volver
Sorry in advance if this comes over as a sermon...
The comment that Sir Lenny made was entirely true. I still haven't read the interview, but I believe it was made in the context of how Caribbean people are still not represented in some parts of society today.
So fatuous comments about shipping people in just come across as minimising the issue and laughing at what he says.
Anyway, the TV program which led to the interview is on the BBC next week, we can all watch it.
No, it doesn't sound like a sermon (to me, at least).
I don't think that commenting about the number of people of colour at an event (or who attend a type of event) is racist. It is an observation. I don't think it would be any more racist if a white person had said it.
It is many years since I was at a festival, so am not in a position to comment on whether it's true or not, but music, particularly for young people, can be tribal, with people in different subcultural (as well as cultural) groups identifying with particular bands, and adopting particular clothing and so on as signifiers of that identification. It wouldn't be surprising if cultural group had a bearing on which 'tribe' people belonged to.
Finding out if this is the case, and attempting to balance the lineup of bands at the likes of Glastonbury could be a way of mitigating this, or it could be that everyone concerned is happy with the provision as it stands, and that there are equivalent outlets for those who aren't keen on the ones who play Glastonbury. The point is that unless someone asks the questions the organisers will never know. It's not enough to assume that people aren't interested in something (whether it's hill walking, opera or festivals) based simply on the take-up.