“I’m making a point that if the future of rock requires real-time pitch correction in a live environment rock is pretty f**ked” – Justin Hawkins has doubled down after facing a backlash for criticising Yungblud’s VMAs performance.
Yungblud recently addressed the negative comments on Jack Osbourne’s ‘Trying Not to Die podcast’, saying he doesn’t let the negativity get to him. “The thing about hate is you will never see someone that’s bigger or more emotionally evolved than you talk sh*t on you,” he told Osbourne.
Now Hawkins claim’s he never intended to start a feud with Yungblud but he’s kinda just digging himself in a bigger hole. In his new video titled ‘Yungblud And The Cost of Having An Opinion’ he states:
“I think that Yungblud is a very well-connected and, as such, dangerous artist. He’s an individual who is not the sort of bear you’d go round poking.”
Then he proceeds to poke:
“But I think that when there’s real-time pitch correction happening and stuff like that, and the other observations I made about the overall delivery of it… you’re talking about somebody that came from musical theatre via Disney and is now being lauded as the future of rock. And if they have real-time pitch correction and that kind of background, I think it’s OK to be a bit skeptical about it.”
“I know that’s not a very popular opinion but from the reaction community if you can’t say something negative about something that leaves you only one opinion available to you and that’s not how life works. Everybody’s allowed to say whatever they want.”
Hawkins finished by stressing he has no bad blood for the 27-year-old: “I’m not slagging him off because… I don’t even think I’m slagging it off actually. I think I’m making a point that if the future of rock requires real-time pitch correction in a live environment rock is pretty fucked, isn’t it?”
So the video pretty mush consists of him saying he doesn’t have a feud. He’s not poking the bear but every line is followed by another dig.
Yungblud was furious after The Darkness frontman Justin blasted his MTV VMAs tribute to the late Ozzy Osbourne, saying: “Yungblud seems to have positioned himself as a natural heir to the Ozzy legacy, having nothing to do with the really important stuff.”
However, he insisted it was nothing personal against the 28-year-old musician – whose real name is Dominic Harrison – and he was merely giving his opinion on a performance.
In a new video on his Justin Hawkins Rides Again YouTube channel titled Yungblud And The Cost of Having An Opinion, Justin said: “There’s nothing ‘feudy about it, especially when it comes to my reactions to the VMAs performance. None of that was intended to incite a feud. I think that Yungblud is a very well-connected and, as such, dangerous artist. He’s an individual who is not the sort of bear you’d go round poking.
“But I think that when there’s real-time pitch correction happening [referring to his criticism of Harrison’s use of autotune] and stuff like that, and the other observations I made about the overall delivery of it… you’re talking about somebody that came from musical theatre via Disney and is now being lauded as the future of rock. And if they have real-time pitch correction and that kind of background, I think it’s OK to be a bit skeptical about it.
“I know that’s not a very popular opinion but from the reaction community if you can’t say something negative about something that leaves you only one opinion available to you and that’s not how life works. Everybody’s allowed to say whatever they want.
“I’m not slagging him off because… I don’t even think I’m slagging it off actually. I think I’m making a point that if the future of rock requires real-time pitch correction in a live environment rock is pretty f*****, isn’t it?”
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Yungblud previously slammed “bitter and jealous” rock star critics of his Osbourne tribute at the MTV VMAs, after he took to the stage with Extreme’s Nuno Bettencourt and Aerosmith duo Steven Tyler and Joe Perry to pay tribute to the late Black Sabbath icon, who died aged 76 in July.
The I Think I’m Okay hitmaker said on Jack Osbourne’s Trying Not To Die podcast: “I think the strangest thing about that was all I was trying to do was my best for your old man, because he gave me such a gift.
“When people try and intellectualise a sense of spirit and six musicians on a stage going ‘f****** love you man’, it’s just bitter and jealous.
“They are doing the things they say we are doing – they’re trying to insert themselves into a conversation to obtain some kind of relevancy, on the back of us honouring one of the greatest rock stars that ever lived – and then they talk about authenticity and stuff like that.”
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Jack himself insisted “these people didn’t f****** know” how involved he was in Ozzy’s life.
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He added: “They don’t know the f****** story of it, the things we know, and I was kind of like, ‘F*** you dude’.
“Dom meant something to my dad, my dad meant something to Dom. I texted you the night of the gig and I said, ‘F****** crush it.’ ”
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