Bob Dylan has cancelled several legs of an Asian tour after Beijing refused to give him permission to perform in China, a newspaper reported Sunday.
Dylan originally planned to play in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, following his multi-city tour of Japan last month, the Sunday Morning Post said.
Tour organisers, Taiwan-based Brokers Brothers Herald, announced in January that Dylan would be performing in Hong Kong on April 8, but there was little subsequent promotion, the report said.
When permission for dates in Shanghai and Beijing was not granted by the Chinese government, the company pulled the other Asian dates.
“China’s Ministry of Culture did not give us permission to stage concerts in Beijing and Shanghai, so we had no alternative but to scrap plans for a Southeast Asian tour,” Jeffrey Wu, the promoter’s chief of operations, was quoted as saying.
Wu said the ministry had tightened control over foreign singers performing in China since Icelandic star Bjork’s pro-Tibet outburst at a Shanghai concert two years ago.
The ministry said Bjork “hurt the feelings of Chinese people” after she chanted “Tibet! Tibet!” when singing her song “Declare Independence.”