Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Remembering Rock Against Racism

Great story, with a surprising inspiration.  It is a fascinating account. I never knew about Clapton and Bowie's attitudes.  Quite racist remarks from Clapton -- a  musician whose fame came from interpreting the blues, which if memory serves was created by African-American musicians...

It was 5 August 1976 and Eric Clapton was drunk, angry and on stage at the Birmingham Odeon. 'Enoch was right,' he told the audience, 'I think we should send them all back.' Britain was, he complained, in danger of becoming 'a black colony' and a vote for controversial Tory politician Enoch Powell whom he described as a prophet was needed to 'keep Britain white'. Although the irony was possibly lost on Clapton, the Odeon in Birmingham is on New Street, minutes from the Midland Hotel where eight years earlier Powell had made his infamous 'Rivers of Blood' speech. But if the coincidence was curious, the hypocrisy was breathtaking: Clapton's career was based on appropriating black music, and he had recently had a hit with Bob Marley's 'I Shot the Sheriff'.

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