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Dancehall is under heavy
fire around the globe these days for
use of anti-gay lyrics in what they
are calling “murder music”.
Bounty Killer was recently dropped from
the Krakrock Festival in Belgium and
gay activists are taking aim at the
industry as a whole. Recently, Beenie
Man and Capleton, were only allowed
to perform at Brussel's Couleur Cafe
Festival after they promised not to
use homophobic lyrics. Both were threatened
with arrest under Belgium's hate crime
laws if they broke their word, according
to a representative from the UK gay
activist organization known as Outrage.
An article in the Jamaica
Observer further noted that a serious
effort to hit Dancehall artists in the
wallet is rippling throughout Europe
with attempts to stop Elephant Man from
performing in Paris, and TOK and Capleton
in Amsterdam. Buju Banton, who is noted
in the Outrage report as “notoriously
anti-gay”, is in jeopardy of losing
a booking in Amsterdam after a Dutch
segment of Amnesty International has
reportedly begun pressuring the promoters.
Amnesty International, a well-established
human rights organization is concerned
that anti-gay sentiments result in increased
violence against the world’s gay
and lesbian population.
"We are confident
that our campaign to stop this murder
music will spread right across Europe,"
Outrage's Peter Tatchell is quoted as
saying. "These hate singers will
soon find it increasingly difficult
to perform their incitements to kill
lesbians and gay men. Facing the prospect
of financial ruin, they will dump their
homophobic lyrics. By penalizing them
financially, our aim is to force homophobia
out of dancehall music," Tatchell
said in the report.
Dancehall music has long
been called the voice of the common
man, and the Caribbean has never hidden
its disdain for homosexuality. However,
in this day of ‘money over moral
code’, will Dancehall bow to an
economic embargo in its second home?
Now that the big Dancehall names have
sold themselves to the large American
record labels, will their new label
bosses force their hand on the lyrical
content issue? Record sales aside, the
most consistent supporters of Dancehall
music’s live performances have
been in Europe. And for many artists
doing stage shows provides their daily
bread more so than record royalties.
Admittedly, Dancehall
has picked up some nasty habits from
its distant cousin, Hip Hop, like sexually
degrading women in lyrics and videos,
promoting violence against one another,
and falling victim to the bling. But
should Dancehall artists be prevented
from voicing their opinion when so many
other genres thrive on equally questionable
lyrics?
While it’s hard
to argue that these artists should be
allowed to call for the murder of any
group of people because of their lifestyle,
there is another issue here. The question
is not gay or straight, the question
at hand is: Can our Dancehall artists
be bought? Were their lyrics really
an expression of their beliefs or was
it just bad bwoy posturing? Food or
principle is the choice before them.
Let’s see who runs for cover when
the protesters tek aim pon dem pocket.
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