Skip to content
Government Federal, Music

BluesFest to appear at live music hearing

House of Representatives < 1 min read

The festival director of Byron Bay’s BluesFest will today appear before the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Communications and the Arts as it continues its public hearings for its inquiry into the Australian live music industry.

The hearing will host a roundtable with ongoing festivals ranging from small community events to large self-sustaining multi-day festivals. The Committee will also speak with Century, a long-established venue and event management business serving clients in Sydney metro and Newcastle.

Mr Paul Mason, a live music industry consultant who has a range of experience in the Australian music sector—both in artist project management, business planning and production, will also front the Committee.

The Committee will receive an update from Victorian not-for-profit youth music advocacy organisation ‘The Push’, which supports young Victorians to participate in contemporary Australian music. The Push will appear alongside the Australia Institute to discuss the release of its most recent research report into young Australian music audiences.

The hearing will conclude with a youth music and all-ages-event roundtable.

The Chair, Mr Brian Mitchell MP, said ‘the Committee looks forward to delving into the issues that have impacted iconic Australian festivals such as BluesFest’.

Details of the public hearings are below, with the full programs and terms of reference available on the inquiry webpage. More information about the Committee, including membership, may be found on the Committee’s website.

Public hearing details

Date: Thursday, 17 October 2024
Time: 9:40 am – 3:00 pm AEDT
Location: Australian Parliament House, Committee Room 2R1

This hearing will be broadcast live @AUSParliamentLive .

Media inquiries

Mr Brian Mitchell MP, Committee Chair
[email protected]
03 6398 1115

For background information

Committee Secretariat
[email protected]
02 6277 2126

More from this category

  • Environment, Government Federal
  • 13/03/2026
  • 10:31
Battery Stewardship Council - B-cycle

$2.1b battery recycling sector critical to Australia’s sovereign capability

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 13 MARCH 2025 $2.1b battery recycling sector critical to Australia’s sovereign capability Industry urges national battery stewardship framework Australia’s battery materials recovery ecosystem already contributes $2.1 billion to the economy each year, supports 19,450 jobs, and includes more than 45 facilities nationwide, according to a new industry profile released by the Association for the Battery Recycling Industry (ABRI). The sector is projected to grow to $6.9 billion and 34,650 jobs by 2050. Battery Stewardship Council CEO Libby Chaplin said these figures demonstrate why battery stewardship should be recognised as a strategic industrial priority, not simply a waste…

  • Energy, Government Federal
  • 13/03/2026
  • 07:00
Rewiring Australia

BULLI MEDIA ALERT: Federal MPs welcome expansion of home electrification pilot

MEDIA ALERT: Federal MPs welcome expansion of home electrification pilot Who: Assistant Minister for Energy, Josh Wilson MP, Member for Fremantle Ms Alison Byrnes MP, Member for Cunningham Dr. Saul Griffith, Co-founder and Chief Scientist, Rewiring Australia Jennifer Macey (householder) What: Doorstop with opportunity for interviews When: Friday 13 March, 3pm Where: 11 Beattie Ave, Bulli, NSW The Story: Bulli locals can now team up with their neighbours to cut power bills and modernise their homes as part of an expansion to an ambitious community-driven electrification push underway in the NSW Illawarra led by Rewiring Australia. Households in the 2515…

  • Finance Investment, Government Federal
  • 13/03/2026
  • 06:01
ACOSS

South Australia benefits far less than eastern states from capital gains tax discount

People in South Australia receive the third-lowest benefit from the capital gains tax (CGT) discount in the nation, while wealthy electorates in Sydney and Melbourne benefit the most, new ACOSS analysis shows. South Australia receives just 4% of national expenditure on the CGT concession, worth around $992m per year, an average of just $907 per person, with only Tasmania and the Northern Territory benefitting less. It receives less than half the average per person benefit received by New South Wales. The electorate of Sturt benefits the most in South Australia but is still ranked only 31st nationally, receiving $193 million…

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.