So Italy, the land of Dante, Da Vinci, and the slow, graceful decline into tourist-choked decay, has finally done something sensible. It has banned Kanye West and Travis Scott. Not their music, you understand. The men themselves. No entry. Basta. For reasons that remain mercifully vague but presumably involve some combination of public nuisance, incitement to riot, and the sort of behaviour that makes a Roman emperor look like a paragon of restraint, the Italian state has decided that these two American exports of pure, unfiltered id are not welcome.
And what is the response from the British music industry? A collective wail for tighter security. Security from what, exactly? From the possibility that a millionaire rapper might throw a microphone stand or encourage a crowd to trample a paying fan? The industry, that great bloated whale of self-importance and virtue signalling, now demands more gates, more fences, more stewards, more CCTV, more of the apparatus of the surveillance state that so many of its members profess to abhor. The irony is so thick you could spread it on a focaccia.
Let us pause and consider the historical parallels. The Roman Empire, in its final decadence, did not fall because barbarians were at the gate. It fell because the Romans themselves lost the will to distinguish between civilisation and spectacle. The Colosseum was not a symbol of strength; it was a venue for watching beasts tear men apart while the crowd munched on olives. Kanye and Travis Scott are the modern equivalent: beasts who have been dressed up in designer clothes and told they are geniuses for having opinions on everything from slavery to sneakers. The ban is not about security. It is about dignity. Italy has remembered what dignity looks like, even if only for a moment.
The British music industry, by contrast, seems to have forgotten entirely. Its reaction is not to defend the nation’s cultural integrity or to question why we allow infantile billionaires to dictate the terms of public safety. No, it is to double down on the very system that created the problem. More security. More rules. More paper trails. More box-ticking. It is the managerial response to a moral crisis. The fall of the British Empire, if you want my opinion, will not be marked by a single battle but by the slow erosion of common sense into bureaucracy. We will not even notice we are gone; we will just be too busy filling out risk assessment forms.
What, after all, is the point of a concert if the audience is treated like potential criminals? The magic of live music, the thing that made it sacred in the age of the phonograph, was the shared risk, the collective danger, the feeling that something could go wrong and that is what made it thrilling. Now we want to sanitise that too. We want to herd the young into pens and tell them to enjoy the show while we pat them down for concealed weaponry. And the industry claps itself on the back for being responsible. It is the death of spontaneity. It is the triumph of the clipboard.
Let Italy have its moment of clarity. Let it remind us that sometimes the right response to a problem is not more policing but a simple, firm word: no. No, you may not come here. No, you may not incite our children. No, we do not need your money more than we need our self-respect. The UK music industry would do well to learn that lesson. But it won’t. It will lobby for more security, hire more consultants, and produce a white paper on best practices for managing public gatherings. And Kanye and Travis will move on to the next country, leaving a trail of bewildered officials and broken fences. The show, as they say, must go on. But what a tiresome show it has become.








