A volunteer army of music lovers in Oxford will take part in the world’s first ever live music census.

The UK Live Music Census – conducted by the universities of Edinburgh, Newcastle and Glasgow – will run for 24 hours from noon on Thursday, March 9.

They hope the survey will help measure live music’s cultural and economic value, discover what challenges the industry is facing, and inform policy to help it flourish.

There will be coordinated censuses in Oxford, Glasgow, Newcastle, Leeds, Birmingham, Southampton and Brighton.

Lead organiser Dr Matt Brennan from the University of Edinburgh said: “This is like a Springwatch for live music. We want people to let us know everything about the music they see on this one day.

“Live music in the UK – from the Beatles and the Sex Pistols to West End musicals and Glastonbury – has transformed our culture, yet it is constantly under pressure. This census will help give us an accurate snapshot of the scene’s health.”

Volunteers will be asked to record aspects of the gig including the musical genre, the venue, door charge and audience demographic.

A nationwide online survey for musicians, venues, promoters and audiences will also go live on 9 March and will be open until 8 May.

It will gather information about why people attend gigs, which venues are considered important, how much people spend and how far they will travel.

The census is led by academics from the University of Edinburgh’s Reid School of Music – part of Edinburgh College of Art – in collaboration with Newcastle University’s International Centre for Music Studies and the University of Glasgow’s School of Culture and Creative Arts.

The project is funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council.

Two years ago the project team ran a pilot live music census in Edinburgh. Its findings were used to inform the city council’s decision to change its policies about noise levels to the benefit of performers.

To get involved visit uklivemusiccensus.org