Danish Dari German Spanish French Turkish Arabic
Click here to go to start page Click here to go to start page
Search Sort content by country/region Sort content by artist Sort content by subject
News stories world-wide
News 2011
News 2010
News 2009
News 2008
News 2007
News 2006
News 2005
News 2004
News 2003
News 2002
News 2001
About music censorship
About Freemuse
Publications
Study room
Activities
Links
Press room

NEWS
11 October 2004

La Rumeur: accused of inciting violence against the police and the media
Interview with French hip hop group La Rumeur

When it was fashionable for French hip hop groups to sign up for a major label La Rumeur went underground. But when fashion went underground, the six-member rap band turned to EMI to release its first album, "L'ombre sur la mesure" ("Shadow on the (music) measure"). Like the two EPs it had earlier released on the underground circuit, it is politically-charged and drenched in a denunciation of France's colonial repression that their parents fled. As a result of the articulate lyrics and uniquely jazzy rhythms, this group from the Paris outskirts helped to redefine the hip hop scene in France.... but faced crippling legal court cases as a consequence. Throughout much of 2004 they fought lawyers representing the Ministry of Interior and Skyrock radio who accused them of inciting violence against the police and the media, respectively.

Interview with La Rumeur (Daniel Brown/Mondomix, 11 Oct. 2004)
Shoot the Singer!
See also: "Rap and censorship in France", in Shoot the Singer! Music Censorship Today (Freemuse/Zed Books, London 2004)

Go to top
Related reading

France: Jamaican reggae star’s concerts cancelled
Six French music venues have axed scheduled performances of Jamaican reggae singer Capleton because of his lyrics against homosexuality
09 June 2005
La Rumeur: accused of inciting violence
The French group from the Paris outskirts helped to redefine the hip hop scene in France.... but faced crippling legal court cases as a consequence
11 October 2004
French minister warns 'hate' rap bands over lyrics
The band Sniper has outraged deputies in the governing UMP party with "La France," a foul-mouthed anti-society rant that taps the deep sense of alienation of disaffected French youths
05 November 2003
Reggae stars 'help to spread HIV'
International Development Minister Gareth Thomas fears that discrimination against homosexuals is deterring people from being tested for HIV. "A number of artistes are effectively contributing to the spread of HIV by producing reggae and rap songs actually encouraging discrimination"
22 November 2004
'Anti-gay' lyrics inquiry starts
The government is considering banning reggae star Sizzla from the UK. Meanwhile detectives are investigating claims that lyrics penned by eight leading reggae artists incite violence against homosexuals and are therefore illegal.
03 November 2004
New Zealand: Controversial American hip-hop group's concert cancelled
The Big Day Out festival removed the American rap group Odd Future from the festival's Auckland lineup due to objections from locals over the group's homophobic lyrics
15 November 2011
United Kingdom: Ban on abusive chants by football fans
The British football club Tottenham Hotspur has vowed to ban fans guilty of offensive or abusive chanting. The Scottish government is considering a law about it
05 October 2011
South Africa: Anti-apartheid song declared 'hate speech'
On 12 September 2011, South Africa’s high court banned the ruling ANC party from singing the old anti-apartheid song ‘Shoot the Boer’
13 September 2011
UK / Scotland: Offensive football songs criminalised
Scottish football fans could be imprisoned for up to six years for singing offensive songs if an ‘Offensive Behaviour at Football Bill’ is passed in the Scottish Parliament
01 August 2011
South Africa: Controversy over whether ‘hate song’ should be banned
The Irish singer Bono’s defense of a controversial song has triggered heated debate. Supreme Court in South Africa is considering whether the song should be banned
25 February 2011