The post Björk Joins “No Music for Genocide” Israel Boycott appeared first on Consequence. Björk is the latest artist to join the “No Music for Genocide” mass Israel boycott, making her catalog of ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s Notebook In the days following a cease-fire in Gaza, the orchestra returned to New York under circumstances that were more tense than usual.
Since September, more than 1,000 artists and labels including Lorde, Björk and Massive Attack have joined an international initiative to remove their music from Israel. The boycott, called No Music ...
NORTH SHORE, Long Island (WABC) -- One year after the Hamas terrorist attacks in Israel, a survivor who attended the Nova Music Festival is sharing her emotional journey from that fateful day. It was ...
Hundreds of artists have yanked their music from streaming services in Israel to protest the ongoing violence against Palestinian people, including Kneecap, Faye Webster and Japanese Breakfast. Aminé, ...
ABC News verified witness videos from the Supernova music festival. As Hamas militants launched an unprecedented attack on Israel over the weekend, pillaging, kidnapping and killing civilians across ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Carnegie Hall was a site of protest on Wednesday, one of many demonstrations over the last two years targeting cultural events, particularly those ...
Hundreds of musicians and record labels have joined on to “No Music For Genocide,” a new boycott campaign of Israel. The signees have pledged to remove their music from streaming services in Israel in ...
Lorde’s songs have disappeared from Apple Music in Israel after the New Zealand-born pop star yelled “free f–king Palestine” during a concert in New York City this week. The kerfuffle was ignited by ...