REGULATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION

NSW Live Music Policy 1992–2008

Authors

  • David Panichi

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/prbt.v9i1.28677

Keywords:

music industry, regulation, infrastructure, performance

Abstract

This article is an investigation into the abolition of the PoPE licence in NSW, an investigation which necessarily calls on previous work by Bruce Johnson, Shane Homan and other key figures in the Australian music studies landscape. It also follows on from a growing body of work (including Cloonan’s article in the last issue that is considering the considerable role played by legislation and regulation in the contemporary music industry. Despite this, Panichi points out that in general popular music scholarship has not spent enough time in this area and the intersecting ideas of agency, infrastructure, performance and consumption that emerge in this study reinforce this message.

References

Bartlett, P (2006) ‘Licence to Thrill’, Sydney Morning Herald, 21April.

Clubs NSW (2004) Submission to Premier’s Dept NSW Live Music Industry Feedback, October 25, Sydney.

Creagh, S (2007) ‘Council in trays buried in paper’, Sydney Morning Herald, 18 July.

Cross, W (1993) Liquor Licensing Laws in NSW: how they impact on the music industry. Paper presented to the North Coast Entertainment Industry Association, 15 May.

Homan, S (2002) ‘Cultural Industry or Social Problem? The Case of Australian Live Music’, Media International Australia, v102.

–––– (2003) The Mayor’s a Square: live music and law and order in Sydney, Sydney: Local Consumption Publications.

Johnson, B (1999) ‘Meeting with AHAExecutive’, Jazzchord 45, February/March.

–––– (2001) ‘Paying the Piper: Researching Gambling and Popular Music Venues’, in Crowdy, Homan and Mitchell (eds) Musical In-Between-Ness: the Proceedings of the 8th IASPM Australia–New Zealand Conference 2001, Sydney: UTS Printing Services.

Johnson, B and Homan, S (2003) Vanishing Acts: an inquiry into the state of live popular music opportunities in NSW,Sydney: Australia Council/New South Wales Ministry for the Arts.

Live Music Working Group (2001) Live Music in South Australia.Adelaide SA, October.

Published

2015-10-03

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Panichi, D. (2015). REGULATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION: NSW Live Music Policy 1992–2008. Perfect Beat, 9(1), 5-21. https://doi.org/10.1558/prbt.v9i1.28677