In October 2020 the BBC Shared Data Unit took another look at the state of the live music industry in the UK amid the pandemic.
Operators across the country said they would have to rely on fundraising activities to make it through the winter.
The 10pm curfew imposed on 24 September could leave the businesses having to trade on an eighth of their usual income, a charity leader told the BBC.
Close to £3m had been raised for a campaign to keep grassroots operators alive in the UK since April.
But the Music Venues Trust (MVT), running the campaign, said the mix of social distancing rules and the curfew would still leave its members facing a difficult winter.
We provided our partners with a spreadsheet containing the details of, and links to, all of the ongoing fundraising campaigns on the Crowdfunder website.
We also compiled a report with quotes from the Music Venues Trust, popstar KT Tunstall and operators of venues in Leicester and Stockton-on-Tees.
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To view the report, click here
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And to view the dataset, click here
The BBC Shared Data Unit makes data journalism available to the wider news industry as part of the BBC Local News Partnership. Stories produced by our partners included:
- Glasgow Live: Music venues fight for survival as £36,000 raised for struggling gig spots in Scotland 3 October 2020
- Teeside Live: Venues desperately fighting to keep grassroots live music alive on an eighth of their normal income 5 October 2020
The story also featured on the UK and England BBC homepages, as well as radio bulletins on 6Music and 5Live.
You can find all coronavirus-related stories by the BBC data units tagged 'coronavirus' here