NSW Live Music Talent Pipeline Drying Up Due to Lack of Regional Music Education
L'essentiel
- A NSW parliamentary inquiry heard that the live music talent pipeline is diminishing as fewer young people in regional areas receive music education.
- This is attributed to a 'user-pays' system, lack of accessible instruments and teachers, and the disappearance of TAFE courses for technical roles.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
A NSW parliamentary inquiry is examining the state of live music, with a focus on regional areas. Evidence suggests a decline in music education accessibility and a lack of systemic support for the industry.
The talent pipeline for live music is drying up at the source with fewer people in regional areas receiving a musical education, a parliamentary inquiry has heard.
The third day of hearings for the state parliamentary inquiry into live music in NSW heard fewer students were learning music in regional NSW because it was simply "not accessible" for most families.
Riverina Conservatorium of Music director Hamish Tate said the system was "completely user-pays", leaving thousands of students without access to an instrument, a teacher, or a stage.
"We are working in all, bar three, of the Wagga Wagga public schools, [but] we're only scratching the surface in each of those schools, where maybe 40 maximum kids in a school of 500 students will be learning music and experiencing music," he said.
"That's very, very limited exposure."
Southern Tablelands Arts board member Garth Prentice said part of the problem was where lessons were taught, with inadequate space in some schools leading to lessons "in the back of a broom cupboard sort of situation".
There was also a lack of funding for trained music teachers.
Mr Prentice told the inquiry a primary school principal in Goulburn had shared how he had shifted to an online program instead.
"The kids sit in front of a screen and they write things about music, and then that's their music education," he said.
Witnesses said the skills shortage extended behind the scenes as well as on stage.
In Cowra, the shire council's corporate services director Alan Dalton told the inquiry venues could not find sound and lighting technicians because regional TAFE courses in those trades had largely disappeared.
"It can be the case that a trainee, for example, may only be able to find a course that would be the other end of the state, which would have requirements of them travelling weekly to attend training," Mr Dalton said.
Sector without proper infrastructure
The education gap was one of four major themes to emerge from the evidence given by the regional conservatoriums, councils and venue operators from Newcastle, Cowra, Tamworth, Cobargo and Kangaroo Valley.
They described an industry surviving on goodwill rather than systemic support.
Witnesses said a lack of fit-for-purpose performance space was further compounding the education problem.
Young Regional Conservatorium CEO Wendy Brooks told the inquiry the organisation had to hire a cinema space to host a student concert.
"Currently, there's no identified infrastructure funding pathway where we can address that need," Dr Brooks said.
The inquiry was told the Macquarie Conservatorium in Dubbo was among those facing a more immediate threat.
After 25 years on a "peppercorn lease" in a state government building, it has been told it will move to commercial rent.
Mr Tate said every dollar diverted to rent was a dollar that could not be spent on "live music performance" or employing regional musicians.
Funding and festivals that work
The inquiry heard from regional councils about a heavy reliance on grants to host events, and the importance of timely funding.
Cowra Shire Council said its inaugural Bell Beats Music and Arts Festival in Central West NSW lost money last year despite attracting 1,400 people, because late funding confirmation left little time to negotiate costs and run a competitive quote process.
Byron Shire Council Mayor Sarah Ndiaye echoed this frustration, describing event funding as either "glacially slow" or rushed.
Both councils called for multi-year funding cycles of three to five years.
The inquiry also heard how Tamworth's decentralised festival model for its Country Music Festival, in which more than 100 individual venue operators independently book acts, was credited with sustaining the festival for 55 years, unlike larger single-ticket festivals that have struggled or collapsed financially.
Tamworth Regional Council urged the inquiry committee to treat live music as essential infrastructure, noting its role in supporting wellbeing, economic development, tourism, and cultural identity in regional communities.
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
Increased advocacy for multi-year funding cycles for regional arts events.
Probable · En quelques mois
Potential for new TAFE course development or partnerships to address technician shortage.
Possible · En quelques années
Questions ouvertes
- What specific funding models can address the 'user-pays' system?
- How can TAFE courses for technical roles be reinstated regionally?
- What are the long-term economic impacts of this decline?

