The Coup’s Boots Riley Talks Abusive Language Charges After Virginia Festival Scandal

6/30/08, 5:05 pm EST

A performance by Oakland hip-hop group the Coup at a festival in Norfolk, Virginia, last week ended abruptly after police there accused Coup leader Boots Riley of using abusive language and charging him with an obscure obscenity law. Since Riley was first hit with the charges on June 21st, the city is going through with prosecution, the first time in 26 years — and the first time the law has ever been applied to a performer — the law is being enforced. Riley, however, alleges the charges are racially motivated and not the result of anything the rapper may have said onstage. “I stayed and debated the validity of the charge with police and festival promoters,” Riley said. “It is clear that this is part of a larger debate that has nothing to do with profanity. That debate is about racism, gentrification and the ownership of public space.”

Riley also alleges that because the festival attracted a predominately African-American audience, the festival received numerous “noise complaints” to the Towne Point Park location — an area where high-priced condos were recently built — even though they followed the same noise decibel code as other festivals. Riley does admit to dropping a few f-bombs here and there — one of the group’s choruses is in fact “What the fuck?” — but the expletives were “meant to flatter, explain a life situation, or used as a lyrical device to provoke positive thought.”


Comments

CB | 7/26/2008, 4:09 pm EST

Did they not know who they hired to perform!
Another case of subliminal fascism.

WailingSoul | 7/16/2008, 1:05 pm EST

To quote Mahatma Mohandas K. Ghandi (1869-1948) ” A “No” uttered from the deepest conviction is better than a “Yes” merely uttered to please, or worse, to avoid trouble.”

Nadia | 7/1/2008, 11:59 pm EST

This is so crazy! The festival promoters need to back him up or they aren’t gonna get any artists to work with them again

wtf | 7/1/2008, 11:17 am EST

All he said was f*** a couple times and he’s called obscene? If that’s the case, you’d have to file charges against every rapper, every rock act, and heavy metal act. There are far worse things that can and have been done than saying the f word. There are shows that feature simulated violence, strippers, in addition to profanity. Why don’t these “performers” get in trouble? ANd besides, who hasn’t used the F word in expressing themselves? I’m not one for race cards but this clearly seems race related. To Boots Riley, keep your head high.

JP | 6/30/2008, 5:49 pm EST

If you wonder why “elitist” people across the country look down on conservative, rural, southern people. It’s stuff like this. Seriously? Prosecuting a rapper for profanity? It’s one of those backwards puritanical laws that good-ol-boys selectively enforce against uppity folks like rappers. If you want people to take you seriously, then use your police force to enforce laws that truly benefit your town. Instead of enforcing laws that will give your town a black eye in the national media.

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