Tag Archives: news

Local 802 Musician Plays 3D Printed Cello

It’s a crazy time we live in with technology pushing boundaries at every corner, and now it’s even capable of printing instruments. Not too long ago a violin was printed and it looks terrifyingly beautiful to say the least with its abstract design.

David Heiss of Local 802 (New York City, NY) was lucky enough to play the world’s first ever printed Cello. It also has a stylish futuristic design and only one string. Not that it holds David Heiss back from seeing what it can do.

You can watch him play the beast below (if the video doesn’t appear click here).

SUPPORT THE FAIR PLAY FAIR PAY ACT

fair-play-fair-payOn April 13, AFM President Ray Hair; AFM International Executive Board member (IEB) and Local 257 President (Nashville, TN) David Pomeroy; IEB and Local 802 (New York City) President Tino Gagliardi; the musicFIRST Coalition; record labels; and other members of the music community to support the Fair Play Fair Pay Act of 2015, introduced by representatives Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Marsh Blackburn (R-TN). This monumental legislation would finally ensure that musicians are compensated fairly when their music is played on any radio platform—Internet, satellite, or traditional AM/FM.

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Bonnie Raitt Buy This Fracking Album

Bonnie Raitt ‘Buy This Fracking Album’

bonnie raitt 'Buy This Fracking AlbumBonnie Raitt of local 47 (Los Angeles, CA) is a founding member of Musicians United for Safe Energy and has always been an activists for a better future by opposing unfriendly projects to the environment such as fossil fuel reliance. Now, she considers the most critical issue of today is Hydro-fracking and she claims it needs a nationwide ban.

Food & Water Watch partnered with Movement Music Records to release a compilation record cleverly titled, “ Buy This Fracking Album. ” It will include 22 artists to spread knowledge about the dangers of fracking. All the songs have been donated and the proceeds from the album will be sent to groups working towards a ban on fracking.

The album isn’t complete yet, and needs about $40,000 to be finished. You can donate here to help the album become a reality, and you will be one of the first to receive the album if you do donate.

Star Wars: The Force Awakens

‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ to be scored in Los Angeles

When Star Wars: The Force Awakens plays in theaters on December 18, 2015, the music will be the sounds of local 47 members and not the London Symphony Orchestra, the musicians behind the previous six Star Wars films. In a time when many jobs – including Hollywood film scoring – are being outsourced to other countries,  the famous local 47 composer John Williams will be working with the freelance members of the LA union, better known as the Hollywood Studio Orchestra.

The scoring sessions will begin in April and span several months. Needless to say, this will generate millions in wages, benefits, and other spending for the Hollywood film scoring community, something that is greatly needed in this time when offshoring is sadly becoming  more common.

“We are excited and proud that our talented pool of Local 47 musicians are scoring the next ‘Star Wars’ film here in Los Angeles,” says AFM Local 47 President John Acosta. “This marks a significant achievement not only in efforts to revitalize the musical community in Hollywood, but also in bringing work historically done abroad here to the United States. We look forward to celebrating many similar future successes.”

“I’ve had the privilege of working with the very best musicians in both the U.K. and the U.S.,” says Williams. “The London Symphony Orchestra has consistently performed with great artistry on all six of the prior films in the Star Wars saga, and I will be forever grateful for their commitment and dedication.  Equally, it has been my honor to have worked with my brilliant colleagues in Los Angeles, and always appreciate the invaluable contribution they’ve made to my scores and to those of other composers.”

American Symphony Orchestra to Cut Concerts

The American Symphony Orchestra (ASO) in New York City, known for its thematic programming and performances of rarely heard works, plans to reduce its concert offerings next season in an effort to save money. ASO will end its Classics Declassified series at Symphony Space and will perform four, rather than its usual six, concerts on its main series at Carnegie Hall.

The organization had launched emergency fundraising campaigns, but was unable to compensate for a decline in individual donations. ASO hopes to restore the cut concerts in future seasons.

Reno Philharmonic Ratifies Four-Year Contract

In a secret ballot, members of the Reno Philharmonic, represented by Local 368 (Reno, NV), ratified a new four-year agreement in September 2014. The previous four-year contract expired June 30. The new deal is retroactive to July 1 and includes improvements to employee wages and a guaranteed number of performances during the concert season. The contract covers the orchestra’s more than 60 musicians. Reno Philharmonic is northern Nevada’s largest performing arts organization.

New Director, New Communications Plan, and News Briefs

By the time you’ve opened your snail mailbox, retrieved this issue of the International Musician, and perused this month’s column, our newest addition to Federation staff, Rose Ryan, will have begun her important work. In fact, odds are that, if your membership profile includes a current e-mail address, you’ve already sampled her work firsthand in our new e-newsletter, rendering the news items I’ve outlined below as old news.

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NJ AFL-CIO Gathers Women for Empowerment Conferen

In March, more than 200 union women gathered in East Brunswick, New Jersey, for the 12th annual AFL-CIO Women in Leadership Development (WILD) conference. Conference founder Laurel Brennan, secretary-treasurer of the New Jersey State AFL-CIO spoke on the theme of economic empowerment. “Women still earn 78 cents for every dollar earned by a man, a statistic that unfortunately hasn’t improved in the past decade,” says Brennan. “This conference enables our union sisters to focus their collective power and energy on public policy injustices that affect women and families, such as gender pay inequality. The best pay equalizer is still a union contract.”

The biggest event of its kind, WILD brought women from across the country together. Participants attended workshops on obstacles to economic prosperity for women and ways to overcome them.

Nominate Those Who Inspire You

The Musicians Hall of Fame & Museum honors all musicians regardless of genre or instrument. As a member of the AFM, you are eligible to nominate up to 10 musicians, two producers, two arrangers, and two engineers for induction into the Musicians Hall of Fame. Simply log on to the Musicians Hall of Fame nomination page (http://www.musicianshalloffame.com/nominations/) and enter your picks before the end of the year. Previous honorees have included Local 257 (Nashville, TN) members Billy Cox, Fred Foster, Charlie Daniels; and Local 47 (Los Angeles, CA) members Steve and Jeff Porcaro; and Local 47 member Steve Lukather and Local 257 member David Hungate with the band Toto.

Napoleón Gómez, Mexican Labor Leader, Addresses AFL-CIO Council

AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka welcomed Napoleón Gómez Urrutia, president of the Mexican mine and metalworkers’ union Los Mineros, to Atlanta at the end of February. Gómez addressed the AFL-CIO Executive Council saying, “As long as Mexican workers don’t have rights, workers in America are under threat.”

In his remarks, Gómez argued that low wages and repression of workers in Mexico hurt US workers by reducing exports to Mexico and creating unfair incentives to relocate plants from the US. “Workers in the US and Mexico have to fight together, even harder, for justice and against inequality,” he argues. He called for the halt of the Trans-Pacific Partnership and demanded real labor reforms for both countries. While the Los Mineros union has doubled the real wages of its members in the past decade, most Mexican workers face repression when they try to join democratic unions.

In 2011, Gómez received the AFL-CIO’s Meany–Kirkland Human Rights Award but was unable to attend the ceremony because of criminal charges filed against him by the Mexican government, which have since been defeated. “This is a great victory for democratic unionism and international solidarity,” says Trumka of the long-awaited visit by the respected labor leader.