Præsentation af Freemuse på danskPresentacíon de FreemusePrésentation de FreemusePresentation in Arabic
Click here to go to start page Click here to go to start page
Search Sort content by country/region Sort content by artist Sort content by subject
News stories world-wide
News 2008
News 2007
News 2006
News 2005
News 2004
News 2003
News 2002
News 2001
About music censorship
Artists on censorship
About Freemuse
Publications
Study room
Activities
Links
Press room

NEWS
23 October 2008

USA:
Opera composer says he is ‘blacklisted’ by US authorities

Interviewed on BBC Radio 3’s ‘Music Matters’ on 18 October 2008, composer John Adams said he was now ‘blacklisted’ and followed by US security forces, supposedly because he composed ‘The Death of Klinghoffer’ — a controversial opera about the Palestinian Liberation Front's 1985-hijacking of the cruise ship Achille Lauro.

“I can't check in at the airport now without my ID being taken and being grilled. You know, I’m on a homeland security list, probably because of having written ‘The Death of Klinghoffer’, so I’m perfectly aware that I, like many artists and many thoughtful people in the country, am being followed,” he told the BBC presenter, Petroc Trelawny, and BBC Radio 3’s listeners. The interview was broadcast on national radio in the United Kingdom on a Saturday afternoon.

The suggestion that John Adams does not feel welcome in his own country will send shock waves through the musical world, commented The Observer’s arts and media correspondent Vanessa Thorpe. She noted that the impact of his remarks would be amplified by the fact that John Adam’s opera ‘Doctor Atomic’ from 2005 had its New York premiere at the Metropolitan Opera the day after his interview was broadcasted on BBC.

‘Musicians are often watched’
During the interview, presenter Petroc Trelawny asked John Adams if he felt that America was living through an age of paranoia that resembled the McCarthy era of the 1950s. John Adams replied:

“Well it is, and of course Congress has continued to sign off on these Patriot Acts that continue to clip the wings of human rights”, adding that poets, novelists and musicians with left-wing leanings are often watched, including, he said, the American composer Aaron Copland, who was ‘hounded’ all his life.

“I'm sure the FBI had a large file on him. So we artists assume that we are being followed.”

About John Adams
61-year-old American composer John Adams is one of America’s most often performed composers, often referred to as one of the most revered living classical composers. He has repeatedly used opera to convey some of the major contemporary themes that have engaged him: ‘Nixon in China’ (1987) focused on market economy versus socialist ideology, ‘The Death of Klinghofer’ (1991) explored terrorism and ‘Dr. Atomic’ (2005) deals with the creation of the atom bomb.
John Adams’ musical autobiography ‘Hallelujah Junction’ is published this month.






John Adams

Listen

Petroc Trelawny’s radio interview with John Adams on 18 October 2008 can be heard on BBS’s website until 25 October 2008:

bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00f0bhs


Sources

BBC 'Music Matters':

bbc.co.uk/radio3/musicmatters

Guardian.co.uk – 19 October 2008:

'I'm blacklisted, says opera maestro'

John Adam's offical website:

earbox.com


Go to top
Related reading on freemuse.org

Iraq / USA: Interview with exiled oud player
Interview with Iraqi oud player and composer Rahim AlHaj - a former political prisoner of Saddam Hussein who escaped Iraq and relocated to the US, New Mexico, in 2000
26 November 2008
USA: Opera composer says he is 'blacklisted' by US authorities
Composer John Adams told BBC he is now 'blacklisted' and followed by US security forces because he wrote the controversial opera 'The Death of Klinghoffer'
23 October 2008
Commentary: Motley Crue, open your ears to Middle East bands
Author Mark LeVine asks the heavy metal band Motley Crue: "Why not really make rock history and open your Make Rock History contest to bands from around the world?"
01 August 2008
Kris Kristofferson
Video interview with American folk singer Kris Kristofferson about his personal experiences with music censorship in USA - and in Russia
31 March 2008
USA: Controversial lyrics lead to concert cancellation
British punk rock band Gallows were removed from the bill of The House Of Blues in California due to offence taken to their lyrics by the owner of the venue, the Disney Company
29 January 2008
Jamaica / USA: Boundaries of freedom of musical expression examined
The boundaries of free speech in today's popular music culture are to be examined in a tv programme recorded in New York, USA, on 7 February 2008
22 January 2008
Palestine: Islamist reactionary groups threaten American pop stars
Pop stars Madonna and Britney Spears will have their "heads cut off" if they continue "spreading Satanic American culture", threaten militant groups in Palestine
13 November 2007
USA: Lebanese musician denied use of theatre
Marcel Khalife often speaks for reconciliation, resulting in bans in the Middle East. Ironically one of his concerts was rejected in the US, accused of being "unbalanced".
14 October 2007
USA: Disney criticised for stopping heavy metal concerts
Why has the heavy metal genre now been labeled “inflammatory” and their fans “undesirable? at House of Blues venues in Anaheim and Orlando?
11 October 2007
USA: Gangsta rap condemned by local police
The police in Colorado Springs publicly condemned the music genre gangsta rap in a news release after a killing in July 2007, writes The New York Times
05 September 2007
USA: Music tv channel bleeps the word ‘suicidal’
The American rapper Sean Kingston was afraid to feel suicidally heartbroken. But MTV and some radio stations have chosen less dramatic versions of the summer hit.
28 August 2007
USA: The US rock group Pearl Jam’s anti-Bush statement censored on webcast
Parts of a Pearl Jam live concert webcast was left out by the main sponsor AT&T. When the lead singer sang “George Bush, leave this world alone” transmission was interrupted
15 August 2007
IASPM Conference 2007: Speech by Ole Reitov
Freemuse presentation at the IASPM conference for popular music researchers from the whole world - in 2007 held in Mexico City
27 June 2007
USA: Printing plant refused to print 'satanic' album cover
A forthcoming death metal album from Akercocke has caused uproar amongst religious groups in Ireland and USA. A US printing plant has refused to print 'satanic' material
16 May 2007
USA: Folk singer Joan Baez 'disinvited' by army officials
American folk singer Joan Baez was forbidden to participate in John Mellencamp’s concert at Walter Reed Hospital where he performed for wounded troops on 27 April 2007
03 May 2007
USA: Grammy awards to blacklist songs containing the n-word
New York's City Council has asked The Recording Academy, home of the Grammys, not to nominate musicians for Grammy awards if they use the word 'nigger' in their lyrics
01 March 2007
USA: Dixie Chicks' triumph over censorship: Five Grammys
It was a victory over censorship and death threats when Dixie Chicks 'swept' the most prestigious honours in the global music calendar, the Grammy Awards
12 February 2007
USA: Censorship allegation increases media attention
The popular web sites iFilm and YouTube were claimed to have censored an anti-jihad music video from the Atlanta-based rap metal group Stuck Mojo.
03 January 2007
3rd Freemuse World Conference on Music and Censorship
200 professional musicians, scholars, and composers from 22 countries met at the 3rd Freemuse World Conference on 25-26 November 2006 in Istanbul, Turkey
18 December 2006
USA: Singer’s religious imagery censored
Crucifixion scene in a performance by American superstar Madonna is censored from NBC’s airing of the concert on 22 November 2006
15 November 2006