Order comes after Williams’
hit Happy was played at an event just hours after a mass shooting at a
Pittsburgh synagogue
Cease-and-desist letter …
Pharrell Williams. Photograph: Mario Anzuoni/Reuters
Pharrell Williams has
ordered Donald Trump to stop playing his music at rallies, after his upbeat
song Happy was played at a Trump event in Indiana just hours after a mass shooting
at a Pittsburgh synagogue.
“Pharrell has not, and will
not, grant you permission to publicly perform or otherwise broadcast or
disseminate any of his music,” reads the letter from the R&B star’s lawyer
Howard King.
“On the day of the mass
murder of 11 human beings at the hands of a deranged ‘nationalist’, you played
his song Happy to a crowd at a political event in Indiana,” the letter
continues. “There was nothing ‘happy’ about the tragedy inflicted upon our
country on Saturday and no permission was granted for your use of this song for
this purpose.”
Trump was criticised for
making jokes about a “bad hair day” in the immediate wake of the shooting. At
the Indiana rally, however, he forcefully condemned the attack, calling it “an
antisemitic act” and adding: “We just don’t seem to learn from the past.”
Williams’ cease-and-desist
letter follows a similar order in August from Steven Tyler, frontman of
Aerosmith, whose lawyers said: “Mr Trump is creating the false impression that
our client has given his consent for the use of his music, and even that he
endorses the presidency of Mr Trump.”
Other musicians who have
forbidden Trump to use their music include Adele, Neil Young, the Rolling
Stones and Queen. REM’s Michael Stipe said in 2015: “Do not use our music or my
voice for your moronic charade of a campaign.”
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2018/oct/30/pharrell-williams-donald-trump-happy-pittsburgh-synagogue-shooting
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