Thursday, June 11
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Posts Tagged ‘Music’

Canada’s Musicians Rock and Make Bank-Roll

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009
by Duncan Kinney

Author Richard Florida was kind enough to tweet this link titled Nashville North. It’s a little misleading however, if you’ve ever been to the Calgary Stampede, you’d know that Nashville North is a sweaty tent full of drunk corporate cowboys two-stepping to live country music. No, the Nashville North that the author of The Rise of the Creative Class is talking about is the strong music business that operates in Canada.

Apparently Canada has almost six times as many music businesses per capita than our neighbors to the south.

The Great Musical North has 5.9 record labels, distributors, recording studios and music publishers per 100,000 residents, compared to just 1.2 in the U.S., and Canada’s musical talent is more spread out among a diverse range of cities.

And while these business don’t bring in the mega-bucks that the American labels do, it’s allowing more people to make a living off of music.

The average music studio, label or distributor in Canada employs 5.7 people and brings in $540,000 (all figures U.S.) per year, while American music businesses have 5.9 employees and rake in $4.1 million annually on average. The figures are from 2007, the most recent year for which information is available.

So you take the good with the bad. Cancon requirements may mean you hear more Nickelback on the radio than you should, but it also means Canada has one of the healthiest music businesses in the world.

My Job: The Business of Being in a Band

Monday, June 15th, 2009
by uladmin

Six a.m. comes early, earlier then usual when you were up till 3 a.m. After rushing through a shower and choking down breakfast, I’m out the door by 6:50 a.m. I fight my way through the morning rush hour with the window rolled down and the music turned up. On a typical day, I’m at my desk by 7:30. By 9 a.m. my ears are still ringing from the night before and the day feels like it should be done soon.

Some people can’t reconcile how my two careers – bassist in an up-and-coming band called The Shakedowns and a desk job in financial services – fit together. But the two complement each other, and not just because my day job pays the bills. The success of the band depends on all the things that any business does. Marketing, accounting, finance and leadership make the difference between playing the Royal Canadian Legion on a Tuesday night and scratching together the money to record and promote an album.

The Shakedowns hit the road

[The Shakedowns hit the road]

Band expenses usually outweigh revenue, like many other small businesses in the first few years of operation. The variable and fixed costs a band incurs include instruments and instrument maintenance (if, say, baby needs a brand new bass), fuel and vehicles to get to gigs, recording and distribution, marketing (posters, merchandise, business cards, websites), as well as food and the occasional nerve-settling formula (alcohol in various forms). The A&R talent scouting of the golden era in the music industry is long gone. Without a music label funding us, we’re the ones footing the bill.

The trick, like with any business, is to offer a product or service that no one has heard about and bring it to places frequented by your target market. In our case the music is the service and the target market hangs out at concert halls (which, it should be said, are hard to book and pay poorly).

The band needs to become as efficient as any business, collaborating not just on songs but also on maintaining our website and our MySpace and Facebook pages. Then there’s booking gigs, writing songs, writing blogs, sending out demos and networking.

Late in the day, when we finish a show and I head home, I can hardly call my second job a job. Sure, there’s the mundane worries of any business – in our case these problems typically involve resources (e.g. the van is low on gas and we hope we’ll make it to the venue) and staffing (the soundman didn’t show up again). But when these kinks work themselves out – and they work themselves out in a miraculous way when we all come together minutes before the show – we step foot on stage not knowing exactly what the crowd expects. And remember why we do it.

Music@Work
LISTEN UP
You can also listen to some of theirs songs on their CBC Radio 3 profile page.

READ UP
In Unlimited’s National Magazine Award-winning story, musician Kris Demeanor chronicles his checkered past through all the gigs (landscaper, sandwich maker at the Olympics, construction worker…) while he waited for the big gig.