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Faithless: 'I wish Maxi were alive to see the love in the room'

Faithless: 'I wish Maxi were alive to see the love in the room'

The track was written in response to the Iraq War — might Iran become Starmer's Iraq? 'Could well do,' Bliss says, teeth gritted. 'Iranians themselves loathe their regime but they've also seen what happens in a power vacuum in Iraq and Libya, and to have it imposed in a semi-colonial way from outside with a gung-ho lack of thinking and diplomacy. It's terrifying.' She's heartened, though, by the resurgence in raised voices within music, citing Massive Attack and, yes, Kneecap. 'To be a band has become a political statement and I'm glad that politics and music don't have to be uneasy bedfellows. If they have convictions and they want to share them and they make great music then those things can sit together. We have tried to do that over the years, and Maxi was the most amazing conduit for the mix of wisdom, politics, everyday life, what it is to be a human being, the struggle with oneself and with the wider world.'
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