I think I am starting to like and have growing respect for my MP Caroline Noakes despite her being a Tory. This is a quote from he in today's Times:
Ms Harman says that Britain should seize the moment created by Brexit to improve protections for workers rather than undermining them. “We are masters and mistresses of our own destiny now. There will be the old battle lines drawn up but we need to see this as an opportunity not just a threat.” Ms Nokes agrees that the forthcoming government legislation gives the chance to “fill in the missing bits” of employment law. “I don’t think there’s any dispute that a number of my colleagues see leaving the EU as the opportunity to have a bonfire of regulation, but the protections workers have are good and important. We should be improving rights rather than reducing them.” The prime minister may soon find he has taken back control from the EU only to lose it to MPs.
What sort of a triumph is that and how often repeated in any number of industries? Is this an example of what those that voted leave were signing up for? I can't believe for a moment it is.Thoroughly depressing post about the dismantling of the UK music industry here through Brexit. It's by Fish from Marillion, but it's too depressing to even make a Fish/Brexit joke.
Long read, but worth it.
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Truly heartbreaking. There just doesn’t seem to be any way through the brick wall. Even if Covid was totally eradicated in the coming months and packed venues became a possibility, the economic nightmare of the Brexit rules would suck any dregs of viability out of touring. Just ridiculous.Thoroughly depressing post about the dismantling of the UK music industry here through Brexit. It's by Fish from Marillion, but it's too depressing to even make a Fish/Brexit joke.
Long read, but worth it.
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The whole Brexit thing is a complete disaster, from which ever angle it's looked at. I can not actually find one single benefit from being outside Europe. Not one. Everything is being made more difficult, more expensive and more tedious. It's the younger generations I really feel sorry for because so much of the harm inflicted will fall upon them in years to come.
I'm sick to my stomach of hearing from politicians that it will get better, that there will be huge national rewards for being out of the EU and we are now able to determine our own future. The only future this country has, with so much reliance on EU trade and manufacturing is to be a piss pot little country with a huge number of its citizens not wanting any of this complete and utter nonsense. We are well and truly ****ed by this bunch of crass nationalistic imbeciles. The only bright spot on the dark horizon is that one day the sane part of the population just might find the balls to unleash their pent up anger and overturn the dung heap that masquerades as a government. ****ers.
What sort of a triumph is that and how often repeated in any number of industries? Is this an example of what those that voted leave were signing up for? I can't believe for a moment it is.
Indeed. But the cultural impact of losing (at least) a generation of musicians will be massive. American pop here we come...
Tbf, very few of the (American, not pop) country and blues artists who gave birth to rock n roll made a full time living out of playing music, in the early days of the recording industry. There will always be artists, creativity will find an out. There may not always be financially successful, professional artists.
Mind you, the U.K. economy will take a hit. Am I right in thinking the music industry accounts for a significant chunk of our exports?
Yep. As detailed in Fish's post.
I didn’t read it all mate, it was too long (plus, Marillion ffs. Worst Genesis tribute act ever).He sold 10,000 of his last album, that’s quite a chunk of VAT. Please read the whole thing, it’s not just about Fish, but about the music industry in total. What he is effectively saying is, the hopes and dreams of the current and next generations of budding musicians have been shot down in flames by the sheer logistical impossibility of touring in Europe.I didn’t read it all mate, it was too long (plus, Marillion ffs. Worst Genesis tribute act ever).
Hope Roger Daltrey did though.
He sold 10,000 of his last album, that’s quite a chunk of VAT. Please read the whole thing, it’s not just about Fish, but about the music industry in total. What he is effectively saying is, the hopes and dreams of the current and next generations of budding musicians have been shot down in flames by the sheer logistical impossibility of touring in Europe.
But that’s the whole point! The whole effect of the Brexit surcharge hits independent artists much harder than those signed up to big labels. And you’re totally wrong about rock and roll dying. Not according to the many musicians I know anyway, none of whom are signed to labels but keep battling on.Yeah, I caught the gist mate, I was just being flippant.
Though there is a point about rock n roll being a subversive art form, which doesn’t benefit from getting co-opted into the corporate world. Rock n roll died when Elvis joined the army, as some smart arsed scouser once said.
But that’s the whole point! The whole effect of the Brexit surcharge hits independent artists much harder than those signed up to big labels. And you’re totally wrong about rock and roll dying. Not according to the many musicians I know anyway, none of whom are signed to labels but keep battling on.