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‘Hello, Goodbye’ : The Beatles Made A Sad Sum Up Of UK-EU Negotiations Around The Exportation Of Music – The Organization for World Peace

‘Hello, Goodbye’ : The Beatles Made A Sad Sum Up Of UK-EU Negotiations Around The Exportation Of Music – The Organization for World Peace

‘Hello, Goodbye’ : The Beatles Made A Sad Sum Up Of UK-EU Negotiations Around The Exportation Of Music – The Organization for World Peace
March 03
09:57 2021

For musicians, Brexit negotiations between Brussels and the UK turned out to be only perpetual hubbub, which would eventually fail them. Since the 1st of January, British musicians who want to tour in one or several European countries ought to sell an arm and a leg each time a customs officer comes across their path – only to very soon run out of body parts with which they can perform. An administrative, financial and time-consuming ordeal awaits them. Indeed, musicians must obtain a work permit, or visa, for each country in which they will be playing, in addition to giving a list (‘carnet’) of all the material they have that is allowed to cross borders. All of this organisation, you will have guessed, can only be possible with the help of expensive accountants and lawyers and leads to substantial costs as far as the transportation of musical gear is concerned.

The public petition ‘Seek Europe-wide Visa-free Work Permit for Touring Professionals and Artists’ posted on the UK Government and Parliament website made headlines. Signed by more than 284,000 people, it followed a similar open letter endorsed by artists like Ed Sheeran or Sting. Alongside this form of protest, Sir Elton John openly spoke about the matter, raising the concerns this no-deal engenders for young unknown artists: “I don’t want to live in a world where only artists who’ve been going for decades, who’ve already sold millions, can tour properly”. He also expressed himself on the crucial effect of touring on musical creativity and inventiveness: “You won’t learn as much about live performance as you do in half an hour trying to win over an unfamiliar audience…you write better songs as a result.” In addition to this, Colin Greenwood, the bassist of Radiohead, announces his worries on UK-EU economic competition regarding British technicians in festivals: “staging, sound and lighting companies from the UK that drive lots of the European festivals might find it much harder to compete with EU alternatives”. Facing this impossibility to export, fear rules that ‘OK Computer’ will ironically only be viewable on a computer for Europeans after the pandemic. But, optimist, Joel Stanley, affirms that the musical industry is the most resilient “in the world and [that it] will always make the show happen.”

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Source: ‘Hello, Goodbye’ : The Beatles Made A Sad Sum Up Of UK-EU Negotiations Around The Exportation Of Music – The Organization for World Peace

About Author

Martin Nethercutt

Martin Nethercutt

Martin A Nethercutt is a writer, singer, producer and loves music. Creative Director at McCartney Studios Editor-in-Chief at McCartney Times Creator-in-Chief at Geist Musik President (title) at McCartney Multimedia, Inc. Went to Albert-Schweitzer-Schule Kassel Lives in Playa del Rey From Kassel, Germany Married to Ruth McCartney

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