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MIRES: from EU project for music industry roadmap to global Music Tech Festival

As part of the EU-funded scientific project MIRES, INESC TEC has participated in the development of a roadmap about the future of music technology research. INESC TEC is the only Portuguese partner involved in the project. The roadmap is available at http://www.mires.cc/files/MIRES_Roadmap_ver_1.0.0.pdf. Due to its innovative features, this initiative has been highlighted by the European Commission, more specifically at the official webpage of Neelie Kroes, Vice President of the European Commission. The Music Tech Fest, one of the most important results of this project, was launched in London in 2012. In 2014, the event will take place in various cities, such as Wellington, Boston, Berlin, Paris and New York.

An EU-funded initiative for creating a European music industry roadmap has led to a series of music technology events around the world. Five ‘Music Tech Fest’ events have already been held and 13 more are scheduled for the coming year, covering eight countries and drawing hundreds of participants.

Music touches everyone, and MIRES project organisers say the Music Tech Fest is galvanising the world of music technology, drawing global recording labels and high-tech companies, start-ups and innovative SMEs, new and established performers, young innovators and hackers, designers and academics.

‘The field of Music Information Retrieval (MIR) has tended to centre on the analysis of sound signal, for the purpose of more efficient search and faster access to digital collections of recorded music,’ explains Michela Magas, coordinator of MIRES project and founder of Music Tech Fest.

Magas says the advent of web-based social networks has created a dynamic global market for digital music, collateral services and new user behaviour, with significant challenges and opportunities for commercial exploitation.

‘Our aim was to create an EU Roadmap for Music Information Research,’ she says, ‘to address major challenges, formulate research evaluation standards for the discipline, and open the field to cross-disciplinary collaboration.’

Workshops were to be a part of the project, allowing a meeting of minds between artists and scientists, industry and academia. The end result was a ‘festival of music ideas’, a creative platform for the free exchange of ideas, without jargon from individual fields of activity.

As soon as Music Tech Fest had a website, interest exploded. ‘The numbers of participants grew daily, and we soon realised that our budget was too low,’ Magas says. ‘So we got matching funding from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), and my company, Stromatolite, invested substantially in the event.’ The MIRES project, which was completed in March 2013, had also received EUR 573 000 of funding under the EU’s Framework Programme 7 (FP7).

Unprecedented success for an EU project

The Music Tech Fest was launched in London in 2012, uniting major players like Soundcloud, Spotify, Shazam, EMI Music and the BBC, innovative labels like Ninja Tune and Warp, tech media like WIRED, great performers and a large number of innovative startups.

‘In 2014 we are going global,’ says Magas, ‘from Wellington to Boston, Berlin, Paris and New York.’ The flagship event in London is now part of the official autumn season of the Barbican LSO St Luke’s, in partnership with the London Symphony Orchestra, and in 2015 the festival will come to the brilliant Umeå campus in Scandinavia, and to São Paulo, Los Angeles and Amsterdam.

While the astounding triumph of Music Tech Fest has been an unexpected result the MIRES initiative, the original goal of creating a European Roadmap has also been successfully achieved. ‘The final roadmap document has had a notable impact on the global MIR research community,’ she says, ’contributing to the establishment of music production and digital library management standards.’ It has laid also out a framework for an MIR excellence network, involving drivers and stakeholders in the field.

Some of the activities being promoted by MIRES might sound rather abstract and academic, but there is really much more at stake. The Music Tech Fest academic community has launched the ‘Manifesto for Music Technology Research’, highlighting the importance of these activities for all citizens and fields of study, and intellectual property policy debates.

‘The intersection of music and technology profoundly impacts upon the well-being, culture and creative experience of all citizens,’ Magas says, ‘while Music Tech Fest’s wide reach enables us to encourage new economic directions, new business models and new venture ideas.’

The project gathered 7 partners from 5 countries, MTG, STROMATOLITE, OFAIINESCP, IRCAM , C4DM and BMAT

Link to project on CORDIS

Link to project's website

Joana Ferreira
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