Concert massacre shocks music world
The assault on one of the leading concert halls in Paris sent shockwaves Saturday through the music world, with top-selling artists including U2 and Foo Fighters calling off shows.

The assault on one of the leading concert halls in Paris sent shockwaves Saturday through the music world, with top-selling artists including U2 and Foo Fighters calling off shows.
“Shocked, sad and angry. We are all Parisian today,” tweeted Peter Gabriel, one of many prominent musicians who took to the social media after Friday’s night coordinated attacks in the French capital. More than 80 people were killed inside the Bataclan concert hall as gunmen opened fire during a performance by the California rock band Eagles of Death Metal, an attack for which the Islamic State group took responsibility. France’s culture minister Fleur Pellerin laid a bouquet of flowers Saturday in front of the Bataclan, a historic venue which is striking for its 19th-century chinoiserie architecture.
The music industry was directly touched by the tragedy, with at least three employees of Universal Music France, part of the largest global label group, among the dead. “The Universal Music family is in mourning,” tweeted Pascal Negre, president of Universal Music France.
“This is crazy. It’s normally a pleasant place where people come to relax. And then it was hell,” said the television and radio presenter Pierre Janaszak. The 35-year-old said that he survived by hiding in the restrooms as the assailants took hostages and was freed in the police counter-assault. Leading French music magazine Les Inrockuptibles said that one of its writers, Guillaume B. Decherf, was killed. Members of Eagles of Death Metal were unhurt and were set to return to the United States, although a British crew member was killed. The Deftones, another California band who were in the audience ahead of their own since-cancelled shows at the Bataclan, were also safe and leaving Paris. The Bataclan, which has a capacity of 1,500, is one of the most prominent Paris venues for successful but eclectic bands. The night before the assault, the acclaimed electronic artist St. Germain performed with an ensemble of Malian musicians. U2 had already cancelled a concert Saturday at the 20,000-seat Bercy arena, the bi ggest covered concert hall in Paris. The Irish rockers led by Bono later also appeared at the Bataclan to pay their respects. “This is the first direct hit on music that we’ve had in this so called war on terror or whatever it’s called,” Bono told Ireland’s RTE radio.
“It’s very upsetting. These are our people. This could be me at a show,” he said. U2 also called off a second date at Bercy on Sunday. Foo Fighters — whose frontman Dave Grohl has collaborated with Eagles of Death Metal — separately announced that the band was cutting short its world tour. Foo Fighters had been due to play at Bercy, also known as AccorHotels Arena, the day after U2 and also had shows left in Turin, Lyon and Barcelona. In contrast, another veteran rock band, Motorhead, will go ahead Sunday with a show. The high-decibel heavy metal group led by Lemmy will play the Zenith, the second-largest indoor venue in Paris at 6,000 capacity. Elsewhere, Coldplay scrapped plans to air a concert Saturday in Los Angeles live on streaming service Tidal.
The British rock band, which is promoting an upcoming album, said it made the decision out of respect for victims. Hollywood is with France: Academy
Hollywood stands in solidarity with France, the head of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences said on Saturday at a star-studded gala honouring three top figures in the industry. “All of us here stand in solidarity and support of France and the Fren-ch people,” Academy president Cheryl Boo-ne Isaacs said.