First off, great interviews in the program this year. I read them all straight through on the flight home.
In the interview with Alan from Primordial he mentioned the welfare system in Scandanavian countries and how musicians can essentially quit their jobs and focus full time on music. I recall that coming up in the Hammerfall interview a couple of years ago as well.
Ignoring the politics of it, I'm interested in how you all see this affecting the quality of music coming from countries with such a social system.
Obviously there are many truly great metal artists from countries such as Sweden. On one hand it seems this could be a modern equivalent of the noble patron who provided artists such as Mozart their livelihood, allowing them to focus fully on their art. On the other hand, much great music has come out of struggle, so perhaps its detrimental to the art by making the path too easy for the artist.
Thoughts?
In the interview with Alan from Primordial he mentioned the welfare system in Scandanavian countries and how musicians can essentially quit their jobs and focus full time on music. I recall that coming up in the Hammerfall interview a couple of years ago as well.
Ignoring the politics of it, I'm interested in how you all see this affecting the quality of music coming from countries with such a social system.
Obviously there are many truly great metal artists from countries such as Sweden. On one hand it seems this could be a modern equivalent of the noble patron who provided artists such as Mozart their livelihood, allowing them to focus fully on their art. On the other hand, much great music has come out of struggle, so perhaps its detrimental to the art by making the path too easy for the artist.
Thoughts?