Feist Exits Arcade Fire Tour in Light of Win Butler Allegations
“We are very sorry to see Leslie go home, but completely understand and respect her decision,” Arcade Fire tells Paste
Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty
Last weekend, a bombshell Pitchfork report revealed that Arcade Fire frontman Win Butler had been accused of sexual misconduct by four people. The band had been set to move ahead with their fall world tour regardless, but they’ll now do so without Leslie Feist, who is bowing out in light of the allegations against Butler.
“I’m imperfect and I will navigate this decision imperfectly, but what I’m sure of is the best way to take care of my band and crew and my family is to distance myself from this tour, not this conversation,” said Feist in a statement shared via social media on Thursday afternoon.
“We are very sorry to see Leslie go home, but completely understand and respect her decision,” Arcade Fire told Paste in a statement.
Feist’s decision follows her performing at the first two stops on Arcade Fire’s tour, which took place at Dublin’s 3Arena on Aug. 30-31—she pledged merch proceeds to Women’s Aid Dublin. “At a pub in Dublin, after rehearsing with my band, I read the same headline you did,” Feist explains in her statement. “We didn’t have any time to prepare for what was coming let alone a chance to decide not to fly across the ocean into the belly of this situation. This has been incredibly difficult for me and I can only imagine how much more difficult it’s been for the people who came forward. More than anything I wish healing to those involved.”
Feist had been set to perform alongside Arcade Fire at 18 more U.K. and E.U. shows, culminating in an Oct. 1 stop at Torwar in Warsaw, Poland. Beck is currently slated to appear as a special guest (performing acoustic sets) on the 16-date North American leg of the band’s tour, running from a sold-out Oct. 28 stop at The Anthem in Washington, D.C., to a Dec. 1 show at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto.
Three pseudonymous women and a fourth gender-fluid person “made allegations of sexual interactions with Butler that they came to feel were inappropriate given the gaps in age, power dynamics, and context in which they occurred,” as Pitchfork reported. Butler acknowledged these extramarital relationships, but denied any nonconsensual contact, stating, “While these relationships were all consensual, I am very sorry to anyone who I have hurt with my behavior.” He also cited “mental health issues” and alcohol abuse in order “to give some context and share what was happening in my life around this time.”
Feist’s statement contextualizes her decision within “a conversation that is bigger than me, […] bigger than my songs and […] certainly bigger than any rock and roll tour”:
We all have a story within a spectrum ranging from baseline toxic masculinity to pervasive misogyny to actually being physically, psychologically, emotionally or sexually assaulted. This situation touches each of our lives and speaks to us in a language unique to each of our processing. There isn’t a singular path to heal when you’ve endured any version of the above, nor a singular path to rehabilitate the perpetrators. It can be a lonely road to make sense of ill treatment. I can’t solve that by quitting, and I can’t solve it by staying. But I can’t continue.