Bob Vylan’s 2024 album Humble As The Sun has reached number one on the UK’s Official Hip Hop and R&B albums chart.
It follows backlash of the punk duo over the past week, following their Glastonbury performance, where frontman Bobby Vylan led the West Holts stage with chants of “free, free Palestine” and “death to the IDF”.
In a post on Twitter, Bob Vylan wrote: “Ban Bob Vylan? The people said ‘Nah”.
Ban Bob Vylan? The people said ‘Nah’. We need artists that speak up. Our album ‘Humble As The Sun’ is back in the charts and, as an independent band releasing music on our own label, it shows the power of the people. You can’t get dropped if you own the label.
— Bob Vylan (@BobbyVylan) July 6, 2025
Thank you all! pic.twitter.com/2QsjP00e1i
The set was broadcast live by the BBC, with a warning message displayed on screen to viewers, though it has not been uploaded to BBC iPlayer.
Since receiving backlash the BBC has said that it will no longer broadcast “high risk” sets & performances.
In a separate post on July 1, following the festival’s conclusion, the band made a statement on social media, stating that “silence is not an option”.
They continued: “We are not for the death of Jews, Arabs, or any other race or group of people,” they wrote. “We are for the dismantling of a violent military machine. A machine whose soldiers were told to use ‘unnecessary lethal force’ against innocent civilians waiting for aid. A machine that has destroyed much of Gaza.
“We, like those in the spotlight before us, are not the story,” they continued. “We are a distraction from the story, and whatever sanctions we receive will be a distraction.”
Following their performance, Bob Vylan were dropped from Manchester’s Radar Festival’s lineup, which they were meant to headline; however other artists withdrew from the lineup in solidarity with Bob Vylan.
The Manchester Radar Festival failed to find a headliner to find a new headliner as well.
The band were also dropped by their talent agency in the days after Glastonbury.





