What was supposed to be a triumphant European run for Kanye West has unraveled at a remarkable pace. The rapper, who now performs and goes by the name Ye, released his latest album Bully in March and had lined up a string of high-profile performances across the continent. Instead, nearly every one of those dates has collapsed under the weight of public pressure and institutional pushback rooted in his well-documented antisemitic remarks from 2022.
The most striking blow came in the United Kingdom, where West had been booked to headline three nights at London’s Wireless Festival. Sponsors pulled out of the event, and the UK Home Office took the extraordinary step of blocking him from entering the country altogether. It was a decisive and very public rejection from one of the world’s most influential music markets.
The fallout did not stop there. Shows in Switzerland, Poland and France were subsequently cancelled, leaving his European schedule in ruins and raising real questions about whether he could perform on the continent at all.
Albania steps in where others stepped back
Against that backdrop, Albania has emerged as the unexpected exception. Prime Minister Edi Rama confirmed through a Facebook post that West would perform in the capital city of Tirana as scheduled in July. The country’s Ministry of Culture framed the decision as both a cultural and economic responsibility, pointing to the broader benefits that major international events bring to tourism and local business.
The decision is a notable one. While most of Europe has moved to distance itself from the artist, Albania is making a deliberate choice to stand apart from that consensus and position itself as a destination willing to host major global acts regardless of the political noise surrounding them.
A controversy that has followed him for years
The controversy trailing West stretches back to late 2022, when a series of posts on social media drew widespread condemnation for their antisemitic content. His Instagram and Twitter accounts were suspended. His talent agency, his record label and his personal lawyer all cut ties with him in the aftermath. The backlash was swift and severe, reaching well beyond the music industry.
His initial response to the criticism made things worse before they got better. He resisted apologizing and at one point made comments suggesting Jewish people should forgive Adolf Hitler, a remark that deepened the outrage considerably.
By 2023 he had issued an apology, attributing his behavior in part to alcohol. Then earlier this year he offered another public statement of remorse, referencing those he had hurt during that period.
What comes next for Ye
Whether the Albania concert marks the beginning of a broader rehabilitation or remains an isolated moment is still an open question. The European market has made its position fairly clear for now. What Albania represents is something rarer in this chapter of his career, a stage, an audience and a country willing to separate the art from the ongoing argument about the artist behind it.
For West, Tirana may be the only European city listening this summer.

