How Independent Music Venues Are Surviving the Pandemic’s Long Tail

After a year of COVID closures, live music made a halting but hard-won return in 2021. Big questions remain, but according to venue operators, there are reasons to be hopeful about the future.

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Graphic by Callum Abbott. Photos by Alexander Popov (inlay) and Maksim Zhashkevych (background) via Unsplash

Velena Vego waited about 16 months for live music to return at the 40 Watt in Athens, Georgia, where she has been booking shows for more than three decades. Now, she’s still waiting for the storied college-rock institution, famous for nurturing hometown legends like R.E.M. and the B-52’s, to return to full steam. “This was a little slow in the fourth quarter,” the veteran talent booker says, “but I do believe that by next spring and the following fall, we’re going to see everybody coming through because they’re going to feel more comfortable.” She pauses. “Well, we hope so, right?”

The 40 Watt was lucky in many respects. After more than a year of agonizing uncertainty, the club was among the roughly 4,800 venues and promoters to receive potentially business-saving funding under the Save Our Stages Act, according to data from the federal government’s Small Business Administration. Since reopening in August, the venue’s Christmas light-strewn room has hosted sold-out shows for artists from Athens local Kishi Bashi to Philadelphia’s Alex G, with masks and proof of vaccination required. In March, Nashville indie-rock singer-songwriter Soccer Mommy is scheduled to kick off her 2021 tour here. “I’m just getting more optimistic,” Vego says.

With new tours being announced with regularity, some independent venues and promoters finally see the light at the end of the tunnel. Although an untold number of beloved spaces are permanently shuttered, the federal government has at long last disbursed $13 billion (of a promised $16 billion) in grant money to venues and other cultural institutions that have struggled to pay their bills during the global pandemic. And while fears about new COVID-19 variants such as Omicron persist, about 60 percent of Americans are now vaccinated. Laws and public attitudes about vaccine and mask enforcement vary from state to state, but in general, they seem to have done their job: allow for the reasonably safe return of live music.

“Everybody is feeling cautious and hopeful for 2022. It’s been an emotional ride,” says Audrey Fix Schaefer, head of communications at the National Independent Venue Association. “It’s a bit of a holdover sensation, of remembering we’re not done with this yet, but we’re closer every day.”

NIVA, an advocacy group of more than 3,000 venues, festivals, and promoters that formed in the early weeks of the pandemic, succeeded by the end of 2020 in getting Congress to incorporate the Save Our Stages Act into December’s COVID stimulus package, earmarking $16 billion in relief for venues that were forced to shutter. The process of actually putting money in venue operators’ hands this year turned out to be almost as torturous as enacting legislation, with NVA and other organizations blaming the SBA for “errors and delays” that meant only 90 businesses had received grant money as of early June 2021. But the situation has recently improved. According to the SBA, it had reviewed all of the initial applications out of 17,644 overall by mid-December.

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