End It frontman Akil Godsey has spoken out for the first time since the viral âbanana manâ incident at one of the bandâs recent shows.
The Baltimore hardcore band were playing at Lithuanian House in Toronto on June 5Â when Godsey singled out a fan in the crowd who was wearing a banana costume.
In footage shared from the night, Godsey called the fan to the front and accused him of seeking attention. He then offered the bandâs setlist to anyone who would âstrip the bananaâ, after which members of the crowd removed the costume.
The fan later called out the band on Instagram, writing that he had been âan unwilling participantâ and that his clothing had been removed âat the direction of a band I paid to seeâ.
âPeople have been trying to dim my sparkle my entire life,â he added. âIt sucks, but Iâm used to it.â
Now, Godsey has addressed the backlash in a video posted to Instagram, with a caption that read: âThanks for the racism and death threats and dissertations. Itâs all been very taxing. Iâm gonna go raise my child now. Peace.â
In the video, Godsey pushed back against those who said they were âdisappointedâ in him, saying they had misunderstood the kind of band End It are.
âYouâve obviously not been listening to the band, and I donât know what the fuck you thought was going on over here,â he said (via Stereogum). âWeâre a hardcore band. We do hardcore things.â
He also suggested that the band could end as a result of the fallout, adding: âEveryone in my life loves me very much. I’m very well taken care of. I do not need your attention or validation. I’ll be just fine. Hey, if the band gotta quit, so be it. I guess I’ll go to work. I’m a fully functioning adult male. I’ll be just fine.â
âThereâs more to life than whatever the fuck you think is going on over here,â he continued. âYou donât even know whatâs going on over here. We havenât spoken in ages. Youâre living off of assumptions. Donât assume. My parents taught me that. But have fun with the life youâve made for yourself.â
The original incident divided the hardcore community, with some criticising the band for encouraging the crowd to remove the fanâs costume, while others argued that the fan should have expected a hostile reaction by wearing a novelty outfit to a hardcore show.
The backlash also appears to have affected End Itâs touring plans, with the band no longer appearing on posters for Hatebreedâs European tour with Life Of Agony, having been included on earlier versions of the bill.
End It formed in Baltimore in 2017, and their debut album âWrong Side Of Heavenâ was released last August via Flatspot Records.
The post End It frontman breaks silence on controversy of battle with man dressed as banana appeared first on NME.