The Musician's Bill of Rights
Whereas, musicians, in addition to being artists, are also human beings
entitled to human rights, and workers entitled to workers' rights, therefore
let it be self-evident that these rights shall for now and forever include:
- The right to enjoy a minimum wage, whether derived from live
performance, royalties, or reuse, that is sufficient
to provide a standard of support proportional to
the entire investment of time and resources required
to secure and perform said gainful employment.
- The right to safe and healthy working conditions including protection
from health threatening theatrical devices,
demeaning and exploitive costumes or uniforms,
excessive sound pressure levels, substandard travel
arrangements, ingestion of second hand tobacco
smoke, irrelevant recorded music before performances and during intermissions
and the right to reasonable rest periods.
- The right to quality education, health care, legal protection
and representation, housing, financial services,
child care, unemployment benefits and retirement
security, all of which must be affordable within
the economic limits defined by the minimum wage.
- The right to equal employment opportunities based on musical
qualifications and/or entertainment value regardless
of race, ethnic background, age, gender, religion,
cultural diversity or political affiliations.
- The right to negotiate fairly on one's own behalf with universal
recognition and legal enforcement of resulting
contracts on agreed terms.
- The right to free speech as defined in the U. S. Constitution
Bill of Rights and applied to all musical performances
and/ or recordings.
- The right to ownership of all intellectual property rights as
applied to compositions, performances, and recordings
by all players and singers as well as leaders and
publishers who are already protected.
- The right to bargain collectively.
- The right to freedom from discrimination.
- The right to respect from society, equal to that afforded all
other workers and professionals are also entitled
to the same rights in exchange for the respective
contribution of time and materials to place their
work in society.