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Income in Classical Music and Jazz (Britain)
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... all that I can add - was my feeling of embarrassment, after a serious career abroad, spending a few years as an Arts Council funded administrator, dealing with musicians who were 'giving' so much more than I was - and who were earning, for their efforts, a pittance compared with my tidy salary. And there were, then, many arts administrators who were earning far far more than any of the 'artists' they were 'administrating'
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Its worth remembering that although artists are paid per performance, they are not generally paid for rehearsals and preparation time so a portion of the fee has to cover that as well as living expenses and agents fees.
In 2009 Roberto Alagna suggested that he just about broke even on opera performances and only really made money from one-off concerts:
"I’m well off but nothing like as rich as people think. I live in Switzerland but I pay my taxes in France. I don’t know exactly how much I’m worth because I’m not a businessman. For a gala concert, I'm paid 60,000 euros. If I need money, I go to Abu Dhabi or Japan, where I can get 100,000 euros. I get 25% (or 25c ?) on CDs, but nothing on DVDs or live cinema broadcasts. For opera, I get a flat 13,000 euros per night. But at the end there’s nothing left. Half goes in taxes. The rest pays my agent and my living costs. [For Carmen] the apartment I rent near Covent Garden costs £1,500 a week. My only luxury is somewhere comfortable to stay. At the Met, my whole fee goes in living costs."
"When I left EMI, I bought my back catalogue for £800,000. I paid for it with what I had in the bank and the advance on my Sicilian album. In classical music, you’re happy to sell 20,000 CDs worldwide.""I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by waldhorn View PostRobertLeDiable:
This is a way-over-the-top estimate... more like £350-£500 per concert INCLUDING EXPENSES!
A golfing friend was a millimetre away from professional status but, being not quite good enough, he became a green keeper in Dover. There are probably tens of musicians every year who don't quite make it, if not hundreds, and end up becoming hobbyists. Arguably a year or two on from crucial assessment in competitions, their levels of excellence can be higher than those who do. It seems such a waste. The markets as operated then skew the perceived difference and deprive them and us of a broader palette.
There is much talk of not wanting the best to move abroad but in the arts demand doesn't move too. The public will always want composers, conductors, orchestras, even risque comedians. Some move on, some move in to their spaces, and to deny the usefulness of that fluidity when it is based on choice is bogus. I feel that the markets buck the markets to promote stasis.
Do we know yet what a R3 presenter earns?Last edited by Guest; 22-06-12, 14:46.
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RobertLeDiable
Originally posted by waldhorn View PostRobertLeDiable:
This is a way-over-the-top estimate... more like £350-£500 per concert INCLUDING EXPENSES!
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RobertLeDiable
Do we know yet what a R3 presenter earns?
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Originally posted by JohnSkelton View PostOr: if it wasn't for being on YouTube the work wouldn't be anywhere and would therefore be forgotten.
Originally posted by JohnSkelton View PostYour complaint only makes sense if someone would have paid the composer cents, gone down the copyright route, had it not been for YouTube. Do you honestly think that's the case? What would you prefer - strict adherence to copyright or people actually hearing your stuff? (I appreciate the position of people like Mode Records who complain that they've incurred the expense of making a recording and believe that 'piracy' affects sales. It may do, but it may also not do. If someone hears something they like they might buy the CD or download. Together with a few other CDs or downloads, possibly, if they are feeling flush and have just made a killing on their new collection of short stories or erotic limericks).
Originally posted by JohnSkelton View PostMost artistic work is done by people who do not make significant amounts of money out of it (or any at all).
Originally posted by JohnSkelton View PostThey do something else to make ends meet.
Originally posted by JohnSkelton View PostIt doesn't mean they aren't proper artists or writers or anything.
Originally posted by JohnSkelton View PostIt just means the sole or main or any source of their income isn't their art.
Originally posted by JohnSkelton View PostIn a socialist society things will, of course, be very different.
(a) I do not see such a society coming any time soon,
(b) there'd be no guarantees of its long-term sustainability or even its short-term survival even if one did so,
(c) not everyone agrees or is indeed ever likely to agree on the same set of definitions for what might constitute such a society and, last but by no means least,
(d) even if I could find it in myself to advocate a socialist society (which, as I imagine you already know, I could not), I would still have scant confidence that it would in any case be likely to favour composers any more than would any other kind.
I even receive the occasional complaint that I have the temerity to charge for supplying copies of my scores, on the trumped-up "grounds" that I should be providing them for free (which would effectively mean at my own expense, although funded by quite what I have no idea and, oddly enough, thosse who expect them for free never tell me); the expectation that scores and recordings in particular should be provided for free has undoubtedly increased considerably since the internet age took hold, although I do not at all blame these technological advances for the rise in this kind of attitude - au contraire, they make prepartion and supply a great deal easier.Last edited by ahinton; 22-06-12, 14:53.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostAh, I see the schoolyard bully is at it again.
The former gets ignored
the latter gets pounced on, even when it's not directed at you
I'll say no more.
But I bet you will
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