The Who frontman Roger Daltrey has responded after his decision to sign a letter supporting visa-free travel for musicians has caused a stir online. The singer previously spoke out in support of Brexit and claimed that it wouldn’t have any impact on music.
Daltrey joined the likes of Liam Gallagher, Ed Sheeran, and Elton John as over 100 artists signed an open letter slamming the UK Government for having “shamefully failed” the music industry in Boris Johnson’s Brexit deal.
The letter called on the government to âurgently do what it said it would do and negotiate paperwork-free travel in Europe for British artists and their equipmentâ and argued that otherwise âmany tours [will be] unviable, especially for young emerging musicians who are already struggling to keep their heads above water owing to the Covid ban on live musicâ.
Daltrey’s support for the letter follows on from his previous well-publicised pro-Brexit comments, which he made in 2019. Asked if Brexit would be “bad for British rock music”, he replied: âNo. Whatâs it got to do with the rock business? How are you going to tour in Europe? Oh dear. As if we didnât tour Europe before the fucking EU. Oh give it up!”
He added: “If you want to be signed up to be ruled by a fucking mafia, you do it. Like being governed by FIFA.â
Now, Daltrey has issued a response regarding his decision to sign his letter and lend his support to the visa-free touring campaign. “I have not changed my opinion on the EU. I’m glad to be free of Brussels, not Europe,” he told NME in a statement. “I would have preferred reform, which was asked for by us before the referendum and was turned down by the then president of the EU.”
The frontman continued: “I do think our government should have made the easing of restrictions for musicians and actors a higher priority. Every tour, individual actors and musicians should be treated as any other ‘Goods’ at the point of entry to the EU Â with one set of paperwork. Switzerland has borders with five EU countries, and trade is electronically frictionless. Why not us?”
Earlier today, music fans, figures from the entertainment world and social media users took to Twitter to re-share his original statements and comment on his U-turn.
Roger Daltrey signs a letter complaining about musicians losing their freedom of movement due to #Brexit.
And that would be… this Roger Daltrey? pic.twitter.com/uWVmg2vudz— Parody Boris Johnson (@BorisJohnson_MP) January 20, 2021
Dear Roger Daltrey
Donât get fooled again.
Yours Sincerely
Everyone who repeatedly tried to tell you this over and over again for five fucking years#BrexitCarnage https://t.co/zFckmjoOxL
— Mark Davyd (@markdavyd) January 20, 2021
Good to see Roger Daltrey has signed this letter about how the #BrexitShambles will destroy Britain's massive music exports, particularly since he supported, er, the #Brexit that has delivered this wreckage. Peak everything.#BrexitCarnage #BrexitDisasterhttps://t.co/bmojZcG3pw
— Brendan May (@bmay) January 20, 2021
Brexiteer Roger Daltrey signs a letter to complain about loss of freedom of movement for musicians caused by … brexit.#asThickAsPigshit
— Kev & Trev (@WipeHomophobia) January 20, 2021
Daltrey may have sang âwonât get fooled againâ many times, but itâs more blindingly obvious than ever that Townsend wrote the lyrics.
— Irvine Welsh (@IrvineWelsh) January 20, 2021
Roger Daltrey today…… pic.twitter.com/oXjD1CB3Jw
— Clark Gillies (@wanderer1982) January 20, 2021
âCan I just shock you?â pic.twitter.com/MusWYVf8Y7
— Accidental Partridge (@AccidentalP) January 20, 2021
Daltry has written to the Govts regarding bands touring Europe
Hereâs his views pre Brexit
Silly old bastard pic.twitter.com/xpaL7kditB
— Reverend&TheMakers
(@Reverend_Makers) January 20, 2021
Responding to Daltrey’s comments last year, Music Venue Trust CEO and former gig promoter Mark Davyd told NME: Â âThe problem is that at a grassroots music level, we donât form a huge part of the conversation when it comes to considering whatâs happening to musicians. You get Roger Daltrey going on television saying, âEverything will be fine after Brexitâ because he used to play in Europe in the 1960s. Then youâve got James Blunt saying it doesnât matter and wonât affect him â and you know what? Heâs right. With the amount of money he makes from touring, he wonât even notice.”
âThis is basically a tax on new and emerging musicians. Itâs not a tax that will have any impact on your James Blunts and Roger Daltreys. Someone will sit in an office and fill in all of their paperwork.â
The open letter was published hours after government ministers rejected pleas for them to fight for a visa-free touring plan for musicians and their crew with the EU.
Despite widespread anger from artists and music industry bosses calling on the government to âtake this seriously and fix itâ, ministers rejected the idea yesterday (January 19) â insisting that âtaking back controlâ of borders is their priority and that talks would only resume if Brussels âchanges its mindâ.
A row erupted last week after Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden said that the EU was to blame for not permitting visa-free travel for artists, following reports that a âstandardâ proposal that would exempt performers from needing a visa to enter countries in the EU for trips under 90 days was actually turned down by the UK government.
Then, as NME revealed, the EU hit back by denying claims that they had rejected the UKâs âambitious proposalsâ, saying that they had in fact offered the UK 90 days of visa-free travel â but the UK responded with their own proposal of just 30 days. See more info on the different deals here.

Politicians from Labour and the Liberal Democrats also spoke out on the issue to NME, claiming that âthe government blaming the EU is predictable but it does nothing to help our creative industriesâ â and calling for the stalemate to end by negotiations resuming to find a viable solution.
Last week also saw music industry insiders amplify their fears that the current Brexit deal could prevent UK artists from being able to play in the US, claiming that if talent is unable to acquire âinternational recognitionâ through playing neighbouring European countries with ease, then this could make them ineligible for a visa.
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