Business Day (Nigeria)

US visa fee hike seen delaying Nigerian artists’ tour dreams

- By Temitayo Jaiyeola

PERFORMING for an internatio­nal audience is the dream of virtually every Nigerian artist, and the United States is one of the major countries many would want to tour.

Now, a threefold increase in the price of visas for internatio­nal artists may choke this ambition out of many up-andcoming Nigerian artists.

Recently, the United States Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services announced an over 250 percent visa fee increase for global musicians hoping to tour the US, which kicked in on April 1, 2024.

This increased the visa applicatio­n price from $460 to $1,615 and $1,655, a 259.78 percent increase. The express applicatio­n price rose to $2,805 from $2,500. According to the Musicians Union (MU), these increases include fees to subsidise the US Asylum Program.

The last time the US reviewed prices was in 2016, when it raised the applicatio­n fee to $460 from $3,235. These hikes translate to a significan­t financial burden for artists who travel with bands. For many from developing countries like Nigeria, the cost of touring has increased. For instance, applying for a fourmember band has increased from $1,840 to $6,460.

In recent years, Nigerian musicians have leveraged the internatio­nal stage to achieve substantia­l financial success and recognitio­n. A recent report from Chartsafri­ca on X revealed that Burna Boy had eight of the 10 highest-grossing concerts by an African artist in the last two years (2022 and 2023).

Notably, five of these eight were in the US. Also, Wizkid’s two Madison Square Garden shows were among the top 10 shows by an African artist, grossing $1.95 million (between 2022 and 2023). In 2023, Asake became the first African artist to headline and sell out a show at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. On July 2, 2023, Davido sold out the 21,000-capacity Capital One Arena, underscori­ng the growing popularity of Afrobeats and Nigerian music globally.

Touring plays a crucial role in launching new artists to Western audiences. After his debut album in 2021, Joeyboy embarked on his first major US tour in 2022. Touring is also a significan­t income source for musicians. Burna Boy, for instance, earned $11.8 million from eight internatio­nal concerts in two years.

“Most Nigerian artists take pride in touring different countries and headlining shows in countries like England and the United States,” Oyinda

Olukanni, a music executive and Entertainm­ent, pose new documentar­y This recently. artists. founder a significan­t visa Bemigho fee of filmmaker, told Party increase challenge Businessda­y Awala, Monkz told will to a Businessda­y: affect do not upcoming have the “I artists structure think as it they will and the make requisite the tour representa­tion happen or have to time and financial capability for it. “Tours require a lot of money. The capital outlay is huge as you travel from city to city, book venues, buy tickets, etc. You need to be backed by a management team with the financial capacity to do it.” He said up-and-coming artists who are signed onto management with the right financial muscle will not be impacted by any extra cost. Matthew Covey, US immi

gration lawyer at Tamizdat and Covey Law, in a post by MU, described the visa fee hike as a major blow to the internatio­nal performing arts sector.

Dave Webster, MU head of internatio­nal, said: “While any increases in US visa fees are a bitter blow to the industry and go against the grain when it comes to cultural exchange, the global response to last year’s proposed increases have certainly ensured that these increases are not as bad as originally feared.”

A petition launched by the United Musicians and Allied Workers on actionnetw­ork.org warns that the consequenc­e of the hike will not only affect internatio­nal artists but will have broader impacts on the US music and cultural industries.

The associatio­n argued that combined with the rising costs of touring and the tripled cost of a visa, the desire and ability for internatio­nal artists from lower-income and marginalis­ed parts of the world to perform in the US will wane.

“Venues, festivals, booking agents, labels, and promoters will all bear the brunt of these via increases, and consumers will see prices increase for concert tickets and merchandis­e from internatio­nal artists,” it added.

Some experts told Businessda­y that up-and-coming artists might not necessaril­y be impacted by the hike because of the growth of streaming revenues.

A 2023 report by the Internatio­nal Federation of the Phonograph­ic Industry disclosed that music revenue in Nigeria and other Sub-saharan African countries grew by 24.7 percent, driven by a surge in paid streaming revenues, which climbed 24.5 percent.

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