
Bob Vylan dropped from UK festival after Glastonbury controversy
Bob Vylan have been dropped from the RADAR Festival in Manchester, with organisers confirming the news just days before the event is due to take place
Bobby Vylan of Bob Vylan performs on the West Holts stage during day four of Glastonbury festival 2025
(Image: Getty Images )
Bob Vylan have been axed from a huge UK festival lineup following the controversy surrounding their Glastonbury appearance. The punk group was set to perform at RADAR Festival in Manchester, but the event's organisers have confirmed that the band will not be appearing.
The festival stated on social media: "Bob Vylan will not be appearing at RADAR Festival this weekend." This decision comes after the duo released a statement claiming they are being "targeted for speaking up", following backlash over their Glastonbury Festival performance where they led chants of "Death to the IDF".
Bob Vylan's plans to tour in America later in the year have also hit a snag as their visas were denied. For the latest TV and showbiz gossip sign up to our newsletter
Since their appearance at Glastonbury on June 28, they have been dropped by their agents and are now under criminal investigation due to footage from their set at the festival.
On July 1, the band commented: "Not the first. Not the last. Today, a good many people would have you believe a punk band is the number one threat to world peace.
"Last week, it was a Palestine pressure group, the week before that it was another band," as reported by the Mirror, reports the Daily Star.
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They further clarified their stance, saying: "We are not for the death of Jews, Arabs or any other race or group of people.
"We are for the dismantling of a violent military machine. A machine whose own soldiers were told to use 'unnecessary lethal forces' against innocent civilians waiting for aid. A machine that has destroyed much of Gaza."
They continued: "We, like those in the public eye before us, are not the story. We are a diversion from the real story.
"And whatever sanctions we receive will be a diversion. The Government doesn't want us to ask why they remain silent in the face of this atrocity.
"To ask why they aren't doing more to stop the killing? To feed the starving?".
"The more time they talk about Bob Vylan, the less time they spend answering for their criminal inaction.
"We are being targeted for speaking up. We are not the first.
"We will not be the last and if you care for the sanctity of human life and freedom of speech, we urge you to speak up too. Free Palestine."
Earlier in the week, news surfaced that Bob Vylan's US visas were denied.
Christopher Landau, United States Deputy Secretary of State, addressed the issue on X/Twitter by saying: "The @StateDept has revoked the US visas for the members of the Bob Vylan band in light of their hateful tirade at Glastonbury, including leading the crowd in death chants."
He added, "Foreigners who glorify violence and hatred are not welcome visitors to our country."
Amid these revelations, although Bob Vylan's performance was broadcast live by the BBC, the broadcaster has since confirmed that there are no intentions to make the footage available again on iPlayer.
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I didn't seem to look peculiar to people, even though I know that I don't typically dress like your average Kazakhstani but man, we had so much fun. 'And we were making a joke, me and the girls in my band, and I said you know, for the last couple of years of Prince's life he always played Le Freak, stuck it in the middle of a song, and I said we're going to stick in Jungle Love, and we started doing the dance and the client who brought us in jumped right in with us and started doing the Jungle Love dance. It was incredible. We were in Kazakhstan and he knew exactly where we were coming from culturally, and I thought to myself, that's the beauty of music and that's really what the world is. People are beautiful. Government's pretty much stink,' he laughs, 'but people are awesome.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Rodgers agrees that the beauty of music is that it transcends politics. 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I remember my girlfriend turned me on to this and there was no such thing as stranger danger. I never heard a bad story, like now it seems that's all we hear. And I know mathematically that there are no more bad people now than there were then, so I just take it as mostly people are good, and every now and then you meet jerks, but most of the time people are really cool.' With the extensive touring, producing, writing and charity work that Rodgers is involved in, is he ever able to go and watch other musicians play? 'Rarely. I love to, but it's rare. I saw Esperanza Spalding and Adam Lambert at the Polar awards [The 2025 Polar Music Prize ceremony in Stockholm last month], and that was great, that was cool and fun, but that's not my normal life. 'My normal life is I'm going from one place to the next. I rarely have leisure time because I'm working on other projects. Doing live gigs is not my life, that's just one small part of it.' 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We're very, very, very cognisant of the other acts, and because we're live, we're not locked to a clock, so we have to be aware of how much time we're on stage because sometimes I'll talk and just go off the rails and start telling stories and that's not really what we're there for. We're there to play music. But sometimes you can't help it. The vibe is so great. And because I've been to all these countries so many times I have nothing but great memories that sometimes I want to share, so I tell them.' And will he be playing his trademark white Fender Stratocaster with the maple fingerboard? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Of course. It's the only guitar I play. If I break a string the audience has to wait for me to change the string.' Does he not have a spare, or other guitars? 'I have tons of them, but I only play that one.' Nile Rodgers performing with Chic at TRNSMT Festival, Glasgow, 2022. | Getty Images Looking back over his lengthy career, of what is Rodgers most proud, some of the hits, his influence on other musicians, his longevity, his success, his charity work? 'That's really high on my list,' he says, referring to his We Are Family Foundation, set up in 2008 and which has funded schools in Malawi, Mali, Nepal and Nicaragua, created a diversity and tolerance curriculum that was sent to every elementary school in the US and is dedicated to create programmes that 'promote cultural diversity while nurturing and mentoring the vision, talents and ideas of young people who are positively changing the world'. 'What we're doing now, it's beyond anything I ever thought we could accomplish and now I know we gotta be doing SO much more because the people in my life now, and just what's going on in America now, it drives me to work in other situations and it opens my mind to developing programmes in other countries because now I really see that… God, you know, there's so much going on in the world that really governments don't address, and we really deal with young people who are addressing those problems and actually making a change. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'And when I was a kid, that's what my life was like. It was not only discovering the problem or becoming aware of the problem but it was actually working on the problem, helping to mend the problem, trying to fix it. On a previous occasion Rodgers told me how when he was a child he had fallen behind a sofa pushed against a wall in the family home and was stuck there for hours, unnoticed. What would he say to that child now, a scared little boy who has no idea how his life will unfold? 'It's going to be amazing.' He pauses and thinks back. 'I thought I was dying. I couldn't breathe. I had asthma. I can't believe that you know that story. Yeah, I fell behind the sofa, and I was a skinny, skinny, skinny little kid and had really bad asthma, and who'd ever have thought that I'd go on to make music for a living? 'Actually I thought that then, believe it or not, but I never would have imagined that it would get to this level, that I'd do songs and video games and theatre and pop records and classical records and jazz records, I mean just anything that artistically comes my way that I'm interested in. It's amazing.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Which just leaves time to wish him all the best for the Barrowland gig and the rest of the tour. 'Thank you. I hope I'll see you all at the show.'