Source: RT
Saying he felt “honour-bound to make an announcement of my own,” after PM Boris Johnson announced the vaccine passes on July 19, Clapton said he would “not perform on any stage where there is a discriminated audience present. Unless there is provision made for all people to attend, I reserve the right to cancel the show.”
Eric Clapton is the new punk. ❤️ #ericclaptonpic.twitter.com/AMLRughybE
— Right Said Fred (@TheFreds) July 20, 2021
The author of ‘Change the World’ accompanied the message with a link to ‘Stand and Deliver,’ the song opposing the lockdowns that he recorded with Van Morrison last year.
According to Rolling Stone, Clapton isn’t scheduled to perform in the UK until May 2022, when he has two dates booked at London’s Royal Albert Hall. He also has a “handful” of concerts in North America scheduled in September.
US reactions to Clapton’s announcement fell along partisan lines, with the conservative Prager University praising him for fighting against “arrogant tyranny,” while liberals said they never wanted to watch him perform anyway, and calling him racist over comments made in the 1970s.
Eric Clapton 👏👏👏 pic.twitter.com/dJQPmVOhWD
— PragerU (@prageru) July 21, 2021
If you’re shocked, go look up where in the 1970s, Clapton said so many racist things from the stage, an artists’ activism and outreach program was founded to counterract him and get the word out that musicians in general were not like him https://t.co/mjqpizzB3d
— Jason Scott (@textfiles) July 21, 2021
That’s a shame since I was — oh, wait, never planning on seeing Eric Clapton perform ever. pic.twitter.com/Mig78EBzwn
— (((Drew Z. Greenberg))) (@DrewZachary) July 21, 2021
The 76-year-old has long been an outspoken critic of the Covid-19 lockdowns. Earlier this year, he drew condemnations for talking about the alleged adverse effects he experienced after taking the vaccine, complaining about “agony” and “chronic pain” that made it impossible to play the guitar for about a week and left his hands too sensitive to heat and cold.
Clapton has sold more than 100 million records worldwide during his solo career, making such hits as ‘Layla’, ‘Tears in Heaven’, and ‘My Father’s Eyes.’
While the majority of England’s Covid-19 restrictions were lifted on July 19, Johnson’s government plans to use vaccination passes have sparked opposition in the form of petitions and street protests.