the shadows, the floor for pay will

drop for both union and non-union musicians. These employment

practices are especially divisive and pernicious because they

exert enormous pressure on individual union members.

We all know what it is like to wonder where your next call is

going to come from or how you are going to pay your bills.

No single musician can stop the forces that undermine our

profession, but as a union we have always been able to push

back.

 

We believe that it is now necessary to take action together.

We call upon the Federation and other AFM Locals to unite

with our membership in defense of our union and our

contracts. In the coming months we will be launching a

campaign to uphold our contracts, to recapture work

being done in the shadows and to ensure that musicians

can earn a livable wage working in Los Angeles.

Our goals are:
1. To ensure fair pay, benefits, and professional

treatment for musicians.

2. To protect our union’s ability to bargain, administer

and uphold our contracts.

3. To bring more work under union agreements.

We, the Executive Board of AFM Local 47, are committed

to building a stronger, more successful future together.
– AFM Local 47 Executive Board

[ EC: Well there’s Irony for you. Complaining about non-

union work when members of the board and every

committee at the Local do those very same jobs.

 

Put very simply, as per recording, “NO buyouts,

NO work” They need to get that.

 

The world has moved on.

The problem is our recording contracts are obsolete

and wishful thinking that help only a minute fraction

while penalizing 98% of the members, and deteriorating

our industry.

 

Our long time building gone, trading it for a short term

infusion of money while making no changes to the

ridiculous business model that benefits only a fraction

of even the RMA members, means that once they’ve

pissed away that money there will be no more “rich

relatives” or buildings to turn to.

 

Either the Union will be forced to change their ways

with buyout contracts or our union recording industry

will eventually cease to exist. Even the blindest adherent

of the status quo knows deep down that the game is over.

The only question left is, will you allow everyone’s future

in the recording industry to die so some can stuff their

pockets a little longer?

 

As another aside, have you heard the self-congratulations

and back slapping that Local 47 has been giving itself for

securing raises in contracts for area orchestras? Well the

rest of the story is those organizations, when

confronted with the increased fees, simply cut out rehearsals.

In some cases orchestras are now having 1 rehearsal per

concert. So in most cases, with fewer services, the players

are making less than they did before.

 

But that won’t stop the administration for blowing smoke

professing what a great job they’re doing.

The COMMITTEE

 
====================================

III. EVENTS
DEAN AND RICHARD
are now at Culver City Elks

the first 
Friday of 
every month.
7:30pm-10:30pm,
11160 Washington Pl.
Culver City, 90232
310-839-8891
————————————-
LA WINDS JAZZ KATS 584
NO COVER, NO MINIMUM.
Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month at
Viva Cantina
7:30-10:00.
900 Riverside Drive, 
Burbank.

Free parking across the street at Pickwick Bowl.
Come hear your favorite charts played the way
they 
should 
be. 

We are in the back room called
the Trailside Room. 


Come on down.

Guaranteed to swing.

————————————————-

7/11-14/17

SANTA BARBARA JAZZ WORKSHOP

The LA Jazz Society is proud to partner with Kim

Richmond and Kimberly Ford in presenting the

Santa Barbara Jazz Workshop, July 11-14, from

Tuesday afternoon to Friday night.

 

A faculty of Jazz professionals teach instrumental/

vocal master classes, improvisation, Jazz Listening

(How to listen, and who to listen to.), modern Jazz

combo and Big Band playing with concerts
each late afternoon (open to the public) where advanced students sit in

For more information, visit www.santabarbarajazzcamp.com.

Presented by Kim Richmond and Kimberly Ford
at the Marjorie Luke Theater and SOHO Jazz Club.

You can read all previous offerings at:
http://www.responsible47.com

—————————————-

7/19/17

GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS

Wed JULY 19, 2017 at 12:10-12:40 pm at the Free Admission
Duos by Dwight Dixon, Katherine Hoover, Peter Maxwell Davies & Payton McDonald:
Flutist Katherine Marsh & Percussionist Timm Boatman.

Sanctuary of Glendale City Church,
610 E. California Ave. (at Isabel St), Glendale, CA 91206.

Jacqueline Suzuki
Curator, Glendale Noon Concerts
818-249-5108
Flutist Katherine Marsh is an active professional musician and teacher. She is currently the solo piccolo player of the Santa Barbara Symphony, principal flute of the San Fernando Valley Symphony Orchestra, and has performed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Santa Barbara Opera and Master Chorale as well as other numerous symphony and chamber ensembles throughout Southern California. Originally from Bowling Green, Ohio, Katherine received a Bachelor of Music Degree from the Eastman School of Music and a Master of Music Degree from the University of Southern California. Her principal teachers include Bonita Boyd, Samuel Baron, Roger Stevens, and Louise DiTullio. Katherine was accepted into the LA Philharmonic Orchestral Training Program, The Round Top Music Festival, and the Orchestral Institute in Graz, Austria.  She has performed in masterclasses with James Galway and Jean Pierre Rampal. This past November Katherine premiered James Domine’s Flute Concerto with the San Fernando Valley Symphony. Katherine’s piccolo and flute playing can be heard in many Star Wars Video games performing with the Skywalker Orchestra. In addition to orchestral work, Katherine is a member of the California Music Teacher’s Association and is a chamber music coach for Junior Chamber Music.

Percussionist Timm Boatman began his career with the Dallas Symphony and Opera. He has performed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, including recordings conducted by Mehta, Previn, Tilson Thomas and Bernstein. He performed with American Ballet Theatre, Joffrey Ballet, Dance Theater of Harlem, Royal Ballet of Covent Garden, Paris Opera Ballet, Stuttgart Ballet, Royal Danish Ballet, National Ballet of Cuba, Miami Ballet, New York City Opera, Berlin Opera, San Diego Opera and many others. He played drumset for the ballets The River by Duke Ellington, Fancy Free by Bernstein and the operas Porgy and Bess and Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny, which won two Grammys for LA Opera. He played with the LA Opera Orchestra since the first season. He also played on the recent Grammy winning  The Ghosts of Versailles.

UNTIL NEXT TIME,

THE COMMITTEE FOR A MORE RESPONSIBLE LOCAL 47

YOUTH ORCHESTRA AUDITIONS / EVENTS

Monday, July 3rd, 2017

7/2/17
I.  OLYMPIA YOUTH ORCHESTRA AUDITIONS
II. EVENTS

…Absolutely guaranteed anonymity – Former Musician’s Union officer

…The one voice of reason in a sea of insanity – Nashville ‘first call’
scoring musician
…Allows us to speak our minds without fear of reprisal – L.A. Symphonic musician

…Reporting issues the Musicians Union doesn’t dare to mention – National touring musician

===========================================

I.  OLYMPIA YOUTH ORCHESTRA AUDITIONS

Dear Friends & Colleagues:

It is very important for students to have a good musical education on
top of academics and sports as extra curricular activity during their
school years. The Olympia Youth Orchestra is a high level orchestra
which only performs original standard repertoire as well as works
by contemporary composers. Easy arrangements are seldom included
in the concert programs.

Please kindly spread the word that the Olympia Youth Orchestra will
be holding its annual auditions from now until the end of August.
Interested students should go on the website at
http://www.olympiaphil.org/wp/ and submit the application form
under “youth orchestra”. Audition requirements are scale and solo
piece of student’s own choice plus some sight reading of orchestral
excerpts from the standard repertoire.

Rehearsals are on Sunday afternoons at CSULA. Annual tuition fee
is $650. There are 4 performances each season, 2 on the campus
of CSULA and 2 at the historic San Gabriel Mission Playhouse. Non-
CSULA students will also have an option of enrolling at CSULA for
transferable college credits of the orchestra class for an additional
charge by the university.

Thank you so much!

Fung Ho

====================================

II. EVENTS

 

DEAN AND RICHARD
are now at Culver City Elks the first 
Friday of 
every month.
7:30pm-10:30pm,
11160 Washington Pl.
Culver City, 90232
310-839-8891
————————————-
LA WINDS JAZZ KATS 584
NO COVER, NO MINIMUM.
Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month at
Viva Cantina
7:30-10:00.
900 Riverside Drive, 
Burbank.

Free parking across the street at Pickwick Bowl.
Come hear your favorite charts played the way
they 
should 
be. 

We are in the back room called
the Trailside Room. 


Come on down.

Guaranteed to swing.

———————————————-

7/5/17

GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS

Wednesday,  JULY 5, 2017 at 12:10-12:40 pm
GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS will feature
Mandolinist EVAN MARSHALL.

Jacqueline Suzuki
Curator, Glendale Noon Concerts
818 -249-5108

Evan  J.  Marshall is  an  internationally  renowned
mandolin  virtuoso,  and  is  widely  regarded  as
he  world’s  premier  solo  performer  on  mandolinin
Duo-Style. By  himself,  he  sounds  like  several
of  the  world’s  finest  mandolinists  performing
together. His  stylistic  signature  is  Classical,
with  strong  influences  from  the  Italian and
American  Folk  traditions.  Country  guitar
legend  Chet  Atkins  called  Evan  “A  true
virtuoso,  one  of  the  few  great  musicians
of  our  time.”
Inspired by Atkins  and  violinist  Jascha  Heifetz,
Evan has  created  a  uniquely  recognizable
approach  to  solo  mandolin  performance  that
combines  bass  lines,  chords,  rhapsodic runs
and  tremolo  melodies.  He  started  Classical
violin  studies  at  age  seven,  and  added  the
mandolin  at age 14.

In  addition  to  solo  performances,  Evan  has
been  a  Featured  Guest  Artist in  Pops  concerts
with  a  number  of Symphony  Orchestras,  including
Houston, Phoenix, Long  Beach, Grand  Rapids, Fort
Worth,  San  Antonio,  Jacksonville, and Pensacola.

Two  of  his  solo  mandolin  recordings  have
been  released  by  Rounder  Records:

————————————————-

7/11-14/17

SANTA BARBARA JAZZ WORKSHOP

The LA Jazz Society is proud to partner with Kim Richmond
and Kimberly Ford in presenting the Santa Barbara Jazz
Workshop, July 11-14, from Tuesday afternoon to Friday night.

A faculty of Jazz professionals teach instrumental/vocal master
classes, improvisation, Jazz Listening (How to listen, and who to
listen to.), modern Jazz combo and Big Band playing with concerts
each late afternoon (open to the public) where advanced students sit in

For more information, visit www.santabarbarajazzcamp.com.

Presented by Kim Richmond and Kimberly Ford
at the Marjorie Luke Theater and SOHO Jazz Club.

You can read all previous offerings at:
http://www.responsible47.com

—————————————-
UNTIL NEXT TIME,

THE COMMITTEE FOR A MORE RESPONSIBLE LOCAL 47

COMMENT ON MUSICIAN’S STORY/ EVENTS

Sunday, June 25th, 2017

6/24/17
I.  COMMENT ON ‘ONE MUSICIAN’S STORY’
II. EVENTS

…Absolutely guaranteed anonymity – Former Musician’s Union officer

…The one voice of reason in a sea of insanity – Nashville ‘first call’
scoring musician
…Allows us to speak our minds without fear of reprisal – L.A. Symphonic musician

…Reporting issues the Musicians Union doesn’t dare to mention – National touring musician

===========================================

I.  COMMENT ON ROBERT’S STORY

Hello Editor!

One of our now deceased members once said…”one day you’re  a star and
the next day you’re parking the car.”  Except for those who have “gamed
the business” the moral of the story is CYA (Cover Your Ass)!

Is there anybody that can’t follow the dots from Universal to today?  See
a YouTube interview with SD from 1994…Really a NON-musician put
into place by a selected few and made a fortune making the selected
few a fortune…

Sickening!!!

Hope all those who are trying to earn a living realize the gravy train is
over…even IF they get a retail call.  CYA!

Member (asked to go Beck Status)  Why not?

interview – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9NLaVv2ZWt4

====================================

II. EVENTS

DEAN AND RICHARD
are now at Culver City Elks the first 
Friday of 
every month.
7:30pm-10:30pm,
11160 Washington Pl.
Culver City, 90232
310-839-8891
————————————-
LA WINDS JAZZ KATS 584
NO COVER, NO MINIMUM.
Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month at
Viva Cantina
7:30-10:00.
900 Riverside Drive, 
Burbank.

Free parking across the street at Pickwick Bowl.
Come hear your favorite charts played the way
they 
should 
be. 

We are in the back room called
the Trailside Room. 


Come on down.

Guaranteed to swing.

—————————————————————————–

6/25/17

SAXTRAVAGANZA 2017
The members of Saxtravaganza, a local 12-member all-saxophone
ensemble, would like to invite you to their concert this Sunday
evening. This year’s program will take place at

Hart Hall, located
24151 Newhall Ave. (inside Wm S. Hart Park)
Newhall, CA

This is a free concert. Music begins at 7PM.

This year will mark Saxtravaganza’s 18th annual performance
and is the brainchild of Kathleen Maxwell, a saxophonist and
private woodwind teacher in the Santa Clarita area. The group
will perform a variety of music, including marches, rags, tangos,
jigs, movie themes, and fresh arrangements from group members
and area composers.  

Saxtravaganza boasts some of this area’s finest saxophone
students, hobbyists, teachers and professional players who
come together for one week each year, to share their music.
Invite your friends and family to the 18th annual SAXTRAVAGANZA.

For more information about the group, you may contact
Kathleen Maxwell at: (661) 291-1729 or
visit their website at: http://www.saxtravaganza.com/   
or

http://calendar.santa-clarita.com/event/saxtravaganza_2017

Hope to see you this Sunday.
Kathleen Maxwell

———————————————

6/25/17

Dear Doctor Wu Fans,

We will be appearing at the Santa Monica Summer SOULstice Festival
on Sunday, June 25th 2017 from 4:30 to 6:30 PM, where we will play
two sets of your favorite Steely Dan tunes.  Please bring your friends
along and enjoy a great time with us!

Edgemar Courtyard
2440 Main Street
Santa Monica, CA 90405
4:30 – 6:30 PM

We hope to see you there!

The Doctor Wu Band
http://www.doctorwuband.com/
https://www.facebook.com/doctorwuband

————————————————-

7/5/17

GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS

Wednesday,  JULY 5, 2017 at 12:10-12:40 pm
GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS will feature
Mandolinist EVAN MARSHALL.

Jacqueline Suzuki
Curator, Glendale Noon Concerts
818 -249-5108

Evan  J.  Marshall is  an  internationally  renowned
mandolin  virtuoso,  and  is  widely  regarded  as
he  world’s  premier  solo  performer  on  mandolinin
Duo-Style. By  himself,  he  sounds  like  several
of  the  world’s  finest  mandolinists  performing
together. His  stylistic  signature  is  Classical,
with  strong  influences  from  the  Italian and
American  Folk  traditions.  Country  guitar
legend  Chet  Atkins  called  Evan  “A  true
virtuoso,  one  of  the  few  great  musicians
of  our  time.”
Inspired by Atkins  and  violinist  Jascha  Heifetz,
Evan has  created  a  uniquely  recognizable
approach  to  solo  mandolin  performance  that
combines  bass  lines,  chords,  rhapsodic runs
and  tremolo  melodies.  He  started  Classical
violin  studies  at  age  seven,  and  added  the
mandolin  at age 14.

In  addition  to  solo  performances,  Evan  has
been  a  Featured  Guest  Artist in  Pops  concerts
with  a  number  of Symphony  Orchestras,  including
Houston, Phoenix, Long  Beach, Grand  Rapids, Fort
Worth,  San  Antonio,  Jacksonville, and Pensacola.

Two  of  his  solo  mandolin  recordings  have
been  released  by  Rounder  Records:

————————————————-

7/11-14/17

SANTA BARBARA JAZZ WORKSHOP

The LA Jazz Society is proud to partner with Kim Richmond
and Kimberly Ford in presenting the Santa Barbara Jazz
Workshop, July 11-14, from Tuesday afternoon to Friday night.

A faculty of Jazz professionals teach instrumental/vocal master
classes, improvisation, Jazz Listening (How to listen, and who to
listen to.), modern Jazz combo and Big Band playing with concerts
each late afternoon (open to the public) where advanced students sit in

For more information, visit www.santabarbarajazzcamp.com.

Presented by Kim Richmond and Kimberly Ford
at the Marjorie Luke Theater and SOHO Jazz Club.

You can read all previous offerings at:
http://www.responsible47.com

—————————————-
UNTIL NEXT TIME,

THE COMMITTEE FOR A MORE RESPONSIBLE LOCAL 47

I. PLAN PARTICIPANTS / COMMENT / SANTA BARBARA WORKSHOP / EVENTS

Monday, June 5th, 2017

6/5/17
I. AFM-EPF PLAN PARTICIPANTS
II. MEMBER COMMENT
III. FROM KIM RICHMOND
IV. EVENTS

…Absolutely guaranteed anonymity – Former Musician’s Union officer

…The one voice of reason in a sea of insanity – Nashville ‘first call’
scoring musician
…Allows us to speak our minds without fear of reprisal – L.A. Symphonic musician

…Reporting issues the Musicians Union doesn’t dare to mention – National touring musician

===========================================

I. OPEN LETTER TO AFM-EPF PLAN PARTICIPANTS:
Response to 5/19 Funding Status Update from the AFM-EPF

Dear Plan Participants,

By now, many of you received an email from the AFM-EPF stating that our
pension fund earned better-than-expected returns in 2016, and we will
not be entering critical and declining status for the next fiscal year
(read that email here). Avoiding critical and declining status means that
our trustees will not be able to file an application to the U.S. Treasury to
cut our hard-earned pension benefits. Under the law, the cuts could be
up to 70% of accrued benefits (use this calculating tool to see the
maximum reduction you could face).

We are not out of the woods, however, and far from it. Our fund

could very well enter critical and declining status this time next year.
In the meantime, it is important that we participants become as
informed as possible as to the inherent problems and solutions.
Musicians for Pension Security (MPS) is requesting that the AFM-EPF
trustees make decisions with input from the participants, and not
be selective about what information they share. They must find a
long-term solution that does not cut accrued benefits without
the fully informed consent of the workers affected, and they must
proceed with complete transparency.

We are aware that certain AFM-EPF Trustees actively support MPRA,
the law that gives them the right to cut our benefits. This law is
controversial as it was passed by Congress in the middle of the
night in 2014 without any debate or hearings. Numerous Senators
and Congressmen on both sides of the aisle, including Bernie Sanders
(D-VT) and Rob Portman (R-OH), believe that MPRA is an unsound
law that hurts workers. They want it repealed, or very substantially
revised. Policy alternatives exist and have been introduced by members
of Congress. These alternative proposals recognize that cutting
accrued benefits without the consent of the workers, particularly
workers who are retiring soon, is morally unacceptable.

We are also aware that our crisis follows a decade of bad investment
management by the trustees. The ten-year investment return for
the fund has been a measly 3.2% net of investment fees, which falls
far short of the trustees own investment goal of 7.5%. To make up
for the poor performance, the trustees are taking more risks with
our investment portfolio. Currently, approximately 32% of Plan
assets are allocated to private equity and alternative investments.
That is $600 million in notoriously risky, illiquid and opaque ventures.
MPS has formally requested the trustees disclose more precise
information regarding the fees and net returns of our private equity
investments. Participants must judge the true performance and arrive
at an informed decision to our prospects going forward.

Many plan participants are unprepared for pension cuts and
face dramatic hardships if they are made. Cutting benefits
without the consent of the workers is not in the interest of the
majority of plan participants. It is something we as a united
majority cannot accept. We as Membership must band together,
speak up and hold our leaders accountable.

In order to stay informed and work with the AFM-EPF, Musicians
for ‘Pension Security has sent a formal request for more plan
information to our Fund Administrator. A copy of that information
request can be found here.

Sincerely,
Members of Musicians for Pension Security

===================================

II. MEMBER COMMENT

Hi there!

Just wanted to alert you to a book that is coming out from University of
California Press that has an chapter-length interview with me regarding
film scoring in Hollywood.  The publisher is sending me a copy, so I don’t
know how it ultimately turned out.  But I did speak VERY candidly about
my story . . . and how many of our colleagues face the same problems.

Funny thing is, since the interview for the book, which I did a few years
back, I’ve been dropped by MG and seem to have been also dropped by TN.

So I’m dead in the water.

Well, at least I had a chance to vent – and it’s there on the printed page!
https://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/11966301

=================================

III. FROM KIM RICHMOND

Dear fellow L.A. Musicians,

A little more than one month from now we will be holding the
1st annual Santa Barbara Jazz Workshop, July 11 – 14, Tuesday
through Friday. This is an intimate jazz clinic, limited enrollment
assuring a more personal learning experience for instrumentalists
and vocalists.

I am co-director with vocalist Kimberly Ford (yes, the 2 Kims),
and this 4 day workshop will be held at the Marjorie Luke Theatre
and SOhO Jazz Club in lovely Santa Barbara. The performances at
the SOhO Wednesday, Thursday and Friday (late afternoons) are
open to the public. The Friday concert (6 PM) will feature the
student combos and the big band.

A faculty of 9 professional jazz performers will teach improvisation,
jazz repertoire and vocabulary, and the students will have opportunities
to play in combos and a big band.

The students are from high school age (21 or younger gets a discount)
to seniors and everything in between.

2017 FACULTY: 9 professional jazz musicians
Saxophone: Kim Richmond (Los Angeles)
Vocals: Kimberly Ford (Santa Barbara)
Trumpet: Jim Mooy (Santa Barbara)
Trombone: Scott Whitfield (Los Angeles)
Guitar: Tom Hynes (Los Angeles)
Piano: John Proulx (Los Angeles)
Bass: Chris Symer (Seattle)
Drums: David Bayles (Milwaukee)
Jon Nathan (Santa Barbara/Pasadena)

Please spread the word. Flyer attached. The website for the Santa
Barbara Jazz Workshop is
santabarbarajazzcamp.com

All the best,
KIM R

====================================

IV. EVENTS

 

DEAN AND RICHARD
are now at Culver City Elks the first 
Friday of 
every month.
7:30pm-10:30pm,
11160 Washington Pl.
Culver City, 90232
310-839-8891

————————————-
LA WINDS JAZZ KATS 584
NO COVER, NO MINIMUM.
Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month at
Viva Cantina
7:30-10:00.
900 Riverside Drive, 
Burbank.

Free parking across the street at Pickwick Bowl.
Come hear your favorite charts played the way
they 
should 
be. 

We are in the back room called
the Trailside Room. 


Come on down.

Guaranteed to swing.

———————————

6/6/17

THE MALIBU FRIENDS OF MUSIC
and the
Montgomery Arts Housefor Music and Architecture
PRESENT

A SPECTACULAR SEASON FINALE CONCERT EVENT
at MAHMA

Click Below:
Take a moment to listen to the sonorous sounds of the
Malibu Coast Chamber Orchestra
under the baton of Scott Hosfeld.

Our own Maria Newman is the viola soloist.

Enjoy gelato & coffee and beautiful ocean views at 7:00pm
just prior to the concert

To make a reservation please call
(310) 589-0295
or make a reservation online at:

www.malibufriendsofmusic.org

Ticket/Donation for our Musical Soirees
is $25.00 per guest (Under 18 is Free)
Donation may be made online or at the door.

The Malibu Friends of Music is a non-profit organization
and operates solely on the generosity of your donations.

Artists, Programming and Dates are subject to change
and/or cancellation without prior notice.

—————————————————————————–

6/7/17

FREE ADMISSION GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS!

PRESS RELEASE/ Wed JUNE 7, 2017 at 12:10-12:40 pm at the Free Admission
GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS/ Richard Strauss Violin Sonata:

Violinist Jacqueline Suzuki
Pianist Brendan White.

Thank you!
Jacqueline Suzuki
Curator, Glendale Noon Concerts
818-249-5108

—————————————————————————–

6/10/17

EDENDALE UP CLOSE CONCERTS
in Echo Park, at the Edendale Branch Library (LAPL).

Fiato String Quartet) – Saturday JUNE 10, 2017 (Noon-1:00pm) performance

Complete info, including upcoming concerts through JAN 2018,
can be found at http://edendaleupclose.blogspot.com
Thank you!
Jacqueline Suzuki
Curator, Edendale Up Close Concerts
818-249-5108

—————————————————————————–

6/13/17

CalStateLA Symphony Orchestra/Olympia Youth Orchestra

Dear Friends & Colleagues:

You are cordially invited to attend the admission FREE concert given
by the CalStateLA Symphony Orchestra/Olympia Youth Orchestra
on Sunday, June 11, 2017 at 3PM at the historic San Gabriel Mission
Playhouse, 320 S Mission Drive, San Gabriel, CA 91776.

The orchestra is composed of young and talented students ages
12 through college age performing standard repertoire for orchestra
from Baroque to Contemporary periods. Students win their positions
in the orchestra through our annual competitive audition. The guest
soloist this concert will be the renowned violinist, Timothy Fain, who
was the recording artist on the sound track of the movie “The Black
Swan”. He will be performing the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto in
E minor accompanied by the orchestra.

Other works will include Wagner Tannhauser Overture, 2nd movement
of the Dvorak New World Symphony, Mozart Adagio and Rondo for
violin and orchestra(performed by our concertmaster, Jeongwon
Claire An), and the 1st movement of the Tchaikovsky Symphony No.4.

Looking forward to seeing every there..

Sincerely,
Fung Ho

—————————————————————————–

6/25/17

Dear Doctor Wu Fans,

We will be appearing at the Santa Monica Summer SOULstice Festival
on Sunday, June 25th 2017 from 4:30 to 6:30 PM, where we will play
two sets of your favorite Steely Dan tunes.  Please bring your friends
along and enjoy a great time with us!

Edgemar Courtyard
2440 Main Street
Santa Monica, CA 90405
4:30 – 6:30 PM

We hope to see you there!

The Doctor Wu Band
http://www.doctorwuband.com/
https://www.facebook.com/doctorwuband

—————————————————————————–

7/11-14/17

SANTA BARBARA JAZZ WORKSHOP

The LA Jazz Society is proud to partner with Kim Richmond
and Kimberly Ford in presenting the Santa Barbara Jazz
Workshop, July 11-14, from Tuesday afternoon to Friday night.

A faculty of Jazz professionals teach instrumental/vocal master
classes, improvisation, Jazz Listening (How to listen, and who to
listen to.), modern Jazz combo and Big Band playing with concerts
each late afternoon (open to the public) where advanced students sit in

For more information, visit www.santabarbarajazzcamp.com.

Presented by Kim Richmond and Kimberly Ford
at the Marjorie Luke Theater and SOHO Jazz Club.

You can read all previous offerings at:
http://www.responsible47.com

—————————————-
UNTIL NEXT TIME,

THE COMMITTEE FOR A MORE RESPONSIBLE LOCAL 47

PENSION / AFM-SAG-AFTRA FUND / EVENTS

Saturday, May 27th, 2017

5/27/17
I. PENSION COMMENT
II. AFM & SAG-AFTRA Fund
III. EVENTS

…Absolutely guaranteed anonymity – Former Musician’s Union officer
…The one voice of reason in a sea of insanity – Nashville ‘first call’
scoring musician
…Allows us to speak our minds without fear of reprisal – L.A. Symphonic musician
…Reporting issues the Musicians Union doesn’t dare to mention – National touring musician

===========================================

I. PENSION COMMENT

FYI:
When our AFM Pension took its stock market dive in 2008,
You recall our L.A. / NY H&W Fund had similar financial woes.
A person in the H&W loop gave me the following info.

(This regards only H&W management, but we can imagine
a similar band of irresponsible folks who “might” have
been ignoring the location/vulnerability of our Pension
money during the stock market crash.

For instance, if those Pension Trustees had been paying
attention to the crisis, they could have switched us to safe
Blue Chip stocks before the worst of it.)

H&W Trustees at the time of the 2008 crash:

Lewis, Vince, exec at Disney, exec at Entertainment
Partners, Gary Hughes (“Management trustee,”) one
more un-named person.

Six total Trustees: 3 from the Union side and 3 from
the music business executive side.
Trustees are volunteers. They serve as a community service.
Trustees are not officially “Trustees” until they meet
together to make decisions.

No Union allows membership to contact Trustees directly.

Very sad.
Again, this is not a list of AFM Pension Trustees.
Then again, maybe some of them were…

=================================

II. AFM & SAG-AFTRA Fund in the Spotlight at ASCAP Expo

The little-known AFM & SAG-AFTRA Intellectual Property Rights
Distribution Fund pays royalties even to oft-neglected session musicians
and backup singers.

Stevie Wonder was the headliner — and closing act — of the ASCAP
I Create Music Expo that concluded this weekend, but musicians and
singers will be interested to know that an obscure fund, jointly run
by the American Federation of Musicians and performers’ union
SAG-AFTRA, also had a moment in the sun at the annual conference
for songwriters, composers, artists and producers.

If those two unions seem like an odd pairing, they aren’t: since its
2012 founding by way of merger, SAG-AFTRA, like AFTRA
before it, has represented recording artists — singers — as
well as actors and others, such as broadcasters.

The joint fund, the AFM & SAG-AFTRA Intellectual Property
Rights Distribution Fund, distributed about $60 million in royalties
in 2016 and thus will be welcome as anything but odd by those
who receive checks from it — a variety of singers and musicians,
including such non-featured performers as backup singers and
session musicians, who otherwise might not receive music
royalties at all.

Although that total is far less than the approximately $1 billion
in residuals that SAG-AFTRA distributes annually, and is also
less than the $90 million to $100 million in audiovisual AFM
residuals that are disbursed each year (which are administered
by yet another organization, the Film Musicians Secondary
Markets Fund), the checks can be significant, ranging up to
$1 million in some cases, said fund executive director Dennis
Dreith.

“We do for non-featured performers what SoundExchange
and AARC do for featured performers,” explained Dreith,
referencing two other music royalty organizations. He spoke
to The Hollywood Reporter after conducting a seminar Friday
for about 100 people at the Expo.

One recipient of a payment from the fund was so unaccustomed
to receiving royalties that she rang up Dreith and asked if she
was really allowed to cash the check. He assured her that she was.

Citing the case of a former Motown session bass player who he said
died impoverished after helping churn out hit after hit (“You Can’t
Hurry Love” by The Supremes, “My Girl” by The Temptations,
and dozens more), Dreith added that the fund helps ensure that
“there won’t be another James Jamerson,” at least in the economic sense.

Where the Money Comes From

Unlike Expo organizer ASCAP, which collects and pays royalties to
songwriters and composers, the joint union fund is for performers.
It was established in 1998, which may give a clue as to its initial
scope: the royalties are collected from U.S. digital platforms, but
not from U.S. terrestrial (conventional) radio, as to which there
is no provision in law for performance royalties. The Fair Play
Fair Pay Act, which the fund and unions vigorously support,
would change that and require AM and FM stations to pay
such royalties, too.

Those for-now digital royalties are paid to non-featured vocalists and
non-featured musicians regardless of their union membership or
affiliations. The fund collects foreign performance royalties for
U.S. non-featured performers as well, but only for members of
AFM and SAG-AFTRA.

That, anyway, is what the sound recording division of the fund
does. Two more recent arms, the symphonic royalties and
audiovisual divisions, represent evolutions beyond digital-only.
The first focuses on royalties for featured and non-featured
performers in symphonic sound recordings, including archival
recordings and radio broadcasts licensed for use on cable,
satellite and digital media. And the audiovisual division
collects royalties — again, for featured and non-featured
singers and musicians — from foreign territories for films
and television programs containing U.S. performers, which
have been broadcast on Spanish and German television,
and motion pictures containing U.S. performers, which have
been exhibited in cinemas in Spain.

There is no word on whether that limited geographic portfolio
might expand.

Like residuals, which inspired this reporter to prepare a
colored chart that Backstage likened to “a periodic table of
elements on mushrooms,” music royalties are complex: a
flowchart in the ninth edition of Harold Vogel’s definitive
Entertainment Industry Economics, which features almost
two-dozen circles, squares and other shapes and a similar
complement of connecting lines, looks like an oil refinery
diagram — except that the latter is easier to understand.
Indeed, turning bauxite into aluminum is apparently simpler
than the way money flows in the music business. But in one
small corner, at least, the AFM & SAG-AFTRA fund has it covered.

===================================

III. EVENTS

 

DEAN AND RICHARD
are now at Culver City Elks

the first 
Friday of 
every month.
7:30pm-10:30pm,
11160 Washington Pl.
Culver City, 90232
310-839-8891
————————————-
LA WINDS JAZZ KATS 584
NO COVER, NO MINIMUM.
Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month at
Viva Cantina
7:30-10:00.
900 Riverside Drive, 
Burbank.

Free parking across the street at Pickwick Bowl.
Come hear your favorite charts played the way
they 
should 
be. 

We are in the back room called
the Trailside Room. 


Come on down.

Guaranteed to swing.

—————————————————————————–

5/28 – 6/2/17
The BBB featuring Bernie Dresel

Mark your calendars and/or get tickets now:
playing TWO daytime shows near LAX (Los Angeles Airport)
this will be the only notice (earlier than usual) for these rare
“west side” shows

1.  LA Jazz Institute Big Band Spectacular
SUNDAY May 28 from 4:30-5:30 at Westin LAX Grand Ballroom
Call 562-200-5477 for $20 tickets or get them at the door.
http://lajazzinstitute.org

2.  LA Audio Show
FRIDAY June 2 from 5:30-7:00 at Sheraton Gateway LAX
poolside deck Single day tickets for the 10am-6pm LA
Audio Show and the 5:30 concert are available for $25
at http://www.laaudioshow.com/register

The deck area offers a variety of amenities from cabanas
to lounge seating and standing room where drinks,
appetizers and snacks can also be purchased. For those
whose preference is indoors, the windows of the
Costero Bar, overlooking the pool, will be opened.
And, for attendees, and others, who have worked up
an appetite for more solid fare, the Brasserie restaurant,
also with windows to the pool, will be serving.

—————————————————————————–

5/27/17
CULVER CITY CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Music Director/Conductor Arlene Cardenes
Saturday May 27th, 5:00PM
A Culver City Centennial Celebration
This performance will feature a new
fanfare by Cary Belling.
Also
Andres Cardenes, Violinist and COnductor
Turning Point School Auditorium
8780 National Blvd. 
Culver City, CA 90232
Click here for ticket information

—————————————————————————–

6/7/17

FREE ADMISSION GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS!

PRESS RELEASE/ Wed JUNE 7, 2017 at 12:10-12:40 pm at the Free Admission
GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS/ Richard Strauss Violin Sonata:

Violinist Jacqueline Suzuki
Pianist Brendan White.

Thank you!
Jacqueline Suzuki
Curator, Glendale Noon Concerts
818-249-5108

—————————————————————————–

6/10/17

EDENDALE UP CLOSE CONCERTS
in Echo Park, at the Edendale Branch Library (LAPL).

Fiato String Quartet) – Saturday JUNE 10, 2017 (Noon-1:00pm) performance

Complete info, including upcoming concerts through JAN 2018,
can be found at http://edendaleupclose.blogspot.com
Thank you!
Jacqueline Suzuki
Curator, Edendale Up Close Concerts
818-249-5108

—————————————————————————–

6/13/17

CalStateLA Symphony Orchestra/Olympia Youth Orchestra

Dear Friends & Colleagues:

You are cordially invited to attend the admission FREE concert given by the CalStateLA Symphony Orchestra/Olympia Youth Orchestra on Sunday, June 11, 2017 at 3PM at the historic San Gabriel Mission Playhouse, 320 S Mission Drive, San Gabriel, CA 91776.

The orchestra is composed of young and talented students ages 12 through college age performing standard repertoire for orchestra from Baroque to Contemporary periods. Students win their positions in the orchestra through our annual competitive audition. The guest soloist this concert will be the renowned violinist, Timothy Fain, who was the recording artist on the sound track of the movie “The Black Swan”. He will be performing the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto in E minor accompanied by the orchestra.

Other works will include Wagner Tannhauser Overture, 2nd movement of the Dvorak New World Symphony, Mozart Adagio and Rondo for violin and orchestra(performed by our concertmaster, Jeongwon Claire An), and the 1st movement of the Tchaikovsky Symphony No.4.

Looking forward to seeing every there..

Sincerely,
Fung Ho

—————————————————————————–

6/25/17

Dear Doctor Wu Fans,

We will be appearing at the Santa Monica Summer SOULstice Festival on Sunday, June 25th 2017 from 4:30 to 6:30 PM, where we will play two sets of your favorite Steely Dan tunes.  Please bring your friends along and enjoy a great time with us!

Edgemar Courtyard
2440 Main Street
Santa Monica, CA 90405
4:30 – 6:30 PM

We hope to see you there!

The Doctor Wu Band
http://www.doctorwuband.com/
https://www.facebook.com/doctorwuband

—————————————————————————–

7/11-14/17

SANTA BARBARA JAZZ WORKSHOP

The LA Jazz Society is proud to partner with Kim Richmond
and Kimberly Ford in presenting the Santa Barbara Jazz
Workshop, July 11-14, from Tuesday afternoon to Friday night.

A faculty of Jazz professionals teach instrumental/vocal master
classes, improvisation, Jazz Listening (How to listen, and who to
listen to.), modern Jazz combo and Big Band playing with concerts
each late afternoon (open to the public) where advanced students sit in

For more information, visit www.santabarbarajazzcamp.com.

Presented by Kim Richmond and Kimberly Ford
at the Marjorie Luke Theater and SOHO Jazz Club.

You can read all previous offerings at:
http://www.responsible47.com

—————————————-
UNTIL NEXT TIME,

THE COMMITTEE FOR A MORE RESPONSIBLE LOCAL 47

PENSION WEBSITE / SITE INFO / COMMENT / EVENTS

Friday, May 19th, 2017

5/19/17
I. IMPORTANT WEBSITE – PENSION
II. SOME INFO FROM THE SITE
III. COMMENT
IV. EVENTS
…Absolutely guaranteed anonymity – Former Musician’s Union officer

…The one voice of reason in a sea of insanity – Nashville ‘first call’
scoring musician
…Allows us to speak our minds without fear of reprisal – L.A. Symphonic musician

…Reporting issues the Musicians Union doesn’t dare to mention – National touring musician

===========================================

I. IMPORTANT WEBSITE – PENSION

We received this information from a reliable source.

You need to follow this!:

Hi everyone,

As you all know we have a major problem with the AFM

pension fund. It is actually far worse than we have been

told by the trusties.

A number of very smart dedicated people in the NYC

area have started a committee to address this problem.

They have created a website to inform you of the ACTUAL

situations happening and the timeline in which they have

happened. They have been involving billion dollar multi –

employer hedge fund experts to advise them on some of

these points.

Please read the following website and sign up.

https://www.musiciansforpensionsecurity.com

 

A couple of the group members would like to come

out and address you about this in the next month

or so. I will be working with a couple of people from

SoCal to try and set this up. I will also be attending

the NY meetings as often as possible.

We ALL have to get involved to fix this.

PLEASE SEND THIS TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW

THAT IS INVOLVED WITH THE FUND!

=================================

II. SOME INFO FROM THE ABOVE SITE

Among other valuable info, you’ll find this on the

PENSION SECURITY SITE

As you may have heard, our hard-earned pension benefits
could be slashed to a negligible monthly payout once we
retire. Our Fund Trustees say this is due to a series of
unfortunate events, but it seems more and more clear
that the true unfortunate event is that they are
responsible for a decade of poor performance, and have
been less than transparent about the health of the Fund.

It’s true that in 2008 we incurred catastrophic losses to
our pension fund. That was a terrible year in the market
for all, and during that crash almost every multiemployer
fund suffered substantial losses. But our pension fund
performed much worse … AFM-EPF lost nearly 40%
(AFM website)  of assets spanning the 18 months
surrounding the crash, while other funds suffered an
average of 25%. After that difficult period, the
majority of multiemployer pension funds bounced
back, and 60% of those plans were back in the Green
Zone by 2011 (PBGC). Not ours, however. The AFM-EPF
fund continued to underperform every single year.

Let’s talk numbers here for a minute…
Over the past decade, our fund yielded a 3.2%
net average return. That’s 1.0% below our
already low custom benchmarks (estimated
returns on investments which are calculated
by Trustees and Fund Administration) and
drastically below the industry-wide yield of
6.8% (according to Pension and Investments
magazine). Compared to our peers, we are
underperforming.

Our pension administration spent over $248
million dollars in administrative expenses
and investment fees over the past decade,
while returning only 3.2% (5500s). Last year,
for example, the Fund admitted to losing $10
million in value (AFM-EPF website), but paid
$25 million in administrative costs and
investment fees. Additionally, our Fund’s expenses
have been unnecessarily exorbitant for years.
We spend $190K/month on rent in one of the
most expensive real estate markets in the country,
pay excessively high salaries to Fund administration,
high fees to investment managers (5500s), and
are unnecessarily overstaffed, in comparison to
similar funds. Not only are we paying employees
high salaries, but we are giving them raises almost
every year in the past decade. We are rewarding t
hem for bad performance.

We spent a lot of money to lose money.

We can make a comparative analysis to a peer
pension fund, AFTRA Retirement Fund. AFTRA is
similar to AFM-EPF in size, value of assets, and
personnel (for example, the consultant, accountant,
lawyers, and investment managers are all the same
professionals).  Although we utilize many of the
same resources, AFTRA is under-spending us
dramatically.  Using Form 5500s for the years
available to us, 2009-2014, we created a comparative
fee and expense analysis between AFTRA Retirement
Fund and AFM-EPF. For those six years, AFTRA paid
$103 million in investment fees and administrative
costs, while AFM-EPF paid $153 million in fees and
expenses. The AFM-EPF paid an extra 50 plus million
dollars in fees and expenses more than AFTRA paid
for the same six year period. Despite the fact that
these 2 funds are so similar in size and personnel,
the AFM-EPF paid a third more in expenses and
fees than AFTRA for 2009-2014.

“The Fund will be solvent until 2047.”

Many AFM members didn’t know just how bad things
were with the pension fund until they received a
December 2016 letter  from the trustees saying
that the fund in 2016 spent 25 million dollars in
fees/expenses and lost 11 million dollars for the
year to date. In addition the trustees in that same
letter made it very clear that the fund is in trouble
and could quite possibly be in critical and declining
status in the near future, as soon as this summer.

In this same letter, the trustees let us know that if
we are in critical and declining status that the new
pension law “MPRA” would apply to our fund.  “MPRA”
is a law that allows trustees to cut existing benefits
and gives workers little to no say in the process.

What is hard to explain is the following articles written
in 2015 by AFM trustees and officials just one year
before we received the bad news in that now famous
December 2016 letter about possible benefit cuts
through the new pension law “MPRA.   These articles
all make it seem like the new pension law “MPRA”
doesn’t apply to our fund and we should not be
worried because our fund is projected to be
solvent all the way till 2047.

So what changed in that one year?  Why are the same
trustees just one year later telling us that the new pension
law which allows trustees to make cuts to benefits
could easily apply to our fund now all of the sudden?

We deserve an answer.

AFM President and co-Chair Trustee, Ray Hair, said in
International Musician in January 2015, “the AFM-EPF…
is not projected to become insolvent, and the new law
[MPRA] does not authorize benefit reductions to the AFM-EPF.”

A month later, Local 802 President Tino Gagliardi wrote
In Allegro, “The new spending bill from Congress … includes
a provision that applies to deeply-troubled pension plans
that are near insolvency. As we have stated before … our
pension fund is projected to be solvent until at least 2047,
which is the longest period for which the actuaries have
made projections.”

In the same publication, Local 802’s lawyer Harvey Mars
also stated the fund would be solvent through 2047
and members should “rest secure”.

Tino Gagliardi then agreed with a statement given by
four Union Trustees — Laura Ross, Brian Rood, Bill
Moriarity and Phil Yao — stating again that they believe
the fund with be “solvent through at least 2047”.

UNDERPERFORMANCE AND HIGH EXPENSES

Christopher Brockmeyer, Co-Chair of the AFM-EPF, is
also the Director of Employee Benefit Funds for The
Broadway League. He was actively involved with the
development and passage of MPRA. In Markets Media
in 2014, he said, “I spend a lot more time on investment
issues … than do a lot of the other trustees.” He went
on to say, “Every fund … is primarily motivated by
trying to get its best return, which is typically 7.5%.”
It’s troubling that Brockmeyer, a Trustee of 11 pension
plans in the entertainment industry, and AFM-EPF
Trustee since 2007, believes our return should be
much higher than our 3.2%.  Where is the accountability
for the Fund’s poor performance, after Brockmeyer
claims to be the authority on “investment issues”? And
when our investment performance is failing, shouldn’t Mr.
Brockmeyer and other Trustees, including Co-Chair Ray
Hair, attempt to cut costs?

In 2009, Kilkelly’s salary jumped from $284K to $356K.

The Trustees vote each year on potential salary increases.
Our Fund Administrator and Executive Director, Maureen
Kilkelly, is now paid $422K a year (5500s). Kilkelly has
gotten a raise every year during the past decade, despite
the Fund’s poor performance. To add insult to injury,
in 2009, the year that New York’s Broadway musicians
took a salary freeze, Maureen Kilkelly received a 25.1%
raise. Why did the Trustees vote to raise Ms.Kilkelly’s
salary every year, regardless of the Fund’s performance?

Where is the accountability?

Has the Board of Trustees breached their fiduciary duties
by allowing for excessive fees, poor returns and little to
no transparency for many years?  Our current trustees
seem incapable of or unwilling to rein in exorbitant
costs. Why, after a decade of poor performance, has
there been no change from the Fund’s leadership?

The Trustees must explain the mistakes with full
transparency, improve the administrative performance,
and drastically reduce the high overhead.

===================================

III. COMMENT

Well Hooray for you. You hate my beloved AFM Local 47.
How satisfying this must be to you and your vaunted
“Committee” giggle~ giggle.

[EC: Did it every occur to you, that when the pensions
are slashed to a fraction of what you expected because
of the RMA leadership’s greed over the years (Plus a
touch of technology), and their refusal to talk buyouts,
reducing our membership numbers, dues, pension
and health and welfare, (More taking out than putting
in) with the work going everywhere but here, YOU
are going to be f***ed?

This committee has been trying to SAVE this union
from their damage, whether you realize it or not.

At least direct your anger where it belongs,… those who

caused this situation.

===================================

IV. EVENTS

DEAN AND RICHARD
are now at Culver City Elks

the first 
Friday of 
every month.

7:30pm-10:30pm,
11160 Washington Pl.
Culver City, 90232
310-839-8891
————————————-
LA WINDS JAZZ KATS 584
NO COVER, NO MINIMUM.
Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month at
Viva Cantina
7:30-10:00.
900 Riverside Drive, 
Burbank.

Free parking across the street at Pickwick Bowl.
Come hear your favorite charts played the way
they 
should 
be. 

We are in the back room called
the Trailside Room. 


Come on down.

Guaranteed to swing.

—————————————————————————–

5/20-21/17

CENTER STAGE OPERA PRESENTS
The Best of Broadway Volume III
Performing Arts Center (on the campus of Reseda High School)
Reseda, CA

May 20th – 7:30 PM
May 21st – 3:00 PM

Music from
Camelot, Cabaret, Guys and Dolls, A Chorus Line,
Snoopy the Musical, Company, Sweet Smell of success,
Miss Saigon, Woman of the Year, Avenue Q, The Wiz, 70 Girls 70
and Annie

Featuring
Nick Navarra
Stephanie Fredericks
Kate Bass
Dylan F. Thomas

—————————————————————————–

5/21/17

SONG OF THE ANGELS FLUTE ORCHESTRA
Founder, Frederick Staff
Music Director, Charles Fernandez

JAZZY FLUTES!

Sunday, May 21st 7pm at the
First Lutheran Church in Torrance

Guest artists
Ali Ryerson
David Shostac
Fred Seldon
and Billy Kerr

for tickets go here:
http://www.soafluteorchestra.com/tickets/

—————————————————————————–

5/28 – 6/2/17
The BBB featuring Bernie Dresel

Mark your calendars and/or get tickets now:
playing TWO daytime shows near LAX (Los Angeles Airport)
this will be the only notice (earlier than usual) for these rare
“west side” shows

1.  LA Jazz Institute Big Band Spectacular
SUNDAY May 28 from 4:30-5:30 at Westin LAX Grand Ballroom
Call 562-200-5477 for $20 tickets or get them at the door.
http://lajazzinstitute.org

2.  LA Audio Show
FRIDAY June 2 from 5:30-7:00 at Sheraton Gateway LAX
poolside deck Single day tickets for the 10am-6pm LA
Audio Show and the 5:30 concert are available for $25
at http://www.laaudioshow.com/register

The deck area offers a variety of amenities from cabanas
to lounge seating and standing room where drinks,
appetizers and snacks can also be purchased. For those
whose preference is indoors, the windows of the
Costero Bar, overlooking the pool, will be opened.
And, for attendees, and others, who have worked up
an appetite for more solid fare, the Brasserie restaurant,
also with windows to the pool, will be serving.

——————-

6/21/17
DON’T MISS
THE PHIL NORMAN TENTET
in West Los Angeles
Sunday, May 21st @ 2:30pm
(doors open at 2pm)
Contrapuntal Hall in Brentwood
655 N. Bundy Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90049

For Tickets:
http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/2951454
limited seating; please reserve early

Hear the Performance of
“THEN  AND  NOW”

Remembering the classic sounds & variations of
12 jazz legends to include:

The George Shearing Quintet
The Dave Brubeck Quartet
The Modern Jazz Quartet
The Cal Tjader Quintet
the Ahmad Jamal Trio
Miles, Dizzy and more

—————————————————————————–

5/24/17

TALL AND SMALL

Wednesday, May 24th, 2017 8 pm – 10 pm

featuring:
Pete Christlieb & Linda Small
Pete Christlieb tenor sax; Linda Small trombone
saxophones Tracy Knoop, Travis Ranney,
Jeff Kashiwa, Bill Ramsay
trumpets Mike Mines, Jared Hall
piano: David Joyner
bass Clipper Anderson
drums Tim Malland

Cover Charge: $5
B SHARP COFFEE HOUSE
706 Opera Alley
Tacoma, WA 98402
Directions

—————————————————————————–

5/27/17
CULVER CITY CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Music Director/Conductor Arlene Cardenes
Saturday May 27th, 5:00PM
A Culver City Centennial Celebration
This performance will feature a new
fanfare by Cary Belling.
Also
Andres Cardenes, Violinist and COnductor
Turning Point School Auditorium
8780 National Blvd. 
Culver City, CA 90232
Click here for ticket information

—————————————————————————–

6/13/17

CalStateLA Symphony Orchestra/Olympia Youth Orchestra

Dear Friends & Colleagues:

You are cordially invited to attend the admission FREE concert given by the CalStateLA Symphony Orchestra/Olympia Youth Orchestra on Sunday, June 11, 2017 at 3PM at the historic San Gabriel Mission Playhouse, 320 S Mission Drive, San Gabriel, CA 91776.

The orchestra is composed of young and talented students ages 12 through college age performing standard repertoire for orchestra from Baroque to Contemporary periods. Students win their positions in the orchestra through our annual competitive audition. The guest soloist this concert will be the renowned violinist, Timothy Fain, who was the recording artist on the sound track of the movie “The Black Swan”. He will be performing the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto in E minor accompanied by the orchestra.

Other works will include Wagner Tannhauser Overture, 2nd movement of the Dvorak New World Symphony, Mozart Adagio and Rondo for violin and orchestra(performed by our concertmaster, Jeongwon Claire An), and the 1st movement of the Tchaikovsky Symphony No.4.

Looking forward to seeing every there..

Sincerely,
Fung Ho

—————————————————————————–

7/11-14/17

SANTA BARBARA JAZZ WORKSHOP

The LA Jazz Society is proud to partner with Kim Richmond
and Kimberly Ford in presenting the Santa Barbara Jazz
Workshop, July 11-14, from Tuesday afternoon to Friday night.

A faculty of Jazz professionals teach instrumental/vocal master
classes, improvisation, Jazz Listening (How to listen, and who to
listen to.), modern Jazz combo and Big Band playing with concerts
each late afternoon (open to the public) where advanced students sit in

For more information, visit www.santabarbarajazzcamp.com.

Presented by Kim Richmond and Kimberly Ford
at the Marjorie Luke Theater and SOHO Jazz Club.

You can read all previous offerings at:
http://www.responsible47.com

—————————————-
UNTIL NEXT TIME,

THE COMMITTEE FOR A MORE RESPONSIBLE LOCAL 47

GEORGE S. CLINTON MASTERCLASS / EVENTS

Friday, May 12th, 2017

5/12/17
I. GEORGE S. CLINTON MASTERCLASS!
II. EVENTS
…Absolutely guaranteed anonymity – Former Musician’s Union officer

…The one voice of reason in a sea of insanity – Nashville ‘first call’
scoring musician
…Allows us to speak our minds without fear of reprisal – L.A. Symphonic musician

…Reporting issues the Musicians Union doesn’t dare to mention – National touring musician

===========================================

I. ASMAC PRESENTS GEORGE S. CLINTON!

5/13/17

ASMAC presents

A MASTER CLASS WITH GEORGE S. CLINTON
MODERATED BY:  Sylvester Rivers
Valley College – Music Building
5800 Fulton Ave., Valley Glen, CA
Corner of Fulton & Oxnard  

Saturday, May 13, 2017
10:30 am –  CHECK-IN – Coffee/Refreshments
11:00 am – 2:00 pm – Master Class

“Scoring Comedies: Comedy is Serious Business
– The Scoring Art & Technique.”

Join us for an informative – and entertaining – Master Class.

Mr. Clinton is an award winning composer who has
scored over 100 films, most notably “Austin Powers
International Man of Mystery” and it’s blockbuster
sequels;  Disney’s hit “Santa Clause” sequels;
“Mortal Kombat” 1 & 2;  “Wild Things”,  “Red Shoe
Diaries”,  John Water’s “A Dirty Shame”  and the
Emmy Award winning “Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee.”

He began his professional musical career as a
singer/songwriter/arranger in Nashville while
earning degrees in music and drama. Upon
moving to LA, he became a staff songwriter
for Warner Brothers Music with songs recorded
by the likes of Michael Jackson and Joe Cocker
and continued working as a session musician
and arranger. It was the music from Clinton’s
solo album  “The George Clinton Band Arrives”
that attracted the attention of Cheech and Chong,
giving him the chance to score his first film “Still Smokin”.

In addition, Mr. Clinton is an advisor at the
Sundance Composers Lab, serves on the Music
Executive Branch of The Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences (The Oscars), is on
the boards of the Society of Composers and
Lyricists and the Alliance for Women Film
Composers, is a member of ASMAC and the
Television Academy, and was Chair of Film
Scoring at the Berklee College of Music 2012-2015.

Awards include a Platinum record for his score
to Mortal Kombat, Grammy and Emmy nominations,
the SCL Ambassador Award, the Spirit of Tennessee
Award, and nine BMI Film Music Awards, including
their highest honor, the BMI Icon Award.

MODERATED BY:  SYLVESTER RIVERS
Composer, arranger and pianist Sylvester Rivers
has recorded with numerous hit artists including
Lionel Richie, Diana Ross, The Jacksons, Sammy
Davis Jr., Dionne Warwick, Nancy Wilson, Kenny
Rogers, Johnny Mathis, Aretha Franklin, New
Edition, Smokey Robinson, The Temptations,
Gladys Knight & The Pips, Barry White, Marc
Bolan & T Rex, Ray Parker, Jr. & Raydio, Deniece
Williams, The Fifth Dimension and many others.

Rivers has composed, arranged and orchestrated
for television and film as well, such as the television
series “Fame,” songs for the Kevin Bacon/Laurence
Fishburne film “Quicksilver,” “Breakin’ 2: Electric
Boogaloo,” “The Arsenio Hall Show” and numerous
others; and  has been prolific in producing music
throughout a wide spectrum.

Valley College – Music Building

Sat., May 13, 2017
11:00 am – 2:00 pm
(Check-in & Refreshments – 10:30am )
Free parking in lot on corner of Fulton and Oxnard.
ASMAC Members and Students – $25
Non-Members – $40

=================================

I. EVENTS
DEAN AND RICHARD
are now at Culver City Elks the first 
Friday of 
every month.
7:30pm-10:30pm,
11160 Washington Pl.
Culver City, 90232
310-839-8891
————————————-
LA WINDS JAZZ KATS 584
NO COVER, NO MINIMUM.
Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month at
Viva Cantina
7:30-10:00.
900 Riverside Drive, 
Burbank.

Free parking across the street at Pickwick Bowl.
Come hear your favorite charts played the way
they 
should 
be. 

We are in the back room called
the Trailside Room. 


Come on down.

Guaranteed to swing.

—————————————————————————–

5/13/17

SAN FERNANDO VALLEY SYMPHONY

Saturday, May 13th, 2017
AGOURA HILLS/CALABASAS COMMUNITY CENTER
8:00 pm
27040 MALIBU HILLS RD
CALABASAS, CA
Price: $25
Saint-Saens: Bacchanale from “Samson and Delilah”
Tchaikovsky: Romeo and Juliet Fantasy-Overture
TWO PREMIERES!
Tuttle: By Steam or By Dream Overture 
Inaugural Performance
Egizi: Orchestral Suite “In memoria di mio Padre”
Inaugural Performance
To purchase tickets for this concert, click here.
For information on the pre-concert dinner, click here.
(Program subject to change

—————————————————————————–

5/14/17

LOS ANGELES SYMPHONIC WINDS
Sunday, May 14th, 2017 – 2:30 pm
Calabasas Performing Arts Education Center
22855 Mulholland Hwy, Calabasas, CA 91302

Extraordinary Women – A Mother’s Day Concert to Remember
The LA Winds pay tribute to remarkable women who helped
shape the course of human history. Featured works will
include Giuseppi Verdi’s stirring “Overture to Joan of Arc”,
Mark Camphouse’s powerful “A Movement for Rosa”,
and Eric Coates’ regal “The Three Elizabeths”.

For tickets contact:
Mary Gallegos at [email protected]

—————————————————————————–

5/17/17

FREE ADMISSION GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS

On Wednesday  May 17, 2017 at 12:10-12:40 pm
the Free Admission Glendale Noon Concerts will feature
the Calico Winds performing duos and trios by
Heitor Villa-Lobos, Malcolm Arnolf and Joseph Canteloube
at the Sanctuary of Glendale City Church,
610 E. California Ave. (at Isabel St), Glendale, CA 91206.
For more information, email [email protected]
or call (818) 244- 7241.

HEITOR VILLA-LOBOS Bachianas Brasileiras No. 6 for Flute & Bassoon
MALCOLM ARNOLD Divertimento for Flute, Oboe and Clarinet
JOSEPH CANTELOUBE Rustiques for Oboe, Clarinet and Bassoon
Theresa Treuenfels (bassoon)
Rachel Berry (horn)
Ted Sugata ( oboe)
Kathryn Nevin (clarinet)
Eileen Holt (flute)

—————————————————————————–

5/20-21/17

CENTER STAGE OPERA PRESENTS
The Best of Broadway Volume III
Performing Arts Center (on the campus of Reseda High School)
Reseda, CA

May 20th – 7:30 PM
May 21st – 3:00 PM

Music from
Camelot, Cabaret, Guys and Dolls, A Chorus Line,
Snoopy the Musical, Company, Sweet Smell of success,
Miss Saigon, Woman of the Year, Avenue Q, The Wiz, 70 Girls 70
and Annie

Featuring
Nick Navarra
Stephanie Fredericks
Kate Bass
Dylan F. Thomas

—————————————————————————–

5/21/17

SONG OF THE ANGELS FLUTE ORCHESTRA
Founder, Frederick Staff
Music Director, Charles Fernandez

JAZZY FLUTES!

Sunday, May 21st 7pm at the
First Lutheran Church in Torrance

Guest artists
Ali Ryerson
David Shostac
Fred Seldon
and Billy Kerr

for tickets go here:
http://www.soafluteorchestra.com/tickets/

—————————————————————————–

5/27/17
CULVER CITY CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Music Director/Conductor Arlene Cardenes
Saturday May 27th, 5:00PM
A Culver City Centennial Celebration
This performance will feature a new
fanfare by Cary Belling.
Also
Andres Cardenes, Violinist and COnductor
Turning Point School Auditorium
8780 National Blvd. 
Culver City, CA 90232
Click here for ticket information

—————————————————————————–

7/11-14/17

SANTA BARBARA JAZZ WORKSHOP

The LA Jazz Society is proud to partner with Kim Richmond
and Kimberly Ford in presenting the Santa Barbara Jazz
Workshop, July 11-14, from Tuesday afternoon to Friday night.

A faculty of Jazz professionals teach instrumental/vocal master
classes, improvisation, Jazz Listening (How to listen, and who to
listen to.), modern Jazz combo and Big Band playing with concerts
each late afternoon (open to the public) where advanced students sit in

For more information, visit www.santabarbarajazzcamp.com.

Presented by Kim Richmond and Kimberly Ford
at the Marjorie Luke Theater and SOHO Jazz Club.

You can read all previous offerings at:
http://www.responsible47.com

—————————————-
UNTIL NEXT TIME,

THE COMMITTEE FOR A MORE RESPONSIBLE LOCAL 47

AFM-SAG-AFTRA FUND / ASA EVENT / COMMENTS / EVENTS

Thursday, May 4th, 2017

5/4/17

I. AFM & SAG-AFTRA Fund
II. ACADEMY OF SCORING ARTS

II. ACADEMY OF SCORING ARTS EVENT

III. MEMBER COMMENTS

V. EVENTS

 
…Absolutely guaranteed anonymity – Former Musician’s Union officer

…The one voice of reason in a sea of insanity – Nashville ‘first call’
scoring musician

…Allows us to speak our minds without fear of reprisal – L.A. Symphonic musician
 

…Reporting issues the Musicians Union doesn’t dare to mention – National touring musician

============================================

I. AFM & SAG-AFTRA Fund in the Spotlight at ASCAP Expo
from the Hollywood Reporter

by Jonathan Handel

The little-known AFM & SAG-AFTRA Intellectual Property
Rights Distribution Fund pays royalties even to oft-neglected
session musicians and backup singers. Stevie Wonder was
the headliner — and closing act — of the ASCAP I Create
Music Expo that concluded this weekend, but musicians
and singers will be interested to know that an obscure
fund, jointly run by the American Federation of Musicians
and performers’ union SAG-AFTRA, also had a moment
in the sun at the annual conference for songwriters,
composers, artists and producers.

If those two unions seem like an odd pairing, they aren’t:
since its 2012 founding by way of merger, SAG-AFTRA,
like AFTRA before it, has represented recording artists
— singers — as well as actors and others, such as
broadcasters.
The joint fund, the AFM & SAG-AFTRA Intellectual Property
Rights Distribution Fund, distributed about $60 million
in royalties in 2016 and thus will be welcome as anything
but odd by those who receive checks from it — a variety
of singers and musicians, including such non-featured
performers as backup singers and session musicians,
who otherwise might not receive music royalties at all.

Although that total is far less than the approximately
$1 billion in residuals that SAG-AFTRA distributes annually,
and is also less than the $90 million to $100 million in
audiovisual AFM residuals that are disbursed each year
(which are administered by yet another organization,
the Film Musicians Secondary Markets Fund), the
checks can be significant, ranging up to $1 million
in some cases, said fund executive director Dennis Dreith.

“We do for non-featured performers what SoundExchange
and AARC do for featured performers,” explained Dreith,
referencing two other music royalty organizations. He
spoke to The Hollywood Reporter after conducting a
seminar Friday for about 100 people at the Expo.

One recipient of a payment from the fund was so
unaccustomed to receiving royalties that she rang
up Dreith and asked if she was really allowed to
cash the check. He assured her that she was.

Citing the case of a former Motown session bass
player who he said died impoverished after helping
churn out hit after hit (“You Can’t Hurry Love” by
The Supremes, “My Girl” by The Temptations, and
dozens more), Dreith added that the fund helps
ensure that “there won’t be another James Jamerson,”
at least in the economic sense.

Where the Money Comes From

Unlike Expo organizer ASCAP, which collects and pays
royalties to songwriters and composers, the joint union
fund is for performers. It was established in 1998, which
may give a clue as to its initial scope: the royalties are
collected from U.S. digital platforms, but not from U.S.
terrestrial (conventional) radio, as to which there is no
provision in law for performance royalties. The Fair Play
Fair Pay Act, which the fund and unions vigorously
support, would change that and require AM and FM
stations to pay such royalties, too.

Those for-now digital royalties are paid to non-featured
vocalists and non-featured musicians regardless of their
union membership or affiliations. The fund collects
foreign performance royalties for U.S. non-featured
performers as well, but only for members of AFM and
SAG-AFTRA.

That, anyway, is what the sound recording division of
the fund does. Two more recent arms, the symphonic
royalties and audiovisual divisions, represent evolutions
beyond digital-only. The first focuses on royalties for
featured and non-featured performers in symphonic
sound recordings, including archival recordings
and radio broadcasts licensed for use on cable,
satellite and digital media. And the audiovisual
division collects royalties — again, for featured
and non-featured singers and musicians — from
foreign territories for films and television programs
containing U.S. performers ,which have been
broadcast on Spanish and German television, and
motion pictures containing U.S. performers, which
have been exhibited in cinemas in Spain.
There is no word on whether that limited geographic
portfolio might expand.

Like residuals, which inspired this reporter to prepare
a colored chart that Backstage likened to “a periodic
table of elements on mushrooms,” music royalties are
complex: a flowchart in the ninth edition of Harold
Vogel’s definitive Entertainment Industry Economics,
which features almost two-dozen circles, squares and
other shapes and a similar complement of connecting
lines, looks like an oil refinery diagram — except that
the latter is easier to understand. Indeed, turning
bauxite into aluminum is apparently simpler than the
way money flows in the music business. But in one
small corner, at least, the AFM & SAG-AFTRA
fund has it covered.

============================================

II. ACADEMY OF SCORING ARTS:

Scott Healy’s Ellington Group
With Special Guest Brent Fischer!
Saturday, May 6th, 2017
10am – 12:30pm
E-Spot Lounge Above Vitello’s
4349 Tujunga Ave, Studio City, CA 91604

You asked, we answered! We’ve enjoyed partnering
with Scott Healy to bring you Ellington, the high level
jazz study group. Now, we’ve added even more value
to our session by adding a guest interview segment.
Our Saturday session will feature special guest Brent
Fischer. Brent is the son of the late, great composer
and pianist Clare Fischer, who was one of our most
prolific and innovative jazz composers and performers.
Brent is a fantastic composer and multi-instrumentalist
in his own right. While he collaborated frequently with
his dad, he also developed his own unique musical
voice as a composer and performer.

We are now handling our ticketing through Eventbrite.
Be sure to get yours online! Ticket prices will be higher
at the door.

Scott Healy will continue the exploration of harmonic
rhythm, focusing on how jazz players and composers
use chord movement. This topic comprises much more
than just cool chord substitution and complicated
altered harmony. Harmonic rhythm defines phrases,
form and pacing, and your heightened awareness of
the flow of harmony will direct and focus the emotional
content of your writing. We will refer to examples from
Ellington/Strayhorn and Bob Brookmeyer.

Then after a break we’ll introduce our special guest,
Brent Fischer. Brent will present some of Clare’s harmonic
and orchestration concepts, and talk about how he’s
carrying on his dad’s legacy. This is deep stuff, so
bring your analog or digital notation aids and put
on your thinking caps! We will have a few handouts,
and also project all of the scores and examples.
They will also be available online for your laptops
or tablets.

Please go to http://ellingtonstudygroup.com
for more details, and we’ll see you there.

$15 pre-sale (deadline May 5), including light breakfast
$20 at the door

=================================

III. MEMBER COMMENTS

Dear Editor,

It is GREAT that there were so many sincere friends and
colleagues of those honored able to attend the ceremony
on Monday night!

What is also telling is that the business of the Union was
of so little interest that they did not stick around for the
last quarterly meeting in our historic Vine Street home.

The disenfranchisement and manipulation of the
membership should be obvious.

No doubt the salaried leadership at 47 will be marching
on May 1st with full pay…the rank and file are encouraged
to volunteer?  The Union Officers, Directors and
employees pick up a check every Friday. Do you?

Longtime Member

———-

well – if they win (the lawsuit) it that would be great but
what’s the odds of us winning?

=================================

IV. EVENTS
DEAN AND RICHARD
are now at Culver City Elks the first 
Friday of 
every month.
7:30pm-10:30pm,
11160 Washington Pl.
Culver City, 90232
310-839-8891
————————————-
LA WINDS JAZZ KATS 584
NO COVER, NO MINIMUM.
Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month at
Viva Cantina
7:30-10:00.
900 Riverside Drive, 
Burbank.

Free parking across the street at Pickwick Bowl.
Come hear your favorite charts played the way
they 
should 
be. 

We are in the back room called
the Trailside Room. 


Come on down.

Guaranteed to swing.

————————————–

5/5/17

DOCTOR WU PERFORMANCE

We’ll be doing one set starting promptly at 8:00 PM at the Saint
Francis de Sales Festival on Friday, May 5th:

Saint Francis de Sales School
13368 Valleyheart Drive
Sherman Oaks, CA 91423

The Doctor Wu Band line up for this show will be:

Tony Egan: Lead Vocals
Leigh DeMarche: Vocals
Jodi Fodor: Vocals
Gil Ayan: Guitar
Steve Bias: Bass and Vocals
Jeff Dellisanti: Saxophones
Mark Harrison: Keyboards
Paul Salvo: Trumpet
Frank Villafranca: Saxophones
Jack Cook: Drums

Admission is free and we look forward to seeing you there!
The Doctor Wu Band
http://www.doctorwuband.com/
https://www.facebook.com/doctorwuband

—————————————————————————–

5/6/17

KIM RICHMOND/CLAY JENKINS

HEY fellow L.A. Musicians,
This is my second notice about this coming
Saturday. My favorite jazz trumpet player will be
in town this next weekend: Clay Jenkins. We will
be playing together at the Desert Rose. Clay
doesn’t make it to L.A. very often what with his
teaching position at Eastman School of Music
in New York, so you should try to catch us
this weekend. Details below.

WHAT: Clay Jenkins and Kim Richmond at the
Desert Rose, with the Mark Z. Stevens Trio
WHERE: Desert Rose Restaurant & Saturday jazz
venue. 1700 N. Hillhurst Avenue, LOS FELIZ
VILLAGE, Los Angeles, CA 90027
WHEN: This coming Saturday, May 6, 7 to 11. 3 sets
WHO: Clay Jenkins, trumpet; Kim Richmond,
alto & soprano saxophones, Mark Z. Stevens,
drums; Lou Foresteri, keyboard; Harvey Newmark, bass.
PARKING: Valet parking available
FOOD: excellent cuisine
RESERVATIONS: Recommended (323) 666-1166.
Ask for inside seating. That’s where the band is.
if you’re planning to join us, it’s absolutely
necessary to make an “INSIDE SEATING RESERVATION”
by the Wednesday or Thursday immediately
proceeding the event.  If you wait until the last minute,
the room will probably be sold out.  If you make
your reservation early in the week, you’ll be in the
best area to hear the jazz.  (If your plans change,
you can always call and cancel.)

Hope to see you there.
All the best,
KIM R
My website address is:
www.kimrichmond.com

—————————————————————————–

5/13/17

ASMAC presents

A MASTER CLASS WITH GEORGE S. CLINTON
MODERATED BY:  Sylvester Rivers
Valley College – Music Building
5800 Fulton Ave., Valley Glen, CA
Corner of Fulton & Oxnard  

Saturday, May 13, 2017
10:30 am –  CHECK-IN – Coffee/Refreshments
11:00 am – 2:00 pm – Master Class

“Scoring Comedies: Comedy is Serious Business
– The Scoring Art & Technique.”

Join us for an informative – and entertaining – Master Class.

Mr. Clinton is an award winning composer who has
scored over 100 films, most notably “Austin Powers
International Man of Mystery” and it’s blockbuster
sequels;  Disney’s hit “Santa Clause” sequels;
“Mortal Kombat” 1 & 2;  “Wild Things”,  “Red Shoe
Diaries”,  John Water’s “A Dirty Shame”  and the
Emmy Award winning “Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee.”

He began his professional musical career as a
singer/songwriter/arranger in Nashville while
earning degrees in music and drama. Upon
moving to LA, he became a staff songwriter
for Warner Brothers Music with songs recorded
by the likes of Michael Jackson and Joe Cocker
and continued working as a session musician
and arranger. It was the music from Clinton’s
solo album  “The George Clinton Band Arrives”
that attracted the attention of Cheech and Chong,
giving him the chance to score his first film “Still Smokin”.

In addition, Mr. Clinton is an advisor at the
Sundance Composers Lab, serves on the Music
Executive Branch of The Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences (The Oscars), is on
the boards of the Society of Composers and
Lyricists and the Alliance for Women Film
Composers, is a member of ASMAC and the
Television Academy, and was Chair of Film
Scoring at the Berklee College of Music 2012-2015.

Awards include a Platinum record for his score
to Mortal Kombat, Grammy and Emmy nominations,
the SCL Ambassador Award, the Spirit of Tennessee
Award, and nine BMI Film Music Awards, including
their highest honor, the BMI Icon Award.

MODERATED BY:  SYLVESTER RIVERS
Composer, arranger and pianist Sylvester Rivers
has recorded with numerous hit artists including
Lionel Richie, Diana Ross, The Jacksons, Sammy
Davis Jr., Dionne Warwick, Nancy Wilson, Kenny
Rogers, Johnny Mathis, Aretha Franklin, New
Edition, Smokey Robinson, The Temptations,
Gladys Knight & The Pips, Barry White, Marc
Bolan & T Rex, Ray Parker, Jr. & Raydio, Deniece
Williams, The Fifth Dimension and many others.

Rivers has composed, arranged and orchestrated
for television and film as well, such as the television
series “Fame,” songs for the Kevin Bacon/Laurence
Fishburne film “Quicksilver,” “Breakin’ 2: Electric
Boogaloo,” “The Arsenio Hall Show” and numerous
others; and  has been prolific in producing music
throughout a wide spectrum.

Valley College – Music Building

Sat., May 13, 2017
11:00 am – 2:00 pm
(Check-in & Refreshments – 10:30am )
Free parking in lot on corner of Fulton and Oxnard.
ASMAC Members and Students – $25
Non-Members – $40

—————————————————————————–

5/13/17

SAN FERNANDO VALLEY SYMPHONY

Saturday, May 13th, 2017
AGOURA HILLS/CALABASAS COMMUNITY CENTER
8:00 pm
27040 MALIBU HILLS RD
CALABASAS, CA
Price: $25
Saint-Saens: Bacchanale from “Samson and Delilah”
Tchaikovsky: Romeo and Juliet Fantasy-Overture
TWO PREMIERES!
Tuttle: By Steam or By Dream Overture 
Inaugural Performance
Egizi: Orchestral Suite “In memoria di mio Padre”
Inaugural Performance
To purchase tickets for this concert, click here.
For information on the pre-concert dinner, click here.
(Program subject to change

—————————————————————————–

5/14/17

LOS ANGELES SYMPHONIC WINDS
Sunday, May 14th, 2017 – 2:30 pm
Calabasas Performing Arts Education Center
22855 Mulholland Hwy, Calabasas, CA 91302

Extraordinary Women – A Mother’s Day Concert to Remember
The LA Winds pay tribute to remarkable women who helped
shape the course of human history. Featured works will
include Giuseppi Verdi’s stirring “Overture to Joan of Arc”,
Mark Camphouse’s powerful “A Movement for Rosa”,
and Eric Coates’ regal “The Three Elizabeths”.

For tickets contact:
Mary Gallegos at [email protected]

—————————————————————————–

5/17/7

FREE ADMISSION GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS

On Wednesday  May 17, 2017 at 12:10-12:40 pm
the Free Admission Glendale Noon Concerts will feature
the Calico Winds performing duos and trios by
Heitor Villa-Lobos, Malcolm Arnolf and Joseph Canteloube
at the Sanctuary of Glendale City Church,
610 E. California Ave. (at Isabel St), Glendale, CA 91206.
For more information, email [email protected]
or call (818) 244- 7241.

HEITOR VILLA-LOBOS Bachianas Brasileiras No. 6 for Flute & Bassoon
MALCOLM ARNOLD Divertimento for Flute, Oboe and Clarinet
JOSEPH CANTELOUBE Rustiques for Oboe, Clarinet and Bassoon
Theresa Treuenfels (bassoon)
Rachel Berry (horn)
Ted Sugata ( oboe)
Kathryn Nevin (clarinet)
Eileen Holt (flute)

—————————————————————————–

5/20-21/17

CENTER STAGE OPERA PRESENTS
The Best of Broadway Volume III
Performing Arts Center (on the campus of Reseda High School)
Reseda, CA

May 20th – 7:30 PM
May 21st – 3:00 PM

Music from
Camelot, Cabaret, Guys and Dolls, A Chorus Line,
Snoopy the Musical, Company, Sweet Smell of success,
Miss Saigon, Woman of the Year, Avenue Q, The Wiz, 70 Girls 70
and Annie

Featuring
Nick Navarra
Stephanie Fredericks
Kate Bass
Dylan F. Thomas

—————————————————————————–

5/21/17

SONG OF THE ANGELS FLUTE ORCHESTRA
Founder, Frederick Staff
Music Director, Charles Fernandez

JAZZY FLUTES!

Sunday, May 21st 7pm at the
First Lutheran Church in Torrance

Guest artists
Ali Ryerson
David Shostac
Fred Seldon
and Billy Kerr

for tickets go here:
http://www.soafluteorchestra.com/tickets/

—————————————————————————–

5/27/17
CULVER CITY CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Music Director/Conductor Arlene Cardenes
Saturday May 27th, 5:00PM
A Culver City Centennial Celebration
This performance will feature a new
fanfare by Cary Belling.
Also
Andres Cardenes, Violinist and COnductor
Turning Point School Auditorium
8780 National Blvd. 
Culver City, CA 90232
Click here for ticket information

—————————————————————————–

7/11-14/17

SANTA BARBARA JAZZ WORKSHOP

The LA Jazz Society is proud to partner with Kim Richmond
and Kimberly Ford in presenting the Santa Barbara Jazz
Workshop, July 11-14, from Tuesday afternoon to Friday night.

A faculty of Jazz professionals teach instrumental/vocal master
classes, improvisation, Jazz Listening (How to listen, and who to
listen to.), modern Jazz combo and Big Band playing with concerts
each late afternoon (open to the public) where advanced students sit in

For more information, visit www.santabarbarajazzcamp.com.

Presented by Kim Richmond and Kimberly Ford
at the Marjorie Luke Theater and SOHO Jazz Club.

You can read all previous offerings at:
http://www.responsible47.com

—————————————-
UNTIL NEXT TIME,

THE COMMITTEE FOR A MORE RESPONSIBLE LOCAL 47

DEADLINE HOLLYWOOD / SUIT AGAINST STUDIOS / LAWSUIT DETAILS / COMMENT / EVENTS

Thursday, April 20th, 2017

4/20/17
I. DEADLINE: HOLLYWOOD ARTICLE

II. OUTSOURCING SUIT AGAINST STUDIOS
III. LAWSUIT AGAINST STUDIOS (DETAILS)
IV. MEMBER COMMENT
V. EVENTS
…Absolutely guaranteed anonymity – Former Musician’s Union officer
…The one voice of reason in a sea of insanity – Nashville ‘first call’
scoring musician
…Allows us to speak our minds without fear of reprisal – L.A. Symphonic musician
…Reporting issues the Musicians Union doesn’t dare to mention – National touring musician

===================================

I. DEADLINE: HOLLYWOOD ARTICLE

Saying that its contracts have been “put at serious risk” by
“work done in the shadows,” Local 47 of the American Federation
of Musicians is preparing to launch a campaign “to ensure that
musicians can earn a livable wage working in Los Angeles.”
Related
WGA Video Urges Yes Vote On Strike Authorization

AFM Local 47
In a recent communique with its members, the local’s executive
board said more and more musicians “are being asked to record
music for major, well-funded projects without union contracts.
If union contracts are made irrelevant by work done in the
shadows, the floor for pay will drop for both union and non-
union musicians.” Read the full message below.
In many cases, union musicians are forced to choose between
working nonunion or not working at all. “These employment
practices are especially divisive and pernicious,” the executive
board said, “because they exert enormous pressure on
individual union members.”

The local’s current contract with the major studios doesn’t
expire until next April, but it’s already gearing up for a
tough round of bargaining. One of the challenges it’s
facing is the trend toward using foreign orchestras to
score films and TV shows that were shot right here
in Los Angeles. Another problem is that the AFM’s
multibillion-dollar pension plan is in “critical” condition.

Related Warner Bros, MGM & Paramount Hit With Outsourcing
Suit By Musicians Union

“The actuary certified that for the plan years beginning
April 1, 2016, and 2015, respectively, the plan is in
‘critical’ status under the Pension Protection Act of 2006,”
according to the AFM Pension Plan’s latest financial
report. As such, the Plan’s board of trustees was
required by law to adopt a rehabilitation plan
designed to improve its financial health and to
allow it to emerge from critical status.

“We all know what it is like to wonder where your
next call is going to come from or how you are
going to pay your bills,” the executive board said.
“No single musician can stop the forces that
undermine our profession, but as a union we
have always been able to push back. We believe
that it is now necessary to take action together.”
[EC: See late weeks Blog for the full message text.]

============================================

II. OUTSOURCING SUIT AGAINST STUDIOS
Warner Bros, MGM & Paramount Hit With Outsourcing Suit By Musicians Union

by Dominic Patten

According to the American Federation of Musicians, the

songs did not remain the same — or at least in the places

they were supposed to be. The 80,000-member-strong

union slammed Warner Bros, Paramount Pictures and

MGM last week in federal court with a breach of contract

lawsuit over four features’ music scores, including the

Hans Zimmer score for Paramount’s Interstellar, which

was nominated for an Oscar this year. The AFM alleges

that the trio of studios broke a 2010 agreement to

ensure that the music for movies made in the U.S.

and Canada was made here too.

“The AFM brings this …action to remedy Defendants’

violations of their respective obligations to employ AFM

members under the terms of the collective bargaining

agreement in recording music in connection with the

production of theatrical motion pictures (referred to

as ‘scoring’) titled (1) Interstellar, (2) Journey 2:

The Mysterious Island, (3) Robocop, and (4) Carrie,

all of which were produced by one or more of the

Defendants in the United States or Canada,  but

were scored, in violation of the agreement,
outside the United States or Canada,” says the
11-page complaint (read it here) seeking a jury trial.
Intersteller, Robocop and Carrie were scored in the

UK, and Journey 2 was produced in Australia and

Papua New Guinea.

[EC: Notice the only commonality of all these actions? To
protect the RMA elites.]

============================================

III. LAWSUIT AGAINST STUDIOS (DETAILS)
LEWIS N. LEVY, Bar No. 105975
DANIEL R. BARTH, Bar No. 274009
Levy, Ford & Wallach
3619 Motor Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90034
Telephone: (213) 380

3140
Facsimile: (213) 480-3284
Email:
[email protected]
[email protected]
JEFFREY R. FREUND (pro hac vice application forthcoming)
ROBERT ALEXANDER (pro hac vice application forthcoming)
ABIGAIL V. CARTER (pro hac vice application forthcoming)
PHILIP C. ANDONIAN (applicationfor admission pending)
Bredhoff & Kaiser, PLLC
805 15th
Street N.W., Suite 100
Washington, D.C. 20005
Email: [email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
Attorneys for Plaintiff
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
AMERICAN FEDERATION OF
MUSICIANS OF THE UNITED
STATES AND CANADA
Plaintiff v. WARNER BROTHERS
ENTERTAINMENT, INC., PARAMOUNT
PICTURES, INC., and METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER
PICTURES, INC.
Defendants.
CASE NO. 2:15-CV-3069
COMPLAINT
JURY TRIAL DEMANDED
NATURE OF THE CASE

1. This is an action under §301 of the Labor Management
Relations Act (“LMRA”), 29 U.S.C
. § 185, for violations of a collective bargaining
agreement to which the Plaintiff American Federation
of Musicians of the United States and Canada
(hereinafter “AFM”) and the Defendants Warner Brothers
Entertainment, Inc. (hereinafter “Warner Brothers”),
Paramount Pictures

Corporation (hereinafter “Paramount”), and Metro
-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures, Inc.
(hereinafter “MGM”) (collectively “Defendants”) are parties.
The AFM brings this § 301 action to remedy Defendants’
violations of their respective obligations
to employ AFM members under the terms of the
collective bargaining agreement in recording
music in connection with the production of
theatrical motion pictures (referred to as
“scoring”) titled
(1) Interstellar,
(2) Journey 2: The Mysterious Island,
(3) Robocop, and
(4) Carrie, all of which were produced by one
or more of the Defendants in the United
States or Canada, but were scored, in
violation of the agreement, outside the
United States or Canada. This action
seeks to recover appropriate breach of
contract damages, including but not limited
to musician wages payable pursuant to the
agreement, to compel Defendants to make the
contributions due under the agreement to
certain separate musician funds that are
maintained under that agreement for the
benefit of AFM musicians, and to obtain a
court declaration of the AFM’s and its
members’ rights and of the Defendants’
duties with respect to the collective
bargaining agreement in relation to each
Defendant’s violation of that agreement.
JURISDICTION AND VENUE

2. This Court has jurisdiction over this lawsuit
and parties pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 185
and 28 U.S.C. § 1331.

3. Venue lies in this District pursuant to
29 U.S.C. § 185(a) and 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b).

PARTIES

4. The Plaintiff AFM is a labor organization
that represents approximately 80,000 professional
musicians in the United States and Canada, including
many hundreds of studio recording musicians who
work to score motion pictures produced in this
District and throughout the United States and Canada.

The AFM is “a labor organization representing
employees in an industry affecting commerce”
within the meaning of the federal statute,
29 U.S.C. § 185, authorizing “[s]uits for violation
of contracts” between such a labor organization
and “an employer.”

5. The Defendant Warner Brothers produces theatrical
motion pictures through its motion picture units,
including Warner Brothers Pictures and New Line
Cinema, and employs in the United States and
Canada professional musicians represented by
the AFM in their production. Warner Brothers
maintains its headquarters at 4000 Warner
Boulevard, Burbank, CA 91522, and engages in
business on a regular basis in the Central
District of California.

6. The Defendant Paramount produces theatrical
motion pictures and employs in the United States
and Canada professional musicians represented
by the AFM in their production. Paramount maintains
its headquarters at 5555 Melrose Avenue, Los Angeles,
CA 90038, and engages in business on a regular
basis in the Central District of California.

7. The Defendant MGM produces theatrical motion pictures
and employs in the United States and Canada professional
musicians represented by the AFM in their production.
MGM maintains its headquarters at 245 N Beverly Drive,
Beverly Hills, CA 90210, and engages in business on
a regular basis in the Central District of California.

8. Each of the Defendants is “an employer” within
the meaning of the federal statute, 29 U.S.C. § 185,
authorizing “[s]uits for violation of contracts”
between such an employer and “a labor organization
representing employees in an industry affecting commerce.”

FACTS

9. At all times relevant to this lawsuit,
the AFM and each of the Defendants were
parties to a collective bargaining agreement,
titled “Basic Theatrical Motion Picture Agreement
of 2010” (hereinafter “Agreement”). The
Agreement is a contract between Defendants as
employers and the AFM as a labor organization
representing employee musicians within the
meaning of 29 U.S.C.

§185. Each of the Defendants is a
“Producer” as to certain theatrical
motion pictures within the terms of the
Agreement. When executed, the terms of
the Agreement were effective for the
period April 14, 2010 through February
23, 2013, and were subsequently extended
through April 4, 2015.

10. The Agreement set out wage and benefit
terms for various defined categories of AFM
members, including, inter alia, instrumental and
orchestral musicians who work to score theatrical
motion pictures (“Musicians”).

The Agreement governed all work by Musicians
“employed by the Producer in the State of California
or elsewhere in the United States and Canada and
whose services are rendered in connection with
the production of theatrical motions pictures.”
Services “rendered in connection with the production
of theatrical motion pictures” include, but are not
limited to, recording of music for use in
connection with the production, known as “scoring.”

11. The Agreement required that “[a]ll
theatrical motion pictures produced by
the Producer in the United States or
Canada, if scored, shall be scored
in the United States or Canada,” unless
excused by the AFM under circumstances
not present here.

12. With respect to a motion picture that
is required to be scored in the United
States or Canada under the terms of the
Agreement, Producers were required to
employ Musicians under the terms of the
Agreement, and were required, among
other things, to provide compensation in
accordance with the compensation terms
specified in the Agreement. A Producer’s
compensation obligations under the
Agreement include, but are not limited
to: (i) the obligation to make specified
minimum wage and other payments; (ii)
the obligation to make a specified level
of contributions to the American Federation
of Musicians and Employers’ Pension Fund,
and various health benefit funds; and (iii)
if appropriate, make contributions to the
Film Musicians Secondary Markets Fund
for the benefit of Musicians.

13. When a motion picture is required to
be scored pursuant to the terms of the
Agreement in the United States or Canada,
and when Producers employed Musicians
pursuant to the terms of the Agreement to
perform work covered by the Agreement,
each Musician’s total hours of service and
total wages paid for covered work must be
reported to the AFM. The reporting process
includes, but is not limited to, submitting
standardized documents known as “B forms,”
which records the work performed by the
Musicians, their wages, and their benefits
contributions.

14. During the term of the Agreement, including
its extension, the following were among the
theatrical motion pictures produced in the
United States and/or Canada by one or more
of the Defendants:
(1) Interstellar;
(2) Journey 2: The Mysterious Island;
(3) Robocop; and
(4) Carrie
(collectively “the Pictures”).

15. Warner Brothers was a Producer subject
to the terms of the Agreement regarding
the motion pictures Interstellar and Journey 2:
The Mysterious Island; MGM was a Producer
subject to the terms of the Agreement regarding
the motion pictures Robocop and Carrie; and
Paramount was a Producer subject to the terms
of the Agreement regarding Interstellar and Robocop.

16. Each of the Pictures was scored under the
meaning of the Agreement.

17. Each of the Pictures was scored outside of the
United States or Canada in violation of the Agreement.
On information and belief, Interstellar, Carrie, and
Robocop were each scored in Great Britain, and
Journey 2: The Mysterious Island was scored in
Papau New Guinea and Australia.

18. The Defendants did not comply with the
compensation terms required by the Agreement
and in the scoring of the motion pictures employed
persons who were not Musicians under the terms
of the Agreement outside of the United States or
Canada, in violation of the Agreement.

CLAIMS FOR RELIEF
COUNT ONE
Declaratory Judgment
(Against all Defendants)

19. The allegations in Paragraphs 1 through
18 above are re-alleged and incorporated
herein by reference.

20. Each of the Defendants was a “Producer” under
the terms of the Agreement in connection with the
production and scoring of one or more of the
Pictures.

21. Each of the Pictures was produced in the
United States and/or Canada within the terms
of the Agreement and during the effective term
of the Agreement and its extension. Pursuant
to the Agreement, each of the Pictures was
required to be scored in the United States or
Canada with Musicians represented by Plaintiff,
and Musicians represented by Plaintiff were
entitled to the compensation set out in the
Agreement.

22. Each of the Defendants employed musicians
to score each of the Pictures as to which it was
a Producer outside of the United States or Canada.

23. Each of the Defendants scored each of the
Pictures as to which it was a Producer outside
of the United States or Canada, in breach of
the express terms of the Agreement.

24. Accordingly, the AFM is entitled to a declaration
(1) that each Defendant was a Producer subject
to the terms of the Agreement with respect to
those motion pictures it is identified as a producer
of in paragraph 15; (2) that each Defendant breached
the Agreement when it scored the motion pictures
as to which it was a Producer outside of the United
States or Canada, and (3) that each Defendant
breached the Agreement when it failed to employ
AFM Musicians under the terms of the Agreement
to score the motion pictures produced in the
United States or Canada as to which it was a
Producer.

COUNT TWO
Breach of Contract
(Against Warner Brothers)
25. The allegations in Paragraphs 1
through 24 above are re-alleged
and incorporated herein by reference.

26. Defendant Warner Brothers was a
Producer under the terms of the Agreement
of the theatrical motion pictures Interstellar
and Journey 2: The Mysterious Island

27. Interstellar and Journey 2: The Mysterious Island
were produced in the United States.

28. Interstellar was scored outside
of the United States or Canada,
in Great Britain. With respect to
such work, proper compensation
and associated payments required
under the Agreement were not made
to or for the benefit of AFM members,
and the AFM and its affiliates were not
provided B Forms reflecting the number
of sessions performed, the musicians
used, and the payments made or due.

29. Journey 2: The Mysterious Island
was scored outside of the United States
or Canada, in Papau New Guinea and
Australia. With respect to such work,
proper compensation and associated
payments required under the Agreement
were not made to or for the benefit of
AFM members, and the AFM and its
affiliates were not provided B Forms
reflecting the number of sessions
performed, the musicians used,
and the payments made or due.

30. By scoring Interstellar and Journey 2:
The Mysterious Island outside the United
States or Canada, Warner Brothers violated
and breached the terms of the Agreement.

31. Warner Brothers’s violations and
breaches of the Agreement have caused
financial injuries to the AFM and its
members, in an amount to be proven
at trial.

COIUNT THREE
Breach of Contract

29 U.S.C. § 185
(Against Paramount)
32. The allegations in Paragraphs 1
through 31 above are re-alleged
and incorporated herein by reference.

33. Defendant Paramount was a Producer under the terms
of the Agreement of the theatrical motion pictures
Interstellar and Robocop
.
34. Interstellar was produced in the United
States and Robocop was produced in the
United States and Canada.

35. Interstellar was scored outside of the
United States or Canada, in Great Britain.
With respect to such work, proper compensation
and associated payments required under the
Agreement were not made to or for the benefit
of AFM members, and the AFM and its affiliates
were not provided B Forms reflecting the number
of sessions performed, the musicians used, and
the payments made or due.

36. Robocop was scored outside of the United States or
Canada, in Great Britain. With respect to such work,
proper compensation and associated payments required
under the Agreement were not made to or for the benefit
of AFM members, and the AFM and its affiliates were not
provided B Forms reflecting the number of sessions
performed, the musicians used, and the payments
made or due.

37. By scoring Interstellar and Robocop outside the United
States or Canada, Paramount violated and breached the
terms of the Agreement.

38. Paramount’s violations and breaches of the
Agreement have caused financial injuries to the
AFM and its members, in an amount to be proven
at trial.

COUNT FOUR
Breach of Contract

29 U.S.C. § 185
(Against MGM)
39. The allegations in Paragraphs 1 through 38 above
are re-alleged and incorporated herein by reference.
40. Defendant MGM was a Producer under the terms of the
Agreement of the theatrical motion pictures Carrie and
Robocop
.
41. Carrie was produced in Canada
and Robocop was produced in
the United States and Canada.

42. Carrie was scored outside of the United
States or Canada, in Great Britain. With respect
to such work, proper compensation and associated
payments required under the Agreement were
not made to or for the benefit of AFM members,
and the AFM and its affiliates were not provided
B Forms reflecting the number of sessions
performed, the musicians used, and the payments
made or due.

43. Robocop was scored outside of the United States or
Canada, in Great Britain. With respect to such work,
proper compensation and associated payments required
under the Agreement were not made to or for the benefit
of AFM members, and the AFM and its affiliates were
not provided B Forms reflecting the number of sessions
performed, the musicians used, and the payments
made or due.

44. By scoring Carrie and Robocop outside the United

States or Canada, MGM violated and breached the

terms of the Agreement.

45. MGM’s violations and breaches of the Agreement

have caused financial injuries to the AFM and its

members, in an amount to be proven at trial.

PRAYER FOR RELIEF
WHEREFORE, the AFM respectfully requests that

this Court:

(1) Issue the declaratory judgment requested in COUNT ONE;
(2) Award the AFM damages for all losses suffered
by the AFM and its members as a result of Defendants’
breaches of the Agreement as set out in COUNT
TWO, COUNT THREE, AND COUNT FOUR;

(3) Order each Defendant to make appropriate contributions
to the American Federation of Musicians and Employers’
Pension Fund, various health benefit funds, and to the
Film Musicians Secondary Markets Fund for the benefit
of Musicians that would have been made if Defendants
had not breached the Agreement as set forth in COUNT
TWO, COUNT THREE, and COUNT FOUR;

(4) Order each of the Defendants to make such other payments
as may have been required if the motion pictures had been
scored under the terms of the Agreement in the United
States or Canada;

(5) Award the Plaintiff pre-judgment interest as required

by law; and

(6) Order such other and further relief as this Court

may deem appropriate.
JURY DEMAND
Plaintiff demands a trial by jury on all claims so triable.

Respectfully submitted,
DATED: April 24, 2015
/S/ Lewis N. Levy
LEWIS N. LEVY, Bar No.
105975
DANIEL R. BARTH, Bar No. 274009
Levy, Ford & Wallach
3619 Motor Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90034
Email: [email protected]
[email protected]
JEFFREY R. FREUND (pro hac vice
application forthcoming)
ROBERT ALEXANDER (pro hac
vice
application forthcoming)
ABIGAIL V. CARTER (pro hac vice
application forthcoming)
PHILIP C. ANDONIAN (application for
admission pending)
Bredhoff & Kaiser, PLLC
805 15th Street N.W., Suite 100
Washington, D.C. 20005
Email: [email protected]
ral
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
Attorneys for Plaintiff

[EC: So, repeatedly in the above lawsuit, Levy et al state:
Award the AFM damages for all losses suffered
by the AFM and its members as a result of Defendants’
breaches of the Agreement as set out in COUNT
TWO, COUNT THREE, AND COUNT FOUR;

Who’s going to decide which musicians get
those payments? Don’t hold your breathe,
you know exactly who they will go to.

If they lose the only ones making out
will be Levy and Company. If they win,
the rank and file will never see a cent.

It seems the Local 47 administration has
become the Donald Trump of the music
industry. Regardless of what happens, they
NEVER take responsibility for their incompetence,
it’s always on someone else, in this case
the studios, for making the AFM unusable.
It’s the contracts that make the AFM unusable,
and it is also the result of the AFM/LOCAL 47
protecting the RMA to the exclusion of
everyone else.

As it turns out, they’re spending our 10
million leftover from the building sale to
try to fatten the pockets of the elites, much
like Trump does. It’s our money, but it’s
certainly not being spent on the rank
and file. All they’re missing is their Mar-a Lago.]

THE ORIGINAL COMPLAINT CAN BE FOUND HERE:
read it here

=================================

IV. MEMBER COMMENT

An article in WSJ  April 19, 2017 “HOLLYWOOD DOESN’T
WORK WITHOUT CHINA” front page continued on page 12,
read if you get a chance!

This not only describes how the Film & TV industry has
changed since 2008 but why, it’s what the future will
look like. Show me the money or sell it to China.

Also, a speculation, could even factor into our Pension
plan if the studios become desperate to stay afloat.
It could all disappear, worse case scenario.

Right now it has to be great for residuals catering
to a global community like never before.  Don’t
expect any buyouts anywhere in the future while
the ramla are in charge.

=================================

V. EVENTS
DEAN AND RICHARD
are now at Culver City Elks the first 
Friday of 
every month.
7:30pm-10:30pm,
11160 Washington Pl.
Culver City, 90232
310-839-8891

————————————-

LA WINDS JAZZ KATS 584
NO COVER, NO MINIMUM.
Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month at
Viva Cantina
7:30-10:00.
900 Riverside Drive, 
Burbank.

Free parking across the street at Pickwick Bowl.
Come hear your favorite charts played the way
they 
should 
be. 

We are in the back room called
the Trailside Room. 


Come on down.

Guaranteed to swing.

—————————————–

4/23/17

Malibu Friends of Music’s
Montgomery Arts House
For Music & Architecture
(MAHMA)
in partnership with

University of Rochester’s
Eastman School of Music
present

EASTMAN IN MALIBU

NICHOLAS GOLUSES
Classic Guitarist
with the
MALIBU COAST CHAMBER ORCHESTRA SOLISTI
Scott Hosfeld, Music Director

APRIL 23rd, 2017 at 3:30 pm
inside the beautiful
MAHMA MUSIC ROOM

ALSO FEATURING RESIDENT ARTISTS:
Maria Newman, violinist
Scott Hosfeld, violist
Paula Hochhalter, cellist
Wendy Prober, pianist

AND PRESENTING:
Jamal Rossi, Joan and Martin Messinger Dean:
Eastman School of Music ~ University of Rochester

MUSIC OF:
Astor Piazzolla, Antonio Vivaldi, Manual da Falla,
Niccolo Paganini, and Maria Newman
…and a little taste of MAHMA:
TENDER HEARTS (1909) Silent Short Film
Starring America’s Sweetheart, Mary Pickford

——————————————

4/6/17

The SCL Presents:
BEYOND THE POLKA with Cory Pesaturo
WRITING FOR ACCORDION

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26th, 2017
7:30PM
The Village Studios | Auditorium
1616 Butler Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90025

Parking available in adjacent lot, or $2 street parking
public lots nearby:

Cory Pesaturo is one of only four accordionists to win
world championships on both the acoustic and digital
accordion and is the only person to also win a world
championship in jazz.  He is a graduate of the New
England Conservatory of Music, where he was the
first musician ever to major and graduate in the accordion.

Cory’s primary contribution to the instrument is
his visionary thinking of how the accordion
should be used, played, and presented in modern
music. Cory currently gives masterclasses on
music theory and the accordion throughout the
US and Europe. He is developing his own electric
accordion, and has created the first ever skinned
accordion that includes a symmetric midi lighting
system attached to the keys.

——————————————

4/23/17

The BBB featuring Bernie Dresel

This Sunday April 23rd from 7-8:30
at
BOGIES in Westlake Village
(right off the 101 at Lindero Canyon Road exit.)
call 818-889-2394 for ticket reservations
$20 cover charge
32001 Agoura Road, Westlake Village, CA 91361

Come join The BBB featuring Bernie Dresel,
(13 horns, upright bass, guitar, and plenty of drums)
at this gorgeous new club swingin’ & rockin’
selections from our brand new album, Live n’ Bernin’,
featuring high-octane, new & original arrangements
by Walter Murphy, Steve Bramson, Nan Schwartz,
Jim McMillen, Tim Simonec, Bill Cunliffe, Scott Healy,
Andrew Neu, Brian Williams, and Jeff Bunnell.

Our new album Live n’ Bernin’ will be available for
sale at this show.
(Also available online at CDBaby and Amazon,
as well as downloads on iTunes, CDBaby and Amazon).

——————————————

4/29/17

LOS ANGELES CLARINET CHOIR SPRING CONCERT
Saturday, April 29 at 8PM-9PM
Barrett Recital Hall
Pasadena Conservatory of Music
100 North Hill Street
Pasadena, CA 91106

The Los Angeles Clarinet Choir, 15 clarinetists
directed by Margaret Thornhill and Victoria Ramos,
gives the World Premiere of “Hajdu’s Nigun” for
clarinet ensemble by Matti Kovler, and performs
other signature works by Japanese, Brazillian,
German and American composers.

Tickets are $20 general, $15 students and seniors.
Seating limited; advance purchase recommended
through www.brownpapertickets.com

——————————————

4/30/17

FREE CONCERT for the Public

THE PHIL NORMAN TENTET
AT THE
Ascension Lutheron Church
Sunday April 30th @ 5pm
1600 E. Hillcrest Drive
Thousand Oaks, CA. 91362

No Reservations Needed

Remembering the classic sounds
& variations of 12 jazz legends
to include:

The George Shearing Quintet
The Dave Brubeck Quartet
The Modern Jazz Quartet
The Cal Tjader Quintet
the Ahmad Jamal Trio
Miles, Dizzy and more

——————————————

5/1/17 DEADLINE

NORTH/SOUTH CONSONANCE
2017 Call for Scores

All composers are eligible for consideration
Solo, chamber ensembles and chamber orchestra works
up to 18 performers will be considered

Vocalists, percussion and/or electronics are acceptable

One work will be selected for recording on the North/South
label

$30 (US Dlls) non-refundable fee per composition
submitted required

Online Submissions at
http://www.northsouthmusic.org/Score-Submissions

Complete submission guidelines at
http://www.northsouthmusic.org/Call-For-Scores

——————————————

5/3/17

Free Admission Glendale Noon Concerts series
(concerts every first & third Wednesday at 12:10-12:40 pm)
are listed at http://www.glendalenoonconcerts.blogspot.com
Thank you for your support in publicizing the Glendale
Noon Concerts!

Jacqueline Suzuki
Curator, GNC
818 249 -5108

On Wednesday  May 3, 2017 at 12:10-12:40 pm
the Free Admission Glendale Noon Concerts will feature
pianist Charles Fierro performing Debussy Preludes
at the Sanctuary of Glendale City Church,
610 E. California Ave. (at Isabel St), Glendale, CA 91206.
For more information, email [email protected]
or call (818) 244- 7241.

PROGRAM:
MAY 3, 2017
CHARLES FIERRO Piano Recital
DEBUSSY: SELECTED PRELUDES
The Dancers of Delphi
Sails
The Girl with the Flaxen Hair
What the West Wind Saw
The Engulfed Cathdral
The Interrupted Serenade
The Hills of Anacapri
Minstrels

————————————–

5/5/17

DOCTOR WU PERFORMANCE

We’ll be doing one set starting promptly at 8:00 PM at the Saint
Francis de Sales Festival on Friday, May 5th:

Saint Francis de Sales School
13368 Valleyheart Drive
Sherman Oaks, CA 91423

The Doctor Wu Band line up for this show will be:

Tony Egan: Lead Vocals
Leigh DeMarche: Vocals
Jodi Fodor: Vocals
Gil Ayan: Guitar
Steve Bias: Bass and Vocals
Jeff Dellisanti: Saxophones
Mark Harrison: Keyboards
Paul Salvo: Trumpet
Frank Villafranca: Saxophones
Jack Cook: Drums

Admission is free and we look forward to seeing you there!
The Doctor Wu Band
http://www.doctorwuband.com/
https://www.facebook.com/doctorwuband

—————————————————————————–

7/11-14/17

SANTA BARBARA JAZZ WORKSHOP

The LA Jazz Society is proud to partner with Kim Richmond
and Kimberly Ford in presenting the Santa Barbara Jazz
Workshop, July 11-14, from Tuesday afternoon to Friday night.

A faculty of Jazz professionals teach instrumental/vocal master
classes, improvisation, Jazz Listening (How to listen, and who to
listen to.), modern Jazz combo and Big Band playing with concerts
each late afternoon (open to the public) where advanced students sit in

For more information, visit www.santabarbarajazzcamp.com.

Presented by Kim Richmond and Kimberly Ford
at the Marjorie Luke Theater and SOHO Jazz Club.

You can read all previous offerings at:
http://www.responsible47.com

—————————————-
UNTIL NEXT TIME,

THE COMMITTEE FOR A MORE

RESPONSIBLE LOCAL 47

IRONY DEFINED / MUSICIANS FOR PENSION SECURITY / EVENTS

Thursday, April 13th, 2017

4/11/17
I. IRONY DEFINED

II. MUSICIANS FOR PENSION SECURITY

III. EVENTS

 
…Absolutely guaranteed anonymity – Former Musician’s Union officer

…The one voice of reason in a sea of insanity – Nashville ‘first call’
scoring musician
…Allows us to speak our minds without fear of reprisal – L.A. Symphonic musician

…Reporting issues the Musicians Union doesn’t dare to mention – National touring musician

===================================

I. IRONY DEFINED

[EC: Obviously they’re missing the fact that because of the lack of union
work ALL members: a listers, Rank and File, LOCAL 47 BOARD MEMBERS
are all doing non-union work. It’s the only way to make a living. Why
don’t they start by dismantling the RMA, the one organization  that did
the most to destroy our industry, enrich a fraction while putting a
majority out of union work. We have our own swamp to drain.]

From the AFM

To all members of the American Federation of Musicians Local 47:

Our contracts are the heart of our union. Whatever we achieve

through collective action and collective bargaining is secured

because management signs agreements. Our contracts allow

us to make sure employers do what they are obligated to do.

They raise the expectations of all musicians for pay, benefits,

and professional treatment.

Recently, those contracts have been put at serious risk.

Members of Local 47 are being asked to record music for

major, well-funded projects without union contracts. If

union contracts are made irrelevant by work done in the

shadows, the floor for pay will drop for both union and

non-union musicians. These employment practices are

especially divisive and pernicious because they exert

enormous pressure on individual union members.

We all know what it is like to wonder where your next

call is going to come from or how you are going to pay

your bills. No single musician can stop the forces that

undermine our profession, but as a union we have

always been able to push back.

We believe that it is now necessary to take action

together. We call upon the Federation and other AFM

Locals to unite with our membership in defense of our

union and our contracts. In the coming months we

will be launching a campaign to uphold our contracts,

to recapture work being done in the shadows and to

ensure that musicians can earn a livable wage

working in Los Angeles.

Our goals are:
1. To ensure fair pay, benefits, and professional treatment

for musicians.
2. To protect our union’s ability to bargain, administer

and uphold our contracts.
3. To bring more work under union agreements.

We, the Executive Board of AFM Local 47, are committed

to building a stronger, more successful future together.

– AFM Local 47 Executive Board

[EC: What a joke, Half the people on the board do non-union work.
Clean up your own damn house before trying to fine others for feeding
their families. In addition, write contracts we can use, contracts with

buyout options. short of that it’s an unavoidable, slow death.]

============================================

II. MEMBERSHIP FINALLY GETTING MAD –

THE AFM-EPF PENSION FUND IS IN CRISIS

MUSICIANS FOR PENSION SECURITY (NEW YORK)

website will launch on April 19

Our pension benefits could be significantly cut…
forever Fund Trust witness are preparing a plan to drastically cut our
pension benefits and file an application with the Treasury Department
under the Multiemployer Pension Reform Act (MPRA)

This could happen as early are this summer

If that plan is approved, the same Trustees and financial managers
who have run our pension into the ground will still be managing the fund.

WE NEED TO TAKE ACTION BEFORE THEY DO!

MUSICIANS FOR PENSION SECURITY, a newly formed pension
awareness group, is hosting an informal talk and discussion –
colleague to colleague, friend to friend. We are as concerned
as you are and are eager to share what we’ve learned.

Wednesday, April 19th, 2017 – 5:30-7:30

St. Malachi’s – The Actor’s Chapel
236 W. 49th Street (Between Broadway and 8th Avenue. (New York)

============================================

III. EVENTS
DEAN AND RICHARD
are now at Culver City Elks the first 
Friday of 
every month.
7:30pm-10:30pm,
11160 Washington Pl.
Culver City, 90232
310-839-8891

————————————-

LA WINDS JAZZ KATS 584
NO COVER, NO MINIMUM.
Every 2nd and 4th Tuesday of the month at
Viva Cantina
7:30-10:00.
900 Riverside Drive, 
Burbank.

Free parking across the street at Pickwick Bowl.
Come hear your favorite charts played the way
they 
should 
be. 

We are in the back room called
the Trailside Room. 


Come on down.

Guaranteed to swing.

—————————————–

4/14/17

The SCL in NY & The New School Present:
“RUFF CUTS”
An evening of short films
and composer/filmmaker networking

Friday, April 14, 2017
7:00PM to 9:00PM

The New School | Arnhold Hall
55 West 13th Street, 2nd Floor
New York, NY, 10011
Join the SCL in NY and The New School for
their final “RUFF CUTS” program of the
Spring 2017 academic semester.  Alumni
of the SCL NY Mentorship Program will
present recent films that they have scored,
alongside student films from The New
School, and discuss their collaborative
process.  This is a terrific opportunity
to meet New York-based filmmakers
while supporting the SCL NY and The
New School film program!

REGISTRATION REQUIRED:

Click “ATTEND EVENT” below
and

enter your first and last name (no spaces) in
the promotional code field for free SCL Member ticket.
FREE for SCL and THE NEW SCHOOL MEMBERS
The New School | Arnhold Hall
55 West 13th Street, 2nd Floor
New York, NY, 10011

——————————————

4/19/17

ASMAC presents
Monica Mancini & Gregg Field
on April 19th at Catalina’s –
11:30 am

Click Here to Reserve Now!

Join ASMAC as we present  a special luncheon with

Monica Mancini & Gregg Field

Wednesday, April 19th
11:30 a.m. networking,
12 noon Buffet Brunch,
12:45 p.m. Program.

Catalina’s Jazz Club – Hollywood
6725 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood 90028
Parking entrance on McCadden

Join us for a unique opportunity to hear from this dynamic duo –
their career paths and highlights, a few stories, and muslc!
Recording artist and double-Grammy nominated vocalist
Monica Mancini and Producer, Musician, educator, 7 time
Grammy winner, and Latin Grammy “Producer of the Year”
Gregg Field

Concord Records recording artist and double-Grammy
nominated vocalist MONICA MANCINI, daughter of famed
film composer Henry Mancini has carved out an impressive
career as a concert performer, appearing with major
symphony orchestras worldwide, including the Chicago
Symphony, New York Pops, Boston Pops, Dallas Symphony,
Seattle Symphony and the London Metropolitan Orchestra.

Seven time Grammy winner, and Latin Grammy “Producer
of the Year”, GREGG FIELD is one of the most musically
diverse and highly sought-after producers, musicians
and educators in music.

Join us — bring your questions!

Wednesday, April 19, 2017
11:30 am  Reception/Networking  •  12:00 noon  Buffet Lunch
12:45 pm  – Program begins

Catalina’s in Hollywood
6725 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood 90028
Parking entrance on McCadden

STUDENTS:  PLEASE NOTE
The Bill Conti Big Band Arranging & Composing Competition
is still accepting entries. $1,000 top prize.  Please visit asmac.
org for more information.

 
—————————————–

4/19/17

CALICO WINDS at
GLENDALE NOON CONCERTS
12:10 – 12:40

On Wednesday  April 19, 2017 at 12:10-12:40 pm
the Free Admission Glendale Noon Concerts will feature
the Calico Winds performing works for woodwind quintet by
Darius Milhaud and Claude Arrieu
at the Sanctuary of Glendale City Church,
610 E. California Ave. (at Isabel St), Glendale, CA 91206.
For more information, email [email protected]
or call (818) 244- 7241.

——————————————

4/29/17

LOS ANGELES CLARINET CHOIR SPRING CONCERT
Saturday, April 29 at 8PM-9PM
Barrett Recital Hall
Pasadena Conservatory of Music
100 North Hill Street
Pasadena, CA 91106

The Los Angeles Clarinet Choir, 15 clarinetists
directed by Margaret Thornhill and Victoria Ramos,
gives the World Premiere of “Hajdu’s Nigun” for
clarinet ensemble by Matti Kovler, and performs
other signature works by Japanese, Brazillian,
German and American composers.

Tickets are $20 general, $15 students and seniors.
Seating limited; advance purchase recommended
through www.brownpapertickets.com

——————————————

7/11-14/17

SANTA BARBARA JAZZ WORKSHOP

The LA Jazz Society is proud to partner with Kim Richmond
and Kimberly Ford in presenting the Santa Barbara Jazz
Workshop, July 11-14, from Tuesday afternoon to Friday night.

A faculty of Jazz professionals teach instrumental/vocal master
classes, improvisation, Jazz Listening (How to listen, and who to
listen to.), modern Jazz combo and Big Band playing with concerts
each late afternoon (open to the public) where advanced students sit in

For more information, visit www.santabarbarajazzcamp.com.

Presented by Kim Richmond and Kimberly Ford
at the Marjorie Luke Theater and SOHO Jazz Club.

You can read all previous offerings at:
http://www.responsible47.com

—————————————-
UNTIL NEXT TIME,

THE COMMITTEE FOR A MORE RESPONSIBLE LOCAL 47