Sunday May 26, 2024

Samuel Sweek discusses Jeremy Corbyn's Peace & Justice Project, Music For The Many and more

Grassroot music venues are the beating pulse of any music scene worldwide. On the surface, it’s a small, dimly lit room with a stage that creaks with every note, but to artists, it’s Woodstock, it’s the Pyramid stage, it’s an opportunity to project their music to anyone that will listen. As Friedrich Nietzsche once said, ‘without music, life would be a mistake’, so why are we seeing so many venues closing their doors for their final times, and what is being done to help?

Within the last year, 22 million people saw music events in grassroots venues, resulting in it bringing in over £500 million to the British economy. Despite this, the profit margin was a mere 0.2% as running costs sat at £499 million, yet night after night up and down the country, venues still continue to host the backbone of music with no support apart from the love of this sadly diminishing craft.

In April 2023, Jeremy Corbyn’s ‘Peace and Justice Project’ launched the ‘Music for The Many’ campaign to help protect these venues and demand that the government create funding and support to help save the futures of the venues at risk. Music For Many has three demands in order to help secure the future of these grassroot venues:

  • Have a grassroot venue fund to ensure that all communities have access to opportunities in the music industry.
  • Tax corporate sponsors of larger music venues.
  • Invest in grassroots music venues to secure the sustainable long-term futures of the music venues.

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