• Once upon a time I got a call from someone who said she had contacted the musicians' union -- an AFL-CIO labor union -- for a referral for a medieval & renaissance ensemble to perform at her "Renaissance Faire." She offered us $20 -- $4.00 each -- to wander around and play "all day," i.e., 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.! That's thirty three cents an hour for people with decades of expensive private training, college degrees in the field, and thousands of dollars invested in musical instruments. We may be amateurs in the final analysis, but we are VERY SERIOUS amateurs. I countered with a fee of $1800.00 -- $30 an hour each, near the rock bottom of union scale in those days -- and she was openly angry on the phone. It's partly the expectation that we do it purely as an avocation, but it's also about valuation -- the offer was low by a factor of a hundred! Do plumbers get the same treatment when people get referrals through the plumbers' union?

    None of us make a living from music (unless you count the crumhorn/cornetto guy who makes most of his income at an instrument repair shop). I'm a law school reference librarian. We make "opportunities" to play for free quite often, at non-profit fundraisers for causes we support, university functions, our own churches, our own homes ... and the union works with the Music Performance Trust Fund, that pays us pretty regularly to perform at convalescent centers, libraries, schools, etc. I spend countless hours creating music for myself, driven by a fundamental urge to create; e.g., playing through a foot-high stack of piano trios with a couple of friends, stopping in the middle for tea and a snack around sunset. You're dead on there. But there's no way in hell I'm going to play free for someone who's charging admission at the gate. And if a for-profit entity were earning money distributing/streaming recordings of any performance of mine, I would want a reasonable stake! That shouldn't be hard to comprehend. Despite any publicity it might afford me, raking it in without giving me a cut is a RIP OFF, plain and simple.
  • You're right—I think we can all agree that "getting ripped off" is a good anti-motivator! I'm sure there are plenty of bands that would agree to play for free to a new audience or as an opener to a well-known band—maybe considering the exposure as payment—but the what really motivates them in the long run is that urge to create.
  • This is a great post. Terry McBride, CEO of the Nettwerk Label spoke at TEDx Vancouver this past weekend and echoed very much the same - including singling out Spotify as an up and comer in North America. The additional point he made is that music listeners don't care about "owning" music - they care about reliving their emotional attachment to a song. Spotify affords that opportunity in an affordable way and if it's much aligned with the motivation of real musical artists, this could be the perfect storm of desire insofar as music is concerned.
  • I decided to post some of his interviews on the site so everyone could benefit from them:
    virtualmusic.tv/2009/12/music-consumption-180-terry-mcbride-interviews/
  • Dave - Thanks a lot for the compliment, and for sharing that about Terry McBride. I just watched several interviews on YouTube from earlier this/last year. He's very intelligent and I like his very positive outlook. Right on. Hopefully last weekend's talk will get posted too.
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