https://apnews.com/c56c6591172edacca00a7ead8346e0cf
According to the article the musicians were part of Nashville's tourism scene prior to the COVID-19 pandemic now the musicians are on unemployment. Note some of the musicians also toured with the big names on concert and they are also facing hard times.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Colin Poulton moved to Nashville in 2008 to study commercial guitar. He dropped out of college but stuck with the city and the guitar, first playing in a series of original bands and more recently making his living in the honky-tonks of Lower Broadway along with “a few wedding bands and some other bands.”
All those gigs ended abruptly when the coronavirus hit. The clubs shut down on March 16 to slow the spread, and Nashville’s normally packed downtown streets are all but deserted. Poulton applied for unemployment as soon as Congress passed the federal relief bill extending benefits to nontraditional workers. He’s been without steady work for five weeks now but so far has received nothing.
“A lot of us went from having anywhere from four to seven gigs a week to nothing,” Poulton said.
With its vibrant music industry, Nashville is a magnet for people like Poulton. Music City is known as the home of country music in the U.S., but tens of thousands of professional musicians of all kinds live there, drawn to the plentiful job opportunities and the camaraderie of a community of artists. Now they’re caught up in an unemployment system that’s not geared toward them.
According to the article the musicians were part of Nashville's tourism scene prior to the COVID-19 pandemic now the musicians are on unemployment. Note some of the musicians also toured with the big names on concert and they are also facing hard times.