[Harp-L] List of harmonica players who have achieved becoming millionaires?
Mike Fugazzi
harpninjamike@xxxxx
Tue Dec 12 10:12:53 EST 2023
$23 is like 2 billion listens! Way to go!
On Tue, Dec 12, 2023 at 9:10 AM 46long Blake <46long at xxxxx> wrote:
> I got a $23 royalty check from streams of my duo's original music this
> year! Like Weird Al said, "Thanks for the sandwich!!" ;)
>
> On Tue, Dec 12, 2023 at 10:01 AM Mike Fugazzi <harpninjamike at xxxxx>
> wrote:
>
>> In fairness, if a harmonica player makes $40,000 a year and has a 25 year
>> career, they have made a million dollars. That being said, the list of
>> harmonica players making a decent living - Forbes reports that the average
>> annual salary in the US is $59,428 - is probably very very low. For
>> those that are making "good" money, they are surely diverse in revenue
>> streams. Meaning, they aren't just playing music for people to listen to.
>> Those that do make a significant amount of money gigging probably do
>> things
>> other than play harmonica too.
>>
>> Anecdotally, in my head, many of the "famous" harmonica players I know
>> supplement their income working jobs outside of music. Those that don't
>> are few and far between like Jason Ricci and Dennis Gruenling (I assume).
>> The elder statesmen have either been that established over decades OR, I
>> am
>> guessing, have benefits from being at retirement age that make things more
>> manageable?
>>
>> Many years ago, I read the Little Walter biography, and I swear I read
>> that
>> even at peak popularity, LW was playing covers on guitar to make most of
>> his money. To make an average salary, a harp player would have to make
>> $1,250 a week, year round. Let's say you have no expenses and three great
>> gigs a week making a couple hundred dollars for a couple of sets, so
>> roughly $600. I am not saying you can't make more than that, but am
>> looking at it realistically. You could teach a few lessons a day at $50
>> and get close to $1,250. But you are also probably booking your own gigs,
>> doing your own promo materials, and trying to be a content creator....so
>> you'd be working full time as a musician.
>>
>> The best way to make a livable wage as a musician is to perform in a cover
>> band. I know guys locally charging several thousand a show. Assuming
>> it's
>> $6,000 a night, almost half probably goes to expenses. The other $3,000
>> would be split between 5 band members, maybe? So, they are making about
>> $600 a gig. Pros are the amount of effort to sustain booking shows is
>> lesser and you don't have to work as much off stage. Locally, the seasons
>> create a stronger demand for shows part of the year, so winters might be
>> slower.
>>
>> Another workable model is to not play in a band but to do duo or trio.
>> You
>> can charge $300-400 a show with lesser expenses and overhead.
>>
>> At the end of the day, there is a lot of nuance to the topic of who makes
>> money with harmonica and how much. There is also popularity vs money or
>> online presence vs gigging to consider too. I've noticed a lot of
>> contemporary harmonica content creators get views, but are intermediates
>> at
>> best. They seem to teach content at their level or maybe a step below.
>> My
>> point being there is a doable floor of entry for trying to make income as
>> a
>> content creator.
>>
>> Finally, the case can be made at times that the better you are from a
>> technical standpoint, the more you hit a point of diminishing returns
>> where
>> the general public cares less about what you are able to do or how "good"
>> you are.
>>
>> I started playing in the early 2000's and was too late for the 5-7 shows a
>> week and too early to get in on the YouTube train before it became
>> saturated. I long ago decided that harmonica was a hobby and I would only
>> do it under my terms, whatever they are at the time. I view it like the
>> lottery, you put a little effort in and some day you might get lucky
>> meeting the right person at the right time (kind of like Mickey Raphael).
>> Could I sing and/or play harmonica at a professional level? Absolutely.
>> Have I ever really tried to do that? No. I like having a steady job,
>> income, and supporting my kids. Since returning to gigging (I took a long
>> time off when I went to grad school), I've booked limited winter dates and
>> as much as I can in the summer. I play in a dad band (wide range of
>> covers
>> on a very small scale of $75-$100 a night) and a duo (which I LOVE LOVE
>> LOVE to do), where I clear $150-300 depending on the gig.
>>
>> As a duo, I basically get to do whatever I want. I get to play stuff like
>> this https://www.youtube.com/shorts/7IvCJu7ifl8 and still get to do this
>> https://www.youtube.com/shorts/NPICWtlg1k0. FWIW, when it comes to
>> posting
>> gig content, I consistently get the most views from Facebook. TikTok is
>> consistent, but not as many, and YouTube is all over. I posted clips from
>> the same gig where the one I thought was kind of lame got a ton of views
>> and then one that I think is really good got like 100. I can't figure out
>> YouTube.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Dec 12, 2023 at 5:49 AM Ken H in Ohio <airmojoken at xxxxx>
>> wrote:
>>
>> > Not sure a list exists... but I bet these three are at the top of it !
>> >
>> > 1. Bruce Willis -- $250 million
>> > 2. Jim Belushi -- $50
>> > 3. John Popper -- $10 million
>> >
>> > Ken H in OH
>> >
>> > On Sun, Dec 10, 2023 at 5:57 AM F F <franze52 at xxxxx> wrote:
>> >
>> > > Does anyone have statistics on the harmonica players who have achieved
>> > the
>> > > milestone of becoming millionaires?
>> > >
>> >
>>
>
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