No performance in Frankfurt ?: Roger Waters show should be canceled

He once wrote music history as a Pink Floyd member.

No performance in Frankfurt ?: Roger Waters show should be canceled

He once wrote music history as a Pink Floyd member. In the meantime, however, Roger Waters primarily attracts attention with controversial political statements. Several cities are therefore discussing stopping him from appearing. Things could get serious in Frankfurt now.

The city of Frankfurt and the Hessian state government want to cancel a concert by singer Roger Waters, who is controversial because of anti-Semitic statements, in the Festhalle. The trade fair, which rents the festival hall and in which the city has a 60 percent stake and the state has a 40 percent stake, should announce the termination of the contract.

The magistrate, in agreement with the state government, decided to instruct the trade fair management by shareholder resolution to cancel the concert planned for May 28 and to "extraordinarily terminate the contract immediately for good cause".

The move is justified by the former Pink Floyd frontman's "continued anti-Israel behavior". He has repeatedly called for a cultural boycott of Israel. A balloon in the shape of a pig with images of the Star of David was part of previous stage shows.

In Frankfurt, the place is also preloaded. After the pogrom night in 1938, Jewish men were brought to the festival hall, abused and later deported to concentration camps.

"The magistrate therefore feels called upon to send a clear signal against anti-Semitism that is supported by society as a whole," the city said. However, this is a case-by-case decision and not a precedent.

As part of the tour, five concerts are planned in Germany in May. There are also calls for the concerts to be canceled in Berlin, Munich and Cologne. However, lawyers consider bans on performance to be difficult to enforce.

Waters was once a founding member of psychedelic rock icons Pink Floyd. From the mid-1970s in particular, he was largely responsible for the songs of the group, which was founded in 1965. The cult album "The Wall", for example, was almost entirely penned by him. In 1985, however, Waters left Pink Floyd.

Most recently, Waters made headlines with comments on the Ukraine war, not only blaming the West for Russia's attack, but even describing the United States as the "main aggressor". Former Pink Floyd bandmate David Gilmour broke up with him long ago. His wife Polly Samson recently described Waters on Twitter as a "Putin apologist" and anti-Semitic to his "rotten marrow". Gilmour immediately followed the words.