Home Entertainment Macklemore bursts onto stage with triumphant performance at Sydney concert as pro-Palestinian song Hind’s Hall goes viral

Macklemore bursts onto stage with triumphant performance at Sydney concert as pro-Palestinian song Hind’s Hall goes viral

0 comments
Macklemore arrived in Australia for his Down Under tour just a few days ago and has already taken the country by storm. In the photo

Macklemore arrived in Australia for his Down Under tour just a few days ago and has already taken the country by storm.

The American rapper put on an exciting performance at Sydney’s Hordern Pavilion on Friday night as he kicked off the first concert of his tour.

The 40-year-old donned his iconic Thrift Shop-era faux fur coat while playing the smash hit.

He then put on a blue satin jacket along with a fitted white shirt and black pants.

Macklemore looked in high spirits as he joined his team of dancers to perform his biggest hits for the salivating crowds.

Macklemore arrived in Australia for his Down Under tour just a few days ago and has already taken the country by storm. In the photo

The American rapper put on an exciting performance at Sydney's Hordern Pavilion on Friday night as he kicked off the first concert of his tour.

The American rapper put on an exciting performance at Sydney’s Hordern Pavilion on Friday night as he kicked off the first concert of his tour.

The 40-year-old donned his iconic Thrift Shop-era faux fur coat while playing the smash hit.

The 40-year-old donned his iconic Thrift Shop-era faux fur coat while playing the smash hit.

The Grammy Award winner, whose real name is Benjamin Hammond Haggerty, then worked the microphone in a sleeveless white shirt.

Macklemore kicked off his Australian tour in Sydney on May 12 before leaving for dates in Melbourne, Queensland and Western Australia.

It comes as the rapper has gone viral after releasing a pro-Palestine song criticizing US President Joe Biden for his role in the bloody conflict in Gaza.

‘Hind’s Hall’, referring to the Columbia University building renamed by pro-Palestinian protesters in honor of a six-year-old Palestinian girl who was killed in an Israeli airstrike two months ago in Gaza while waiting for help while trapped in a car and surrounded of corpses of their relatives, was spread on social networks on Monday.

He then put on a blue satin jacket along with a fitted white shirt and black pants.

He then put on a blue satin jacket along with a fitted white shirt and black pants.

Macklemore looked in high spirits as he joined his team of dancers to perform his biggest hits for the salivating crowds.

Macklemore looked in high spirits as he joined his team of dancers to perform his biggest hits for the salivating crowds.

Macklemore kicked off his Australian tour in Sydney on May 12 before traveling to Melbourne, Queensland and Western Australia.

Macklemore kicked off his Australian tour in Sydney on May 12 before traveling to Melbourne, Queensland and Western Australia.

The Grammy Award winner, whose real name is Benjamin Hammond Haggerty, then worked the microphone in a sleeveless white shirt.

The Grammy Award winner, whose real name is Benjamin Hammond Haggerty, then worked the microphone in a sleeveless white shirt.

It comes as the rapper has gone viral after releasing a pro-Palestine song criticizing US President Joe Biden for his role in the bloody conflict in Gaza.

It comes as the rapper has gone viral after releasing a pro-Palestine song criticizing US President Joe Biden for his role in the bloody conflict in Gaza.

The song, which has been viewed by 24 million people on Twitter alone, takes aim at Joe Biden, who until last night had consistently provided military support to Israel.

He said in his song: ‘The blood is on your hands Biden, we can see it all.’ And fuck no, I’m not voting for you in the fall.

The rapper, best known for his pro-LGBTQ+ rights song Same Love, also criticized the music industry for being “complicit in his platform of silence.”

The song’s accompanying video intersperses its lyrics with clips of protests at American universities, which have seen a wave of clashes between protesters and university police.

Proceeds from streaming the song, which has yet to be released on streaming platforms, will be donated to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, which has had much of its funding cut. funding this year following allegations that its workers were involved in the Oct. 7 attack. .

Macklemore has long been a supporter of the Palestinian people.

In November, Macklemore gave an impromptu speech at a pro-Palestine rally in Washington DC, in which he told the crowd: “I don’t know enough, but I know enough that this is a genocide.”

His speech was preceded by an October 19 statement in which he condemned Hamas’ bloody incursion into Israel and Israel’s brutal response against the Gaza Strip, calling the latter “a genocide in the making” and a “backed catastrophe.” for the United States.”

The song, which has been viewed by 24 million people on Twitter alone, takes aim at Joe Biden.

The song, which has been viewed by 24 million people on Twitter alone, takes aim at Joe Biden.

You may also like