We empower through education.
We dismantle the gatekeepers.
We are the critique of the mainstream and the end of the old guard.
— burninghouse manifesto
Education as rebellion. Strategy as legacy. No gatekeepers. No permission. No status quo.
The music and creative industries present artists with a structurally dishonest choice. Mainstream success — label deals, platform algorithmic favour, festival placements — is increasingly contingent on a degree of conformity that slowly erodes the artistic distinctiveness that made an act worth signing in the first place. The alternative, artistic purity maintained at the cost of commercial viability, is a path most artists cannot sustain past their late twenties. The industry has been content to let this binary stand because it serves the interests of capital aggregators, not creators.
burninghouse exists to make that choice unnecessary.
Build parallel. Educate. Document everything. Refuse the dependency model.
Operating principleburninghouse draws its philosophical lineage from punk — not as aesthetic nostalgia but as a structural argument. Punk's enduring contribution to culture was not three chords and ripped jeans; it was the demonstration that an entire system of gatekeepers, A&R offices, radio programmers, and press tastemakers could be bypassed if you were willing to do the work yourself and tell the truth while doing it. The DIY recording, the self-pressed single, the gig in a community hall: these were not stopgaps while waiting for industry permission. They were the industry, built parallel.
burninghouse applies the same logic to the contemporary creative economy. The gatekeepers have changed form — they are now algorithms, streaming deal structures, sync licensing bottlenecks, and the opaque economics of music video production — but the strategic response is identical. Build parallel. Educate. Document everything. Refuse the dependency model.
Non-conformity at burninghouse is not rebellion for its own sake. It is the recognition that the mainstream template for artist development — sign, release, tour, repeat until dropped — is optimised for label revenue, not artist longevity. Deliberately departing from this template is a business decision as much as an artistic one.
The DIY ethos means building the infrastructure burninghouse needs rather than waiting for it to be offered. This includes proprietary educational content, in-house creative production capability, self-managed client onboarding systems, and a documentation standard that makes burninghouse's work legible and verifiable — not just to clients, but to the outside world watching.
The music industry has a long-standing institutional interest in artists not understanding the business they are working in. burninghouse's educational branch is a direct intervention against that structure. Radical education here means giving artists the knowledge — about rights, royalties, licensing, deal structures, creative entrepreneurship — that the industry has historically withheld or obscured. An artist who understands their P&L is not a better client. They are a harder client to exploit, which is precisely the point.
Every output from burninghouse is documented with the same rigour a journalist or legal professional would apply. Claims are verified before they are made. Case studies are real and attributed. Educational content cites sources. This is not pedantry — it is brand positioning. In an industry full of consultants selling frameworks nobody has tested, documented honesty is a competitive differentiator.
Documented honesty is a competitive differentiator.
Brand positionAn artist who understands the economics of the music industry makes better decisions. Better decisions produce more durable careers. More durable careers generate more interesting creative output over longer periods. The industry is therefore structurally better — more diverse, more innovative, more resistant to extraction — if artists are educated. The educational branch is not charity; it is a bet that financially literate artists are a better market for services like burninghouse's mentoring and project work.
Financially literate artists are a harder client to exploit.
Strategic thesisThe fundamental mechanics of how the music industry actually functions — not the mythology, not the gossip, not the inspirational founder stories. The supply chain of a recording. How DSP economics work in practice. What a distribution deal contains and what it doesn't. How sync licensing operates and who controls it. What a manager's responsibilities actually are under Spanish and EU law.
Rights ownership, royalty tracking, income diversification, tax structures for self-employed creatives in Spain, and basic financial modelling for music careers. The goal is not to make artists into accountants but to make them informed enough to know when their accountant (or lawyer, or manager) is doing their job.
Building a career as a creative enterprise. Brand development, audience strategy, creative direction principles, pricing frameworks for creative services, and the business mechanics of running an independent music operation at scale.
The capacity to interrogate the industry's norms rather than accept them. Reading deal structures critically. Evaluating whether a partnership is genuinely aligned or opportunistic. Understanding the difference between marketing claims and operational reality. Developing the intellectual tools to know when you are being manipulated.
An artist who understands their P&L is a harder client to exploit.
Core principleThe burninghouse Data Center is a library of downloadable resources produced by the academy and the creative operating system. Everything here is free, rigorously documented, and designed to be used — not just read. No email gate. No paywall. No tracking.