MusicNewsMassive Attack address Brexit at London concertThey called out the 'racists and bigots' in the wake of the referendum results, performing a track for the first time in 18 yearsShareLink copied ✔️July 4, 2016MusicNewsTextAnna Cafolla Musicians from Stormzy to PJ Harvey have all had their say on the UK’s decision to leave the EU, and while performing at British Summer Time festival, Massive Attack made a big statement in response to the referendum results. The Bristol-born group performed their track “Eurochild” at the London festival, their first airing of the record in 18 years. Robert “3D” Del Naja introduced it, and said: “We didn’t expect to be singing this 20 years later as a requiem”. He added: “As sons of immigrants, we are both very disappointed with the situation. We can’t allow ourselves to fall victim to the populist bullshit going on at the moment. We can’t let the bigots and racists back into this situation. It’s bullshit.” Parts of the UK, particularly London, have seen a shocking increase in racist and xenophobic hate crimes. As they played their rallying cry for unity in the face of crisis and political turmoil, the band stood in front of visuals that read “we are in this together”, “no visas for Ibiza” and “#wearerefugees”. PJ Harvey only last week similarly used her festival platform to air an opinion on Brexit. While playing Glastonbury, the musician read No Man is an Island by John Donne. It was received as a direct address to the UK leaving the EU. Marches in London this weekend to protest the referendum decision drew crowds of over 40,000 according to reports. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREDHLSigrid’s guide to NorwayThe 30 best K-pop tracks of 2025Meet the Dazed Clubbers on this year’s Dazed 100‘UK Ug’: How Gen Z Brits reinvented rap in 2025 How a century-old Danish brand became pop culture’s favourite sound systemLucila Safdie answers the dA-Zed quizDHLInside singer Sigrid’s intimate walks through nature with her fans ‘The unknown is exciting’: Why Gorillaz’ upcoming album is all about deathThe 20 best tracks of 2025, rankedThe 20 best albums of 2025, rankedThe renaissance of Zara Larsson: ‘I’m out of the Khia Asylum’The 10 best music videos of 2025, ranked