Dean Budnick

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Dean Budnick is an American writer, filmmaker, college professor and radio host who focuses on music, film and popular culture. He grew up in East Greenwich, Rhode Island.[1] As of September 2013, he is Relix's Editor-in-Chief along with Mike Greenhaus.[2]

Dean Budnick delivers keynote at 2012 International Music Festival Conference

Ticket Masters

In April 2012, Plume/Penguin published the revised, expanded edition of Budnick's latest book, Ticket Masters: The Rise of the Concert Industry and How the Public Got Scalped in North America and the U.K.[3] ECW Press issued the original hardcover edition of the book, co-authored with Josh Baron, in 2011.[4] Ticket Masters 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, the efforts of numerous independent competitors and bands such as the Grateful Dead,[5] The String Cheese Incident[6] and Phish.[7] 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."[8] Similar assessments appeared in Rolling Stone,[9] Maclean's,[10] Pollstar[11] and other outlets.[12] A revised expanded paperback edition was published by Plume in 2012.[13] Budnick has gone to on to deliver keynotes about the subject at numerous industry events, including: the Ticket Summit,[14] the International Ticketing Association Conference (INTIX),[15] the IAVM Arena Management Conference[16] and the International Music Festival Conference.[17] He continues to write about ticketing and the concert industry for publications such as Relix[18] and The Hollywood Reporter.[19]

Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle

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.[20] Budnick happened upon such accounts (as well as those related to the "Swedish Nightingale" Jenny Lind), while writing his doctoral dissertation on Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle.[21] 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.[22] "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 PhD in 2000 and his dissertation committee consisted of Henry Louis Gates, Werner Sollors and Ellen Fitzpatrick.[23]

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.[24]

Wetlands Preserved

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.[25] 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[26] The documentary also includes music and interviews with Dave Matthews, Bob Weir, Questlove and Warren Haynes as well as members of Phish, moe., Agnostic Front, 311, the Disco Biscuits and many others.[27] 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.[28] 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."[29] Other positive reviews appeared in the New York Daily News,[30] Newsday[31] and other outlets.[32] Wetlands Preserved was later acquired for television by the Sundance Channel[33]

Jambands, the Jammy Awards and Relix

While still a graduate student, Budnick wrote two books, The Phishing Manual (Hyperion, 1996)[34] and Jam Bands (ECW Press, 1998).[35] 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).[36] 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.[37]

During the summer of 1999 Budnick produced the Jambands.com tour, which traveled from Maine to Maryland over two weeks and featured performances by such groups as: The Disco Biscuits, The Slip, STS9, Deep Banana Blackout and Percy Hill with special appearances by Allman Brothers Band members Butch Trucks and Oteil Bubridge[38] (Budnick later served as board member for Trucks' Flying Frog Records).[39] In 2000 Budnick created the Jammy Awards along with Wetlands owner Peter Shapiro.[40] 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.[41] Over successive years the Jammys would move to Roseland Ballroom[42] and then to the Theater at Madison Square Garden,[43] 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.[44]

In 2001 Budnick also began his ongoing association with Relix Magazine, which acquired Jambands.com.[45] His Relix cover stories have included profiles of Phish,[46] Phil Lesh and Bob Weir,[47] Eric Clapton and Steve Winwood[48] The Allman Brothers Band,[49] Zac Brown Band,[50] Tenacious D,[51] Warren Haynes,[52] moe.,[53] Grace Potter & The Nocturnals,[54] a H.O.R.D.E. Retrospective[55] and Dave Matthews Band.[56] In his role at Relix he created the official Bonnaroo Music Festival daily newspaper, the Bonnaroo Beacon[57] and event newspapers for Phish's festivals.[58] He also programmed the Live Soundtrack Cinema at the inaugural Lockn' Festival, a film tent that designed to "unite the musical side with the visual side by having the audio feed from the stage playing as specifically-selected features, shorts and animated films that complement the music are screened."[59] In September 2013, he was named Editor-in-Chief at Relix, sharing the role with Mike Greenhaus.[60]

Jam Nation Radio

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.[61] 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).[62] 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.[63]

Notes

  1. Philip Eil "Concert tickets: how the public got scalped," The Providence Phoenix, April 12, 2012
  2. "Editor's note" Relix October/November 2013
  3. Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Library and Archives
  4. Bill Baars,"Ticket Masters: The Rise of the Concert Industry and How the Public Got Scalped," Library Journal May 1, 2011
  5. Blair Jackson "Ticket Bastards" Blair's Golden Road Blog, Dead.net August 24, 2011
  6. Benjy Eisen "String Cheese Incident Stage Ticketing Coup at the Greek" Rolling Stone May 19, 2012
  7. Greg Barbrick "Book Review: Ticket Masters: The Rise Of The Concert Industry And How The Public Got Scalped," Seattle Post Intelligencer, June 9, 2011
  8. Ken Kurson "Rock 'n' Roll's Real Gatekeepers" Wall Street Journal May 28, 2010
  9. Andy Greene "Where Did All The Concert Tickets Go? New Book Explains" Rolling Stone June 9, 2011
  10. Chris Sorensen, "Review: Ticket Masters: The Rise of the Concert Industry and How the Public Got Scalped " Maclean’s June 17, 2011
  11. Gary Bongiovanni "Ticket Truths" Pollstar June 14, 2011
  12. Dave Moyer "Ticket Masters: The Rise of the Concert Industry and How the Public Got Scalped," New York Journal of Books June 1, 2011 , Greg Barbrick "Book Review: Ticket Masters: The Rise Of The Concert Industry And How The Public Got Scalped by Dean Budnick and Josh Baron," Blogcritics.org
  13. Benjy Eisen "'Ticket Masters' Q&A: Greedy Artists, StubHub and How to Fight Back," Spinner July 5, 2012
  14. Allison Reitz "'Ticket Masters': Dean Budnick and Josh Baron explore concert, ticket industries," TicketNews July 21, 2011
  15. "Dean Budnick Delivers Closing Keynote" INTIX news
  16. "AMC 2012: A winning ticket" Your IAVM News
  17. Marjana Jaidi "What Makes a Great Festival? Dean Budnick's IMFCON Keynote," Cultivora December 10, 2012
  18. Dean Budnick and Josh Baron "Soapbox: Voting With Your Feet (How To Combat High Ticket Prices)," Relix September 2011
  19. Dean Budnick "Can the Concert Industry Survive After Mick Jagger and Madonna Retire?" The Hollywood Reporter February 7, 2013 , Dean Budnick "How StubHub Helped Ticket Scalping Go Legit" February 7, 2013 , Dean Budnick "Torn This Way: Losses From Lady Gaga's Hip Injury-Prompted Canceled Tour Could Top $25 Million" The Hollywood Reporter February 16, 2013
  20. Shirley Halperin "Author Dean Budnick Talks 'Ticket Masters: The Rise of the Concert Industry'” May 18, 2011, Billboard.com
  21. Lesley Riva "Sold Out! Or why it costs $137 to see Paul McCartney at Fenway Park…" RWU Magazine Spring 2012
  22. Marc Allan "Scholar Gets into Jammin'," Indianapolis Star, November 8, 1998
  23. Major Publications of Graduates of the History of American Civilization Program
  24. Rick Massimo "Box Office Battles," Providence Journal July 12, 2011
  25. “indieWIRE INTERVIEW ‘Wetlands Preserved’ Director Dean Budnick,” Indiewire.com, March 12, 2008
  26. Kyle Anderson "Wetlands Preserved" Celebrates Music, Activism, Stoned Rock Stars" Rolling Stone April 22, 2008 , Alexandra Bullen "Interview with Wetlands Preserved Director Dean Budnick," Identity Theory April 4, 2008
  27. John W Barry The Poughkeepsie Journal October 10, 2006,Stewart Oksenhorn "Wetlands Preserved' — as is the music," The Aspen Times April 23, 2008
  28. Wetlands Preserved Firstrunfeatures.com
  29. Jeannette Catsoulis "Remembering a Home for Music and Activism," New York Times March 14, 2008
  30. Elizabeth Weitzman "Wetlands Preserved," New York Daily News March 14, 2008
  31. Rafer Guzman "Wetlands Preserved," Newsday, March 20, 2008
  32. "Wetlands Preserved: The Story of an Activist Nightclub" Rotten Tomatoes
  33. Wetlands Preserve”, Sundance Channel Film Index
  34. Brooke Donovan "Doctor of Phishography," Harvard Magazine January 1997 , Marc Allan, "'Phishing Manual' big catch for fans" Indianapolis Star May 20, 1997
  35. Andy Smith "Enthusiasm for jam translates into guide," Providence Journal, January 14, 1999
  36. Sarah Rodman "Making that move to find a groove; Hopkinton author jams bands into improvisational, funky rock guide" Boston Herald October 29, 1998
  37. Philip Booth "Jambands: The Complete Guide to the Players, Music & Scene" Journal of Popular Culture Vol. 38 Issue 6. p.574, Dean Budnick Jambands: The Complete Guide to the Players, Music & Scene, Backbeat Books, 2003
  38. Dean Budnick "Tale of the T" Jambands.com August 5, 2007
  39. The Minds Behind Flying Frog Records
  40. "Friend of a Friend of the Devil: The Jammy Awards" MTV.com June 23, 2000
  41. Janene Otten "The Jammys: A Photo Gallery" Jambands.com July 2000
  42. Jon Pareles "What's Strong and Sweet As Fresh Homemade Jam?" New York Times October 5, 2002 , Jon Wiederhorn "Me'Shell Ndegeocello, Les Claypool To Perform at Jammys" June 6, 2001 MTV.com
  43. Jon Pareles "A Night To Honor Bands That Jam" New York Times March 18, 2004
  44. "Jammy Awards Reunite Phish, For A Moment" Billboard May 8, 2008
  45. Melinda Newman "Jam Bands Weather Economic Uncertainty With Ingenuity and Loyal Fans," Washington Post August 9, 2009, Blake Gernstetter "Relix Remix: Music Mag Relaunches Under New Ownership" Mediabistro.com, May 4, 2009
  46. Dean Budnick "Phish 3.0" Relix June 2009
  47. Dean Budnick "Dead Behind, Furthur Ahead" Relix March 2011
  48. Dean Budnick "Eric Clapton and Steve Winwood: Faith Renewed" Relix April–May 2008
  49. Dean Budnick "The High Cost of Low Living" Relix June 2003
  50. Dean Budnick "Everywhere Is Southern Ground" Relix July/August 2013
  51. Dean Budnick "Let It D" Relix November 2006
  52. Dean Budnick "Papa's Got A Brand New Bag" Relix December 2011
  53. Dean Budnick "Still Buzzing The Tower" Relix August 2010
  54. Dean Budnick "Grace Potter & The Nocturnals: Savage Dreamers" Relix December 2012
  55. Dean Budnick "H.O.R.D.E.: 20 Years Later" Relix April–May 2012
  56. Dean Budnick "Listener Supported" Relix October–November 2002
  57. Jon Busdeker "You can't see everything," The Huntsville Times June 14, 2008
  58. Seth Schiesel "A Musical Theme Park for 60,000," New York Times, August 7, 2003
  59. "Lockn' aims for collaborations to create extraordinary event" Examiner.com September 3, 2013
  60. "Editor's note" Relix October/November 2013
  61. Art Howard "Radio Rebels: 6 shows that bring jambands to the airwaves,” Relix May–June 2002
  62. Art Howard "Radio Rebels: 6 shows that bring jambands to the airwaves" Relix May–June 2002
  63. Dean Budnick "Jam Nation," Jambands.com, November 28, 2005 , Dean Budnick "Live from Jam Nation, Redux," Jambands.com, January 1, 2010
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