‘Entertaining
Notes’ from an Enfettered Isle
by
Alexander
Moseley
by Alexander Moseley
"If
music be the food of love, play on," wrote the bard in Twelfth
Night, but don't think you can do it freely in England.
Everywhere we turn, a licence is required, a form to be filled in,
a planning department to be called, a government official to be
consulted and music is no exception.
An
esoteric habit of mine is to enjoy the letters pages in the Incorporated
Society of Musicians monthly magazine, which my partner receives,
for news and views on how politics affects and perpetually disables
the playing and understanding of music in our land. The circulation
is small (5,100) but, as far as I understand, the ISM readership
is capable musically, pedagogically, and literarily. In comparison,
she dropped her subscription to the left-wing leaning Musicians’
Union a year back after it had requested assistance from the Labour
government to repeal some very arcane legislation, a move which
predictably and completely back-fired, and also because the MU sought
to provide membership for DJs alongside classically trained musicians
– the great equalisation of talents continues apace!
The
MU had knocked on the government’s doors (there are many of them)
asking for the repeal of an arcane, ludicrous, and illiberal piece
of legislation that limited the number of performers in any unlicensed
establishment to two. Two. The so-called ‘two-in-a-bar’ rule meant
that if two people got up and sang a song or played instruments
no offence would be committed – but if a third person joined
in, or one of the two sat down, and another took his or her place,
it was a case for the local magistrates! Seriously. Grave,
as musicians say.
From
the ISM’s letters page this month we read of a case being brought
before North Devon Magistrates over alleged breaches of the licensing
regulations. At a fund-raising concert last summer (fund-raising
– mental emphasis, for that becomes important again), the District
Council alleged that a hotel owner breached the licensing rules.
Two members of the ‘(Bonzo Dog) Doo-Dah Band’ were performing to
an audience – so far, so good. But, get this, two members of the
audience then joined in!!! One playing a washboard and one with
a box and string. Well, word had got out that the Doo-Dah Band were
raising funds at the hotel, so the local ‘Principal Environmental
Health Officer’ was suspicious – as well he might! Two people making
music – who knows where it could lead? Revolt? Right on, man! So
this guardian of the public morals sent an Environmental Health
Officer (PEHO sends EHO to Doo-Dah the night away) to spy. The EHO
reported that the two members of the audience who joined in "played
the songs quite well and seemed to know them." Ah! Bless them for
their abilities, at least they know what they do. But – amazing
saving graces: the concert was held in the hotel’s court yard and
therefore was exempt from the Local Government Act 1982 (Thatcher’s
Britain even!), so the case was thrown out.
However,
next November (2005), the new all-encompassing Licensing Act becomes
law – and rather than getting the repeal that the MU wanted, the
Blairegime has removed the ‘two-in-a-bar’ rule to a ‘none-in-a-bar’
rule (jokes abounding). If one person dares to drum zoppa on
a washboard, pulls out a didgeridoo to blow sostenuto, or
raps fingers ostinato on a table, or hums dolente
the national anthem for money (tips, drinks) in an unlicensed premise,
the fine (I think – I’m still wading through this) is £20,000 (~$50,000
and rising) and six months in jail. I’m drawing an analogy
here from something an ISM letter writer pointed out last month:
if you lend an instrument out that is subsequently used in a concert,
that’s the penalty, if you’ve got no licence to lend out instruments.
What
has happened, cried the MU? What about all those dues we paid to
the Labour Party, you know, being good union members and all that
red-flag flying solidarity with acoustic guitars, what has happened
to musicians’ freedom you were supposed to believe in, man? What
about Our Beloved Blair entering 10 Downing Street with his Mean
Axe Guitar?
Well,
I’m sure he’ll need a licence too if he decides to entertain any
guests who may have paid to attend his house. (Royal palaces are
exempt, I see, so too are trains, wharfs, and airplanes.)
The
new Act requires any public performance to be licensed. Some last
minute compromises were arranged however – religious ceremonies
were exempt (but they’ve not mentioned bell-ringing, which I foresee
will become an issue as we have many urbanites moving to the countryside
and finding their peace shattered with the village church bells
ringing or hounds howling or cows mooing or sheep grazing – and
it’s full of smells too); singing ‘Happy Birthday’ spontaneously
is fine (but which version? and what if we all sang it in three
part harmonies?); Morris Dancing got an exemption; and so too did
music teaching (after all – a pupil performs to his or her teacher
and possibly other people in the room and pays money for the privilege)
and, and, oh, LewRockwell readers will love this one, any performance
that is not likely to make a profit. Read that again. Hence
fund-raising will be exempt – as long as there is no intention
of profit making. How dare they deign to make money, those money-grabbing
musicians?
Here’s
the official site summary of why profit is dirty. "The profit motive
can lead people to take chances or cut corners about things like
public safety or the protection of children in order to maximise
the profit involved." Hello? What century are we in? Is this the
land that spawned David Ricardo and Adam Smith and the Free Trade
Movement, the Manchester School, the Repeal Movement? Seventeen
times the word ‘profit’ or ‘with a view to a profit’ is deployed
in the summary. For public safety: compare Madonna offering a free
concert in a local village hall (she lives over here on a country
shooting estate I gather) or charging £20 (~$50 and rising) a head.
Which, ECON101, is more likely to lead to excess demand?
What
happens if I accidentally make a profit? The highly useful
FAQ (quickly and phonetically pronounced, I presume) informs me
(and there will be plenty of informers in this country – I’m often
amazed we stood our ground against Nazi Germany in WWII and that
the enemy was not let in by the wannabee regulators, snits, and
grassers wringing their hands in pleasure over the plethora of regulations
Hitler would have introduced) that if there was no intention to
make a profit then I do not need a licence, as long as the musician
(or puppeteer – ah, need to licence those satirical b*stards) plays
for the entertainment and enjoyment of the audience and not for
profit, that’s fine. Or rather no fine.
Well,
we have an excellent pianist on board our team – and we’d like to
entertain our pupils and parents with some performances to educate
and entertain. But should she work for free? Should we get no return
for organising such events? That is the implication of the Act;
or perhaps, they mean we may work ‘for cost’. Now, pianists can
be very very expensive, your honour. We are looking at a decade
plus of intensive training, 46 hours a day, all those scales,
fingering exercises, ...
What
is the morality of demanding musicians work for the entertainment
and pleasure of the audience with no intention of profitable gain?
Does the government think that musicians are saints? No slaves.
The
all-encompassing bill, with its usual quaint English (and Welsh
– they’re affected too, I should note) compromises will do nothing
for music in our land. Except maybe drive those folk musicians underground
... behind closed doors, long after the snits have gone to bed,
listen-easies will open up, pianos will tinkle and guitars will
strum, songs will be chanted in the depths of forests, money will
exchange hands furtively with a nod and a wink, and we will sing
our anthems to freedom.
The
ISM is a little less naïve in reflecting on hug-all government
initiatives – its latest editorial describes the Blairspeak ‘Music
Manifesto’ with words that can be easily applied to the Licensing
Act – "as a policy, it is vacuous. Yet its basic emptiness will
be revealed only in years to come, when its progenitors will be
far, far away ..." True – and they’ll all be musically illiterate.
Saucy
sources:
The
three of us at Classical
Foundations are providing a solid musical education (and academic
education – my speciality, but I chip in with web site design and
historical research for the music side) precisely because
we are independento e privato. How long we can remain so
depends on many factors of course, but the day will come when the
regime seeks to hug us in its regulatory death-embrace – or at least
take a greater cut from our efforts. Then furioso we may
take our bows and pesante close our shop.
September
7, 2004
Alexander
Moseley [send him
mail] has lectured and tutored in American, Canadian and British
Universities. He spent the last two years sampling the State-run
comprehensive system in the UK and now teaches privately. He and
his fiancée have formed a partnership, Classical Foundations,
to teach music and other subjects privately one-to-one in their
area. Dr. Moseley is an avid exponent of the ideals Rothbard outlines
in his Education:
Free & Compulsory. He is the author of A
Philosophy of War and the novel Wither
This Land.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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Moseley Archives
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