![]() ![]() How bracing to hear that word so many times at a major American concert. It’s not something you see at most shows. From Syd Barrett, his star-crossed partner in the formation of Pink Floyd, to Bob Dylan to great early rocker Gene Vincent to the Rolling Stones– Waters is open about his debt to other musicians and his gratitude for them. That generosity of spirit extends to a number of artists Waters mentions in the show. He is exposing the depths of his mind and trusting his audience to hear him and when they respond, he pours out more. He’s not crowdpleasing, and he’s never Talking Down. In puzzling that out, I would say the secret is that Waters loves performing and loves his audience, and that feeling comes through in his every motion, and the fans respond with adoration. Waters had equal parts of Pink Floyd hits and more recent hits, like “Deja Vu” and “Is This the Life We Really Want?” Waters supports this site, so mine is hardly an unbiased view, but it is remarkable to see a man in his late 70s who has been so creative and experimental for 60 years continuing to carry on at such a high level. Putting on my other hat, of music-lover, I share that view. Image of the apartheid wall featured in Roger Waters concert, during song, “Us and Them”. I don’t think I’d seen anything that flashy in my life. But Jordan Hoffman found no evidence of antisemitism and was thrilled by the show (“as entertainment, it was incredible. The correspondent was obviously sent to the Garden with the goal of describing the antisemite’s latest act. It was very important to the newspaper to get the word “Jew Hater” in the headline. Just check out the review in the Times of Israel. I like to believe that Waters’s successful tour is part of the sea change that the Palestinian cause is undergoing in the U.S. And when I saw Waters speak in March in Washington, he made gleeful sport of the other musicians who have ignored his pleas not to play Israel and normalize apartheid. This is great political theater, performed for huge crowds in our largest halls, and despite those who are tired of Waters’s politics, there was a lot of applause for his commentary last Wednesday night. Waters stands up for Julian Assange as a journalist, airing the footage of the civilians killed by a helicopter gunship in Baghdad that we only know about because of Assange, and assails Barack Obama and Donald Trump and George W Bush as war criminals. It begins with that brilliant quip from Waters, “If you’re one of those ‘I love Pink Floyd, but I can’t stand Roger’s politics’ people, you might do well to f- off to the bar right now. The show is more political than Waters’s last tour. I’m told there were demonstrators outside Madison Square Garden last Wednesday, but the feeling this time round is completely different. It was clear that Waters’s treatment chilled other performers, watching a legend struggle to stand against Zionist hoodlums. There were demonstrations outside his 2018 tour events. I wondered whether he was going to be blacklisted by promoters and venues. He was smeared as an antisemite because he stood up for Palestinian rights. Opposition to Waters’s advocacy was fierce and reminiscent of the fury that rocked Vanessa Redgrave’s career for years.
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