Tag Archives: anti-fascist

Through Cable Street Beat, music became a potent antifascist weapon against the farย right

The Cable Street Mural by Dave Binnington Savage, Paul Butler, Ray Walker and Desmond Rochfort (1979 โ€“ 1983). Amanda Slater/Wiki Commons, CC BY

Alexander Carter, University of Birmingham

In the 1980s, Britainโ€™s far right was on the rise. Fascist parties fielded over 100 candidates in the 1983 general election. And culturally, the far right was also making ground.

โ€œWhite powerโ€ bands like Skrewdriver and Peter and the Wolf began drawing sizeable crowds and selling thousands of records. In 1987, Skrewdriverโ€™s frontman founded Blood & Honour, a music network that soon gained followers and branches throughout the US and Europe.

Blood & Honourโ€™s emergence caused tremors among the UK antifascist movement. Anti-Fascist Action (AFA), the dominant antifascist group of the time, struck back with their own musical network: Cable Street Beat (CSB).

This is the story of how music became a battleground in the 1980s and 1990s, as antifascists fought fascism with guitars and microphones.

Cable Street Beat

Cable Street Beat was named after the antifascistsโ€™ celebrated victory over Oswald Mosleyโ€™s Blackshirts. Before the second world war, British MP Oswald Mosley had commanded a growing fascist movement that had been fiercely resisted by antifascists.

On October 4 1936, Mosley amassed his Blackshirts to march through the East End of London. However, around 100,000 militant antifascists gathered on Cable Street to oppose them, ultimately preventing the fascistsโ€™ march.

The first CSB gig was held on October 8 1988 at the Electric Ballroom in London. Newtown Neurotics, The Men They Couldnโ€™t Hang and punk poet Attila the Stockbroker electrified a 1,000-strong crowd

Black and white photo of Oswald Mosley

British MP Oswald Mosley commanded a growing fascist movement. National Portrait Gallery

On October 4 1936, Mosley amassed his Blackshirts to march through the East End of London. However, around 100,000 militant antifascists gathered on Cable Street to oppose them, ultimately preventing the fascistsโ€™ march.

The first CSB gig was held on October 8 1988 at the Electric Ballroom in London. Newtown Neurotics, The Men They Couldnโ€™t Hang and punk poet Attila the Stockbroker electrified a 1,000-strong crowd.

Crucially, the audience also heard a powerful speech from Solly Kaye, an antifascist veteran of the actual Battle of Cable Street five decades earlier. Kaye warned the assembled concertgoers that fascist โ€œsongsโ€ were โ€œpoison put into the minds of young peopleโ€.

Brendan, an AFA and CSB organiser and horn player with antifascist punk band the Blaggers, described to me how CSB was needed: โ€œFirstly as a way to draw people who might be attracted to the far right into a more progressive type of politics โ€ฆ Secondly it was needed to bring people together from different cultures. Thirdly, just to stick two fingers up to the far right.โ€

The power of punk

CSB drew energy from the UKโ€™s frenetic punk scene. Bands such as the Angelic Upstarts, Snuff and Yr Anhrefn all enthusiastically took up CSBโ€™s cause. They shared the stage with antifascist activists who gave rousing speeches.

Punk poet Attila holds a microphone in one hand and beer in the other.

Punk, and in particular the working-class focused, aggressive Oi! subgenre and related skinhead subculture, was an area that the far right had long tried to colonise.

Blood & Honour wanted to believe otherwise, but the skinhead movement (which originated in the 1960s) had roots in Jamaican culture and reggae. Indeed, few skinheads had any interest in white power.

Punk poet Attila the Stockbroker in 2018. Madchickenwoman/Wiki Commons, CC BY-SA

โ€œIf far-right politics helped inform the identity of some within the โ€ฆ skinhead subculture,โ€ says historian Matthew Worley, โ€œthen the vast majority resisted and rejected the substance of the fascist message.โ€

CSB gained considerable ground in this battle. High-profile bands like The Specials and The Selecter played benefit gigs. Multiple other bands โ€“ including The Oppressed, Knucklehead and Spy Vs Spy โ€“ put out AFA fundraising CDs.

Thomas โ€œMensiโ€ Mensforth, the charismatic lead singer of the Angelic Upstartsโ€™ (who sadly passed away in 2021), even narrated an AFA documentary produced for the BBC in 1993.

Unity Carnivals

CSBโ€™s most high-profile strategy was its Unity Carnivals. The first, held in Hackney Downs Park in 1991, attracted 10,000 attendees. This made it the biggest public antifascist event in a decade. Bands including Gary Clailโ€™s On U Sound System, The 25th of May and The Blaggers kept the vast crowds dancing all day under the banner of antifascism.

But the partying was punctuated with serious political rhetoric. Throughout the day activists gave speeches and handed out flyers. Brendan was part of the team that organised the carnival.

โ€œItโ€™s a clichรฉ,โ€ he told me, โ€œbut that carnival really did unite people. It brought a really diverse crowd together in Hackney and really got the political messages across.โ€

Two more carnivals followed: another in Hackney in 1992 and one in Newcastle in 1993, where The Shamen headlined with their chart-topping song Ebeneezer Goode.

Freedom of movement

CSB was wound down in the early 1990s. Nevertheless, music remained a central element of AFAโ€™s activism.

By the early 1990s, electronic dance music had taken off in the UK. Antifascists immediately saw the potential and in Manchester local DJs and AFA set up the Freedom of Movement campaign in 1993 to mobilise these ravers. AFAโ€™s magazine, Fighting Talk, declared Freedom of Movementโ€™s aim was to โ€œpoliticise the previously apathetic dance club scene, raising issues of racism and fascismโ€.

From 1993 to 1996, AFA put on a series of antifascist club nights in cities from Edinburgh to London. They also released an AFA benefit album, This is Fascism, featuring prominent DJs and producers including Carl Cox, Drum Club and Fun-Da-Mental. The Blaggers had close links to AFA, playing multiple benefit gigs.

Fascism is on the march again. The far right in Italy, Argentina and the Netherlands have all recently experienced electoral victories. Many other countries โ€“ such as the US, Brazil and India โ€“ have experienced explosions in far-right activity.

Findings from my own research and othersโ€™ demonstrate that fascists are adept at using culture to achieve their goals. It enables them to transmit their hateful ideology, generate money and forge networks across countries.

But the successes of CSB and AFA provide us with valuable lessons. Music can send a powerful message and mobilise hundreds of thousands to resist racism. Its emotive nature can change listenersโ€™ worldviews, and help create a shared culture that is antithetical to the far rightโ€™s divisive goals.

This is an area where antifascists can make real gains against their foes: uniting antifascism and music is a tried-and-tested method for winning over the hearts and minds of people against hatred.


Alexander Carter, Research Fellow, University of Birmingham

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

“The Time Has Come For Love”: New song sends all profits to Doctors Without Borders

Irish protest singer and folk musician, Andy White, just dropped a new song, giving all the proceeds to Doctors Without Borders. As we all know, things are looking pretty bleak, all around the world, and Andy felt the urge to do something and he urges all of us to do what we can.

In his case, the talent lies in creating music, raising awareness, and gathering funds for selfless doctors who risk their lives every day attending to casualties of war and other tragedies.

Andy writes:

“As you know there is a humanitarian disaster happening right now. We do what we can do. March, donate, write… Recorded it at home and I have just put it up on Bandcamp. Any proceeds will go to Mรฉdecins Sans Frontiรจres (Doctors Without Borders) msf.org.au.

“I couldn’t not write this song.”

Andy will be touring the UK and Ireland at the beginning of next year and release a new album in December. But as he writes, he felt he had no chance but to put this song out as soon as possible.

Read also: Andy White (Interview)

He ends his message with an empathetic plea to those in power and responsible for the state of the world: “The time has come for love.โ€

Cover photo retrieved from Andy’s Facebook page and credited to Callum Wayne.

Iranian protest singer arrested after releasing a song dedicated to Iranian women’s movement

The arrest comes in the wake of the anniversary of Mahsa Amini’s death in custody and the following protests that shook Iranian society.

Mehdi Yarrahi protesting for Karun river by Darafsh (Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International).

Last 28th of August, Mehdi Yarrahi was arrested for releasing a new piece of music. In the song, titled “Roosarito” (meaning ‘your headscarf ‘), the singer blasts the government’s hijab law and with the release the singer wanted to show support for his country’s women and their fight for equality.

Also read: Why Is Iranโ€™s Regime So Afraid Of This Song?

Yarrahi was accused on two accounts, one for “publishing obscene and vulgar content” and “encouraging public to immorality and depravity,” and the other for “propaganda against the establishment.”

International human rights organisations have condemned the Iranian government for these actions taken against the artist and demanded his immediate release.

In the beginning of his career Yarrahi made anything but protest music, in fact he got famous for composing and singing for the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB).

But after seeing the injustice his people faced, from water shortages to air quality to bad living conditions, Yarrahi began shifting his creative work to address social issues in his country. For which he has since received much backlash and now official arrest.