The idea
Music hubs form where artists feel free, protected, and respected.
Liberland already has the legal foundations to become that place — without heavy regulation or culture wars.
Instead of copying California today, Liberland should copy what made California great in the first place, and avoid the mistakes that came later.
What to copy from California
- Creative freedom: artists experimenting without censorship
- Risk-taking culture: support for new sounds, new scenes, and new ideas
- Talent clustering: musicians, producers, engineers, and creatives in one place
- Collaboration over permission: people building scenes organically
These conditions made California a global music center.
What not to copy from California
- Predatory contracts that strip artists of ownership
- Heavy regulation and bureaucracy around venues and events
- Cultural gatekeeping by labels, platforms, or politics
- Complex taxes and compliance that punish independent creators
These factors slowly pushed artists out or locked them into bad deals.
Why Liberland can do this better
Liberland already offers:
- Freedom of expression
- Strong property and contract rights
- No cultural censorship or cancel culture
- Voluntary economic relationships
Music fits naturally into this framework as speech + private property.
About me
My name is Dylan James Brecher (Don Dilucho).
I’m an Argentine-American music artist and a citizen of Liberland.
I’m proposing this as a creator who believes Liberland can become a place where artists:
- Stay independent
- Own their work
- Create freely without political or cultural pressure
Closing
The government doesn’t need to regulate music to attract it.
It just needs to stay out of the way — and protect freedom better than anywhere else.