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Guest post by Bobby Owsinski of Music 3.0Everyone wants to play festivals these days. If you’re a new act then they can provide great visibility, and if you’re established then you can make some real bucks. The problem is that there are now so many festivals that they’re competing for customers, and that means contract language that’s meant to protect the festival from competition to some degree. As a result, most festival performer agreements now have what’s known as a “radius clause” to limit when and were the artist can play another festival, but many artists claim that Coachella’s goes to far.Coachella’s radius clause prohibits an act’s appearance at all other North American festivals from December 15, 2017 to May 1, 2018. What’s worse, artists were also asked not to play shows in venues other than a festival setting in 7 Southern California counties during that same time. On top of that, artists also have to announce that Coachella is their first festival appearance of the year. Needless to say, many acts, especially the smaller ones with less negotiating power, are livid.The Soul’d Out festival in Portland is too, and is now suing Coachella, claiming that many artists have turned down performances at the festival as a result of Coachella’s radius clause, and that it violates federal antitrust laws.Artists Up In Arms Over Coachella’s Radius Clause
[UPDATE] Festivals have become a preferred way for artists to gain visibility and earn some serious cash, but their ubiquity has often leaves these events competing for customers, causing them. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2018/07/artists-up-in-arms-over-coachellas-radio-clause.