... Skip to main content

WASP frontman Blackie Lawless has departed from his usually scripted between-song banter to deliver a polemic on free speech at London’s Eventim Apollo.

The eighties rockers, of whom Lawless is the sole original member, have been playing their 1984 self-titled debut in its entirety in Europe and each show has been more or less the same in terms of what the 69-year-old has had to say.

But on Sunday, September 28 at what used to be the Hammersmith Odeon, Lawless decided to wade into political waters – citing his own battles with the PMRC as he hoisted a union jack at the rear of the stage.

“It’s now 40 years since we played our first show on Great British soil,” Lawless told the large crowd. “And it’s changed here a lot in that time.

“We’ve maintained an office here and I’ve probably spent a total of three years here in that time.

“The way they treat people now if you want to speak a bit of your mind is a real worry. I had my own issues back in the eighties with the PMRC and there were some people who thought it would be better if certain people, certain bands, were not around.

“Let me tell you, if you let them take a little bit of your freedom, they will take more.

“You need to get onto your MPs asses about this or it’s going to get worse.”

Lawless discussed the issue two years ago on the Metalshop podcast, saying: “We were too young to really understand what it was all about but they quickly put us in the eye of the hurricane and then all kinds of bad things started happening — death threats and getting shot at and all of that,

“We became educated very, very quickly.

“I think it was Indianapolis — this girl came in to interview me and nd this was, like, ’87. And she had worked for the PMRC at one point. And she, at this time I was talking to her, was a journalist. And she goes, she brought in a cassette tape and she goes ‘I’ve got something I need you to hear’. And she played this cassette tape for me. And on it were Susan Baker (PMRC co-founder] and a few of the others talking about what their real motivation was.

“And their motivation was not to get stickers on records. Their motivation was to get Al Gore a platform to then run for president of the United States. So they were trying to create a political profile for him — because what better way to get attention, if you’re a political candidate, a southern caricature, which is what he was, what better way to get attention than to go after an attention getter?

“I mean, this is McCarthyism — you know, it’s no different. Richard Nixon did it. All these witch hunts that went on in DC for years. But they come to a generation who’s not heard it.

“So this thing comes around once every 15 years. The generation hasn’t heard it. They haven’t heard the same old lies that come out of it. So it sounds pretty good to them because it sounds sincere and genuine.”

“Let me tell you something about free speech. I’m part Jewish, I’m part Native American Indian. You can stand on a soapbox and you can talk about how wonderful Nazism is and how you’d like to kill all the Indians out there. I don’t care. Well, let me rephrase that. I do care, but I don’t want to limit your ability to speak, because if I do that, then we start going down a dark road because you start playing umpire and then who plays umpire tomorrow?

“This country was built as a republic and a republic, contrary to what a lot of people don’t understand, is not a democracy. But what you have to do to create a republic, you have to have a certain amount of faith in the people. So, in other words, if you have a guy that’s spewing a bunch of hatred on a street corner or in a soapbox, you have to have faith in your fellow Americans that this guy is a lunatic and the vast majority of people are gonna find him out and not follow him.

“But what happens is when you start limiting that speech, then, like I said, you take away the ability of the people to decide for themselves, number one, who’s crazy and who isn’t. But even more dangerous than that, you start appointing these umpires that tell you what you can and cannot say. And it’s extremely dangerous. And you’ve heard it a million times but it bears repeating, our system is not set up for popular speech. It’s set up for unpopular speech.”

READ AND HEAR INTERVIEWS WITH DOZENS OF ARTISTS VIA OUR PATREON PAGE. EAVESDROP AS WE CHAT TO THE BIGGEST NAMES IN ROCK AND METAL – FROM 1987 TO THE PRESENT!

Features:

AC/DC

Ace Frehley

Aerosmith

Alice Cooper

The Angels

Angry Anderson

Avantasia

BB Steal

Black Star Riders

The Bombers

Bonham

Candy Harlots

Cinderella: Fred Coury

Cinderella: Jeff LaBar

Cinderella: Eric Brittingham

Cinderella: Tom Keifer

D’Mont

Danko Jones

Dave Ellefson

Dead Daisies

Dead Flowers

Def Leppard

Disneyland After Dark

Femme Fatale

Georgia Satellites

Gotthard

Guns N’Roses

Hard-Ons

Heaven

Inglorious

Jane’s Addiction

Jane’s Addition (1989)

Johnny Diesel and the Injectors

Joe Perry

KISS (1989)

KISS (1990)

Kings Of The Sun

Living Colour

Metal Church

Metallica

Mike Tramp

Mr Big

Motorhead

Nick Barker and the Reptiles

Poison

Ratt

Rhino Bucket

Rose Tattoo

Roxus

Screaming Jets

Silverchair

Slaughter

Steve Vai

Stone Rider

Stryper

Tom Keifer (1991)

Vinnie Vincent

Vivian Campbell

Winger

Audio interviews:

Buckcherry

Burnt Out Wreck

Chuck Billy

The Casanovas

Bob Catley

Danko Jones

Duff McKagan 1989

Gotthard

Jason Newstead (1988)

Joel Hoekstra

Eric Martin

Kelly Nickels

Kurdt Vanderhoof

Rikki Rockett (1989)

Ugly Kid Joe

Donnie Vie

  • LA Guns – Waking The Dead

  • Bon Jovi – Keep The Faith

    $53.74
  • Motley Crue – Cancelled EP (CD)

    $30.08
  • Slash – Orgy Of The Damned CD and vinyl

    $23.33
  • Skid Row – Subhuman Race vinyl

    $57.03
  • Riley’s LA Guns – Renegades

    $65.99
  • Motley Crue – Shout At The Devil 40th anniversary boxed set

    $271.88
  • KISS – Creatures Of The Night 5CD blue ray boxed set

    $317.42
Hot Metal Premium

Author Hot Metal Premium

More posts by Hot Metal Premium