Skip to content
Government Federal, Music

Inquiry into the challenges and opportunities within the Australian live music industry

Department of the House of Representatives < 1 mins read

The House of Representatives Standing Committee on Communications and the Arts has today released a report, Am I Ever Gonna See You Live Again?, following its inquiry into the challenges and opportunities within the Australian live music industry.

Over the course of the inquiry, the Committee held 18 public hearings in Canberra, Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth, and received many submissions from a wide range of stakeholders, including all levels of government, artists, broadcasters, promoters, venues, festivals, service providers and peak industry bodies.

Committee Chair Brian Mitchell, the Federal MP for Lyons in Tasmania, said the inquiry’s recommendations, if taken up by Government, would help ensure a strong and sustainable future for live music in Australia.

'It was clear to us that many people across the country are doing a lot of work on live music,' Mr Mitchell said.

'There was broad agreement about the myriad challenges and a lot of good ideas about how to grasp the opportunities of a fast-changing technological landscape.

'Our Committee hasn’t sought to reinvent the wheel, but rather bring all that work and evidence together in a report and a set of recommendations that are practical and achievable.'

The report is being tabled in the parliament out of session and can be found on the Committee’s webpage on the Commonwealth Parliament’s website.

Media inquiries

Mr Brian Mitchell MP, Committee Chair
Brian.Mitchell.MP@aph.gov.au
03 6398 1115

For background information

Committee Secretariat
Communication.reps@aph.gov.au
02 6277 2126

 

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 22/03/2025
  • 09:16
Consumers Health Forum

Half a million Australians missing out on cheaper medicines due to outdated systems

Half a million Australians missing out on cheaper medicines due to outdated systems Nearly half a million eligible Australians are missing out on cheaper medicines due to an outdated manual tracking system that should be automated. The Consumers Health Forum of Australia (CHF) is calling for urgent automation of the PBS Safety Net system after it was revealed 495,865 people who qualified for the benefits in 2024 missed out due to the current paper-based tracking system. This means almost half a million people are paying more than they should for essential medicine, paying full price for medication when they should…

  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Government Federal
  • 21/03/2025
  • 12:58
ACOSS

ACOSS demands removal of whole Targeted Compliance Framework after damning Government revelations

ACOSS is demanding the urgent removal of the whole Targeted Compliance Framework due to shocking revelations of massive Government failure and potential illegality in the administration of income support payments affecting tens of thousands of people. The Department of Employment and Workplace Relations has today revealed it has paused several additional penalty measures under the TCF due to serious legal and operational failures impacting over 10,000 people. This follows previous decisions by the DEWR Secretary to pause a number of other penalty measures. The new administrative failures identified affect over ten times as many people as previously known and call…

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 20/03/2025
  • 09:29
Consumers Health Forum of Australia

Consumer Health Forum welcomes PBS price cut for essential medicines

The Consumers Health Forum of Australia (CHF) has welcomed today’s announcement, with bipartisan support, to reduce the maximum co-payment under the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) to $25 from January 2026. CHF CEO Dr Elizabeth Deveny said this measure, which CHF has long called for, is a step towards alleviating cost pressures, with the price cut bringing meaningful relief to millions. “This is a major win for Australian health consumers and something CHF has consistently advocated for,” Dr Deveny said. “Every dollar matters when people are choosing between food, bills and essential medication, and this is a significant win for health…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.