I Can See You - by Paddy Summerfield c. 1986
Showing posts with label Billy Bragg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Billy Bragg. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 09, 2025

Billy Bragg on Morrisey - lest we forget!

 So sad, sad past Sunday reading. Beyond distressed or angry now just so so disappointed. Morrisey you've let us down, you've let Manchester down, worse you have made fools of all The Smiths fans like me and Billy (Bragg) who wrote and posted this)

Shame on you Steven!

Billy Bragg 7/7/2019 (from his Facebook page)

"Last Sunday, while much of the British media were lauding Stormzy’s Glastonbury headline show as epoch defining, Morrissey posted a white supremacist video on his website, accompanied by the comment ‘Nothing But Blue Skies for Stormzy...The Gallows for Morrissey’. The nine minute clip lifted footage from the grime star’s Pyramid Stage performance while arguing that the British establishment are using him to promote multiculturalism at the expense of white culture. 

The YouTube channel of the video’s author contains other clips expressing , among other things, homophobia, racism and misogyny - left wing women of colour are a favourite target for his ire. There are also clips expounding the Great Replacement Theory, a far right conspiracy trope which holds that there is a plot of obliterate the white populations of Europe and North America through mass immigration and cultural warfare.

My first thought was to wonder what kind of websites Morrissey must be trawling in order to be able to find and repost this clip on the same day that it appeared online? I came home from Glastonbury expecting to see some angry responses to his endorsement of white supremacism. Instead, the NME published an interview with Brandon Flowers in which the Killers lead singer proclaimed that Morrissey was still “a king”, despite being in what Flowers recognised was “hot water” over his bigoted comments. 

As the week progressed, I kept waiting for some reaction to the white supremacist video, yet none was forthcoming. Every time I googled Morrissey, up would pop another article from a music website echoing the NME’s original headline: ‘The Killers Brandon Flowers on Morrissey: ‘He’s Still A King’. I’m well aware from personal experience how easy it is for an artist to find something you’ve said in the context of a longer discourse turned into an inflammatory headline that doesn’t reflect your genuine views on the subject at hand, but I have to wonder if Flowers really understands the ramifications of Morrissey’s expressions of support for the far right For Britain Party? 

As the writer of the powerful Killers song ‘Land of the Free’, does he know that For Britain wants to build the kind of barriers to immigration that Flowers condemns in that lyric?

Party leader Anne Marie Walters maintains ties with Generation Identity, the group who both inspired and received funds from the gunman who murdered 50 worshippers at a Christchurch mosque. How does that sit with the condemnation of mass murder by lone gunman in ‘Land of the Free’?

 

As an explicitly anti-Muslim party, For Britain opposes the religious slaughter of animals without the use of a stun gun, a policy that has given Morrissey a fig leaf of respectability, allowing him to claim he supports them on animal welfare grounds. Yet if that is his primary concern, why does he not support the UK’s Animal Welfare Party, which stood candidates in the recent European elections? 

Among their policies, the AWF also aim to prohibit non-stun slaughter. If his only interest was to end this practice, he could have achieved this without the taint of Islamophobia by endorsing them. They are a tiny party, but Morrissey’s vocal support would have given the animal rights movement a huge boost of publicity ahead of the polls. 

Instead, he expresses support for anti-Muslim provocateurs, posts white supremacist videos and, when challenged, clutches his pearls and cries “Infamy, infamy, they’ve all got it in for me”. His recent claim that “as a so-called entertainer, I have no rights” is a ridiculous position made all the more troubling by the fact that it is a common trope among right-wing reactionaries. 

The notion that certain individuals are not allowed to say certain things is spurious, not least because it is most often invoked after they’ve made their offensive comments. Look closely at their claims and you’ll find that what they are actually complaining about is the fact that they have been challenged.

The concept of freedom pushed by the new generation of free speech warriors maintains that the individual has the right to say whatever they want, whenever they want, to whoever they want, with no comeback. If that is the definition of freedom, then one need look no further than Donald Trump’s Twitter feed as our generation’s beacon of liberty. Perhaps Lady Liberty should be replaced in New York Harbour with a colossal sculpture of the Donald, wearing a toga, holding a gaslight.

Worryingly, Morrissey’s reaction to being challenged over his support of For Britain, his willingness to double down rather than apologise for any offence caused, suggests a commitment to a bigotry that tarnishes his persona as the champion of the outsider. Where once he offered solace to the victims of a cruel and unjust world, he now seems to have joined the bullies waiting outside the school gates.

As an activist, I’m appalled by this transformation, but as a Smiths fan, I’m heartbroken.

It was Johnny Marr’s amazing guitar that drew me to the band, but I grasped that Morrissey was an exceptional lyricist when I heard ‘Reel Around the Fountain’. Ironically, it was a line that he had stolen that won my affections. “I dreamt about you last night and I fell out of bed twice” is spoken by Jimmy, the black sailor, to his white teenage lover, Jo, in Sheila Delaney’s play ‘A Taste of Honey’. 

The 1961 movie, starring Rita Tushingham was an early example of a post-war British society that would embrace multi-racial relationships (and homosexuality too). By pilfering that particular line for the song, Morrissey was placing the Smiths in the great tradition of northern working class culture that may have been in the gutter, but was looking at the stars. Yet, by posting a white supremacist video in which he is quoted as saying “Everyone prefers their own race”, Morrissey undermines that line, erasing Jo and Jimmy and all those misfit lovers to whom the Smiths once gave so much encouragement.

A week has passed since the video appeared on Morrissey’s website and nothing has been written in the media to challenge his position. Today it was reported that research by the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a UK based anti-extremist organisation, reveals that the Great Replacement Theory is being promoted so effectively by the far right that it is entering mainstream political discourse. 

That Morrissey is helping to spread this idea - which inspired the Christchurch mosque murderer - is beyond doubt. Those who claim that this has no relevance to his stature as an artist should ask themselves if, by demanding that we separate the singer from the song, they too are helping to propagate this racist creed.


morrissey-billy-bragg article Independent

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Singles bought when they came out | BILLY BRAGG - BETWEEN THE WARS

 Folks on Billy’s Facebook page were talking about how old this was and it is indeed THAT old (Forty years ago this week!)but how apposite and tortuously relevant today . . . . during the permanent state of war somewhere on the planet (everywhere?!)  . . . . . I got the picture sleeve


Just a small point but Steve Wright noting it took him at least three plays to understand Billy’s point here really let him down and I can recall being disappointed in him . . .sadly gone now and he was a unique DJ

Billy says : 
When I made my first appearance on Top of the Pops, the audience had been replaced for being too gloomy, so the people I played to were dancers.
Just before I performed, the Director told them to wave their hands in the air during the song, but after he left, I went to the edge of the stage and told them that I was playing this live, so please don’t do anything to distract me.
To their credit, they hardly moved

 



Sunday, May 23, 2021

BILLY BRAGG - CURRENT STATE OF THINGS - a riposte! + Live At The Ritz 1990!

 Billy Bragg about nails it here . . . . . . . . . really worth a read


"Over the years, I’ve been called a sell-out for numerous reasons: signing a record contract; owning more than one pair of shoes; supporting the Labour Party; shaking hands with the Queen; advocating tactical voting – the list goes on. I’m not complaining – it’s a situation faced by everyone who tries to uphold progressive ideas. But I never expected to find that getting vaccinated against Covid-19 would be added to that list.


My one sentence post on the subject yesterday was met with a wave of anger and disappointment from those who felt my support for vaccination was a betrayal of my principles. I tried to reason with some of the early posters, but soon the viriol was raging out of control, like a dumpster fire. There were some comments accusing me of ‘genocide’, plenty of dystopian imagery featuring vaccinated zombies and a quite a few of the “I’ve never heard of Billy Bragg but….” kind. Raking over the ashes this morning, I’d say they could be broadly categorised into two distinct camps.


The first could be described as libertarians, those who see the vaccine argument as a conflict between individual liberty and the common good. Given that socialism is based on the notion of the common good, it’s baffling that many who voice this libertarian line believe themselves to be taking a left wing position. After all, this is the basis upon which some Americans oppose the idea of universal health care for all in the US and also found expression in Margaret Thatcher’s famous maxim that there is no such thing as society. 


So vague are its tenets, it’s arguable whether or not libertarianism is an ideology, but in the past decade or so, it has become a touchstone for keyboard warriors seeking a shield from accountability. That tendency was prominent among anti-vaxxers responding to my post, many of who made an argument that can be summed up as follows: “I have made my choice as a sovereign individual and I don’t see why I should face any repercussions as a result. In fact, to hold me responsible for my actions in an infringement of my liberty.”


It’s an argument echoed by the Brexiteers who refuse to accept that, due to the puritanical Brexit that Boris Johnson chose to pursue, there now has to be a border in the Irish Sea. Likewise Trump supporters in the US Senate, who feel that there should be no proper investigation into the Jan 6th insurrection.


The libertarian strain can be seen around the world, in everything from Bolsanaro in Brazil refusing to act on climate change to the Tories threatening anyone who suggests that the British Empire may have been a negative force. The rise of authoritarian leaders around world determined to avoid any kind of accountability shows the threat that libertarianism presents to a democratic society. It also underlines the fact that the rejection of the common good does not hold water as a left wing position.


The second distinct group among those angry at my post can be described as the vaccine hesitant. As an apprehensive flyer, I have some sympathy for them. I know that I am more at risk traveling in a car than in a plane, but I’m never at ease going up and always relieved to come back down. But although I respect their right to be hesitant, as with the libertarians, the onus is upon them to respect me if I am hesitant to mix with them.


I also worry that those with genuine concerns are in danger of being manipulated by the forces of reaction. Fear-mongering about vaccination has long been used by the right as a tool for divisive and discriminatory propaganda, as seen in the poster below, produced in the mid-50s by the Keep America Committee, a right wing anti-communist group from California.


They identify the three great threats to the US as being fluoridated water, mental hygiene and the polio vaccine. Polio was a huge threat to children everywhere in the years after WWII. Ian Dury caught the disease as a seven year old while innocently playing in a swimming pool in Southend during the 1949 epidemic. A 1952 survey found that Americans feared only nuclear annihilation more than polio. 


In 1954, mass inoculation of children began in America. This kind of propaganda soon followed, seeking to scare people into opposing not just the vaccination of their children but also the possibility of “nation-wide socialised medicine” – libertarian pushback against the notion of the common good. 


History tells us that mass vaccination eliminated polio in the US and elsewhere in the world. The hesitancy of parents to have their children vaccinated was unfounded. Furthermore, fluoridated water turned out to be a threat to only to tooth decay. 


What the Keep America Committee meant by ‘mental hygiene’ is harder to discern. Their description of it sounds as if it is one of those concepts like ‘cultural marxism’ or ‘political correctness’ that can be used to deflect accusations of bigotry and discrimination. That impression is underscored by the example given, the implication of which is that we must watch out against people who take us to task for being anti-semitic.


There were worrying echoes of the messaging in this poster among the comments left by anti-vaxxers in my thread – dark mumblings about George Soros and one world governments, claims that vaccination is the first step on the road to communism (in one case, immediately beneath another claiming it is the first step towards fascism. Please, make your minds up!) 


My worry is that the genuine concerns of the vaccine hesitant, when mixed with the dystopian visions of conspiracy hacks and cybercondriacs, will act as a recruiting tool for the libertarian right. The Keep America poster should act as both a comfort to the vaccine hesitant – none of the fears came to pass – but also a warning to them to be aware of who is feeding their fears.


In the end, we all want the same thing: an end to the lockdowns and a return to some semblance of a normal life. By following the NHS guidelines in continuing to wear a mask in public places, keep my distance and wash my hands even though I’m vaccinated, I'm doing what I can to help hasten that day. By contrast, libertarians seem determined to prolong the misery by ignoring their responsibility to their fellow citizens."


Billy Bragg 23 May 2021


Well said Billy. The voice of common sense, sanity and reason as ever! Never sold out! Man of principal and reason


 

'twas ever thus . . . 




https://www.billybragg.co.uk

The perspicacious amongst you will have noticed that Jobe dropped by to add his notes and those really paying attention will have spotted he kindly posted links to this!


Billy Bragg - Live at The Ritz New York 1990 - A Jobe / Swappers joint production!

BBC/PBS Silvertracks




1. Milkman of Human Kindness 3.50
2. Like Soldiers Do 2.51
3. (banter) 1.41
4. Little Time Bomb 2.31
5. St.Swithins Day 3.04
6. Levi Stubb's Tears 3.30
7.(banter)
8. Marching Song of The Covert Battalions 4.27
9. Tank Park Salute 3.33
10. (banter) 1.55
11. Everywhere 4.55
12. The World Turned Upside Down 5.14
13. The Saturday Boy 2.44
14. There is Power in The Union 2.52

Disc Two

1. Intro (enter wiggy)
2. North Sea Bubble 2.59
3. (banter) 4.56
4. Island of No Return 3.37
5. Help Save The Youth of America 2.41
6. Greetings To The New Brunette 3.12
7. New England (banter) 4.51
8. A New England 2.59
9. Trust 3.52
10. Accident Waiting To Happen 5.35
11. Waiting For The Great Leap Forward 4.44
12. (intro of the guests Natalie Merchant, Michael Stipe, Peter Buck)1.30 
13. Dallas 3.21
14. Hello In There (John Prine) 4.24 


Billy, Natalie and Michael



Thursday, November 12, 2020

 BILLY BRAGG

Wow didn't expect to be posting links to a Billy Bragg set this morning . . . . Taylor Swift's new best pal ( I kid you not!? sic) and co-conspirator with my current fave Emily Barker (check my link to both). . . . here he is from NY State University over at the ubiquitous Floppy Boot Stomp! (where else you gonna go? I mean really!) Thanks fellow Enoch!


Mandela Room
State University Of New York
Binghampton NY
1988-04-14
Soundboard @320


01. To Have and to Have Not
02. King Richard
03. The Warmest Room In The House
04. Tender Comrade
05. Greetings to the New Brunette
06. Days Like These
07. Help Save The Youth of America
08. Levi Stubbs' Tears
09. There Is Power In A Union
10. The World Turn'd Upside-Down
11. Valentines Day Is Over
12. Wishing The Days Away (Tape Flip)
13. Honey, I'm A Big Boy Now
14. Waiting for the Great Leap Forward
15. The Short Answer
16. Man In The Iron Mask
17. A New England
18. I Don't Need This Pressure, Ron
19. political Rap
20. A Change Is Gonna Come
21. Between The Wars
22. Walk Away Renee
23. kudos to Wiggy
24. Must I Paint You A Picture?
25. Star

Billy Bragg - Binghapmton, New York, 1988 - Floppy Boot Stomp


Monday, May 04, 2020

This is a treat today and please consider purchasing it.
I found it on their Facebook pages and it works . . . . . 

EMILY BARKER

& 

BILLY BRAGG

Shortly after lockdown began, I was contacted by Emily Barker who asked if she could record a cover of my then just released song 'Can't Be There Today' as part of the Relay Project. It's a benefit record for the Music Venue Trust helping UK grassroots music venues survive this tough time with their #SaveOurVenues campaign.
The idea behind the 'relay' was that an artist would cover a song by an artist they admired, who would then be called upon to record a song by an artist that they admired and so on. I thought it was a great project for a locked down time.
I chose to record a song by Seán McGowan, his poignant ballad 'Springhill', which seems to resonate with these challenging times. You can hear it along with the other isolation-recorded tracks at
If you can spare a donation by buying the album at a price of your choosing, that would be great - and it will give impetus to a Volume Two that carries the project on.

Emily said:

Hello everyone, 
I hope you're keeping well. 
I was honoured to be asked to contribute a cover by a UK artist I admire for a collaborative album to help raise funds for Music Venue Trust
I chose this song by Billy Bragg because it speaks about our shared experience of being separated from our loved ones during lockdown. 
The album features a cover by Billy himself and many other brilliant artists such as Edgelarks - Phillip Henry and Hannah MartinThe Little UnsaidJacob & Drinkwater
 and more.
You can buy the entire album on Bandcamp and all monies go towards keeping our music venues going whilst we can't do shows.
I hope you enjoy my version of this beautifully poignant song.
Look after yourselves.
Emily
 
❤️
#SaveOurVenues