
Inspiring communities across generations
Press Release
22 April 2026
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Two in five children locked out of live music as cost and location barriers create growing divide
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New research reveals postcode lottery in live music exposure as Playground Proms set to reach 63,000 primary school children over the next four months
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An estimated 2 million UK children are being locked out of live music[1], with cost and location preventing access for two in five primary school pupils, according to new research from music charity Playground Proms.2
The study, which surveyed 1,000 state school children aged 7–11, found that 40% have not seen live music in the past year, highlighting a widespread gap in access to cultural experiences.
Exposure varies significantly depending on where children live. In Greater London, 68% of children have seen live music, compared to just 43% in the North East. Most other regions sit between 50% and 57%, reinforcing a clear postcode lottery in access to live performance.
Among children who have not attended live music, cost and distance are the dominant barriers, with 43% saying tickets are too expensive and 37% saying events are too far away or difficult to get to.
There is also strong unmet demand for playing instruments. Nearly three in ten children (29%) do not have access to a musical instrument they can practise on. Access is heavily dependent on schools, with 51% using instruments at school compared to 35% at home.
Among those without access, two thirds (66%) say they would like to learn, compared to 34% who are not interested, indicating that lack of opportunity - rather than lack of interest - is the key barrier.
The survey reveals that children recognise a small set of familiar instruments by sound well, but knowledge drops sharply beyond this. For some instruments, more than one in five children say they don’t know what they are hearing, pointing to gaps in exposure to live music rather than just knowledge. While 95% of children can identify a piano by sound, just 39% can identify a saxophone. Uncertainty is also high for less familiar orchestral instruments, with 43% unable to identify a flute by sound and 20% unsure about the double bass.
The research comes as Playground Proms announces its largest UK tour to date, supported by Arts Council England funding. Inspired by the BBC Proms, the project is designed to tackle these access gaps by bringing high-quality live classical music directly into state primary schools, particularly in areas where opportunities to experience live music are more limited.
The programme also includes intergenerational visits, bringing children into care homes to perform and share music with older residents, helping to tackle isolation while building confidence and connection across generations.
In 2026 the initiative will reach 63,000 children, delivering workshops across 15 UK areas with 18 regional stops. Since launching, the programme has already reached around 150,000 children in over 500 schools, expanding year-on-year.
The findings show that children’s perceptions of classical music are still being formed. Around 23% of those surveyed say it makes them feel relaxed, 22% say they like it and 19% say it makes them happy, while 14% describe it as clever or impressive. However, 16% describing it as ‘boring’ or ‘for old people’, while 7% say it is ‘for people with money’ and 6% say it is ‘not for people like me’. A further 17% say they don’t know much about it, suggesting unfamiliarity - rather than dislike - is shaping many views.
Cathal Ó Dúill, founder of Playground Proms, said: “Our new research exposes a stark reality - too many children are being locked out of music in the UK. When nearly half of children are missing out on live music because of cost and where they live, that is not a cultural gap, it’s a systemic failure.
At a time when music provision is under pressure in schools, the government needs to act on the election promises it made to ensure that all children receive high quality music education. A-level music entries in England have fallen by 45% and GCSE music by 26% since the introduction of the EBacc in 2010, and when access increasingly depends on geography and funding, we risk entrenching these inequalities even further – already, less than 2 percent of current performers in UK orchestras are from the global majority. Without intervention, a generation of children will grow up without meaningful access to music that is proven to support confidence, wellbeing and academic engagement.
We know that playing an instrument helps our brain health – promoting memory and problem solving skills, and for children, just listening to classical music helps with language skills, focus, development and emotional regulation. There is a clear need for sustained investment in music education and local provision to ensure every child has the opportunity to engage. Playground Proms exists to break that cycle by taking music directly into schools and removing those barriers completely. If we don’t act now, access to music will become a privilege, not a right.”
Founded in 2021, Playground Proms delivers interactive classical music workshops in state primary school playgrounds, removing barriers linked to cost, transport and location. Using Dalcroze-informed techniques, each visit combines live performance with hands-on learning, introducing core musical concepts such as rhythm, conducting and composition, alongside well-known classical repertoire. Children actively take part, including creating and performing their own music, building both confidence and understanding.
Ahead of each visit, schools receive resource packs for teachers and pupils, alongside CPD sessions to help teachers embed music more confidently in the classroom and extend the impact beyond the workshop.
ENDS
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[1] UK child population estimate based on Office for National Statistics (ONS) mid-year population estimates (approx. 4.8–5 million children aged 7–11)