DIGITAL ENT. WORLD EXPO TAPS JIMMY DUNNE AS FEATURED SPEAKER

Inspire President Jimmy Dunne has been tapped as a featured presenter at the upcoming Digital Entertainment World Expo, held in Los Angeles, California.

The Digital Entertainment World Expo is a leading global music conference, featuring many of the most celebrated thought-leaders around the globe; including, Jimmy Chamberlin (The Smashing Pumpkins), Jason Feinberg (Pandora), Kevin Charnett (Live Nation), Jennifer Prince (Twitter), Mark Caplan (Sony Pictures Entertainment),  Jesse Uram (Creative Artists Agency), Thom Gruhler (Microsoft), Ralf Jacob (Verizon), Kevin Mayer (Walt Disney Company), Christopher Harrison (Sirius XM Radio Inc.), Leslie Berland (American Express) and many more.

Jimmy will be presenting The Future of Art & Commerce on Thursday, February 11th, 2016.

For more information please visit:

http://www.dewexpo.com/speakers/jimmy-dunne/

MUSIC SUPERVISOR FOR NEW FORM DIGITAL STUDIO

new form ronNew Form Digital is a video distribution and production studio — with principals Ron Howard, Brian Grazer, Ed Wilson (Fox), and Jim Wiatt (William Morris), and backed by Discovery.

With 16 projects currently slated, New Form Digital has tapped Inspire as their Music House — providing music-related services; including curating composers and songs for its projects.

“We’re honored to partner with New Form Digital — and we’re excited about exploring new ways to infuse scoring and songs into contemporary shows,” said Jimmy Dunne, President of Inspire.

Inspire’s current projects include New Form’s “Do Over,” “Miss Earth,” and “Mr. Student Body President.”

Recent article in TechCrunch on New Form Digital:

http://techcrunch.com/2015/09/15/new-form-digital-is-the-new-hollywood-combining-new-and-old-media-for-online-distrubution/

 

UC MERCED’S ALMA MATER

merced logoJimmy Dunne had the honor to write the Alma Mater for California’s tenth and newest university — UC Merced.

With 11,000 undergraduates and growing exponentially, UC Merced is a unique university located in the San Joaquin Valley — and the first American research university to be built in the 21st century.

Jimmy Dunne met with a number of the members of the University’s Board at the university, and had numerous meetings with students, the university’s band, parents, and the university’s leadership — talking about the story and soul of the university.  His greatest research was taking walks through the campus and its classrooms — listening to the hearts of its passionate students and teachers.

He wrote “My Merced,” a song that speaks to the profound effect of this nurturing home on its students’ lives.

Jimmy Dunne and Stephan Oberhoff produced a number of versions of the motif and melody (along with exceptional musicians/singers) — affording UC Merced to incorporate the audio branding into myriad touchpoints and events at the university.

 

 

 

James Edward Dunne (1926-2015)

It was five in the morning yesterday in La Grange, Illinois – and I was walking through an absolute wonderland of snow, blanketing the wise-old elm and maple trees that proudly frame family homes in the quiet of the early morning of my childhood hometown.

I could feel every flake of snow that drifted through the crisp air.  Everything was right – except for the reason I was standing there.  I was heading to my father’s house in town – where he passed away during the night.

I was his namesake… Jim Dunne was born on the eve of the Depression, a 7th generation Irish Catholic Dunne from the Southside of Chicago.  The Dunnes before him of Chicago whispered confidence in his ear as a teenager at 108 Mayfield Avenue in Oak Park; the boat-builder sons and daughters of Patrick William from Ireland that chanced fate and slept on the bottom of a timber boat to cross the Atlantic for new dreams and a better life.  My Dad heard the whispers of the tradition of all the Dunne priests, and the Dunne journalists and writers that spoke to the heart of a new city and an America that yearned for a better day.

His feisty mother, Josephine Martin Dunne, who lost her husband early and worked to help raise her kids alone — fueled my Dad’s soul with an Irish fire and will.

He played stickball all summer long as a kid on empty tennis courts at Columbus Park with lifelong, loyal pals that chipped away at life, and love and careers with him till the night before his death.

Right out of Fenwick High School, he blinked and he was in the hull of a Navy boat in the Pacific Ocean in the middle of World War II.  On the back of a GI bill, he graduated Summa Cum Laude from Loyola University back in Chicago.

He did the smartest thing he ever did… He fell in love with the neighborhood catch that lived only blocks away, Joan Lawley – absolutely stunning and a Class Officer from Rosary College.

“First comes loves, then comes marriage, then comes 7 babies in a baby carriage.”  They lived below my Nana in a simple duplex and started a family — praying that his entrepreneurial career would evolve to meet their growing needs.  I was the 4th generation Dunne to live in that duplex.  My Dad would let off steam with his Irish pals at their watering hole and sanctuary  — “Ye Olde Shilleleghs” Bar.

Dad boldly moved their family from the city to a home in the suburbs of La Grange where he didn’t know a soul; hoping to follow in his ancestor’s footsteps of finding a better life for his wife and kids.

He became Vice President for Transtate Oil Corporation, a Chicago heating oil business, and put in enough long hours and sales wins to risk buying the company.  Dad created Dunne Oil Company, building it into one of Illinois’ most successful heating oil companies – serving homes, churches and businesses throughout the city and suburbs.  A prominent voice in his business community, he was the Director of the Oil Heat Marketers Association among many other organizations.

Mom and Dad rolled the dice again, and needing more room, and we moved across town into one of the larger homes in La Grange… I can remember walking through that grand La Grange home (with indoor air conditioning!) for the first time with my Mom and Dad like it was yesterday.   (My youngest brother, Marty, bought our family home from my parents – where I’m staying this week.  I’m in the guest room on the third floor – in the same room I had as a teenager.)

Before every sporting match, before every 6AM mass as an altar boy, before every school day, before heading out for every winter, spring, summer and fall job – when I’d walk out that back kitchen door my dad would give me the same ol’ pep talk with a big smile on his face to go out there and “Be a Dunne.”

Dad taught us all every sport known to man.  We logged a zillion hours throwing baseballs at Gordon and Sedgwick Park, hitting golf balls at “Easy Aces” Par Three, shooting hoops in the backyard on winter nights under the garage lights, and countless journeys to Chicago to watch the gods at Wrigley Field, Soldier Field, Chicago Stadium and Comiskey Park.

Dad didn’t sit on the sidelines; he was tremendously involved in our parish and school.  We didn’t live in a town – we lived in the parish of St. Francis.  Dad was the school’s Athletic Director forever, creating many youth-orientated initiatives that still go on today. He started a suburban church basketball league for all the kids that didn’t make their grammar and high school teams, and was the ‘Jack Brickhouse’ of Little League baseball games barking out the play-by-play in an old, green booth above the home plate backstop.

He taught Catechism Class, and I can’t tell you how many kids have had “Dunne Oil” across the back of their baseball uniforms over the years.  With young girls of his own, he was a champion for the girls’ softball leagues — and the La Grange Pet Parade wasn’t the same if my Dad wasn’t front and center waving and driving his ‘baby blue’ Eldorado Cadillac convertible.

He was always, always there for families and kids in any kind of need – he paid attention, and he did something about it.

Our ‘eighth child’ was Timmy O’Connell – a special needs teenager from down the street that spent every single day at our home – and loved his second dad, “The Captain-O,” as Timmy would proudly call him.  Chicago St. Vincent de Paul Society helps needy families experiencing tough times — ask them if my Dad made a difference…

Norman Sims, on my eighth grade basketball team and in the only black family at St. Francis, walked home with me every day after basketball practice.  But he’d drop me off and keep walking to ‘the other side of the tracks.’  My Dad was his mentor and confidant – who encouraged and toughened him to make sense out of the prejudice and racial slurs stinging him every day.

What my Dad said during those years to us was one thing.  What he did – stuck forever to the side of our ribs.  Principals.  Character.  Integrity.  Those were the tenets of my Dad that were etched in every single decision and thing he did.

Three nights ago, with his kids and my Mom around him at his bedside, I began playing “When Irish Eyes are Smiling” on a little keyboard in the room – and he immediately woke and sang along…  He told us all how he didn’t want to leave us.   With his eyesight almost completely gone, he looked over to my Mom holding his hand.  He said, “Momma, I need to see your face.  Crying, she stood up to be only inches from his face.  He looked in her eyes and said, “You’re so beautiful.   And I’ve lived a beautiful life…  Because of you.“

If a man is measured by the love, values and confidence he gifted his children through the arc of a lifetime; if a man is measured by the tenderness, unwavering loyalty and respect he dedicated to his wife; if a man is measured by the depth and breadth of lifelong friendships with the truest of gentleman; if a man is measured by the heartbeat of the selfless footprints he left in his path…  Then Jim Dunne was a giant of men.

It’s now sunset, and the snow has settled in a bit.  It’s starting to hit me how I’m missing him.  How I can’t call him on the phone.  How I can’t stop by and see him and hear how happy he is to see his buddy.

Walking the snow-covered streets, one thing is very clear.   Whenever I come back to La Grange, I’ll see him.  Oh, I’ll see him.

I see him now.  I see him in the light of the windows of the homes.  I’ll see him at the parks.  I’ll see him in the eyes of every kid at every school and every church.  I’ll see him in my Dad’s friends, and their kids.  I’ll see him in my brothers and sisters; Laureen, and Terry, and Julie, and David, and Marty and Alison – and in the 21 grandkids, and, as days go on — in their kids.  I’ll see him in my Mom.

My Dad mattered.   My Dad loved life so, so much.

How blessed we were to be touched by my Dad.

My buddy.  My hero.  My namesake.

.
— JIMMY DUNNE.

FEATURE STORY IN PALISADES POST

By SIERRA SHAFER  Staff Writer, PALISADES POST

The next time you find your favorite album while in the check-out line at Whole Foods, you may have Palisadian Jimmy Dunne to the thank. A family man who has found his passion as well as success in both art and business, Dunne is the creator of Inspire Entertainment, a firm that has orchestrated some of the most recognizable music and branding initiatives in the past decade. Inspire’s clients include Whole Foods Market, Office Depot, UPS, JC Penney, Staples, Visa and many other notable national brands.

Whether selling CDs in stores, gifting customers with free downloads or creating audio logos, Inspire identifies how leading brands can benefit from music.


MUSIC MAN


Dunne released his first album during his college days at U. of Kentucky.  Since then, he’s become a hit songwriter with pop and country songs on 28 million records, along with songs and scores in 1,400 television shows and films.  With all that experience, he understands exactly what it takes to make it to the top of the charts.

“In a 3-minute song, how can you tell a complete story, to inspire someone to be moved in a significant way?”  Dunne said.  “That’s the fun of it and it doesn’t happen often.   Songwriting is all about authenticity, and all about telling the truth.  If it’s not authentic, it doesn’t work.”

Dunne’s songs have made their way onto Grammy, Emmy, CMA and ACM-winning records as well as to the top of the charts.  “Nobody Loves Me Like You Do,” one of the many songs he’s written, soared to #1 on the country charts and was later covered by Whitney Houston.  His office walls pay tribute to more than 75 gold, platinum and multi-platinum records from around the world.

Although his partnerships with nationally recognized artists could have taken him anywhere in the world, after three decades of living and working in Pacific Palisades, Dunne can’t imagine building a life anywhere else.

“The best kind of town is when it looks and feels like you and respects the same thing you do.  I wanted to find a town that would be a fabulous, nurturing home to raise a family, a place I could work in and where I’d want to get involved,” he said.  “That’s the Palisades.”
A Chicago native, Dunne graduated Phi Beta Kappa and Omicron Delta Kappa from U. of Kentucky with double Honors majors in business and journalism and minors in music and communications.

He started a profitable music agency business and was the head tennis professional during the summer months at Chicago tennis clubs where he created the West Suburban Tennis Conference, now celebrating 40 years.


A CARUSO CONNECTION


Young and optimistic, Dunne headed west for an unknown California where he was hired as an Academic Tutor at USC.  It was there he began a friendship with Palisades’ developer Rick Caruso.

“People think of him as a business man, but I think of him as an artist.  His art is creating town centers for communities.  There is an tremendous amount of creativity and art in that,” Dunne said of his longtime friend.

As the developer makes plans to bring his artistic stroke to Swarthmore in the Palisades, Dunne said his trust for Caruso’s plans is founded in more than his previous projects, but in his role as a father and family man as well.

“Living down the street in Brentwood, Rick, Tina and their kids are in the Palisades all the time.  It’s so important to Rick that he creates something that Palisadians will be proud of; I’ve never seen him more genuinely excited about a project he’s done,” Dunne said.  “He also has a couple ideas up his sleeve that folks are going to really love.”

Dunne is confident that his old friend is going to raise the bar even higher for one of the most desired places to live in the country — a place he has called home since he happened on it years ago.

INSPIRED BY THE PALISADES


At 27, Dunne was living in Hollywood working on “Happy Days” when he drove through the Palisades on the Fourth of July. A celebration of families and kids, the parade was reminiscent of his hometown of La Grange, Illinois. “I saw the families lining the streets, a zillion kids in the parade and I knew in that moment I wanted the Palisades to be the canvas to draw the rest of my life on,” Dunne said. “I bought a house and had the best thing ever happen to me — I met Catherine Bailly [now Dunne’s wife] from Minnesota.”

From his ‘gopher’ job on “Happy Days,” he rose through the ranks as a writer and producer for the show. He went on to produce other sitcoms at Paramount, while writing and producing songs and scores on a slew of their series. Ten years ago, his passion for music and business found their true harmony when Dunne launched Inspire. He found it all in the Palisades and has since been involved in a number of big ways.

The tennis ace started the California Paddle Tennis Conference, which is now in its 12th year with more that 10,000 matches played. He also founded the California Beach Volleyball Championships and is spearheading an initiative to bring bocce courts to the Palisades Park.

Dunne is working with the Park Advisory Board on plans to bring the bocce courts to the park for all age groups, but especially for senior citizens.

“Bocce is such a great social game and it’s on fire around the country, enjoyed by every possible age group,” he said. “My dream is seeing the courts filled with senior citizens in leagues enjoying a great day at their park where they meet friends, get some exercise and create a new ‘town center’ in their lives.”

Working with a younger generation, Dunne has helped run youth group programs at St. Matthew’s and was the President of the Father’s Club at Marymount. He has produced charity events for Corpus Christi Parish and raised two daughters. “In many ways, I’ve found that your kids steer your ship. My daughters, Kaitlyn and Alexis, had fantastic experiences at St. Matthew’s and then Marymount,” Dunne said. “Catherine and I were able to enjoy that once-in-a-lifetime journey with so many parents that have become friends for life.” With the beach down the street, an office in town and hiking trails minutes from his back door, Dunne doesn’t deny the Palisades’ stunning location, but for him the best thing about living in the Palisades is undoubtedly the people.

“They’re smart. They’re engaged. The’re full of life and they feel privileged to be in this town, he said. “With a bunch of friends for life that you bump into everywhere you go — how lucky can you be?”

Dunne said it’s heaven having the offices in the Palisades just down the road from family and friends, allowing him to work and play in the same community. “The best thing I ever did was move our office to the Palisades. It’s so nice to ride my bike to work, or walk to lunch with clients down the street to Cafe Vida or Pinocchio’s. And having Catherine come and visit me,” he said. DSC_0438 - Version 2


A BALANCING ACT


From his office on Alma Real Drive, Dunne has found a way to balance art and business. He’s currently writing songs for Garry Marshall’s new musical of “Pretty Woman,” recently released a new CD of original compositions on piano, “Joy to Life,” contributes to his Pandora station “Jimmy Dunne Radio” and is finishing up a rewrite of a hockey drama screenplay — and that’s just the art.

When it comes to his business, Dunne has been in the studio producing a number of musical logos for retail chains and corporate brands, launching CDs in a new national retail chain, producing a multi-artist concert at “Austin City Limits'” Moody Center, and his team at Inspire is creating a few cutting-edge initiatives that Dunne said is sure will shake up things. While his plate is as full as ever, Dunne embodies the old adage — if you love what you do, you’ll never work a day in your life. “There’s no substitute for hard work and accountability,” he said. “But hard work is really, really easy when you love what you do.”