|
Songwriters Group Awaits New Home
06/04/2004 9:44 PM, Reuters Jim Bessman
The 2004 Songwriters Hall of Fame
Awards dinner June 10 in New York will be another star-studded
affair. But this year's ceremony, which honors songwriting
legends, also will include an announcement of a possible
physical home for the Songwriters Hall of Fame in Washington
D.C.
Although the deal is not yet complete, Hal David,
chairman/CEO of the National Academy of Popular
Music/Songwriters Hall, tells Billboard there is an agreement
"to house the Songwriters Hall of Fame in the new National
Music Center and Museum, which will be constructed on the site
of the old Washington Convention Center in downtown Washington,
D.C."
News of a proposed home for the Songwriters Hall of Fame is
just one highlight of this year's dinner, where inductees will
include Charles Fox, Al Green , Daryl Hall & John Oates, Don
McLean , Barrett Strong and Norman Whitfield.
Special awards will go to leading publishers, songwriters
and patrons, including Neil Sedaka , who will receive the Sammy
Cahn Lifetime Achievement Award.
The inaugural Starlight Award, which honors a "rising
star," will go to Rob Thomas of Matchbox Twenty. Garth Brooks
will perform in honor of Don McLean, while India.Arie and
Johnny Lang will salute Stevie Wonder , this year's recipient of
the Johnny Mercer Award.
A PLACE FOR SONGWRITERS
Mercer and publishers Howie Richmond and Abe Olman founded
the National Academy of Popular Music and Songwriters Hall of
Fame in 1969.
Since then, the hall has honored some 300 songwriters and
publishers, representing every era of popular music dating back
to the era of Stephen Foster in the mid-19th century.
The National Academy of Popular Music complements the hall
of fame by offering workshops, showcases, networking
opportunities and other support services for less-established
songwriters.
Despite the delay in building a physical home for the
Songwriters Hall of Fame, co-founder Richmond in 1999 offered a
grant for the creation of a "virtual" hall online at shof.org.
Songwriters Hall of Fame president Linda Moran notes the
increasing significance of the annual induction dinner, which
will take place at the Marriott Marquis Hotel.
"It's becoming bigger and bigger, because the
writer/artists who are getting inducted now are at a stage in
their careers where they're taking greater pride in their
songwriting -- it's where their roots are," she says.
She also offers an assessment of the event in the context
of the current music business climate.
"Our membership has increased tremendously over the last
few years," Moran notes. "With all the layoffs in the music
industry, networking is more important than anything. But it's
still just a very special evening for the whole songwriting
profession and the publishers who are so very involved in it."
Reuters/Billboard
|