Neil Wyatt’s Post

View profile for Neil Wyatt, graphic

Founder of Handmade Cyclist and The South Downs Social. Festival Director and live events specialist.

Putting my ‘old career’ music hat on, this is an excellent article. I’ve long thought that the festival industry and the top end of the live industry are facing a fairly existential crisis that will hit in five years or so from now. The talent pipeline is broken, the number of potential new stadium and festival headliners is dwindling and there’s only so many times the public will pay to see heritage headliners. The stats the live industry were peddling last year about ‘London’s biggest ever summer of live music’ were misleading and dangerous - a combination of the Covid logjam finally cleaning and the hawking of the same old talent. There’s been - and continues to be - major investment in new, bigger venues, but for me the real bell weather for the health of the industry is the 500-2000 cap gig circuit - and you just have to look at that to see all is not well. Fewer and fewer touring artists, lack of label tour support and artists playing with reduced creative ambition as it’s just not possible to fund touring. The nostalgia industry plugs the gaps at all levels - from covers bands and 90s club nights in the venues that used to have shows from new artists several nights a week to the heritage headliners still filling stadiums. But for how long? This is all said from my personal position these days as a consumer rather than protagonist and I’m sure I’m not at the cutting edge of comment here compared to those at the coalface. But I can see clear parallels with the impact of streaming on the BBC stations I used to work for (reduced reach, Radio 1 ‘noughties’ nostalgia shows on daytime) and on the live touring and festival circuits. The day-to-day interface between the public and the ‘old’ suppliers of music - radio and live venues - is broken, either the demand is not there for new music, or the industry is not able to find a way to connect what new music there is with the consumers in a meaningful way, so it falls back on music that *has* built a connection - ie old music. And that, by definition, is about the past, not the future. In short, good luck out there people, the next few years are going to be rough.

View profile for Conor McNicholas, graphic

// consultant // building AI solutions for creative and marketing // solving creative team issues // content strategy // music + pop culture

Yeah... kinda fucked, kinda exciting. https://lnkd.in/eNF8Hbc8 Great round-up piece on the state of play in the core music industry. The barrier to success is actually culture change. The question is whether the legacy businesses can innovate fast enough. Time to be bold and, I'm afraid, pick some internal fights. Time for strong leadership. #musicindustry #musicbusiness #music #businesstransformation #culturetransformation

The Record Label Crisis

The Record Label Crisis

medium.com

Lewis Jamieson

Co-Executive Director at Music Declares Emergency

9mo

A lot on here and on comment I agree with but...... The k pop companies use the old model and make it work, they do almost everything that is flagged as a problem here. More than one way to restore a functioning talent pipeline

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