Winter Music Conference

Winter Music Conference
Genre Electronic music
Dates March 24–28, 2015
Location(s) Miami, Florida, United States
Years active 1985–present
Website
wintermusicconference.com

The Winter Music Conference (WMC) is a weeklong electronic music conference, held every March since 1985 in Miami Beach, Florida, United States.[1] The conference brings together professionals such as artists, DJs, record label representatives (A&R), producers, promoters, radio and the media for seminars and panel discussions.[1] Thousands of attendees attend the Winter Music Conference each year.[1]

History and background

The conference is spread across various locations in Miami.

It was founded in 1985 by then DJs and record pool directors Louis Possenti and Bill Kelly. Held annually in Miami Beach, Florida, the Winter Music Conference, or "WMC" as followers of electronic dance music call it, hosts around 100,000 people. The first Winter Music Conference took place at the Fort Lauderdale Marriott February 19–21, 1986 with approximately 80 dance music industry insiders in attendance. The event festivities are presented across Miami Beach and Downtown Miami. A major event is the International Dance Music Awards. The event commands a major international draw with around 38% of attendees coming from outside the United States.[2] The conference serves as a platform for many underground and indie artists from over 70 different countries who spend the conference at events and panels; it is also a medium used by several entrepreneurs and consumer electronic companies to present their businesses and technological developments.[2]

The WMC & The Recording Academy began in 1996 - a partnership presenting The Producers Forum, a gathering of legendary artists.[3] Waxpoetics Magazine, JBL, and Stanton sponsored the first International Record Collectors Show in 2007.[2] The WMC 2009 introduced the first annual WMC VJ Challenge at The Miami Beach Resort & Spa with celebrity hosts, judges, and VJs from various parts of the world hosted by VJ Psyberpxie and Felix Sama.[3] This inaugural year of the competition resulted in Sergey Lobodln (Moscow, Russia), walking away with the top winner prize.[4] In 2010, the VJ Challenge was expanded into two areas of competition; Video Mixing and Audio/Visual Mixing. The 2010 VJ Challenge winners were AeonChild (Boulder, Colorado) in the video category and Eclectic Method (London/NYC) in the Audio/Visual category.[5] The Miami Beach Resort also received the performance of the RoboMusic Demo in which Funkstar De Luxe and RoboProfessor (Henrik Hautop Lund) create live interactive compositions of RoboMusic.

Since 2008, the conference has received increasing competition from the International Music Summit taking place in Ibiza in May.

Demographics

Countries with no color in the map were not part of the participant countries in 2008.

The WMC is recognized for serving around 60,000 visitors during one week. In 2008, 3,726 industry delegates attended, 65% of the present were males and 35% were females. Most of the delegates hailed from the United States summing up to 62%, 23% came from Europe, the Latin American community formed 4% of the delegates, Canada with 6% and 1% of Asia and other territories.[6]

At the events and panels, 15% of the professionals in 2008 were record label representatives, publishers, and A&R. The press and media formed 13% close to the 12% of music production specialists, 10% were DJs, 8% being artists as well. Event and concert promoters, managers, agents, and consultants added up to 13% of the present. Radio, venue, club, an bar representatives each listed 5% of the visitors.[6] More than 1.3 million people from 183 countries (out of 192 in the world) viewed the WMC website in 2008. 62,000 participants from 70 countries were present at Miami Beach to get involved in the WMC week.[7]

Events

There are over 500 individual events during the week the conference takes place. Because of its large extent and popularity, The New York Times named it "one of the most anticipated clubbing events in the country".[2]

  • WMC Seminars & Panels
  • Ultra Music Festival
  • The International Record Collectors Show (since 2007)
  • South Beach Sessions (since 2008)
  • International Dance Music Awards (IDMA)
  • The Producers Forum (since 1996)
  • WMC Demo Listening Workshops
  • WMC/DMC DJ Spin-off
  • WMC On-Site Featured Events

  • WMC Exhibits
  • WMC Official and Sanctioned Events
  • WMC Sample Sack
  • The Guide
  • The List
  • Exhibit Hall
  • WMC technology demonstrations
  • WMC VJ Challenge (since 2009)

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Winter Music Conference.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Duran, Jose D. (2013-03-14). "How Russell Faibisch Built Ultra Music Festival -- and Whom He's Battled Along the Way". Miami New Times. Retrieved 2015-01-31.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "WMC: General Facts". Winter Music Conference. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
  3. "WMC: Events: VJ Challenge". Winter Music Conference. Retrieved 2010-07-15.
  4. "2010 WMC VJ Challenge". Winter Music Conference. Retrieved 2010-07-15.
  5. 1 2 "WMC: Demographics". Winter Music Conference. Retrieved 2009-03-29.
  6. "WMC: Global Reach". Winter Music Conference. Retrieved 2009-03-29.

External links

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