Live Nation (events promoter): Difference between revisions

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== History ==
== History ==
He shits on pigs

== Business ==
== Business ==
===United States===
===United States===

Revision as of 01:41, 25 June 2008

Live Nation
Company typePublic (NYSE: LYV)
IndustryEntertainment
Founded2005
HeadquartersBeverly Hills, California
Key people
Michael Rapino, CEO
Michael Cohl, Chairman
Productsconcerts
RevenueIncrease$4.4 billion [1]USD (Calendar 2005)
Number of employees
3,000 full-time, 15,900 part-time
Websitewww.livenation.com

Live Nation NYSELYV is a live events company based in Beverly Hills, California. Live Nation formed in 2005 by a spin-off from Clear Channel Communications. The present CEO of the company is Michael Rapino.

In 2005, Live Nation promoted or produced over 28,500 events, including music concerts, theatrical shows, specialized motor sports and other events, with total attendance exceeding 61 million. As of September 30, 2005, Live Nation owned or operated 117 venues, consisting of 75 US and 42 international venues. These venues include 39 amphitheaters, 58 theaters, 14 clubs, 4 arenas and 2 festival sites. In addition, through equity, booking or similar arrangements Live Nation has the right to book events at 33 additional venues.

In October 2007, Live Nation announced a new contract with pop singer Madonna throughout the next decade after leaving Warner Music and Warner Bros.. She will be the founding recording artist for the new music division Live Nation Artists, formerly Artist Nation.[2]

History

He shits on pigs

Business

United States

Worldwide

  • Acquired Italian music promoters Milano Concerti and Friends & Partners Agency.
  • Worldwide subsidiaries include Welldone Agency & Promotion (Finland), dkbMotor (Denmark), EMA Telstar (Sweden) and Gunnar Eide Concerts (Norway).
  • Live Nation's subsidiary Mojo Concerts is the biggest organiser of concerts in The Netherlands with over 200 concerts and a total of a million visitors a year. Well known festivals include Pinkpop, Lowlands, Arrow Rock Festival and North Sea Jazz.
  • Owns Clear Channel Entertainment do Brasil Ltda, a Brazilian music promotion and production company
  • Acquires Music and Entertainment producers GAMERCO, the biggest Spanish promotion and production company.

Controversy

As a previous subsidiary of Clear Channel Communications under the Clear Channel Entertainment name, Live Nation was party to some highly visible controversies. The 2005 SEC filing for the creation of Live Nation listed several reasons for pursuing the split, including avoiding regulatory and legal pitfalls faced by Clear Channel.

Live music recordings

In 2004, Clear Channel acquired a key patent in the process of producing Instant Live recordings, in which a live performance is recorded directly from the sound engineer's console during the show, and then rapidly burned on CD so that audience members can buy copies of the show as they are leaving the venue. This had been intended to provide additional revenue to the artist, venue, and promoter, as well as stifle the demand for unauthorized bootleg concert recordings made by audience members for profit. However, some media critics, as well as smaller business rivals, believed that Clear Channel was using the patent (on the process of adding cues to the beginning and ending of tracks during recording, so that the concert is not burned as a single enormous track) to drive competitors out of business or force them to pay licensing fees, even if they do not use precisely the same process. The patent was transferred to Live Nation when Clear Channel Entertainment was spun off, [1] but the claims of the patent were cancelled on March 13, 2007,[2] after the patent owner failed to respond to a final office action in an inter partes reexamination proceeding. All originally issued claims were rejected as being anticipated or rendered obvious by earlier publications for products developed by Telex.[3]


Comments about Jazz in American Culture

On June 17, 2008, with regard to musical acts that would be selected by Live Nation to perform at a proposed festival in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Mike Luba of Live Nation Artists stated "We're doing everything we can to eliminate jazz from American culture, so, no jazz!"[3] On June 18, Luba explained that he had made the comment in jest. As of June 20th, however, the company has not issued a formal apology for their remark. [4]

Corporate governance

Current members of the board of directors of Live Nation are: Henry Cisneros, Jeffrey T. Hinson, L. Lowry Mays, Mark P. Mays, Randall T. Mays, Connie McCombs McNab, John N. Simons, Jr., Timothy P. Sullivan, Harvey Weinstein, Michael Cohl, and Michael Rapino

Top executives

  • Michael Cohl – Chairman of the Board, Chairman and CEO of Live Nation Artists
  • Michael Rapino – chief executive officer; married to Jolene Blalock
  • Kathy Willard – Chief Financial Officer
  • Jason Garner – CEO, NA Music
  • Alan Ridgeway – CEO, International Music
  • Bryan Perez – CEO, Global Digital
  • Russell Wallach – President, Live Nation Alliances
  • Michael Rowles – Executive Vice President and General Counsel
  • Arthur Fogel – Chairman of Global Music
  • Thomas O. Johansson – Chairman, International Music
  • Bob Ezrin - Chairman, Live Nation Artists Recording Division
  • Tres Thomas - Senior V.P., global touring
  • Kate Ramos - S.V.P., global touring

Live Nation Venues

See also

New England Dodge Music Center - Hartford, CT Chevrolet Theatre - Hartford, CT

Sources

  1. ^ Fortune: Live Nation Rocks the Music Industry
  2. ^ PR Newswire
  3. ^ Wallman, Brittany (2008-06-18). "Fort Lauderdale tells music fest promoter: Streisand, not Metallica" (HTML). South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Fort Lauderdale, Florida: Tribune Company. ISSN 0744-8139. Retrieved 2008-06-19. 'We're doing everything we can to eliminate jazz from American culture, so no jazz!' Mike Luba of Live Nation Artists told commissioners, eliciting a few 'boos' from the audience.
  4. ^ Wallman, Brittany (2008-06-18). "Just kidding! Promoter for Lauderdale music fest says after slam on jazz" (HTML). South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Fort Lauderdale, Florida: Tribune Company. ISSN 0744-8139. Retrieved 2008-06-19. Luba said he made the comment 'totally in the moment, to break the tension,' and that 'it was 100 percent a joke.'

External links