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Garbage’s Shirley Manson defends rant against fan who threw beach balls during Australian gig: “I make no apologies whatsoever”

Garbage frontwoman Shirley Manson has defended her rant about a fan who threw beach balls during their set at an Australian festival.

  • READ MORE: Garbage’s Shirley Manson: “I don’t have to be young, I don’t have to be sexy – if you cancel me, you cancel me”

The band performed at Melbourne’s Good Things Festival on Friday (December 5), when the set was interrupted by a fan throwing beach balls in the crowd, spurring a rant from Manson.

“Big guy with your big fucking beach ball,” Manson said. “What a fucking douchebag. You’re a fucking middle-aged man in a fucking ridiculous hat, and you’re a fucking fuckface. I want, literally, to ask people to fucking punch you in the fucking face. But you know what? I’m a lady, so I won’t.”

Manson went on to voice the plight of musicians specifically, saying: “We’re fed up of not getting fucking paid properly and fed up of having to play for douchebags like you.”

Her comments quickly went viral, sparking a wave of debate online. Now, Manson has doubled down on her speech in a post on Threads.

Writing yesterday, the singer explained her long-standing dislike of beach balls at shows, saying: “I make NO APOLOGIES whatsoever for getting annoyed at beach balls at shows,” she wrote.

“I joined a band because I HATED THE FUCKING BEACH. I joined a band because I wanted to listen to Siouxsie and the Banshees and The Cure and be dark and beautiful.”

She continued, “I love the musical community and I want to respect their artistry. I am so tired of folks taking music for free and treating us all like circus performers.”

In other news, Garbage recently announced that next summer they’ll play a huge show at Edinburgh Castle. It will follow a run of outdoor UK co-headline gigs with Skunk Anansie for next summer, including dates at Dreamland Margate, Halifax’s The Piece Hall, and Scarborough Open Air Theatre.

They are heading out on the road in support of their eighth and latest album, ‘Let All That We Imagine Be The Light’, which was released in May. In a glowing five-star review, NME wrote: “Not only are [Garbage] showcasing some of their most intriguing and impactful material, but they’re also paving the way into a hopeful new chapter.”

Garbage recently completed their last-ever US tour, after indicating that they were “unlikely to play many of the cities” on the run “ever again”.

Speaking to NME last year, Manson opened up about the crushing and “abusive” financial strains of the music industry.

“Now what you have are musicians who are independently wealthy – maybe they come from a wealthy family – and they can start to carve out a career for themselves in the music industry,” she told us. “You have the old guard who made records before 1995; they themselves can survive. Then the artists who enjoy phenomenal success also survive.”

During an interview with NME this summer, the singer talked about the theme of love that runs through ‘Let All That We Imagine Be The Light’: “I’ve never really written about love very much. I always think it’s been written about by people a thousand more talented than me. I’m just not a romantic person, really.”

She continued: “After my mum died and then Veela [Manson’s ‘soul dog’], I realised I had to touch love somewhere, somehow. I’ve got an amazing marriage and I love my husband so much, but I also realised that in order to move on through a different passage in my life, I had to reach out to find all the different types of love: the world, nature, the ocean, friends, my bandmates, my family.”

The post Garbage’s Shirley Manson defends rant against fan who threw beach balls during Australian gig: “I make no apologies whatsoever” appeared first on NME.