Concerts are becoming more political in general

Fontaines D.C. canceled their rock concert on the Orange stage at the Roskilde Festival, to make way for a ten-minute pro-Palestine protest.

A large cloud displayed the text “Israel commits genocide”

-We have some friends with us, they said, and then they handed the microphone to pro-Palestinian activists, who shouted Free, Free Palestine! and other slogans about Jerusalem in Arabic.

The singer Mø also follows this trend.

She stopped playing, and gave way to political activism during her own concert at the Roskilde Festival.

There she invited Greta Thunberg to the Arena stage to mark the establishment of the Nordic Climate Justice Coalition.

This is a movement of young climate activists from Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Finland.

Together with two other activists, Thunberg performed a spoken word from Mø’s song ‘Heartbreak’, while others carried banners with various slogans on stage.

According to a press release, the performance is intended as a peaceful declaration of “intersectional climate justice.”

The press release also states that the Nordic Climate Justice Coalition fights against “ecological collapse, colonial exploitation and social injustice.”

The message of genocide or the battle cry “Death to the IDF” was heard at the NorthSide and Glastonbury festivals, as have been heard at other music festivals in both Europe and the United States.

Martin Krasnik, Danish journalist, Who also has a Jewish background writes in weekendavisen

-The world’s artists have a message these years, and it has never been about the Israeli music festival Nova, where 365 young people were massacred in a sadistic orgy of violence, which was much worse than the terror against the Parisian Bataclan or the homosexual Pulse in the Middle East.

More survivors are still being held hostage in Gaza, but not a word from any group has been heard to remember them, not a cry to release the hostages, Krasnik concludes.