Music Grants in Australia: Funding Artists, Education, and Music's Community Role

Music is one of Australia's most vibrant cultural expressions — from Indigenous song traditions thousands of years old to a commercial music industry producing globally significant artists. Music grant funding supports the full spectrum: emerging artists who need investment to develop, music education in schools and communities, live music venues and festivals that are essential community infrastructure, Indigenous music preservation and development, and the community music programs that use music as a tool for wellbeing and connection. Understanding the music grant landscape helps artists, educators, and organisations find the right funding for their work.

Music in Australia

The Australian music landscape

  • Diverse and internationally significant commercial music industry
  • Rich Indigenous music traditions — songlines, ceremony, contemporary Indigenous music
  • Strong live music culture: festivals, venues, and pub rock tradition
  • Significant classical and orchestral sector (Sydney Symphony, Melbourne Symphony, etc.)
  • Music education from primary school through conservatoria
  • Music as community: choirs, community bands, amateur ensembles

Challenges facing Australian music

  • Streaming has transformed revenue models for artists
  • Live music venues under pressure from development and noise regulations
  • Music education in schools has declined in some states
  • Regional and remote communities have less access to music education and live music
  • Indigenous music often under-resourced and inadequately preserved

Government music funding

Australia Council for the Arts

Major national funder of music across genres:
- Individuals: development grants for emerging and established artists
- Organisations: operational and project funding for music organisations
- Music Australia: promotion of Australian music internationally

Creative Australia

(Formerly Australia Council — rebranded in 2023): continues major music funding role.

State arts agencies

  • Arts NSW / Create NSW
  • Creative Victoria
  • Arts SA, Arts WA, Arts Queensland, Arts Tasmania

APRA AMCOS

Australian music rights body — some grants and award programs for songwriters.

Philanthropic music funders

The Ian Potter Foundation

Music (particularly classical and education).

The Myer Foundation

Music and performing arts.

Creative Partnerships Australia

Co-investment matchmaking for music and arts.

Foundation for Young Australians

Youth music programs.

State community foundations

Local music programs.

Types of funded music programs

Emerging artist development

  • Recording grants (studio time, production costs)
  • Touring support for emerging artists
  • Residencies and intensive development opportunities
  • Mentoring with established artists
  • Marketing and audience development for emerging artists

Music education

  • Instrument programs in schools (particularly disadvantaged schools)
  • After-school music programs
  • Community music schools
  • Music literacy and appreciation in curriculum
  • Teacher professional development for music

Indigenous music

  • Recording and preservation of traditional music
  • Indigenous music centres and studios
  • Contemporary Indigenous music development
  • Song language preservation
  • Crossover and contemporary Indigenous music artists

Community music

  • Community choirs (dementia choirs, refugee choirs, community singing)
  • Community bands and ensembles
  • Music in aged care and disability settings
  • Music therapy programs
  • Community music festivals

Live music infrastructure

  • Venue support for small live music venues
  • Festival development grants
  • Regional and remote live music access
  • Indigenous music festivals

Classical and orchestral

  • Symphony orchestra support
  • Chamber music development
  • Opera and music theatre
  • Youth orchestras

Music and health

  • Music therapy (accredited clinical programs)
  • Music in mental health settings
  • Music and dementia programs
  • Music in palliative care

Genre diversity

  • Jazz and improvised music
  • Folk and traditional music
  • Electronic and experimental music
  • Hip hop and contemporary
  • World music and multicultural music

Music's community role

Beyond its artistic value, music plays a profound role in community health and cohesion:
- Community choirs reduce social isolation and improve mental health
- Music in aged care reduces depression and agitation
- Music programs for youth at risk build self-esteem and community connection
- Music therapy has evidence for neurological, psychiatric, and palliative care applications
- Music brings diverse communities together — multicultural festivals, community concerts

Grant applications that connect music to these wellbeing and social outcomes — without losing the intrinsic value of music itself — can access health, social services, and community funders alongside traditional arts funders.

Grant application considerations

Artistic quality alongside access

Music funders care about both artistic excellence and community access. Applications that don't address artistic quality are less credible to arts funders; applications that don't address access are less credible to community funders. Balance both.

Indigenous music: community-led

Indigenous music grants must be led by Indigenous artists and communities. Applications from non-Indigenous organisations working with Indigenous music must have deep, genuine Indigenous creative leadership.

Music education equity

Music education is unevenly distributed — well-resourced schools have it; disadvantaged schools often don't. Applications for music education specifically in disadvantaged communities address a genuine equity gap.

Venue sustainability

Live music venues are closing across Australia. Applications for venue support that include sustainable business models (not just emergency support) are more compelling to funders.


Tahua's grants management platform supports music funders and music organisations — with artist development tracking, program reach measurement, audience engagement data, and the reporting tools that help music funders demonstrate their investment in Australia's musical culture and community life.

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