Ivy Rich
Website update imminent

I’m updating (and simplifying) this website!  Some pages may not match!  Please stay tuned…everything will be back to normal in a week or so.

~Ivy

Apparently I’m a soprano!  :)  Here’s proof.

 I also uploaded a few other songs to my YouTube channel (http://youtube.com/ivyrichmusic) from Friday’s gig at Cuppa Joy in Vancouver.  Check out some fun flute playing on Livin’, hear the encore of Star of the County Down on flute, and hear Doesn’t It Mean Anything and 3 Days In December live.

~ Ivy

20 Feb 10

Upcoming Show!

Ahhhh….I’m back from the abyss, so to speak, and have finally booked a solo show for Friday, February 18th, at Cuppa Joy in Vancouver.  (Located in Kitsilano at 4th & Alma).  Music from 8-10 pmAdmission by donation.

I’ll be singing, playing guitar AND playing flute!  Mark your calendars - I don’t have anything scheduled after that!

Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!

I made it to Edmonton (home!) to visit friends & family and also got a chance to play at my “alma mater” of open stages - the Sunday Night Songwriters’ Stage, hosted by Rhea March.  

It’s now at Expressionz, but has moved locations at least 3 times since I started going there in 2006…two years before I picked up a guitar.

It was fantastic to see Rhea, and I also got a chance to play some music with Tim Chesterton (him on guitar, me on flute).

Wishing everyone a very Happy New Year. :)

~ Ivy

THERE WILL BE NO OPEN MIC ON THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11TH, 2010.
Please honour those who fought to give us the freedom we have today by attending a Remembrance Day ceremony.
Lest We Forget

Live Song Upload & Open Stage Page

Hey, I’m a poet and don’t know it. :P

Just a couple of quick updates!  I took August and about half of September totally off of practicing and performing, so there’s not much to update.

Greg & I continued to run the open mic at the Wired Monk, AND it now has a Facebook page:

http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Thursday-Open-Mic-at-The-Wired-Monk/154836864534401?ref=ts

AND I got a great live cut of 3 Days In December, so it’s first up at http://myspace.com/ivyrich.  Check it out!

~ Ivy

The SAC, File Sharing Levies, and Independent Musicians.

The Songwriters Association of Canada’s proposal to monetize music file sharing just doesn’t cash in.

The Songwriters Association of Canada, or SAC, an organization which seeks to develop and recognize Canadian songwriters, recently released the details on a Music File Sharing Proposal which has, apparently, been in the works since 2007.  But when I joined the SAC in 2008 there was nothing on their website, or in any issue of their Songwriters Magazine that I received.  Until last month.  My most recent issue of Songwriter Magazine had a disturbing article about the proposal, called Let Our People Share.

The full details of the proposal is available at http://songwriters.ca (Click on “Advocacy”), however, in short, the SAC is pushing for a levy to be applied to internet access fees to make up for the massive amounts of illegal file-sharing of music – in other words, they’re advocating that the cost of providing internet to you, the user and consumer, should go up, to the tune of $4 or $5 per month.  Then “this money would go into a pool and a pro rata distribution made to the artists, songwriters and rights holders whose songs are being shared”. They think this is a great idea, and that it will put money back into the hands of the musicians who work so hard to create this music, and help them to make more music, because they’ll have the money to do it.

Have they so quickly forgotten the current issue with the Private Copying Tariff?

Implemented in 1999, and which increases every year, the Private Copying Tariff currently adds $0.29 to each medium deemed to be used for recording.  29 cents per blank CD regardless of your use of it.  This was, in theory, to make up for the illegal copying of music CDs, which caused record labels, artist management companies and the artists themselves to lose money.  However, as Joseph Stalin succeeded in demonstrating, what works in theory often does not work in practice.  Musicians and songwriters who aren’t represented by an independent label or agent have yet to see a penny from the sale of recordable media.  This won’t change with the addition of an internet usage levy.

The SAC seems to forget that as songwriters - composers, really, of lyrics, melodies, and supporting music all in one song – the end result is not only our intellectual property, it is our work – like a job.  I’m sure no one in the SAC would neither ask nor advocate for a lawyer to work for free.  Yet, by supporting the legal file-sharing of independent music, that’s exactly what they’re doing.

On their website, as well as on the Canadian Private Copying Collective website, there are artist statements in support of these levies.  Indeed, artists like Amy Sky, Randy Bachman, Faber Drive and The Trews would definitely support this; they stand a chance of actually seeing some of the money collected through the levy.

However, for the rest of us, the math just doesn’t add up.

The current population of Canada is just over 34 million people.

The current number of people using the internet in Canada is about 25.5 million.

If a $5/month fee per person is levied, then the amount of money that will be divvied up will be just over $1.5 billion.  That’s a lot of money.  But how many musicians are now vying for this?  According to Statistics Canada the number of people who might be sharing in this $1.5 billion pot of gold – songwriters and others who have a partial claim in each recorded song, such as composers and producers – is just under 94,000 people.  This works out to about $16,500 per person, per year. But wait…there is a “pro rata distribution” method, which means that number is moot.  Who will determine the pecking order in which the musicians line up for their piece of the pie?  Is it based on the number of songs each rights holder has available?  If I only have 5 songs professionally recorded and publicly available but Band X has 25 songs recorded then do I make only 20% of what Band X makes per year?  And do they only make 25% of what Band Z makes because Band Z has 100 songs?  How much, if any, of that $1.5 billon can any of us down at the bottom of the pile expect to see?

The SAC’s proposal to implement a levy on internet access fees and purportedly monetize file sharing just isn’t viable.  All it will do is rob the true independent musicians of another $60 a year that none of them will even see a percentage of a royalty from.

Therefore my advice to independent musicians is this:

First, if you are a member of the SAC, repeal your membership and put your money towards something else that will actually support you.

Second, spread the word about this to all the independent musicians you know who are working towards someday having a full-time future as a songwriter.

And in closing, my words to the SAC: Get real.  Start talking to some true independent musicians and find out what issues they’re really coming up against.  Talk to those who aren’t represented by a label, agent or publisher because they can’t afford it.  Talk to those who have to run their small business of music on evenings, weekends, and lunch hours.  Talk to those who have made recordings with money from their own pockets.  Talk to those who work day jobs and hope that they’ll have enough time, energy & creativity left at the end of the day to pick up a guitar and write a song that might stand up to critical reviews.  Instead of advocating for us to work for free, go and work with SOCAN and the Copyright Board of Canada and start getting some of the money from the current Private Copying Tariff out of the government’s pockets and into ours.

Sincerely,
Ivy Rich (stage persona)
(aka. Amity M)

This article has been cross-posted by the author at http://amitym.com.

Break Time! (Aug 7, 2010)

I canceled today’s outdoor gig in Port Coquitlam due to cold & rain.  I have a limit to what I will do for a free gig that doesn’t even provide a meal!  In the meantime I got Thursday’s open mic webcast up - we had a fantastic small crowd which gave some shyer performers a chance to come up and dazzle us with some fun covers.  Really a very enjoyable night all around.

The rest of August is BREAK TIME for me - I have no more gigs scheduled indefinitely, and it’s needed.  I have 5 more custom songs to write and some flute studio stuff that needs to be worked on.

I will continue to host the open mic and post the webcast here but other than that I am taking August off of music!

~ Ivy

Summer Open Mics & Wedding Songs

July 30, 2010

Summer is upon us which means that many people are on vacation - the past couple of weeks have been much less busy at our little open mic.  This is, in a way, kind of nice - a wonderful, quiet crowd that listens to the performers, and a chance to play a bit longer.  Check out last night’s open stage by clicking here!

Aaaaaand….all those custom songs are finally rolling - the first one, for my long time pal (and former roomie) and her new husband, premiered in a campground in the Kootenays last weekend.  I couldn’t look at them while I was playing - I’m fairly certain it would have resulted in me bursting into tears.  They loved the song.  A sample of it is on my business website HERE.  This version was recorded in early May, but I’d like to re-record it in a month or so.  My vocal & guitar skills have improved since May. :)

Only 5 more custom songs to go!

~ Ivy

Open Mic from Thursday! (Jul 24, 2010)

It’s up!  After some FTP issues I managed to get in and get the webcast uploaded for your listening pleasure.  We had a lovely small crowd which meant that a few people got a second go.  Have a listen at http://ivyrich.com/omcurrent.php