Shut up, says Sharpton
We're minded to think of the flavour of the month club as we watch the current war on rap profanity. Al Sharpton and the National Action Network is now onboard, planning a march this Thursday on the HQs of three major labels in New York:
"We aren't marching against artists -- we are marching against record companies to ban these words completely," says Tamika Mallory, who is leading the NAN's decency initiative. "It's nice that Russell Simmons asked for these words to be bleeped out, but if we start from the top and ban them, then we won't have to answer questions at the bottom."
It's an interesting and depressing view of the music industry and creativity that the NAN believe that commercial organisations ought to be the conscience and arbiter of art, and that individual artists aren't considered worth appealing to, or capable of exercising their own judgement. Wouldn't it be better if people didn't make records which called women whores because they didn't think of women that way, rather than because Sony-BMG have instructed them not to? Shouldn't rappers (and rockers) be asked to exercise a little personal thought?
2 comments:
They should just sit down and watch Frank Zappa's appearances on Frontline and the whole PRMC fiasco. Properly inspiring stuff.
Where is the Zappaesque figure of the hip-hop world to speak out here? Chuck D?
And then read the transcript of the Lenny Bruce "n!gger" skit.
Its not so much the words themselves but the way they are used as weapons to hurt people's feelings (and if people aren't being hurt, what's the fuss all about?).
To paraphrase a hit of yesteryear, bad words don't hurt people, rappers do.
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