Eric Clapton is a dick, an anti-vax promoter, and a racist....

Innula Zenovka

Nasty Brit
VVO Supporter 🍦🎈👾❤
Joined
Sep 20, 2018
Messages
23,943
SLU Posts
18459
He was one of the reasons Rock Against Racism started -- that was back in my antifa days, when I was a member of the Anti-Nazi League.

 

GoblinCampFollower

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 20, 2018
Messages
5,414
SL Rez
2007
He was one of the reasons Rock Against Racism started -- that was back in my antifa days, when I was a member of the Anti-Nazi League.

huh... I had no idea, but apparently loony beliefs are nothing new for him. But being so loud about this back in the 1970's wasn't career ending like it is now (usually). Nice to know he didn't suddenly go insane, he's just always been like this.
 

Dakota Tebaldi

Well-known member
VVO Supporter 🍦🎈👾❤
Joined
Sep 19, 2018
Messages
9,842
Location
Ohio
Joined SLU
02-22-2008
SLU Posts
16791

Innula Zenovka

Nasty Brit
VVO Supporter 🍦🎈👾❤
Joined
Sep 20, 2018
Messages
23,943
SLU Posts
18459

Veritable Quandry

Specializing in derails and train wrecks.
Joined
Sep 19, 2018
Messages
5,322
Location
Columbus, OH
SL Rez
2010
Joined SLU
20something
SLU Posts
42
For all the accolades he gets for his guitar playing, he was never the best, or even close. He was safe. He never reached for the highs, so he never failed. He's a middle-of-the-road white guy playing with bands that are better than he is but who don't step on his toes.

And he's a racist asshat. In some circles, that's a plus.
 

Romana

The Timeless Child
Joined
Sep 21, 2018
Messages
5,097
SL Rez
2010
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought Bowie was just role playing a character in an interview when he said a few things like that and it was widely misinterpreted.
Probably the "Thin White Duke". And from this, it sounds life it was more the imagery than the ideology. And heavily influenced by drugs.

 
  • 1Thanks
Reactions: GoblinCampFollower

Imnotgoing Sideways

Puts the FU in Cute
Joined
Sep 22, 2018
Messages
687
Location
Morbidette
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought Bowie was just role playing a character in an interview when he said a few things like that and it was widely misinterpreted.
He took on a number of personas for many of his albums. I was personally most fond of Ziggy Stardust. But yeah, Major Tom, Aladdin Sane, and TTWD.
 
  • 1Thanks
Reactions: GoblinCampFollower

Veritable Quandry

Specializing in derails and train wrecks.
Joined
Sep 19, 2018
Messages
5,322
Location
Columbus, OH
SL Rez
2010
Joined SLU
20something
SLU Posts
42
One thing that strikes me in the OP article is the willingness to play off racist talk and the like as the result of heavy drinking, like who you are dunk isn't really you. That is unmitigated bullshit. Alcohol supresses the part of your brain that inhibits you from doing or saying all the things you are thinking about. It takes away your filter. What comes out isn't some magical Racist in a Bottle. The drink didn't make you racist, it just let out the racist inside you when you stopped thinking about how the people around you would take it.
 
Last edited:

Innula Zenovka

Nasty Brit
VVO Supporter 🍦🎈👾❤
Joined
Sep 20, 2018
Messages
23,943
SLU Posts
18459
This is all going back a long time, of course, but as I recall it, it was all a lot more complicated than the necessarily oversimplified recaps in later magazine articles make it sound.

Back then, WW2 was a lot more recent, and nazi chic was considerably more edgy than it is even now. The full scale of the Holocaust was only just beginning to seep into the public consciousness, and the Thin White Duke was an act he kept on far too long at a time when the neo-Nazi National Front was becoming stronger, feeding off the kind of racist anti-immigration propaganda of which Donald Trump was a more recent exponent.

Clapton's outburst was in a different league, and led to Rock Against Racism being founded, in a political context in which there was already a large and active antifascist movement, because Clapton brought to a head the concerns more and people had been having about any sort of flirtation with fascism and the far right, including about Bowie.

That was then, though. Bowie moved on. Clapton didn't.
 

GoblinCampFollower

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 20, 2018
Messages
5,414
SL Rez
2007
This is all going back a long time, of course, but as I recall it, it was all a lot more complicated than the necessarily oversimplified recaps in later magazine articles make it sound.

Back then, WW2 was a lot more recent, and nazi chic was considerably more edgy than it is even now. The full scale of the Holocaust was only just beginning to seep into the public consciousness, and the Thin White Duke was an act he kept on far too long at a time when the neo-Nazi National Front was becoming stronger, feeding off the kind of racist anti-immigration propaganda of which Donald Trump was a more recent exponent.

Clapton's outburst was in a different league, and led to Rock Against Racism being founded, in a political context in which there was already a large and active antifascist movement, because Clapton brought to a head the concerns more and people had been having about any sort of flirtation with fascism and the far right, including about Bowie.

That was then, though. Bowie moved on. Clapton didn't.
That makes me think that maybe Bowie had some genuine interest in fascism that he was passing off as "ironic" bigots often seem to love, LOVE racist jokes way too much before exposing their overt racism. The good news is many grow out of it. Good that Bowie did.
 
  • 1Like
Reactions: Innula Zenovka

Innula Zenovka

Nasty Brit
VVO Supporter 🍦🎈👾❤
Joined
Sep 20, 2018
Messages
23,943
SLU Posts
18459
That makes me think that maybe Bowie had some genuine interest in fascism that he was passing off as "ironic" bigots often seem to love, LOVE racist jokes way too much before exposing their overt racism. The good news is many grow out of it. Good that Bowie did.
I won't speculate about Bowie's thoughts and beliefs at the time. He could not have been unaware of the growing concern about, and criticism of, his persona, amongst his fans as much as anyone else, and rehearsed in both the musical and, increasingly, the national news media.

He did nothing, for far too long, to dispel those concerns.

His reasons are his own and, to my mind, speculation won't get us anywhere. He did what did, a long time ago, and he did a lot of other, quite different, things since. To my mind, he made a bad mistake, but we've most of done that a few times ourselves, though in different ways and not so publicly.

Meanwhile, Clapton is still being Clapton.
 
Last edited:

Romana

The Timeless Child
Joined
Sep 21, 2018
Messages
5,097
SL Rez
2010
In my clubbing days, post-punk (or maybe it was still considered punk, IDK) there was a local club that was like a NYC or, people even came from the city greatest it was cheaper. People dressed, well, creatively. Among the regulars was a gay couple who my friend, probe to giving people nicknames, called Kevin Cutie and Nicky Nazi.
"Nicky" wasn't really a Nazi, he just wore the bits of regalia for shock value. I don't know how much he even knew about the history, notably how they viewed homosexuals.
I can't say if this is what Bowie was doing or not, of course. At least he explored the real meanings, and ultimately, rejected it.