Los Angeles Times

Readin’, ’ritin’, rockin’

Grammy Museum, Grammy Foundation merging to focus on educationa­l programs.

- By Gerrick D. Kennedy

On a recent Friday evening, L.A. Live downtown was thick with action.

Music blared from a DJ booth as guests filed into the Microsoft Theater for an ESPN event. A casual basketball game was in full swing in the courtyard and jersey-clad Lakers fans descended on the complex.

Calmer was the Grammy Museum, L.A. Live’s headquarte­rs for the history of pop music.

Behind the scenes, however, executives have been working to transform the museum from a palace of interactiv­e exhibits, artifacts and intimate concerts into a leading educationa­l institutio­n.

The museum aims to expand its programmin­g in a

merger with the Recording Academy’s Grammy Foundation, bringing it closer to one of the charitable arms affiliated with the institutio­n responsibl­e for the yearly Grammy Awards.

The combined entity will be re-branded the Grammy Museum Foundation.

“When you look at what the mission of the Grammy Foundation was in its inception and the missions of the [museum] … there are a lot of goals and aspiration­s that are in alignment,” Recording Academy President Neil Portnow, said ahead of Monday’s announceme­nt. Chief among them: Both institutio­ns pair students with music profession­als, and the Grammy Foundation funds museum-like preservati­on efforts.

When the Grammy Museum launched in 2008, it did so with a 10-year financial commitment from AEG. A museum spokeswoma­n says AEG will continue to be “a significan­t resource for the ongoing financial stability of the museum” under the new structure.

“We’ve put ourselves in a position where we’re trying to create as much money as possible to do even more exhibits and expand its footprint outside of Los Angeles,” said Todd Goldstein, AEG’s chief revenue officer.

When the $34-million museum opened, it faced an uphill battle; tax documents show it has continued to struggle to operate without a deficit. It opened before many of the properties that now thrive in the complex, when foot traffic was scarce and the Great recession, resulted in staff cuts during its first year.

The newly expanded Grammy Museum Foundation was largely spearheade­d by the museum’s executive director Bob Santelli, who will now assume the title of founding executive director and focus on domestic and internatio­nal expansions. Scott Goldman, previously vice president of the Grammy Foundation and the Recording Academy’s MusiCares Foundation, will serve as executive director of the Grammy Museum.

Executives credit successes beyond L.A. — being selected by the White House to co-produce concerts and working with then-First Lady Michelle Obama on education programs, for example — with catapultin­g the museum’s profile.

The museum, heavy on interactiv­e exhibits, attracts about 135,000 visitors a year. Of course, Santelli would welcome more. “But,” he said, “the museum is designed for a lot of one-on-one experience­s … so that requires it to be a successful, smaller visitation than some of the big museums.”

“It’s not intended to be the cash cow,” Portnow offered. “It is about creating a cultural institutio­n.”

Aligning with the Grammy Foundation — which oversees the Recording Academy’s education and preservati­on efforts — will allow the museum to focus on expanding its curriculum-based initiative­s.

At a time when federal funding for the arts is imperiled, Grammy executives see doubling down on education as vital.

In the last year, the Grammy Foundation provided $300,000 in grants for research, archiving and preservati­on projects. The museum and foundation have served nearly 100,000 students.

“It’s time to move away from the things that have felt good and have been traditiona­l but really aren’t moving the needle,” said Portnow who hopes to see, “a more vibrant, more meaningful approach to music education. It’s important, especially when all of this is so much under fire — and in certain cases under attack on a government­al level.”

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