Great Escape music festival in doubt over artist exodus in protest of Israel link

Great Escape music festival in doubt over artist exodus in protest of Israel link

At time of writing, 126 acts have withdrawn from performing at the Great Escape music festival that’s due to be held in Brighton from today until Saturday (18 May). The number represents over a quarter of the festival’s line-up.

The walkout is in protest of festival sponsor Barclays Bank. Barclays has been the focus of Bands Boycott Barclays, an online campaign for music festivals to divest from sponsors that are invested in Israel.

Bands Boycott Barclays originally made a petition against the Great Escape festival which was promoted by Bristol-based queer punk band The Menstrual Cramps. The petition raised signatures from over 200 of the 500-strong festival line-up. It also collected high-profile signatories not playing the festival including Massive Attack.

“As musicians, we are calling on The Great Escape to drop Barclays as a partner. Barclays is funding Israel’s genocidal assault on Palestinians through its financial ties with arms companies that sell weapons to Israel,” the petition reads.

It refers to the heavy bombing campaign that Israel is carrying out on the Gaza strip, and Barclays’ involvement in providing the Israeli Defence Force with its munitions. “These bombings are bankrolled by Barclays, which invests over £1bn in – and provides financial services worth over £3bn to – companies supplying weapons and military technology to Israel, used in its attacks on Palestinians.”

The Menstrual Cramps, one of the main bands to lead the campaign at the Great Escape
The Menstrual Cramps, one of the main bands to lead the campaign at the Great Escape - BACK TO BACK WILD BLANKET PHOTOGRAPHY

The two main companies the campaign mentions are General Dynamics and Elbit Systems. Barclays has invested £100 million (€116 million) in “General Dynamics, which provides gun systems for the fighter jets used by Israel to bomb the Gaza Strip” and £2.7 million (€3.1 million) in Elbit Systems which “supplies the Israeli military with armoured drones, munitions and artillery weapons used in its attacks on Palestinians,” according to the campaign.

Barclays has reputed claims they invest in nine companies which arm Israel. “We trade in shares of listed companies in response to client instruction or demand and that may result in us holding shares. We are not making investments for Barclays and Barclays is not a “shareholder” or “investor” in that sense in relation to these companies,” a statement from the bank reads.

Taking cues from the 90s Artists Against Apartheid movement that tackled apartheid in South Africa, the Bands Boycott Barclays campaign refuses “to let music be used to whitewash human rights violations. We cannot let our creative outputs become smokescreens behind which money is pumped into murdering Palestinians.”

Last month, when Euronews Culture first reported on the petition, six artists had pulled out of the festival in response to the petition. Those artists were Cherym, Mui Zyu, Hongza, Lambrini Girls, LVRA, The New Eves and ZHEANI.

Record label Alcopop! Records also pulled out of the festival noting that “when The Menstrual Cramps and [promoter] How to Catch a Pig explained the Barclaycard situation, Alcopop! and Big Scary Monsters felt strongly about standing in solidarity and stepping away from the line-up. To be associating our label with Barclays doesn't sit right with our ethical standpoint, and if we can do anything to help raise awareness, and ultimately highlight the corporate greed at the heart of this horrendous genocide in Gaza, we will.”

Today on the day the festival is due to begin, the number of artists who have dropped out has risen to over a quarter of the total line-up.

The petition lists over 100 acts who have confirmed they have pulled out as follows:

  1. Alcopop! Records (label)

  2. Alfie Templeman

  3. Animal Shithouse

  4. arliworld

  5. Avije

  6. Balraj Samrai (panellist)

  7. BEBELUNA

  8. Beetlebug

  9. Belmondo

  10. Big Scary Monsters (label)

  11. Bishopskin

  12. Blue Lab Beats

  13. Bo Milli

  14. BODUR

  15. borough council

  16. Bug teeth

  17. C Turtle

  18. Canned Pineapple

  19. Carsick

  20. Cherym

  21. Chowerman

  22. coex

  23. Come Play With Me (showcase)

  24. COMRAD

  25. Congratulations

  26. Cryalot

  27. Daltons Brighton (venue)

  28. Delilah Bon

  29. Delilah Holliday

  30. DellaXOZ

  31. ESEA Music (showcase)

  32. Faker Villain

  33. Fari

  34. Farrah

  35. future bubblers soundsystem (showcase)

  36. Gigi williams

  37. Graft

  38. Hang Linton

  39. Hatter

  40. Heights

  41. Hongza

  42. Ideal Living

  43. Izzy Withers

  44. jackie moonbather

  45. James Luxton

  46. Jasmine.4.t

  47. Jianbo

  48. Kaisha

  49. Kane Eagle

  50. Keeya Keys

  51. Kerensa

  52. King isis

  53. Lambrini Girls

  54. Lana Lubany

  55. LANDEL

  56. Lewis G Burton (panellist)

  57. Lucy Tun

  58. LVRA

  59. Martha May & The Mondays

  60. Message From The Ravens

  61. MOULD

  62. Mrisi

  63. Mui Zyu

  64. Mya Mehmi

  65. MYNK

  66. Noah and the Loners

  67. Opus kink

  68. Orchards

  69. Other Half

  70. Pem

  71. pertrelli purple

  72. Plantoid

  73. Pop Vulture

  74. Projector

  75. Rett Madison

  76. romy nova

  77. SAFENATH

  78. Sarah Crean

  79. Sen Morimoto

  80. SHADEEMUS

  81. She's got brass

  82. Smoke Filled Room

  83. Soft Launch

  84. SOMOH

  85. Sophia Ryalls

  86. Steven Bamidele

  87. Sunday Club

  88. Sunflower Thieves

  89. t l k

  90. Tala Yunis

  91. Tay Jordan

  92. The Halfway Kid

  93. The Menstrual Cramps

  94. The New Eves

  95. The Psychotic Monks

  96. the tubs

  97. Tiberius B

  98. Tom Rassmussen

  99. Tony Njoku

  100. Uninvited

  101. U T O

  102. Van Zon

  103. Vi0let

  104. Water Machine

  105. Yiigaa

  106. Yoshika Colwell

  107. ZHEANI

Other acts who have also confirmed they have pulled out of the festival online include the drag queen Bimini Bon Boulash, Lizzie Berchie, Picture Parlour, and Miso Extra in the hours since the list was published.

It’s a significant moment for the boycott movement which has seen protests outside 50 branches of Barclays in the UK as well as individual cases of vandalism to buildings associated with the bank.