• Making Music Accessible to Performers with Disabilities with Arthur Gwynne of RAMPD

  • Aug 31 2024
  • Length: 30 mins
  • Podcast

Making Music Accessible to Performers with Disabilities with Arthur Gwynne of RAMPD

  • Summary

  • Joeita interviews Arthur Gwynne, operations manager at RAMPD, the Recording Artists and Music Professionals with Disabilities, about creating disability-inclusive spaces in the performing arts.

    Highlights

    • Disability Inclusion in the Performing Arts - Opening Remarks (00:00)
    • Introducing Arthur Gwynne – Head of Operations at RAMPD (01:11)
    • About RAMPD - Recording Artists and Music Professionals with Disabilities (01:38)
    • The Origins of RAMPD (03:11)
    • The RAMPD Community (07:48)
    • Disability Advocacy in the Music Industry (12:25)
    • Pushing the Boundaries of Art Itself (20:13)
    • Closing Remarks (26:08)

    RAMPD –

    Award-winning platform equipping the Music Industry with Disability inclusive solutions, programs, and a directory of peer-vetted music professionals and creators with disabilities, neurodivergence and chronic and mental health conditions.

    Find RAMPD online - Facebook, Instagram

    Arthur Gwynne Bio - from LinkedIn

    Arthur heads operations for the award-winning platform RAMPD (Recording Artists and Music Professionals with Disabilities) where he’s collaborated with the likes of Netflix and the Recording Academy to build inclusive programming. Arthur also manages the career of globally touring recording artist, charting songwriter and cultural activist Lachi—the go-to voice on Disability Culture in the music industry through her work on the GRAMMYs Board and as CEO of RAMPD. Throughout the course of this mission-work, Arthur stepped away from a career in executive recruitment, and opened up publicly about his own neurodiversity. Today Arthur runs a robust diverse team, booking national tours, negotiating major contracts, working everything from creative projects and music releases to development programs from cradle-to-grave.

    Arthur speaks on panels and podcasts—at places like the Kennedy Center and the Music Managers Forum—on how embracing one’s neurodivergence is an asset in the music industry. He has also made it his mission to break down the silos and barriers holding back the disability community, laying seeds for a national conversation on Disability Culture and what Inclusion and Universal Accessible Design means at a practical and industrial level. Beyond all of this, Arthur is Lachi’s stylist, and designs her iconic Glam Canes.

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    About AMI

    AMI is a not-for-profit media company that entertains, informs and empowers Canadians who are blind or partially sighted. Operating three broadcast services, AMI-tv and AMI-audio in English and AMI-télé in French, AMI’s vision is to establish and support a voice for Canadians with disabilities, representing their interests, concerns and values through inclusion, representation, accessible media, reflection, representation and portrayal.

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