Yes, exactly. A session player, for anybody who's wondering, or a side player, is someone who accompanies the featured artist. So when you see a band, you think that band remains intact. Most of the time they don't. Those are individuals who are hired by what's called the musical contractor or the musical leader to play for that particular artist, particularly in a concert situation and in recording. So the band that you see live is not the band, necessarily, that you will find in the studio. Those players who participate—and they bring rights through Re:Sound and through the other collectives. That comes to, yes, $2,000 to $3,000 a year, depending upon the airplay, you're absolutely right. What's important is it's a source of income that they've come to depend on.
Nobody's arguing with the principle, by the way. Nobody here at this entire committee says it's not correct that they get that. What we're arguing about is the means of delivering that, and how it's stored and how copies are made.
We believe—and that's what we're asking the government to consider—we need to keep that principle in front and say, yes, okay, the technology doesn't work anymore, it doesn't make sense, but we need to find a mechanism that still upholds the principle, still gets this cash back to the players who have depended on it. It's a small amount, but it does pay for studio time, it does pay for instrument maintenance and a number of different things, and it's been there for 20 years.
We're just asking for maintenance. We're not asking for something new. We're asking to keep something that's been there for a long time.