Good afternoon. My name is Miranda Mulholland, and I'm very happy to be here today.
I'm a professional musician, a record label owner and a music festival founder, and most recently, I've become an artist advocate.
I started my career in 1999, just as the digital revolution started to change everything about how music was consumed and how artists were remunerated. Now you may not recognize me, but I guarantee that you have all heard me play. Over the last 19 years, I have played or sung on hundreds of recorded songs on over 50 records, including many Juno award-nominated or Juno-winning albums. I've done film and television work. You can hear my fiddle playing on every episode of Republic of Doyle and in the film Maudie, and on the “Good things grow in Ontario” jingle.
I'm currently in my band Harrow Fair. I was in a band called Great Lakes Swimmers, which you might have heard of. I have performed with Blue Rodeo's Jim Cuddy, Alan Doyle, Rose Cousins, and Joel Plaskett, and the list goes on. I own Roaring Girl Records, which is a boutique record label, and I founded the Sawdust City Music Festival in Gravenhurst, Ontario.
Creators are storytellers, and I'm going to tell you a story with a beginning and a middle and an ending that I hope we will write together.
Here's the beginning.
In my first year of university in 1999, a cute boy called me on my home phone and asked me if I could play Celtic fiddle. I could not. I had been studying classical violin since age four but I had no idea about fiddle tunes. But I told him I could and I went to Carden Street Music in Guelph and I bought a Natalie MacMaster CD for $15.99, and I learned every tune on that record.
From there, I went on to a career in music based on my fiddle playing and my life changed, but then everything changed. By now, I know you've heard about the value gap. It's the significant disparity between the value of creative content that's accessed and enjoyed by consumers, and the revenues that are returned to the people and the businesses who create it. What this means to me is that others are commercializing my music and that of my fellow creators but not compensating us fairly.
The biggest reason for this is that the laws in place today reflect a time of home phones, of scrunchies, and of buying a CD at a music store instead of today's world of streaming. Today, music is everywhere. Consumption has never been higher. I can play you every song ever recorded on my cellphone and yet remuneration to artists has not kept up, as David so aptly pointed out.
Our functioning marketplace has been destroyed and creators have been asked to adapt to the new landscape but with no help from the legal framework that's meant to support us. I've lived this first-hand. As I worked harder and harder, playing on more and more records, and more and more tours, I noticed that my success as a musician was getting harder to measure financially. I started to realize that times have changed so quickly and so drastically that the hopes of belonging to the middle class, even as a successful artist, were disappearing.
In a time when artists feel so much pressure to exhibit shiny, glossy lives on social media, I started speaking out about some real truths about our industry, about transparency, and just who the government and copyright laws are protecting. As soon as I did, my creator colleagues like David reached out, spoke up, and confirmed that this was felt across the board and at every level of the music ecosystem. Our community is in a crisis and something needs to be done urgently.
I know you've heard this before. When Andrew Morrison, who is in the Juno-nominated The Jerry Cans, testified at this very committee, the conversation turned to middle-class artists, and he said, “I want to be one of those”. He lamented that royalty cheques that once paid for a down payment on a house can buy him a cup of coffee. Remember when I told you that I play with Jim Cuddy. I have been playing with Jim Cuddy and subbing in for his fiddle player, Anne Lindsay, since 2005. When I first moved to Toronto, I wanted to be the next Anne Lindsay. I followed in her footsteps. I played recording sessions like her. I made my own records like her, and then literally played her shows with Jim whenever she couldn't be there, and I still do. But Anne, who started a generation before me, owns a house. The musician middle class is gone. Even the ladder to get there is gone.
Now I've come to the middle of my story.
Artists like me, Andrew Morrison, and David Bussières, as well as industry leaders like Graham Henderson from Music Canada, representing the majors; SOCAN, representing songwriters; CIMA, representing the indies; and ACTRA, representing performers, agree the laws need to update to reflect the digital marketplace.
Here are four changes that would make a big difference in the lives of artists, and in my life, now.
Number one is the radio royalty exemption. It was a 1997 subsidy given to every commercial radio station in Canada, allowing them to only pay $100 of royalties on the first $1.25 million in advertising revenue, and it was meant to be temporary, 20 years ago. The landscape has changed significantly, and now most of these stations have been acquired by the big media companies, but the subsidies still apply. That means that all of your favourite Canadian artists are subsidizing Bell and Corus.
Here's another one. The definition of “sound recording” in the Copyright Act is currently worded in such a way that recorded music is not considered a sound recording when it's included in a soundtrack for TV and film. Here's how this affects me. Even though I played on every episode of CBC's Republic of Doyle, which is now syndicated worldwide—I've seen it on TV in Germany—I only received the one-time union rate I got per session, which is about $280. However, the composer of the songs collects residuals every time that show airs around the world. In 44 other countries around the world, they give artists the right to receive public performance royalties when their sound recordings are used as part of a soundtrack for TV and film. That's 44 other countries. I think we can catch up. Here's the kicker. The current definition of “sound recording” costs the music ecosystem approximately $45 million per year in lost royalties.
Another thing that would help immediately is the creation of a private copying fund. This fund would make sure that when artists' work is copied, artists are fairly compensated for it, without creating a new cost to consumers.
Last, the extension of the term of copyright has an impact on artists as creative entrepreneurs, giving artists the ability to leverage their success in order to create new opportunities. This is a legacy move. This ensures that my catalogue retains value for longer, providing something for my grandchildren.
How does this story end? I'm hoping that you'll help us write it.
Last week there was an historic vote in Europe, and the European Parliament took real, decisive action to address the value gap. They have not only agreed that it's a problem; they're now taking the legislative steps to begin to close it. Two days ago, the United States Senate unanimously adopted the Music Modernization Act, which also works to close the value gap.
Here in Canada, it's my hope that you'll work with artists like me who've come to this committee, come to your colleagues at the industry committee, and told you that the framework is broken and that we need our laws to update to our day-to-day lives. Artists have adapted and we need our laws to do the same.
I'd also like you to apply skepticism when those currently taking advantage of artists come here and tell you the system is fine and that artists are better off or that we just aren't working hard enough. They might do what they did in Europe and swamp your inboxes with technologically created auto-spam to give you the false sense that there are thousands of faceless voters determined to vote to protect the status quo, but if that happens, I hope that you'll remember this story, my story, and that we have over 3,700 real Canadian creators, including Alanis Morissette, The Sheepdogs, and Loreena McKennitt, who have signed on to focus on creators and to advocate for urgent changes in copyright law.
It's easy to look at Canada's musical superstars like Drake and Bieber and to think that they don't need this committee's help, but I'm here for the 99% of artists whose music is being listened to but who are struggling to earn a living, to feed their families, to pay taxes, and to keep creating Canadian music. For these creators, the value gap is real and we need you to fix it.
Thank you.