The Commodores, Take 6 and American
Idol Stars Deliver More Than 33,000 Petition Signatures on Capitol Hill to
Support Music Education
PR Newswire, March 10, 2005
http://www.prnewswire.com
Last night at a special Congressional reception to support music education,
Grammy(R) Award-winning artists The Commodores, Take 6 and American Idol stars
Justin Guarini, Diana DeGarmo and John Stevens presented more than
33,000 petition signatures signed by teens across America who want music in
their schools. The evening culminated in a special performance by these
legendary and emerging recording artists for members of Congress, their staff
and families.
(Photo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20050310/NYTH141 )
The celebration capped a full day on Capitol Hill for representatives of NAMM,
the International Music Products Association, the American Music Conference (AMC),
SupportMusic.com, The Commodores, Take 6 and the American Idol stars who spent
the day visiting lawmakers on Capitol Hill to help bring much-needed attention
to the benefits of music education and music making for children and teens.
"According to the Music Education Coalition, it's estimated that the current
round of budget cuts will deprive as many as 30 million students of an education
that includes music," says
Justin Guarini. "That's more than 60 percent of those enrolled in grades
K-12 nationwide. That statistic is incredibly unfortunate, because we know first
hand that kids who study music do better in school and in life. This petition
reinforces the fact that kids want and need music in their schools."
"Hundreds of thousands of kids are losing the opportunity to participate in
school music programs because of drastic budget cuts in arts programs," added
Joe Lamond, President and CEO of NAMM, which promotes music, music research and
music education. "Music education offers too many benefits to developing minds
for this issue to go unnoticed. We need to give kids the opportunity to have a
well-rounded education, and we need to empower more of them and their parents to
voice their concerns."
The petition to Congress on behalf of music education got its start in June
2002, when Justin Timberlake broke the news on MTV's Total Request Live. Since
then, TEEN PEOPLE magazine, NAMM and AMC's free web resource for teens,
themusicedge.com, have encouraged and empowered thousands of young people to get
engaged in civic involvement and add their names alongside celebrities like Clay
Aiken, Nick Lachey, Sean Paul, JC Chasez, Nick Cannon, Yellowcard, Amber Tamblyn,
Ashlee Simpson, Pharrell Williams, Samaire Armstrong and Adam Brody.
During the month of March, NAMM advances national efforts to increase awareness
and support for music as vital to a quality education for all children. NAMM
urges parents, children, educators and community officials to support music
education in schools by visiting
http://www.amc-music.org/
. Information on building local advocacy efforts for music education is also
available at
http://www.supportmusic.com/ , a public service and grassroots advocacy
initiative from the Music Education Coalition.
About NAMM
The International Music Products Association, commonly called NAMM in reference to the organization's popular NAMM trade shows, is the not-for- profit association that unifies, leads and strengthens the $16 billion global musical instruments and products industry. The association's activities and programs are designed to promote music making to people of all ages. NAMM is comprised of nearly 9,000 Member companies. For more information about NAMM, interested parties can visit http://www.namm.com/ or call 800-767-NAMM (6266).
About AMC
Founded in 1947, AMC is a national non-profit educational association dedicated to promoting the importance of music, music-making and music education to the general public. For more information on the American Music Conference, go to http://www.amc-music.org/ .
About SupportMusic.com
SupportMusic.com is an easy-to-use resource offering information about how
parents and community members can work to ensure that music is an integral part
of a quality education for all children. The site focuses on reaching parents
and teachers who are facing massive school music program cuts while providing
the tools and information needed to take action on behalf of their children's
education and future.
CONTACT: Ann-Marie Nieves of Giles Communications, +1-914-798-4114,
anieves@giles.com , for
NAMM, the International Music Products Association
Web site: http://www.namm.com/
http://www.amc-music.org/
http://www.supportmusic.com/
SOURCE NAMM, the International Music Products Association
URL:
http://www.prnewswire.com