The Business of Jazz: How Independent Musicians Thrive Today
Independent jazz musicians handle their own bookings, sales, and fan contact. The ones who last treat these tasks like regular work instead of side chores.
Book gigs yourself
Start with rooms that already host jazz. Send a short email or make a quick call. Mention your set length, trio size, and one recent show.
- List ten venues within driving distance and note their music nights.
- Reach out to three per week with a one-paragraph note and a link to a live clip.
- Follow up once after ten days if you hear nothing.
- Confirm date, pay, and PA details in writing the same day you agree.
One bassist I know books four house concerts a month this way. Each pays $400 plus a cut of the door and he keeps travel under an hour.
Collect money from several places at once
Do not rely on streaming alone. Combine live pay, direct sales, and small teaching work.
| Source | Realistic monthly target | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Live gigs | $1,200 | Three paid quartet sets plus one duo |
| Direct album sales | $300 | 20 CDs or downloads at shows |
| Private lessons | $400 | Four weekly students |
Keep a simple spreadsheet with columns for date, payer, amount, and method. Update it after every show or lesson so you know exactly what cleared the bank.
Stay on top of the basics
- Send a thank-you note and next gig date to every email list signup within 48 hours.
- Photograph the room and post one clear shot the next morning with the venue tagged.
- Pay quarterly estimated taxes on any month that clears $2,000 net.
- Block two mornings a week for admin so gig days stay open for music.
These steps keep cash flow steady and cut last-minute scrambles.
