GuitarMikeB wrote:yod wrote:Why would you exclude the price someone is willing to pay for a ticket? Seems like the better question would be, "Have you ever spent $100 enjoying live music?"
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Because we are not talking about the mega stars here. We're talking about people who play locally, or maybe even do some small amount of touring. The mega band's not getting $100 from that $100 ticket - they're lucky to see $20 of it after the venue, promoter and the band's agent and the expenses.
You might be surprised how much of a ticket price the "Mega" band actually gets. They want you to think it's everyone else, but it isn't like playing the bars.
The local player - maybe the venue hits people with a $5 cover charge (if its a bar/club) or if its a ticketed event, $20-30 (again the player doesn't get all that). If the attendees have already bought the performer's last 2 CDs, what are they going to buy - a shirt?
...and a mug...and a sticker....and a vinyl...and a bracelet...and a necklace or two.
If we aren't talking about rock-n-roll, the artist might even have a book!?!
But you also swerved into another axiomatic truth. Bands don't really see any return on selling their recordings until their 3rd or 4th album. What actually separates successful from one-hit wonders is being able to crank out decent quality music as often as possible.
Maybe one time in a few years - but I don't think there's much merch business for the smaller players at all. We're not hitting that 100 fans X $100 range. You can't release 6 CDs a year (@ $15 each) and expect to sell them (I can't imagine making 6 CDs a year with the time involved while playing gigs and everything else involved).
I'm no household name but I have those "superfans" or I couldn't have made it as a recording artist more than a couple of years. I understand how it seems impossible, but really it isn't rocket science to work hard at all aspects of a creative life daily, and then multiply that over thousands of days. What stops most people is that they don't have the faith it will eventually pay off. Those are the people who never invest in their own career.
It looks like our friend, Jookey, is at a time in his life when he can focus on the pure joy of creating music and playing out. Given that, it's only a matter of time before he finds himself busy all the time with it. One day you look up and realize your daily routine isn't what it used to be, and suddenly you can't afford a day job.
Then it becomes a matter of how long you can sustain being productive creatively while performing all the time.
EDITED TO ADD:
Follow-up on the original post link - you have to supply an email address to download the 'free ebook'. 3 'spam' emails since I did that, all trying to push his video series and other crap.
I see your point. I hate that crap, and besides, none of this is really a secret. He's just trying to make money off of teaching people who don't know what it takes already.
How dare him
try like that!?
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