Dean Budnick is an American writer, filmmaker, college professor and radio host who focuses on music, film and popular culture.
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In June 2011, ECW Press published Budnick’s latest book, Ticket Masters: The Rise of the Concert Industry and How the Public Got Scalped. Ticket Masters, which Budnick co-authored with Josh Baron, explores the emergence of computerized ticketing and the rise of the modern concert industry. It is the first book to chronicle the origins, development and ongoing strategies of companies such as Ticketron, Ticketmaster, Live Nation and StubHub and the efforts of numerous independent competitors.[1] Wall Street Journal reviewer Ken Kurson wrote, “A clear, comprehensive look at a murky business, the book is also an encyclopedia of information about the rise, decline and rebirth of the live music industry.”.[2] Similar assessments appeared in Rolling Stone, Maclean’s and other outlets.[3]
Budnick has explained that the idea for the book first came to him in the mid-1990s, while a graduate student at Harvard University’s History of American Civilization program, when he explored reports of ticket scalping on Charles Dickens’ final American speaking tour.[4] Budnick happened upon such accounts (as well as those related to the “Swedish Nightingale” Jenny Lind), while writing his doctor dissertation on Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle.[5] In Direct Verdict: The Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle Trial Discourse, Budnick who also earned a J.D. at Columbia Law School, worked from the original trial transcripts, dozens of newspaper reports and other primary sources to explore the silent film comic’s life before and after his manslaughter trials that followed the death of actress Virginia Rappe on September 9, 1921.[6] “Directed Verdict” examines not only on prevailing attitudes towards Hollywood and a new culture of celebrity but also tabloid journalism, the onset of Prohibition and the emerging, oft-contradictory roles of women in the 1920s. Budnick received his Ph.D. in 2000 and his dissertation committee consisted of Henry Louis Gates, Werner Sollors and Ellen Fitzpatrick.[7]
After serving as a teaching fellow and tutor at Harvard Budnick has gone on to teach at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design, Roger Williams University and the University of Rhode Island.[8]
In 2004 his interest in film as well as an ongoing focus on live music led Budnick to begin work on the feature-length documentary Wetlands Preserved: The Story of An Activist Rock Club.[9] Budnick directed the film, which utilized archival footage, soundboard recordings and the efforts of a dozen digital animators to relate the story of Tribeca nightclub Wetlands Preserve. The documentary also includes music and interviews with members of Dave Matthews, Bob Weir, Questlove and Warren Haynes as well as members of Phish, moe., Agnostic Front, 311, the Disco Biscuits and many others.[10] Wetlands Preserved, played at such festivals as SXSW, Woodstock and Asheville (where it won top documentary honors), was released to theatres by First Run Features on March 14, 2008.[11] The New York Times wrote, “Wetlands Preserved is a fond account of the rising, thriving and eventual closing of the TriBeCa club known as the Wetlands Preserve.”[12] Other positive reviews appeared in the New York Daily News,[13] Newsday[14] and other outlets. Wetlands Preserved was later acquired for television by the Sundance Channel [15]
While still a graduate student, Budnick wrote two books, The Phishing Manual (Hyperion, 1996) and Jam Bands (ECW Press, 1998).[16] In the summer of 1998, shortly before the publication of the second book, Budnick created Jambands.com along with webmaster Andy Gadiel (who would go on to create the JamBase website).[17] Budnick is often said to have coined the term jam band but in 2003, with the publication of an expanded edition of Jambands (Backbeat Books, 2003) he indicated it that he only popularized it, although he is responsible for recasting it as a single word.[18]
In 2000 Budnick created the Jammy Awards along with Wetlands owner Peter Shapiro.[19] The inaugural edition of this awards show took place at Irving Plaza on June 22, 2000 where Budnick co-hosted with the musician Peter Prince while wearing a tuxedo, a tradition Budnick would repeat at every Jammys. Over successive years the Jammys would move to Roseland Ballroom and then to the Theater at Madison Square Garden, where in its final installment in 2008, Phish received the Lifetime Achievement Award on the eve of the band’s announcement that it would return to the stage after a 4 year hiatus.
In 2001 Budnick also began an association with Relix Magazine, which acquired Jambands.com, where he now serves as Executive Editor.[20] Along with writing numerous feature stories, his other projects include the creation of the official Bonnaroo Music Festival daily newspaper, the Bonnaroo Beacon and event newspapers for the band Phish.[21]
In the fall of 2000 Budnick and Jefferson Waful began co-hosting the Jam Nation radio show. Jam Nation originated from WMRQ in Hartford, CT where it aired Sunday nights from 8-10PM.[22] Twice a month the show hosted a one hour electric performance from musical acts, with appearances by such groups as Derek Trucks Band, STS9, Galactic, Keller Williams and Umphrey’s McGee (for whom Waful would eventual become lighting director). Jam Nation was soon syndicated on the fledging XM Satellite network where it aired until 2009, ending its run following XM’s merger with SIRIUS.[23]