A local coffee shop hosts our open mic every Thursday (since 2016). No one on the stage gets paid for their performance and the hosts (me and my combo) do not get paid. The business model is: the coffee shop provides a space for the community to do its thing.
The venue does a brisk business on Thursday nights and you can see an uptick in business on Thursday nights when you search for the venue and click on the "Popular times."
All the musicians and performers are a mixture of community people or performers living in the city or passing through. Many of them are individuals who just like to strum and perform their favourite songs. It's a great community and they back each other up. Most of the time my mixer board only has two active channels: mic and guitar. The average of original to covers is about 50/50. Maybe 40/60. I haven't kept a record.
So in this case should the venue be paying a performance fee to SOCAN?
I'd like to start a discussion about this because we want to do the right thing. But we also want to support community music, which is based on an intrinsic value (not commercial value) model, for the most part. People perform for the fun of it and to show off their musical accomplishments. It's a space for community building through performance, but not through the music itself.
Tom
The venue does a brisk business on Thursday nights and you can see an uptick in business on Thursday nights when you search for the venue and click on the "Popular times."
All the musicians and performers are a mixture of community people or performers living in the city or passing through. Many of them are individuals who just like to strum and perform their favourite songs. It's a great community and they back each other up. Most of the time my mixer board only has two active channels: mic and guitar. The average of original to covers is about 50/50. Maybe 40/60. I haven't kept a record.
So in this case should the venue be paying a performance fee to SOCAN?
I'd like to start a discussion about this because we want to do the right thing. But we also want to support community music, which is based on an intrinsic value (not commercial value) model, for the most part. People perform for the fun of it and to show off their musical accomplishments. It's a space for community building through performance, but not through the music itself.
Tom