its true- i dont and never have advocated for violent confrontation or rioting. must be my boomer upbringing.
— Ariel Pink (@arielxpink) January 7, 2021
A Twitter user reposted the photo as “proof” that Ariel and John attended the rally, and Ariel jumped into the conversation. Read on to find out what he said, and to learn more about the controversial indie singer, who was born in Los Angeles in 1978:
1. Ariel defended his attendance at the Trump rally. “Its true- i dont and never have advocated for violent confrontation or rioting. must be my boomer upbringing,” Ariel wrote in response to the fan who posted about his attendance at the Trump rally in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 6. He added, “i was in dc to peacefully show my support for the president. i attended the rally on the white house lawn and went back to hotel and took a nap. case closed.”2. He once said “gay marriage stuff pisses [him]” off,” among other unsettling comments. Ariel’s quotes from interviews over the past few years continue to disturb fans: “I’m very old fashioned, very traditional in my values. I don’t understand what all this gay marriage stuff is about, it really pisses me off. I don’t really even support marriage, per se,” he said in a 2012 interview with Pitchfork Weekly. In the same interview, he added, “I love necrophiliacs [sic].” He also said that he “love[s] the Westboro Baptist Church” because he loves “being able to remind people that this a country where you can say, ‘You’re going to go to hell,’ and you won’t go to jail” in a 2014 interview with Pitchfork. The Westboro Baptist Church is known for its extremely homophobic and anti-gay protests.i was in dc to peacefully show my support for the president. i attended the rally on the white house lawn and went back to hotel and took a nap. case closed
— Ariel Pink (@arielxpink) January 7, 2021
3. Ariel has a cult following in the indie, lo-fi music scene. He has put out 18 albums since 2002 (his earlier records were attributed to Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti). Ariel is known for his “bedroom music” style, after recording his earliest songs on an 8-track cassette recorder.