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The 1975, Nile Rodgers, Jessie Ware, and more have signed a new open letter pledging to fight against systemic racism and other forms of prejudice within the music industry, as Variety points out. The #NoSilenceInMusic letter was also signed by over 700 members of the U.K. music industry, including producers, songwriters, managers, and more.
“We, representatives from the music industry, write to demonstrate and express our determination, that love, unity and friendship, not division and hatred, must and will always be our common cause,” the letter begins. Signees also pledged to “speak out and stand together in solidarity” when witnessing issues of “islamophobia, xenophobia, homophobia, and transphobia” in addition to systemic racism. “We stand together, to educate and wipe out racism now and for our future generations,” the letter concludes. Read it in full below (via Variety).
The letter arrives days after London rapper Wiley was dropped by his management company following a series of anti-Semitic statements and remarks that he posted on social media. On Tuesday (July 28), the Artist Rights Alliance (ARA) shared an open letter signed by artists including Mick Jagger, Lorde, Pearl Jam, Elvis Costello, and more regarding the unauthorized use of music by politicians.
Read “Can Pop Stars Be Political Organizers?” over on the Pitch.