From The Beatles, Oasis and Corinne Bailey Rae to, more recently, Youth Music Awards winner English Teacher, many of Britain’s most-loved bands and artists originate from the north. The region emerged as a musical powerhouse for one important reason: in northern cities with strong industrial backgrounds, like Liverpool, Manchester and Sheffield, music became a form of expression and escape.
For aspiring musicians, there was once a much wider array of physical spaces to perform in the region – from local pubs and youth clubs to the legendary Haçienda in Manchester. These venues provided crucial platforms and access to music. Sadly, they have been in sharp decline nationwide in recent years. Meanwhile, labels like Factory Records in Manchester played a pivotal role in the rise of northern bands such as Joy Division and Happy Mondays.
Now, this legendary music scene is in crisis. As funding across the music sector reaches a historic low, many grassroots organisations fostering creativity and musicality in young people are under threat, with 88% of Youth Music-funded projects reporting concerns about the impact of austerity and the cost of living crisis on young people, together with the workforce supporting them. Funding is being diverted to cover basics such as food, shelter and everyday essentials, meaning that music and creative activity are being sidelined.
This is highlighted in Youth Music’s new Sound of the Next Generation (SONG) report, which found that almost a quarter (24%) of young people in the north of England don’t believe that all children and young people have equal access to musical opportunities. in the UK
The report, published to mark our 25th anniversary, looks at young people’s relationship with music and found that only half (52%) of young people in the north of England see themselves as musical in comparison to 62% of people in the south. This drop in young people feeling musical, with a decrease in those learning their craft and a slim minority performing in public, has only been worsened by the economic shocks and the bleak social-political landscape.
Our research polled 2,100 children and young people across the country, finding that those in Yorkshire (49%), the North-West (57%) and the North-East (52%) are among the least likely to feel supported when making music.