BLABBERMOUTH.NET
IRON MAIDEN frontman
Bruce Dickinson has called on the U.K. government to get its act together to help artists tour the European Union post-Brexit.
As a result of the Brexit agreement, performing artists of all kinds must now have work permits to earn money from gigs in EU countries, and have a "carnet" that allows the transport of goods such as musical instruments across borders. Individual visas and work permits are required for different countries, and U.K. touring vehicles are limited to only three stops in Europe before having to return home. This amounts to extra costs roughly amounting to ÂŁ5,000 per individual country.
During an appearance on
Sky News on Monday (June 28),
Dickinson told
Kay Burley that Brexit is making it harder for British acts to do tours and concerts in Europe and that the government should be doing more to help.
The 62-year-old singer, who previously admitted he voted to leave the EU, said: "Don't get me started on the government's attitude to the entertainment industry. We are probably one of the U.K.'s major exports. I mean ⌠come on. And yet we're sitting here, we can't do anything.
"It's very well known that I voted for Brexit," he continued. "But, you know, the idea is after you've done it, you then go in and be sensible about the relationship you have with people. So, at the moment, all this guff about not being able to play in Europe, and the Europeans not being able to play over here and work permits and all the rest of the rubbish â come on! You know, get your act together."
Back in 2018,
Dickinson told the French news magazine
L'Obs that he was "quite relaxed about the idea" of the United Kingdom separating from the European Union, explaining that he thought Brexit would make Britain "more flexible" and that "Brexit actually opens our borders, Brexit opens the United Kingdom to the whole of the world.
"Brexit will not change the status of the [country] by very much," except for "enhanc[ing] our economic capabilities," he added.
After
Dickinson's latest comments were aired, people were quick to note his changed position. "This is what he voted for," one person wrote. "Don't get me started on prominent Brexiteers claiming otherwise."
"Own it
Bruce, this is what you voted for," added another.
"Well, well, well, if it isn't the consequences of his own actions," tweeted a third person.
"Maybe you should have done some research, this is exactly what you voted for you idiot," said another.
Earlier this month, over 200 musicians and bands â including
WOLF ALICE,
Annie Lennox,
Mark Knopfler,
NEW ORDER and
RADIOHEAD â urged the U.K. government to act now to mitigate the Brexit-related expenditure and red tape of touring on mainland Europe. The "Let The Music Move" campaign calls for a renegotiation on touring â or "new bilateral agreements with each country that will reduce the costs and red tape" â as well as a short-term "transitional support packageâ to financially assist artists with new paperwork.
The campaign's organizer, the Featured Artists' Coalition, said that, in 2019, U.K. artists played almost four times as many shows in the EU as they did in North America.
The campaign is asking for the government to cover new and additional costs of touring, deliver measures to overcome restrictions on transporting instruments and stage equipment, and a promise that EU artists will have reciprocal freedoms.