{"id":3894,"date":"2015-03-11T09:12:13","date_gmt":"2015-03-11T09:12:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/fivethousand.co.uk\/?p=3894"},"modified":"2019-11-12T10:58:55","modified_gmt":"2019-11-12T10:58:55","slug":"music-venue-trust-unveil-detailed-report-into-small-venues","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/5000mgmt.com\/music-venue-trust-unveil-detailed-report-into-small-venues\/","title":{"rendered":"MUSIC VENUE TRUST UNVEIL DETAILED REPORT INTO SMALL VENUES"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n The Music Venue Trust<\/strong> – a charity founded in 2014 to preserve, secure and improve the UK\u2019s network of small to medium scale (mostly independently run) music venues – hosted Venues Day<\/a><\/strong> in London at the end of last year. Over 120 venues from across the UK attended, to put their heads together to see how they could improve their lot. They\u2019ve produced a report called Understanding Small Music Venues<\/a><\/strong>. You can read it here<\/a><\/strong>. If you haven\u2019t got time and you don\u2019t mind my focussing on that which specifically interests me, read on:<\/p>\n The Executive Summary mentions the “tired pejorative of the \u2018toilet circuit\u2019\u201d, then goes on headline one of its chapters \u201cSaving and Safeguarding The Toilet Circuit\u201d. We need to stop saying \u201cToilet Venue\u201d, \u201cToilet Tour\u201d, \u201cToilet Circuit\u201d. We shouldn\u2019t even acknowledge that we ever did. We\u2019re the only country (other than maybe the US) on the face of God\u2019s Earth with this bizarre notion that playing in a shithole is some rite of passage for new bands. It\u2019s not. It should never have been. It\u2019s a disgrace. If your venue IS a shithole and you\u2019re in some way proud of it, I hope you go bankrupt tomorrow, to be replaced by an AEG-funded apartment block with a McDonalds and a Starbucks inside. I don\u2019t want to safeguard or save the \u201cToilet Circuit\u201d. I want to either clean it up or destroy it.<\/p>\n Here are some interesting nuggets I pulled out of the report:<\/p>\n – Of 109 venues questioned by those who put the report together, 44% provide rehearsal space in addition to performance space. That\u2019s pretty cool<\/p>\n Almost half of the venues don’t have their own back-line. Smart people. It\u2019s hard enough to run a small venue without having to worry about replacing all the gear that band trashed\/stole last night. Electricians don\u2019t expect you to have wire-strippers and voltage indicators waiting for them when they come to your house<\/p>\n 34% have no disabled access. That sucks, but plenty of them could do more to help. They could start with saying what they can<\/em> do for disabled customers on their websites<\/p>\n – The vast majority hold a PRS<\/a><\/strong> licence (95%) though I wonder how many just said they did, in case PRS found out. The general impression was one of “strained relationships\u201d with PRS. In fact, the only people who get less of a kicking than the PRS in this report are local authorities. The PRS have a PR problem. They need to address it. They also might want to stop being complicit in bleeding small venues dry<\/p>\n – A bunch of venues complained about getting the blame for any noise going on in their area, and property developers (via local authorities desperate for money) forcing closures<\/p>\n – No-one has a good word to say about the Live Music Act 2012<\/a><\/strong>. What a surprise. Oh wait\u2026 those who authored the report did<\/em> have a good word to say about it: “Notwithstanding the mixed reception of the Live Music Act 2012, and regardless of the impact of the Act itself, its existence is surely testament to the fact that focused activism can effect actual, tangible change in policy\u201d \u2026 which is a bit like saying \u201cwe’re sorry some of you got shot in the leg, but at least we know the gun works.\u201d However, they then go on to say “yet voices in this report and elsewhere suggest that (the Act) has in some cases dissipated audiences (and thus trade), given rise to amateurism and ultimately lowered the aggregate quality of live music provision.\u201d Still no sign of \u00a0UK Music<\/a>\u00a0or the\u00a0Musicians’ Union<\/a><\/strong>\u00a0(who wholeheartedly supported and celebrated the Act) acknowledging this<\/p>\n