American Thought Leaders - From Rock Star to Dissident: Winston Marshall
Episode Date: May 24, 2024In 2021, Winston Marshall sent a tweet congratulating Andy Ngo for his book, “Unmasked: Inside Antifa’s Radical Plan to Destroy Democracy.” He soon found himself and his band, Mumford & Sons..., at the center of a firestorm.Three years later, he’s the host of The Winston Marshall Show and co-founder of the “Dissident Dialogues” festival of ideas, which held its first gathering recently in Brooklyn in New York City.Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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2021, I tweet about a book by an American journalist called Andy Ngo
covering the BLM riots and the Antifa BLM.
It just completely blew up, and it blew up my life.
All these sort of Antifa trolls were dogpiling me and my bandmates.
So I issued an apology.
In this episode, I sit down with Winston Marshall,
the former lead guitarist and banjo player of Mumford & Sons.
The duty of the artist is to tell the truth.
So with this groveling apology that I issued, I participated in a lie.
Now he's the host of the Winston Marshall Show and co-founder of the Dissident Dialogues Festival of Ideas.
So after all that incident that happened three years ago, I feel now it's a duty to speak
the truth as I see it. This is American Thought Leaders, and I'm Janja Keller.
Winston Marshall, such a pleasure to have you on American Thought Leaders.
Jan, thanks for having me. We made it happen.
Well, yeah, we've been talking about this for quite some time.
Our paths have gone like this, and now I'm in the hot seat.
And you're here in New York. I'm here in beautiful skyline on this lovely evening.
Well no it's fantastic to have you and you know it was amazing to be at Dissident Dialogues
and see you on stage sort of in the thick of what seems to be your thing right now
and just thinking back to three years ago about this time,
your life kind of profoundly changed.
So, you know, for those, for the very few
that might not be aware of what happened,
I just want to kind of go back there a little bit.
I mean, you were a rock star.
You had four albums with Mumford & Sons.
You were also a banjo player,
which is rare among rock stars, as I understand it. And you had some- No, if you want to be a rock star, don't pick up the banjo player, which is rare among rock stars, as I understand it.
If you want to be a rock star, don't pick up the banjo.
And really wonderful music.
Grammys, and basically top of the game, 20,000 people in stadiums.
I mean, first of all, what's it like to have that going on?
Three years on from it, you appreciate even more so.
We were talking before the cameras were rolling about miracles,
and you were referring to your wife.
But I think I see that as well with what happened with the band.
It's a bit of a miracle.
I thought we were good, and I was very proud of the music we made,
and we worked very hard.
But it's one thing to be good, and it's another thing to have success
like we were so lucky and blessed to have.
And I really think the stars aligned.
Maybe the world wanted that kind of music at that time.
I was just reflecting because I saw a poster from our first US tour, which was September 2008,
which is exactly when the Wall Street bailout was.
And I was thinking, isn't that interesting that we came to America just at that period,
and then our success kind of was at the same time
as the, I guess the beginning of what I call
the populist age.
But I think there was a whole cultural movement
against things that were synthetic.
It wasn't just us.
There were bands like Avett Brothers, Lumineers, Old Crow Medicine Show,
just a kind of folk revival, and other English ones as well.
Anyway, so we were a good band, if I can say so myself.
But then I think the stars were aligned, the world had an, or America had an appetite
for folksy music and going back to that.
So there was a period there where we had a really good run.
And then, so then you mention Dissident Dialogues,
which also should be explained,
because your viewers won't know what that is,
but it was a festival of ideas that we held in Brooklyn.
And the continuation there is that I was, when with the band,
we were hosting festivals, we were putting festivals on across America.
We'd go into towns, work with the towns,
bring in local food, local booze, local artists,
and we'd do these things.
And so I thought, having been in the idea space there's a there's a desire for community here there's a desire for
people people want somewhere to commune and to come together a bit like how you
might love a band go to see the band even though you don't have any friends
who like them and then at the concert you'll be like oh loads of people like this band I think
that that's kind of what we wanted to create with this festival of ideas.
So there's a kind of a continuation there. Also, you and I have been to loads of these
conferences and some of them are quite, without pur-puring any of them because it's a very
hard thing to pull off, but some of them are, you know, stuffy buildings. We wanted to do
kind of a fun rock and roll version of that.
So that's kind of what Dissident Dialogues.
Anyway, for your viewers, I've just
painted a very bizarre picture of a model of things there.
But that's kind of a sketch of where I went from there to there.
Well, and I absolutely do want to talk about that evolution.
But let's just talk briefly about what actually happened because you were
I mean top of the game, right?
Yeah so three years ago as you say it was the pandemic so peak hysteria. Also music
industry, BLM hysteria and you remember Black in which was Black Square Tuesday which is I think June 2020.
Anyway whilst that was going on I was tweeting about books I was reading through the pandemic
2021 I tweet about a book by an American journalist called Andy Ngo covering the BLM riots and the Antifa
BLM including the 19 deaths in the first 14 days, the siege, insurrection
technically of the Portland Federal Courthouse for the entire month of June
2020. This book categorised or documented rather all of these activities. And somehow, even though I had 3,000 followers on Twitter,
something like 24 hours later, it went up all the trending charts,
I think in America as well as in my country.
By the end of the weekend, it was a segment on Tucker and The View.
It just completely blew up and it blew up my life.
Long story short, I issued
an apology, all these sort of antifa trolls were dogpiling me and my bandmates and I appreciated
that I didn't know everything that was going on so I thought, okay, well, maybe there's
more I don't know here, maybe I don't know this whole story.
So I issued an apology under considerable duress,
I would say.
But I still did it somewhat willingly.
And then spent a few months researching, looking into it,
and came to the conclusion not only that I wasn't wrong
to tweet the book, that it was bad, the stuff that Antifa had done.
It was bad.
The riots of the BLM, whatever the cause, motives behind them.
And I also came to the conclusion that it was bad that I had apologised
because in apologising I participated in a lie.
And so I came to to conclusion that all that
could be done was that I well I certainly had to retract the apology but
it was also made perfectly clear to me from with a band that having those
opinions we it wasn't fair on them for me to have my opinions because it would
have professional repercussions for them so it felt like the only way forward was to leave sadly.
And any regrets at this point because you had to, what you said you were looking back at those years and how amazing they were moments ago.
Yeah I don't really have time, regrets aren't helpful particularly. I look forward, I think, how can I build?
How can I grow?
My big lesson through all of this is tell the truth and play the chips as they lie.
That's the only way through life. You don't know what's ahead.
Like the story of Job, the Lord giveth, the Lord taketh away.
Blessed be the name of the Lord.
You don't know what's going to happen, but all you can hang on to is your soul, your dignity, and the truth.
And it's your character that leads you in all those things.
We share being inspired by Alexander Svartsky and especially the Live Not by Lies essay, which I know you've referenced.
And you've just a little bit obliquely referenced it again.
How important is that?
In that period before, between my apology and my retraction,
there's an essay someone sent me at some point,
Living Not By Lies, which he published, I think, in 1974
as he was being exiled from Moscow.
It's about five pages long, and I must have read it
certainly at least five, maybe four or five times in that period.
I keep coming back to it because there's a paragraph that says,
I can't remember the exact quote, but it's something like,
how dare you call yourself an artist if you're not prepared to live by the truth
or tell the truth.
He's obviously talking about life in the Soviet Union, but why that resonated so much
with me is that the role of the duty of the artist is to tell the truth. So with this
apology, this groveling apology that I issued, that was also not me or not not real it seemed to me that
would detract from all work I would do going forward so whether if it was
lyrics or songs like it kind of meant that anything I would do in the future
couldn't be genuine because of that article because it would it would show an inconsistency in pursuit of truth.
So in that sense, yeah, Sultanism has a huge, huge impact on me.
I actually then became very, I started a podcast over there and my first guest was Alexander Son Ignat, Sultanism is a phenomenal artist here in New York.
And that's another funny sequence of events that you don't appreciate.
And he's become a wonderful friend.
The line between good and evil cuts through every human heart is a very important principle that I think we forget about
when I see what's happening in the world today.
One more thing about the music side.
Is there some moment that you remember in particular from that time
that you cherish or you remember that sticks out in your mind?
Oh, I mean, there's 14 years.
I mean, you got to play with Bob Dylan.
That sounds almost cosmic somehow.
Yeah, that was crazy.
At the Grammys, we had...
Yeah, I couldn't quite believe it.
Sometimes you meet these people.
When I was a boy,
these were all posters on my bedroom wall.
And then you meet them, and they're real.
And we were lucky.
You know, I was just thinking about
who the loveliest of a a lot of some nice people but really the
loveliest was Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin because he was so disarming he
immediately started talking about football so it was just lovely he's from
I think he's from Wolves or something and of all of these people it's very daunting
meeting them but he would just immediately go,
oh, did you see what happened in the Prem?
I thought he was very sweet. He's a very nice man.
So, you know, then you've had a podcast in The Spectator,
and I want to chart that a little bit too,
because it's not necessarily obvious that a rock star banjo player,
if I can say Grammy awarding,
is going to become a meaningful podcaster.
We've overlapped quite a number of guests between our shows.
But you have some very big minds on there, right?
And I'm curious if you would dare
to say which one has been most impactful or quite impactful,
at least for you.
Well, actually, at the beginning of this year, I was in Israel and interviewed Douglas Murray,
and I think that must have been, with no disrespect for my other guests, that must have been the
highlight.
It was so moving.
He's so compelling, and it was quite emotional there's something he obviously
is his ability with words but his also his ability to really get to the essence
of something really get to the heart and crux of the most difficult issues
whether it's Israel Palestine or the various issues we've had in Britain and
in America and in America.
He just put out an amazing documentary about the fentanyl crisis here.
He's a fearless journalist and such a wit as well.
He's so funny.
He's a profound dude who has ability to engage with all aspects of human nature.
Well, and you know, the strange death of Europe
and the war on the West,
the strange death of Europe is kind of prophetic.
He's unapologetic in truth telling
and what he understands to be the truth.
And I find that also very inspiring.
We need Douglas to run. I think Douglas could save our country. We need Douglas to run.
I think Douglas could save our country.
We need him to, I mean, obviously you can't,
we're talking about Britain here, but you know.
I want him to be our prime minister.
It would be fantastic.
He's the guy.
Because this is another thing in Westminster,
there's no one who speaks the truth,
no one says what they're thinking.
They're so hamstrung by political correctness.
I see the same thing here. That's a big problem, you know, political correctness.
It's literally killing people. Do you find that the, get curious that it's this, people would
call it American Marxism or critical social justice, wokeism. This is kind of an American
product from Herbert Marcuse, the Frankfurt School, And somehow it made its way to the UK.
And, you know, at least in terms of speech,
it's become massively influential in the political class and the elite class.
Yeah, I totally agree.
And when we look at it here in New York,
you can see what's going on in Gaza Plaza at Columbia.
It seems to me that it's still all of the same crowd
as the BLM riots in 2020, Summer of Love.
It's all these over-educated children
who have been spared from reality for so long
that they don't actually...
They live in another plane. I can't quite work it.
But as you mentioned, Solzhenitsyn earlier,
there's good in them.
So how do we engage with that? How do we bring it out? Let me ask this. But as you mentioned, Solzhenitsyn earlier, there's good in them.
So how do we engage with that? How do we bring it out?
Let me ask this. They believe they're fighting the far right.
What do you make of this far right moniker? I remember when you wrote your Medium essay about quitting,
you said, I believe if I recall correctly, you said,
the far left isn't good,
but the far right is equally reprehensible.
Yeah, absolutely.
And that far right is thrown around these days
kind of like popcorn.
Oh, I agree.
I have no problems condemning the far right.
I do think that the term far right,
just like racist or bigot or fascist, it's the
same way that Hillary used the word deplorable. These words are used to shut people down because
they sting. I always called it for reading a book. J.K. Rowling is somehow far-right and right and bigoted because of her pro-women positions. It's just like utterly senseless,
but it has a way of censoring the general population into keeping them out, making them
want to avoid even getting involved, which helps the ideologues keep winning the debate, I guess.
In the UK right now, this political correctness,
at least around speech, is really metastasizing.
There's police, as I understand it, arresting people for things which are kind of shocking here.
Yeah.
The First Amendment is under assault here, that's very clear,
but it feels like a whole different level in Britain.
Why do you think that is? Well, we have a bunch of things going on at the same time. We have
something called a non-crime hate incident. You'll notice the hate crime is a word coming in
that's into the parlance. I'm not sure I can quite see the point in having the difference
between a crime and a hate crime. Crime's a crime. I don't think it adds much to the conversation
knowing whether it's a hate crime or not.
But in Britain we have a non-crime hate incident
which is you can be reported to the police
for having committed a certain instance of hate
and you won't be tried on it.
It's in the eyes of whoever's reporting you if they
deem it to hateful you can't get rid of it off your record you can't contest it you don't even
know it's there but employ future employees can see whether it's there so it's just it's
totally well in and then there's um you refer to incidences of insane free speech issues.
I'll give you an example.
There's a girl in Liverpool.
I think she's a teenager, 19 or something.
And she put some Snoop Dogg lyrics on her Instagram, on an Instagram reel.
It might have included the N word or something.
Anyway, she was charged and then
made to wear a collar on her ankle. There's another instance in, I think it was in Leeds,
where the West Yorkshire Police arrested a young girl who had autism. This young girl had pointed
at a police officer and said, look, it's a lesbian-like auntie so-and-so, because the
autistic girl thought that the police officer looked like her lesbian aunt
They ended up arrested. This is a horrific video about it
and at the same time then we see the horrific stuff going in on in London with
Very vile
antisemitic anti-israel
Stuff and just being completely left alone. In fact, it's worse than that. You'll see
in the pro-Palestine, anti-Israel marches in London, not only are the pro-Palestine left
alone, and I would say to some extent they should be, except when they're inside violence
or support prescribed terrorist groups. But at the same time, there's an Iranian guy,
his name I've forgotten, but he goes and he holds up a poster that says,
Hamas is terrorist.
And on two occasions, he's been arrested.
So there's a ridiculous double standard here.
And there's even more, it seems,
that there's been examples of Jews wearing yarmulkes or Magandavids,
and the police videos of this,
of the police asking them to either leave
or they'll be arrested or have the Magandavid taken down
because they would worry that their presence
would incite some sort of trouble.
And so, yeah, it's a terrible time to be Jewish.
That's another conversation.
Terrible time to be Jewish in Britain at the moment.
When all this happened three years ago,
you didn't expect to effectively become a commentator.
Not only have you been having guests on the show,
you've also become a commentator on your own.
You've had a column in the Spectator.
And now this is one issue where you're commenting.
I go back to this question a little bit.
It doesn't seem obvious that someone
coming from, you know... Well, I'll tell you something that I have observed which is very sad,
which is that, so after all that incident that happened three years ago, I feel now it's a duty
to speak the truth as I see it. Why make the sacrifice and then not speak the truth?
I've been outspoken on Israel issues for a while.
I've published in the Jewish Chronicle.
I've been outspoken throughout
this latest Israel-Hamas war.
I get private messages from Jewish people
that I used to work with in the music industry
and those I didn't work with.
Some of them in powerful positions, others not, but they can't speak in the music industry.
And they thank me for writing and speaking, knowing that I can. And that's kind of terrifying,
is that there's a lot of self-centersorship going on and I think that's because the young crop of
artists let's say the 15 to 25 year olds are all part of that have that same
anti-israel ideology anti-zionist ideology and so Jews in the industry are very careful not to speak
because they don't want to set those people off. I know you've interviewed
so many people from different industries and you'll have noticed that the
academy is particularly bad. Now it seems to me the academy is worse than the
music industry, some of the stories I've heard. The music industries are not far
behind, the creative industry is.
And I would even say maybe theatre is ahead of the academy.
Just, you cannot speak, you cannot...
In theatre, there's one Jewish actress I interviewed
called Tracy Ann Oberman,
said that Jews felt scared wearing a Magandavid into work.
This is even before the war,
because they would get questioned by Israel
just for wearing that
and challenged on it
so
there's a weird
the anti-Semitism stuff was completely obvious to me
when I was living in New York
back in 2016, 17, 18
people were talking about white privilege
every bloody minute of the day
and it was obvious to me that that ideology
ended up in anti-Semitism it's the same ideology it's the same stuff
that was being parent have been said in 1930s Germany so yeah I don't what do
you mean exactly the same ideology as 1930s Germany how does that work in your
mind it's an assumption that because some part of one group, identity group of people, are overachieving
in a sector or various sectors that the whole group are then not only achieving but also
oppressing the others even when most of the group are on the breadline. That's the same as white
privilege concepts which is that, oh look at all these white males in these top positions.
Okay, well then look at, you're ignoring the
tens of millions of
like, poor whites. And then the other aspect is if you play that game out about privilege, okay, who, which of the whites
is okay who which of the whites is is is achieving most which the whites is a
person you you end up getting some juice because the Jews are high achieving
group so it was obvious that that stuff and I think a lot of progressive Jews
now see that you'd be like one's a famous example he's speaking out against
DEI because after October 7th it was like oh and the react more specifically
the reaction to October 7th Holocaust denial was like, oh, and more specifically, the reaction to October 7th, the Holocaust denial in real time.
And that's when it seemed that people saw that the white privilege ideology is actually pretty anti-Semitic at its core.
As we finish up, you mentioned it's so hard for so many people to speak up in so many industries.
And, you know, it's like it's this hard for so many people to speak up in so many industries.
It's this massive cultural phenomenon, right?
This extreme political correctness, perhaps, let's call it that.
It took October 7th to catalyze a whole bunch of people.
Why does it take something like that, something so extreme, to catalyze people to speak up on things that they already know?
You know, as you did, obviously, as you were, you know, at some level when you went through your situation three years ago.
And what would it take to shift that, I guess?
On what topic um i i mean there's so many but just you know rational approaches to the world
as opposed to very extreme left-wing perspectives on how the world should work which seem to be
the the view that you need to that you need to uphold or the the the one that that's allowed
to be spoken about not to shit on rationality,
but seeing as actually rationality is something
that Dawkins spoke a lot about at our festival on the weekend.
We're not rational beings.
Humans aren't rational beings.
And I think we're spiritual beings and we're irrational beings. And so actually being rational is the rare state of being, I guess.
And I would not say that I'm rational most of the time.
I try to be.
I try to contain my emotions and passions and think about things carefully.
But it seems every year we have a new thing
that we're all being irrational about.
But 2020, it was the pandemic and BLM.
Same thing happened in 2016 with Brexit and Trump.
And it happened, and then October 7th
was just another one of those things that it's like,
oh, shit.
Like, people are mental
what what would you say to people who are in that state of you know not being afraid to say
something that they would they would like to but there's such a cost or seems to be such a cost. Yeah someone asked me that last night. I would say you don't need to recklessly
say the truth but you should not but you see my story is that I was essentially
forced to lie and that's the if I hadn't been I think I would still be in the
band because I wouldn't have had to retract anything but I think I would still be in the band, because I wouldn't have had to retract anything.
But I think it's important not to lie.
It's not to partake in the lie.
To paraphrase Solzhenitsyn, when you find yourself nodding
along to things that you know not to be true,
you might want to have a think.
Take the opportunity to have a look.
Because I know a few people in that situation or if you're forced to wear rainbow shoelaces or post something on
social media that you don't feel like you support maybe stop and think that's
when it that's you don't want to participate in that that's where it gets
that's where your soul and your integrity is at stake, which
as we said earlier, is all we've got in this world.
Well, Winston Marshall, it's such a pleasure to have had you on.
John, thank you for having me.
Thank you all for joining Winston Marshall and me on this episode of American Thought
Leaders. I'm your host, Jan Jekielek.