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Report Shows “Devastating Impact” of COVID-19 on Canadian Independent Music Industry

A new report details just how much the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted Canadian independent musicians, with some portions of the sector losing up to 79% of revenue from 2019.

The Canadian Independent Music Association (CIMA) says the evaporation of the live music scene has led to a decline in revenue of $280 million in just six months and that the industry will likely not recover to pre-COVID levels until at least 2023.

The report, entitled The Impact of COVID-19 on Canadian Independent Music, was conducted by Nordicity on behalf of CIMA and shines a light on the various impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on the Canadian independent music sector.

The key challenges include:

“If real supports are not made available to music creators, Canadian music may not recover. Not only do we have an obligation to protect Canadian music as a voice for our country and as one of our proudest forms of cultural expression, but we also have a responsibility to support the hard-working Canadians who work in this industry. This is their livelihood and it has been devastated,” says CIMA Board Chair and co-owner/president of Sonic Unyon Records, Tim Potocic.

As part of the Nordicity report, CIMA includes several recommendations for additional supports that can back the independent music industry as it recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic. Among the recommendations:

“We are asking the government to consider that without these supports, ‘the band cannot play on,’” says board director and president/founder of Aporia Records Gord Dimitrieff. “Every day, more music creators and their representatives are losing their livelihoods and there is nowhere else for them to go. This thriving and dynamic Canadian music industry that we are so proud of is quickly eroding, and without speedy action, it will be years before it can even begin to recover.”

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