If there are any of you that are paid church musicians in a Texas metropolitan area (or other city area with similar cost of living), I would appreciate any private replies about how you are paid (hourly, salary, other), and what that ends up amounting to per hour, based on the average number of hours you work each week (averaged out over the course of the year).
And, whether you think the current pay is just or not, and why or why not.
Often the local AGO Chapter has a salary guide--in this area it's on-line (Milwaukee.) They break down compensation in a variety of ways that may be helpful for you. Be warned: the AGO scale is usually higher than what the Catholic church likes to pay.
The AGO no longer publishes the Salary Guide, and it's been taken down from all chapter websites. It was a dispute that involved the Federal Trade Commission and lawyers, etc. Anyway, don't bother with that.
The AAM publishes a much better and more reliable guide anyway, including fees for weddings and funerals.
Yes the AAM publishes a guide...do you know of one Catholic Church that remunerates musicians at that level? Some Anglicans do. The thing is, remuneration is the RC is all over the map. There is no guide followed, except that many parishes pay by the mass in order to avoid giving any benefits to musicians - we all know the full time jobs that are listed as '20 hours a week' to avoid this. Yes, social justice?
matthewj: Really? I have never heard of a RC church anywhere paying what a person with a doctorate and the experience listed receives anywhere near the salaries mentioned.
I am reminded of Joseph Haydn commenting on his younger brother Michael, lamenting how such a bright musical mind was so badly paid: "One could earn more money with a bagpipe than with masses and offertories."
And this was at a point in time when the patrons of Church music were nobility, as well as clergy.
I was speaking with my mother about just this topic the other day. Not only does it make a difference in paying bills monthly; it makes a difference in the 403(b) contributions. So we are unjustly compensated now and in our retirement. She said something about not having to tithe - I told her that should be my choice, not the Church's. I believe it becomes a labor of love for all of us.
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