Is Toronto Elephant Man show really cancelled?
TORONTO NEWS / "As far as I know, he's coming," says promoter
Michael Pihach / National / Wednesday, July 29, 2009
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HOMOPHOBIC LYRICS. Circa nightclub in Toronto says an Elephant Man performance has been cancelled because of the musicians homphobic lyrics.
(Xtra files)
Homophobic dancehall musician Elephant Man was booked to perform at Circa nightclub on Aug 2 as part of Caribana weekend. But after some in Toronto’s gay communities expressed outrage, Circa staffers say they cancelled his appearance. Even so, independent event promoters say Elephant Man is still planning to appear.

Circa staff released a schedule of events for Caribana on Jul 28 that included a poster for the Celebrity Ball, a Sunday night event featuring a photo of Elephant Man as the headlining performer. Minutes after the material was sent, the Twitterfacefriendspacebook-o-net twitched to life with outrage among some of Toronto’s gay people. Circa staff quickly backpedalled, telling the Twitterfacefriendspacebook-o-net that his booking was cancelled. On the promo poster, the musician’s image was replaced by a question mark.

“Elephant Man will not be performing,” Circa staffer Tika Simone told Xtra on Jul 27. Staff at Circa say they were unaware of Elephant Man’s homophobic lyrics prior to the backlash and pulled him from the lineup as soon as they realized what a fuss it would create.

However, when Xtra called some of the event’s independent promoters they sang a different tune.

“As far as I know, he’ll be there,” said Prawjectz, one of the Celebrity Ball’s promoters and MCs, on Jul 29. “If there was a change we would have known about it by now.”

Xtra contacted Jag a promoter for Soulshock, the promotion company behind the event, to ask if Elephant Man would be performing at Circa’s Celebrity Ball, but he refused to comment and hung up. Three other promoters linked with Soulshock who spoke with Xtra said they were unaware that Circa had dropped Elephant Man from the bill, and that the event was going ahead as planned, Elephant Man included.

Xtra contacted Elephant Man’s booking firm, Solid Agency, but after some back and forth calls, no one returned our inquires.

In all of Xtra’s inquires there is so far no indication that Elephant Man will simply be performing in another venue.

The controversial musician last made headlines in 2007 when he was scheduled to perform at Koolhaus in Toronto after the concert club cancelled his appearance because outrage erupted from some in the gay community.

Elephant Man has been the target of international activist organization Stop Murder Music. The Canadian branch of the coalition helped convince Apple i-Tunes to stop selling songs that incited violence against gay and lesbian people. 

Matt Thomas, an associate editor of Toronto’s fab magazine, which is operated by Pink Triangle Press, which also publishes Xtra, says he posted a note on his Facebook account about Elephant Man performing at Circa soon after he received the promotional material from Circa. He was surprised by how fast word spread online and by how fast Circa acted.  

“As an activist I’m used to not getting what I want,” says Thomas. However this time, “I didn’t have to leave my desk and it took three hours.”

Thomas says banning homophobic artists, like Elephant Man, from entering Canada isn’t a good way to oppose homophobia. He says in this case the protest is about putting “socio-economic pressure” on businesses that make a living partly from the support of gay people. Thomas says he wants to encourage venues to think twice before booking homophobic musicians.

“It’s about targeting people who profit from hate,” says Thomas.

Akim Adé Larcher of Stop Murder Music Canada says that some Jamaican dancehall artists with homophobic lyrics will pull their homophobic songs from their show when performing in some countries. However, “They sing those songs when they return to their home countries,” he says. “The songs still incite violence and hate.”

Some of Elephant Man’s lyrics include lines such as, “Battyman fi dead! Tek dem by surprise” (queers must be killed! Take them by surprise) and “When yuh hear a Sodomite get raped/but a fi wi fault/it’s wrong/two women gonna hock up inna bed/that’s two Sodomites dat fi dead” (“When you hear a lesbian getting raped/ It’s not our fault ... Two women in bed/ That’s two Sodomites who should be dead.”)





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Reader Comments


 
Preposterous
Why are we letting this piece of trash into our beautiful diverse country is beyond me. We didn't let the Westboro Baptist Church enter this country. Then why are we making an exception for this violence instigating freak? Ship him back to the Jamaican jungles where he's from with some bananas for him to feed along the way. YUCK! I'm disgusted. If this freak manages to show up, I will personally come down and destroy the stage.
tri, Montreal Quebec
08/04/09 11:52 AM EST
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Shutup
@ preposterous.I presume you're a fag or have a lot of them in your life. Instead of worrying about elephant man and his performances worry about what's going up your ass and the AIDS you all keep infecting the world with. Dude can sing about w.e the hell he wants, and if the gay communitiy and their std ridden selves have an issue, then drink some gasoline and swallow a lit match. Make the world a better place!
Mona, toronto ontario
08/04/09 2:29 PM EST
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Mona
Mona you're a delusional dickhead. Sorry gays only make up 10% of the world yet multitudes of heterosexuals are dying from it. Why don't you go and have sex with a prostitute tonight and then die of AIDS to make the world a better place idiot? It's interesting how you stereotype gay people to make human trash like you feel better. He can sing about whatever he wants? Then he really should start singing bout beating up women, burn Muslim in hell, or torture Buddhists to death too! You wouldn't care either way. You and your attitude make people sick in the stomach. Why don't you go join that little cult of yours in the States instead of soiling our land with your low life bigotry? Poor little disposable uneducated creature.
tri, montreal quebec
08/05/09 3:42 AM EST
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[Editor's Note]
Ack!
Hey guys - could we please stick to the issues raised in the article? Nobody wants to read all of this back-and-forth name calling. Thanks!
Brent Creelman, Toronto ON
08/05/09 10:05 AM EST
Confused
Editor: I had my comments deleted a few months back when I referred to a gay cabinet minister by name - and it violated your policy on outing. I don't agree with your position, but I respect it for legal reasons if nothing else. But can you tell me why saying that a gay person is gay must be deleted, while the above person can advocate that we all "drink some gasoline and swallow a lit match" and other hate-mongering diatribe is okay on your website? Why don't you just delete it? We are subject to enough homophobia in our lives (or at least have been in our histories) that we shouldn't have to see it here - in our own media. The Globe, Star or even the Sun would have hit the delete button by now. I urge you to do the same. It is well within the duty of an editor to edit out such crap. A passionate argument for free speech at all costs is one thing - I had no time for those fags who tried to shout down Margaret Somerville and deny her her right to speak a reasoned (reasoned as in considered, or thought out) argument from a point of view most of us don't share. But this contributes nothing.
Alex MacLean, Toronto ON
08/05/09 12:32 PM EST
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Respectfully disagree
Hi Alex, Mona's asinine comments remind us that there are still a lot of rabid homophobes in the world. They remind us that we still have a long way to go, no matter how smug and cushy we may feel in our little gay lives in our little gay village. They remind us that we can't afford to be complacent.
Julia, Toronto On
08/05/09 12:40 PM EST
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Um, we're not all complacent and cushy
Thanks for engaging respectfully, Julia. You should be aware, however, that not all of us live "smug and cushy" lives in "our little gay village." I live adjacent to Regent Park, and I and the good number of other fags and dykes in the area have an uneasy peace with the many young Caribbean men (Elephant Man's fan base) in the area. I respect them, I don't assume the worst, and they appear to reciprocate. I've never had a problem, I don't try to 'pass' but I really tone it down. (I am aware of my own self-policing behaviour). But my neighbours know - I live with a man about my age. Diversity carries the day, most days; with people from around the globe, there's little small town conformity here. Still, it is anything but cushy here, and when the parties run late and the beer flows I hear the comments and the 'jokes' that float through the summer nights reminding me that underneath the superficial tolerance, there's a strong undercurrent of homophobia. So I don't need people like Mona reminding me that homophobia exists, and I've lived enough of it in my lifetime to last me. I don't need Elephant Man stirring the pot. And I strongly dislike his apologists getting free space in a gay rag. Should Jews embrace desecration of synagogues as cogent reminders that anti-Semitism still exists? Would Muslims tolerate graffiti about Mohammed on a Muslim website? But perhaps you are right, that there are people who have forgotten or who never experienced homophobia. But I'm not swayed by your argument which seems to be that there are so few opportunities to actually experience homophobia in today's liberal Canadian world that we need to create a space for it in the gay media lest some who live sequestered lives in the gay village forget it exists.
Alex, Toronto ON
08/06/09 11:32 AM EST
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