
Reflections in Pictures of Music Exchange #MEX24
Reflections in Pictures of Music Exchange #MEX24 held on 30th Nov 2024 at the Fire and Ice Hotel Cape Town. All photos by Simon Shiffman
Reflections in Pictures of Music Exchange #MEX24 held on 30th Nov 2024 at the Fire and Ice Hotel Cape Town. All photos by Simon Shiffman
TICKETS R150 EACH – BUY THEM ONLINE NOW The 14th edition of Music Exchange is a one-day conference jam-packed with stellar speakers. The conference welcome
We proudly announce we have secured another global Thought Leader flying in from the USA to attend and speak at this year’s Music Exchange Conference.
We proudly announce as a keynote speaker, the thought leader, investigative journalist and film writer/director/producer, Diana Neille, who will attend and deliver a keynote address
Meng Ru Kuok, Group CEO & Founder of Caldecott Music Group, to speak at #MEX23. Meng is a global
music industry investor and innovator spanning multiple sectors, including
digital (BandLab Technologies), media (NME Networks), and manufacturing and
retail (Vista Musical Instruments).
In a major coup for Cape Town the CEO for SAMRO is speaking at #MEX22 on Sat 5th Nov 2022. Mark Rosin is the Southern African Music Rights Organisation (SAMRO) Chief Executive Officer (CEO). Mark will speak about SAMRO and the Road map forward.
Lauded and awarded for its consistent commitment to the broader South African music industry, #MEX21 will run from 11 September to 2 October 2021, with a wealth of quality international and local speakers. Some of the topics #MEX21 will unpack, in detail, include our streaming reality, the platforms generating engagement (Ayoba) and driving artist’s incomes (SubmitHub), right through to the importance of heritage (MEX Chairman), the state of radio in South Africa (KFM), and just how artists are rebuilding and morphing in response to the pandemic (RJ Benjamin).
Originally published by IOL on 23 June 2020. “The landscape has changed irrevocably, and SA radio needs to decrease the amount of imported music it plays – that royalty income leaves our shores and is not productive for the local economy.”
Originally published by IOL on 23 June 2020. “The landscape has changed irrevocably, and SA radio needs to decrease the amount of imported music it plays – that royalty income leaves our shores and is not productive for the local economy.”
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