Live streaming is reshaping what it means to work as a musician. This book examines the rise of the 'musician-streamer' on Twitch and what the platform is doing to the conditions of musical labour.
Musicians on Twitch: Creativity, Struggles, and the Reality Behind Live Streaming offers the first large scale study of music and musicians on Twitch, the live streaming platform originally built for the broadcast of video games. Since the mid-2010s, and with rapid acceleration during the COVID-19 pandemic, musicians have begun broadcasting their practice live through a platform whose conventions were shaped not by concert halls or recording studios but by the culture of gaming. They have done so not as a marginal experiment but as a regular commitment that, for many, has become a central part of what it means to be a musician at all.
Drawing on interviews with this new breed of ‘musician-streamers’, extensive online observation, and longitudinal data gathered between 2020 and 2026, the book examines what it takes to make and sustain musical work on Twitch.
The book makes four central arguments. First, that Twitch is not a neutral stage for music but an environment with its own history, culture, architecture and norms that shape what musicians do within it. Second, that the work of a musician on Twitch combines technical, relational, content-creation and artistic competencies in a single live performance, giving rise to a hybrid figure the book calls the musician-streamer, an early articulation of what musical professionalism may increasingly require in a world where live, interactive media environments are becoming structural features of cultural life.
Third, that monetisation on Twitch is rarely about music as a finished product. What viewers pay for through subscriptions, donations and other forms of voluntary support is the social environment built around the music: the atmosphere of the stream, the pleasure of recognition, the sense of belonging to a community formed around a particular musician. Fourth, that the demands of remaining visible in a saturated attention economy push musicians towards intensifying practices: marathon streams, subathons, the gradual absorption of everyday life into streamable content. These demands fall unevenly, and they raise difficult questions about what platformised music economies are restructuring and at what cost.
Musicians on Twitch offers a grounded, longitudinal account of what musical work looks like under contemporary conditions of platformisation. Neither celebratory nor dismissive, the book takes seriously both what musicians find on Twitch, including community, creative satisfaction and, in some cases, viable income, and what the platform asks of them in return. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the intersection of music, technology and creative labour, and in what it means to be a musician today.