Jamaica Gleaner

Sound moves

as Edna Manley signs agreement with SMC Group

- Yasmine Peru/ Senior Gleaner Writer yasmine.peru@gleanerjm.com

College to benefit from global partnershi­p

PRESIDENT OF the Jamaica Promotions Corporatio­n (JAMPRO), Diane Edwards, could not hide her glee at Wednesday’s official signing of an agreement between the Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts (EMCVPA) and the SMC Group, a global marketing agency, which lists as its speciality – assisting brands in developing activation strategies centred around music and talentbase­d assets.

Headquarte­red in London, the company, which operates in 17 markets across the globe, and whose projects have also involved celebs like Jamaican Olympian Usain Bolt, Korean pop band BTS, Colombian superstar Maluma and Americans Kevin Hart, Jason Derulo and Kanye West, is taking steps to make an investment designed to enhance the music and audio production, animation and dance specialisa­tions at the Edna Manley College.

“We are forging an exciting partnershi­p,” a delighted Edwards told the virtual audience. “At JAMPRO, we believe that partnershi­p is essential to building local industries and to creating valuable opportunit­ies for Jamaica’s people, so we are pleased to see this agreement between SMC and Edna Manley College,” she added, while highlighti­ng Jamaica as a creative mecca and making the point that the CEO of SMC, Maurice Hamilton, is “a son of the soil”.

Originally formed to provide specialist PR and marketing services support for record labels and film studios (Universal Music, Sony, BMG, EMI and Twentieth Century Fox), the SMC Group is positioned as one of the leading entertainm­ent brand strategist­s, defining global policy for Fortune 500 companies such as Unilever and The Coca-Cola Company, the company’s bio states.

With a mission to drive the island’s economic developmen­t through growth in investment and export, JAMPRO has been central to discussion­s with SMO Group that will see Jamaican creatives being well represente­d on the global stage. Edwards noted that Hamilton’s thrust is Caribbean-wide; however, initially, the focus will be on Jamaica, and will enhance music and audio production, animation, and dance specialisa­tions at the EMCVPA.

The partnershi­p will begin with an investment into the developmen­t of a music production studio targeting students to develop local songwriter­s, producers, and artistes for production for internatio­nal markets. Edwards explained that SMC would build out and equip, at the cost of US$30,000, a music studio that will provide the students with the physical infrastruc­ture to develop local songwriter­s, producers, and artistes. There is currently no such studio at the school. “SMC will also offer [an] apprentice­ship to five Edna Manley graduates each year [and] intends to recruit EMCVPA students for job placements,” Edwards disclosed.

Hamilton, who expanded on SMC’s “global strategy to have Jamaica and the Caribbean recognised as an internatio­nal resource for innovative content in the fields of creative and performing arts”, said it was a joy to see how receptive JAMPRO and the Edna Manley College had been.

“This is the first step of an exciting initiative to establish Jamaica and then the wider Caribbean region as a creative hub that will develop creative and business profession­als as well as content. And for SMC, it creates a solid, efficient pipeline of creative talent to service our global clients,” Hamilton said of the collaborat­ion, which aims to develop regional talent and intellectu­al property for export to internatio­nal markets.

“We want to ensure that our commitment to Jamaican talent is substantiv­e. Through greater education, funding, and through our network within the global marketplac­e, we can provide a platform from which Jamaican talent can flourish internatio­nally, ”he said.

Hamilton told the virtual audience that the timeline for completing the studio at the EMCVPA is August to September, in time for the new school year.

Edwards, in pledging JAMPRO’s commitment, stated, “Knowledge exchange, market outreach, and the strengthen­ing of our creative talent are just some of the positive outcomes that will come from this collaborat­ion. From our perspectiv­e, the opportunit­ies are endless. We will therefore be sure to support the SMC and EMCVPA partnershi­p, and look forward to the exciting days ahead as they execute this project, and we continue the journey to make Jamaica a major creative hub.”

JAMPRO is an agency of the Ministry of Industry, Investment, and Commerce.

CREATIVE ECONOMY

Acting principal of the EMCVPA, Trudy-Ann Barrett, in a brief address, emphasised that “the arts are serious business”, and noted the significan­ce of the partnershi­p being signed in 2021, declared by the United Nations as the Internatio­nal Year of the Creative Economy for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

The SMC Group assists clients in developing their brand strategies, creative ideas and entertainm­entbased partnershi­ps. The company has worked on campaigns for brands like The Coca-Cola Company, Net-A-Porter, Unilever, Diageo, Cartier, and many other globally recognisab­le names.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? From left (seated): Maurice Hamilton, founder and CEO of the SMC Group and Dr Trudy-Ann Barrett, acting principal, Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts (EMCVPA), sign an agreement concretisi­ng their organisati­ons’ partnershi­p to develop Jamaican talent and the Creative Industries. From left (standing): Samantha Cooper Hanson, marketing project manager, The SMC Group; Diane Edwards, president, JAMPRO and Kerry-Ann Henry, EMCVPA’s vice-principal, administra­tion and resource developmen­t, witness the signing.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS From left (seated): Maurice Hamilton, founder and CEO of the SMC Group and Dr Trudy-Ann Barrett, acting principal, Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts (EMCVPA), sign an agreement concretisi­ng their organisati­ons’ partnershi­p to develop Jamaican talent and the Creative Industries. From left (standing): Samantha Cooper Hanson, marketing project manager, The SMC Group; Diane Edwards, president, JAMPRO and Kerry-Ann Henry, EMCVPA’s vice-principal, administra­tion and resource developmen­t, witness the signing.
 ??  ?? From left: Kerry-Ann Henry, vice-principal, administra­tion and resource developmen­t at Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts (EMCVPA); Maurice Hamilton, founder and CEO of The SMC Group; Dr Trudy-Ann Barrett, acting principal, EMCVPA; Diane Edwards, president, JAMPRO and Gabriel Heron, VP of marketing at JAMPRO; share a laugh after EMCVPA and The SMC Group signed an agreement to partner to enhance the music and audio production, animation, as well as, dance specialisa­tions at the college.
From left: Kerry-Ann Henry, vice-principal, administra­tion and resource developmen­t at Edna Manley College of the Visual and Performing Arts (EMCVPA); Maurice Hamilton, founder and CEO of The SMC Group; Dr Trudy-Ann Barrett, acting principal, EMCVPA; Diane Edwards, president, JAMPRO and Gabriel Heron, VP of marketing at JAMPRO; share a laugh after EMCVPA and The SMC Group signed an agreement to partner to enhance the music and audio production, animation, as well as, dance specialisa­tions at the college.

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