Tenor Adds ‘All Lives Matter’ To Canadian Nat’l Anthem At All-Star Game

FILE - In this Tuesday, July 12, 2016 file photo, The Tenors, shown on the scoreboard, perform during the Canadian National Anthem prior to the MLB baseball All-Star Game, in San Diego. A member of a Canadian singing... FILE - In this Tuesday, July 12, 2016 file photo, The Tenors, shown on the scoreboard, perform during the Canadian National Anthem prior to the MLB baseball All-Star Game, in San Diego. A member of a Canadian singing quartet changed a lyric in his country's national anthem and held up a sign proclaiming "All Lives Matter" during a pregame performance at the 87th All-Star Game on Tuesday. The Tenors, a group based in British Columbia, caused a stir at Petco Park with Remigio Pereira's actions while singing "O Canada." (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File) MORE LESS
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SAN DIEGO (AP) — A member of a Canadian singing quartet changed a lyric in his country’s national anthem and held up a sign proclaiming “All Lives Matter” during a pregame performance at the 87th All-Star Game on Tuesday.

The Tenors, a group based in British Columbia, caused a stir at Petco Park with Remigio Pereira’s actions while singing “O Canada.”

In a statement issued during the game, the group blamed the changes solely on Pereira, who held up the sign and sang the altered lyrics while the other three singers wordlessly harmonized. The band said Pereira won’t perform with The Tenors “until further notice,” calling his actions “disrespectful” and “shameful.”

The change happened during the middle portion of the anthem, which is often sung in French at sporting events.

Pereira unexpectedly sang: “We’re all brothers and sisters. All lives matter to the great.”

The normal lyric is “With glowing hearts we see thee rise. The True North strong and free.”

“United We Stand” was written on the back of his sign.

“The Tenors are deeply sorry for the disrespectful and misguided lack of judgment by one member of the group acting as a ‘lone wolf’ today,” the Tenors said in a statement posted on their official Twitter page.

“The other members of the group are shocked and embarrassed by the actions of Remigio Pereira, who changed the lyrics of our national anthem and used this coveted platform to serve his own political views. Our sincere apologies and regrets go out to everybody who witnessed this shameful act, to our fellow Canadians, to Major League Baseball, to our friends, families, fans and to all those affected. The actions of one member of this group were extremely selfish, and he will not be performing with The Tenors until further notice.”

Major League Baseball also had no idea Pereira sought to make a political statement, spokesman Matt Bourne said.

Although the audio wasn’t crystal-clear at the park, many fans reacted with surprise when they saw the sign on the ballpark video scoreboard. The Canadian anthem wasn’t shown live on U.S. television, but it aired in Canada, where the decisions lit up social media with overwhelming criticism of the change.

The Tenors are Pereira, Clifton Murray, Fraser Walters and Victor Micallef. The Juno Award-winning group has recorded multiple platinum albums in Canada while performing around the world, including gigs at the 2010 Winter Olympics opening ceremonies, the 2012 Queen’s Jubilee in England and the 2014 Stanley Cup Final.

“All Lives Matter” has become a common online response in recent months to the “Black Lives Matter” movement, particularly after the police shootings of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile.

The motivations and ethnicities of the proponents of the “All Lives Matter” response vary, but it has received heavy criticism. The phrase has been perceived to use reductive reasoning to trivialize the problems specifically facing blacks.

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. Avatar for lb22 lb22 says:

    I saw this yesterday and as a Canadian it deeply pissed me off, not just that he chose to change the anthem, at a time when the Canadian parliament is debating changes to make it gender neutral, but to do if for such an obnoxious political statement. So I am surprised and glad to hear that it was one member of the group who did it without informing anyone, and that the group has released such a strongly worded statement denouncing him and suspending him.

    (Not that anyone in Canada even knows who they are.)

  2. If adding “all lives matter” to a national anthem is a problem, society has serious issues. (Duh!)

    “Oh, Canada” is the most beautiful (to my ear) anthem any country has ever been lucky enough to be saddled with. If Canadians have issues with a word change as “All lives matter”, I would suggest they consult a national survey naming Tommy Douglas as “The Greatest Canadian.”

    Three Inconvenient Truths:

    1. Tommy is the father of universal health care in Canada.
    2. Tommy is Kiefer Sutherland’s maternal grandfather.
    3. The torture never stops.
  3. Avatar for lb22 lb22 says:

    What the fuck does Tommy Douglas have to do with this prat minimizing the grievances of blacks in North America? You can bet that if Tommy Douglas was alive today he would be a supporter of the BLM movement and would have choice words for anyone who responded to “black lives matter” with “no, all lives matter”.

  4. Avatar for lb22 lb22 says:

    I think the best we can hope for is that he is an ignorant prat who has no idea what statement he was making.

  5. They also neglected to use the updated lyric “True patriot love in all of us command”, reverting instead to the old version “in all our sons command…”

    Also, US networks cut to commercial when someone else’s anthem is played? Probably a good thing in this instance, but seriously, how is that not disrespectful?

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