Scottish Daily Mail

Why I’m leaving Mumford & Sons

Hounded out by far Left hate mob just for tweeting about a bestseller, brave pop star reveals...

- by Winston Marshall Winston Marshall has given his fee for this article to his local food bank.

ILOVED those first tours. Bouncing off a sweaty stage in an edinburgh catacomb we then had to get to a gig in Camden by lunch the next day. We couldn’t fit all four of us and Ted’s double-bass into the vW Polo. I think it was Ben who drew the short straw and had to follow by train with his keyboard.

I remember blitzing it down the M6 through the night, the lads asleep beside me. We made it but my voice sadly didn’t, completely shot by exhaustion, I had to mime my harmonies. Being in Mumford & Sons was exhilarati­ng.

every gig was its own adventure. every gig its own story.

Be it odysseys through the Scottish Islands, or soapbox shows in Soho. Where would we sleep that night? Hostels in Fort William, pub floors in Ipswich, even the Travelodge in Carlisle maintains a sort of charm in my mind. We saw the country and then, as things miraculous­ly grew, the world.

All the while doing what we loved. Music. And not just any music. These songs meant something. They felt important to me. Songs with the message of hope and love. I was surrounded by three supremely talented song-writers and Marcus, our singer with a one-in-a-million voice.

A voice that can compel in both a field of 80,000 and the intimacy of a front room. Fast-forward ten years and we were playing those same songs every night in arenas, flying first-class, staying in luxury hotels and being paid handsomely to do so. I was a lucky boy.

ON STAGE, to my left Ted, a roaring bear, with his doublebass flying high above him. To my right Ben, pounding at the keys. And Marcus leading us with the might of a hurricane or the tenderness of a breeze, depending on the song.

What a blessing it was to be so close to such talent. It will be with immense pride that I look back on my time with Mumford & Sons. A legacy of songs that I believe will stand the test of ages. What we’ve achieved has exceeded the wildest fantasies of this S ******** r from Mortlake.

Who in their right mind would willingly walk away from this? It turns out I would. And it’s been no easy decision.

At the beginning of March, I tweeted to American journalist Andy ngo, author of the new York Times bestseller, Unmasked. ‘Congratula­tions @MrAndyngo. Finally had the time to read your important book. You’re a brave man.’ Posting about books had been a theme of my social media throughout the pandemic. I believed this tweet to be as innocuous as the others. How wrong I turned out to be.

over 24 hours it was trending with tens of thousands of angry retweets and comments. I failed to foresee that my commenting on a book critical of the far-left could be interprete­d as approval of the equally abhorrent far-Right.

nothing could be further from the truth. Thirteen members of my family were murdered in the concentrat­ion camps of the Holocaust. My grandma, unlike her cousins, aunts and uncles, survived. She and I were close. My family knows the evils of fascism painfully well. To say the least. To call me ‘fascist’ was ludicrous beyond belief.

I’ve had plenty of abuse over the years. I’m a banjo player after all. But this was another level. And, owing to our associatio­n, my friends, my bandmates, were getting it, too. It took me more than a moment to understand how distressin­g this was for them.

despite being four individual­s we were, in the eyes of the public, a unit. Furthermor­e it’s our singer’s name on the tin. That name was being dragged through some pretty ugly accusation­s, as a result of my tweet. The distress brought to them and their families that weekend I regret very much. I remain sorry for that. Unintentio­nally, I had pulled them into a divisive and totemic issue. emotions were high. despite pressure to nix me they invited me to stay with the band. That took courage, particular­ly in the age of so-called ‘cancel culture’. I made an apology and agreed to take a temporary step back.

Predictabl­y another viral mob came after me, this time for the sin of apologisin­g. Then followed libellous articles calling me ‘rightwing’ and such.

Though there’s nothing wrong with being conservati­ve, when forced to label myself I flutter between ‘centrist’, ‘liberal’ or the more honest ‘bit this, bit that’. Being labelled erroneousl­y just goes to show how binary political discourse has become. I had criticised the ‘left’, so I must be the ‘Right’, or so their logic goes. Why did I apologise? ‘Rub your eyes and purify your heart — and prize above all else in the world those who love you and who wish you well.’ — Aleksandr Solzhenits­yn once wrote. In the mania of the moment I was desperate to protect my bandmates. The hornets’ nest that I had unwittingl­y hit had unleashed a black-hearted swarm on them and their families. I didn’t want them to suffer for my actions.

Secondly, I was sincerely open to the fact that maybe I did not know something about the author or his work. ‘Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak,’ Churchill once said, ‘courage is also what it takes to sit down and listen.’ And so I listened.

I have spent much time reflecting, reading and listening. The truth is that my commenting on a book that documents the extreme far-left and their activities is in no way an endorsemen­t of the equally repugnant far-Right.

The truth is that reporting on extremism at the great risk of endangerin­g oneself is unquestion­ably brave. I also feel that my previous apology in a small way participat­es in the lie that such extremism does not exist, or worse, is a force for good. So why leave the band? on the eve of his leaving to the West, Solzhenits­yn published an essay titled live not By lies. I have read it many times since the incident at the start of March. It still profoundly stirs me.

He wrote: ‘And he who is not sufficient­ly courageous to defend his soul — don’t let him be proud of his ‘progressiv­e’ views, and don’t let him boast that he is an academicia­n or a people’s artist, a distinguis­hed figure or a general. let him say to himself: I am a part of the herd and a coward. It’s all the same to me as long as I’m fed and kept warm.’

For me to speak about what I’ve learnt to be such a controvers­ial issue will inevitably bring my bandmates more trouble. My love, loyalty and accountabi­lity to them cannot permit that.

I could stay and continue to selfcensor but it will erode my sense of integrity. gnaw my conscience. I’ve already felt that beginning.

The only way forward is to leave the band. I hope in distancing myself from them I am able to speak my mind without them suffering the consequenc­es.

I leave with love in my heart and I wish those three boys nothing but the best. I have no doubt their stars will shine long into the future. I will continue my work with Hong Kong link Up [buddy system for HK people settling in the UK] and look forward to new creative projects plus speaking and writing on a variety of issues, challengin­g as they may be.

 ??  ?? Stepping back: Winston Marshall
Stepping back: Winston Marshall

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