And there it is: Godwin's Law. https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/godwins-law
Thread's over. Good night everyone.
And there it is: Godwin's Law. https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/godwins-law
I haven't spoken up against this piece (though I have in the past. Sometimes I see things from different directions as time passes.) I haven't defended it except in the sense of correcting what I see as wrong, like the idea there are lots of similar pieces just as good. I've focused on a different aspect of the conversation, and explained it badly, I guess.
etc. I don't think that's true. I don't think there's anything courageous at all about attacking a piece nobody really cares about and 99.9999% of the country have never heard of.This is the type of courageous conversations
This is an absolutely terrible justification. First of all, it's entirely apparent from the conversations that have happened over something that you are saying is totally inconsequential (which it definitely isn't inconsequential given the number of people who are fighting about it) that no, not every member of the trombone playing world opposes racism, or cares about it, or understands what it really looks like it, so don't pretend that they all do.timothy42b wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 6:01 am
Now I come to my point, I'll try again and probably fail again. GBP saysetc. I don't think that's true. I don't think there's anything courageous at all about attacking a piece nobody really cares about and 99.9999% of the country have never heard of.This is the type of courageous conversations
We all oppose racism, right? Enough to do something real? Or are we making a statement that is meaningless but makes us feel good?
I'm imagining a neighbor, person of color, coming home after picking up a teenage son who's been arrested for Driving While Black or any of a number of instances of what institutionalized racism leads to, and I rush over to his driveway all excited and say, "Dude! Dude! You'll be so proud of me! I've stopped playing Lassus!"
I think this is maybe a debate only privileged white people can afford to have.
I hope that's not too offensive. It's my perspective. I don't claim it should be yours. I do claim there's more than one way to look at this.
I’m with you. I see a lot of congratulatory chest-beating for being woke, at the expense of losing most of the points of the conversation. I see reasonable questions about censorship and reception being batted aside on esthetic terms. I see cancel-ites piling on a bandwagon without being willing to address the deeper points they’re espousing. I also see Doug Yeo making a moral-superiority argument as an exceptionally privileged white man, and that maybe taking his argument as Gospel misses a heck of a lot along the way.timothy42b wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 6:01 amI think this is a complex issue that has more than one possible viewpoint. I see some of you violently disagree, but I think most real world issues are like that. Further, I think this piece is racist but not racism.
This piece was written in a racist time with a racist title, granted. It has survived 105 years, not because it espoused racism, but because it's a catchy tune. Think about that for a moment. We have statues and other symbols that have survived and are defended because they stand for racism, that are poorly executed. They survive because of the message. That isn't really true of this piece. The number of people who know about its racist past is inconsequentially small. (as, probably, are the people who hear and play it)
Nah, that's what you are debating, and it's a sideshow. I'm tired of being compared to the literal Nazi's because I care about not alienating black people with racist minstrel music. Nobody is putting a gun to your head to make you stop playing this music, so don't be so dramatic.
1. Doug Yeo’s article is very much telling others they shouldn’t perform this music, from a position of authority as an eminent performer and professor.Redthunder wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 8:50 amNah, that's what you are debating, and it's a sideshow. I'm tired of being compared to the literal Nazi's because I care about not alienating black people with racist minstrel music. Nobody is putting a gun to your head to make you stop playing this music, so don't be so dramatic.
Doug's "authority" is that of any other citizen and he's exercising his free speech, just like you are. Again, he's not making you do anything. He's just talking. Again, he's not putting a gun to your head.brtnats wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 9:20 am 1. Doug Yeo’s article is very much telling others they shouldn’t perform this music, from a position of authority as an eminent performer and professor.
2. It’s not minstrel music. It outlasted minstrelsy by 100 years. Our perception of it grew beyond minstrelsy as the society changed.
3. I didn’t compare you to a Nazi. I compared you to a futurist who wanted to silence an offensive past in response to a worldwide rise in Fascism.
4. You don’t get to imply that people who are cautious about censorship want to alienate “black people,” just like you don’t get to imply that “black people” is some kind of homogeneous group. That’s intellectually dishonest, at best.
Lol, just like I asked Bruce, can you actually point to where I said ban the music? Erase the history? Can you show me anybody else that said that? You are strawmanning hard. Where's my hammer? Doug said we should stop putting them on concerts for entertainment. I agree with him. The entire premise of your argument is based on a misrepresentation about what Doug's actual point is, and you and many others seem to be doing it on purpose.brtnats wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 10:45 am Yeah, it is ridiculous. It’s ridiculous that you are being so incredibly presumptuous.
For starters, none of the Black artists I’ve spoken with would presume to speak for the entire Black community. Their opinions have been far more nuanced than the hammer you’re currently wielding.
If you find yourself constantly being compared to fascists, which I did not do, then perhaps you need to look at what it is that you’re saying and how it’s being received by the people you’re saying it to.
Redthunder wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 8:07 amThis is an absolutely terrible justification. First of all, it's entirely apparent from the conversations that have happened over something that you are saying is totally inconsequential (which it definitely isn't inconsequential given the number of people who are fighting about it) that no, not every member of the trombone playing world opposes racism, or cares about it, or understands what it really looks like it, so don't pretend that they all do.timothy42b wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 6:01 am
Now I come to my point, I'll try again and probably fail again. GBP says etc. I don't think that's true. I don't think there's anything courageous at all about attacking a piece nobody really cares about and 99.9999% of the country have never heard of.
We all oppose racism, right? Enough to do something real? Or are we making a statement that is meaningless but makes us feel good?
I'm imagining a neighbor, person of color, coming home after picking up a teenage son who's been arrested for Driving While Black or any of a number of instances of what institutionalized racism leads to, and I rush over to his driveway all excited and say, "Dude! Dude! You'll be so proud of me! I've stopped playing Lassus!"
I think this is maybe a debate only privileged white people can afford to have.
I hope that's not too offensive. It's my perspective. I don't claim it should be yours. I do claim there's more than one way to look at this.
This is not an either or situation. You can "do something real" (like protest the treatment of black people by the police), and still want to see "smaller" instances of racism to be dealt with too. Do you really believe that Doug Yeo wrote this article to get a pat on the back about it from his black friends? To brag to them about it? Also it's not at all your place to tell a black person what is and isn't a "worthy" example of racism to deal with. THAT smacks of YOUR privilege. Have you actually talked to any black people about this?
I'm really sorry that your experiences and opinions about this are being dismissed.
Here is what is truly sad, I expect to be ignored or called uppity or be dismissed.Redthunder wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 11:05 am
I'm really sorry that your experiences and opinions about this are being dismissed.
Thank you for posting here. Truly. I really appreciate your willingness to continue to share your experiences even despite these things.
More than one.
No. Not true, not even close. I have disagreed with what you said. That is not the same as dismissing.Notice how he has dismissed everything I have said.
You still haven't addressed the other issue I mentioned earlier, which is that it's not your place to dictate which examples of racism are worthy to address, and that it's entirely possible for people to address more than one issue at once.timothy42b wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 12:17 pm
More than one.
No. Not true, not even close. I have disagreed with what you said. That is not the same as dismissing.Notice how he has dismissed everything I have said.
I'll repeat what I disagreed with.
Specifically, I do not think it is even slightly courageous for a priviliged white person (and that is most of us here) to think they are fighting racism by not playing a song most people don't even know is racist. They might as well wear a Black Lives Matter teeshirt under a sweater.
I don't insist you agree or anybody agree with me. I don't even insist not playing that song could be the right thing to do. But courageous?
People do a lot of things that have zero impact, but makes them feel good or safe. Okay, that's human nature. As soon as they feel good, many have no reason to continue into actions that might matter.
Doug's argument distilled a bit is that anything conceived in racism remains racist and damaging for ever, even long after anyone knows it started that way.paulyg wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 1:00 pm
The argument for discontinuing performance of this piece was clearly articulated by Doug Yeo. It is very straightforward- the piece has a legacy of racism, and further performances harm the performers and the audience by communicating nostalgia for a racist past, turning the performance into a racist present.
After all of this, you STILL don't understand that by now, EVERYONE knows? And if they don't yet, they will shortly?timothy42b wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 2:11 pm
Doug's argument distilled a bit is that anything conceived in racism remains racist and damaging for ever, even long after anyone knows it started that way.
Nobody ever said he was.timothy42b wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 2:11 pm Doug preached a good sermon but he isn't the sole arbiter of all musical opinion.
No. You can insist on insulting people who don’t agree with you, but you’re not cutting to chase. There’s an entirely different chase that you, and others, are either willfully (or not) choosing to ignore.Redthunder wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 2:55 pm Can we cut to the chase about this?
Some of you think that the history of this song is not a good reason to stop performing it. Fine, that's your opinion, and clearly we all see this differently.
But can some of you please stop cloaking your disagreement in other reasons? Trying to "well ack-shually" your way into feeling justified about your position isn't a good strategy. It's disingenuous concern trolling. Clearly, we all have the ability to talk about this as freely as we like until we are blue in the face. There is absolutely zero censorship occurring.
Show me where I insulted anybody? Also, pot, meet kettle.
Whataboutism. Next.You don’t get to cherry-pick your examples. Period. If this piece is too racist for you, but countless works by Strauss, Tchaikovsky, Mozart, Bach, Monteverdi, Caccini, Gershwin, Bernstein, Puccini and yes, Wager are ‘just racist enough to be ok,” then I call BS. I am more comfortable throwing out the entire lot than I am arbitrating the racist content within a given piece of music and deciding how much is ok and how much is too much.
I didn't say it was courageous. GBP did. Also, more whatboutism. Next.It is NOT courageous to come down against “Lassus Trombone,” a novelty piece by a 3rd-tier composer composer. “The bell has been rung” against a novelty piece by a 3rd-tier composer. And the guy that rung the bell did so from a position of privilege as a professor and emeritus player in one of the most important orchestras of the world. Courage would be coming down against “Elsa.“ Courage would be coming down against “Magic Flute.” Courage would be coming down against “Porgy and Bess.” Courage would be coming down against the makeup of American orchestras, which resemble a bottle of White Out, or American conservatories, which do the same. Courage would be using your platform to spotlight Black performers struggling in the classical world. Courage would be talking about all those “diversity panels” which often include 1 BIPOC. Courage would be a long hard look at academia that perpetuates this. But courage isn’t smearing Henry Fillmore and leaving the rest alone.
Oh look, all-or-nothing thinking and MORE whataboutism. You keep reframing the debate about something that it isn't about.You’ve either got to see the racism inherent in all of this music, or you’ve got to admit that you’re cherry-picking and that this is an awkward, hard conversation without definitive answers that we have to have in order to move forward as artists and citizens.. If you want to burn down the whole thing and start again, I’ll be right there with you. But I’m not going to banish Fillmore and let somebody more profitable stand. That’s the very definition of hypocrisy.
What signal is the defence of this piece sending about the perpetuation of all the things that actually do require courage? If you wish to make a start on the courageous stuff, start, and build momentum.
I’m not defending the racist content in this piece. I’m saying that if you’re going to cancel Fillmore on those grounds, and not Mozart or Tchaikovsky on those same grounds, then that’s arbitrary.
You're so wrapped up in your own wrong assumptions about what people are saying here that you can't see that you're actually defending this piece, explicitly. Here's a direct quote of you defending this piece:
I read this list as an argument that Lassus Trombone is music that has transcended its racist roots, and is still acceptable to perform (especially point No. 2). If that weren't enough, there's this:brtnats wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 9:20 am 1. Doug Yeo’s article is very much telling others they shouldn’t perform this music, from a position of authority as an eminent performer and professor.
2. It’s not minstrel music. It outlasted minstrelsy by 100 years. Our perception of it grew beyond minstrelsy as the society changed.
3. I didn’t compare you to a Nazi. I compared you to a futurist who wanted to silence an offensive past in response to a worldwide rise in Fascism.
4. You don’t get to imply that people who are cautious about censorship want to alienate “black people,” just like you don’t get to imply that “black people” is some kind of homogeneous group. That’s intellectually dishonest, at best.
brtnats wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 8:33 am
I’m with you. I see a lot of congratulatory chest-beating for being woke, at the expense of losing most of the points of the conversation. I see reasonable questions about censorship and reception being batted aside on esthetic terms. I see cancel-ites piling on a bandwagon without being willing to address the deeper points they’re espousing. I also see Doug Yeo making a moral-superiority argument as an exceptionally privileged white man, and that maybe taking his argument as Gospel misses a heck of a lot along the way.
I’m not going to defend the advertising materials for these pieces, but I’m also not going to give Doug a free pass on the idea that we should always judge previous zeitgeists with modern criticism. If that’s what we’re going to do, we have to tear down western culture and start again. Those advertising materials are overtly racist, and are undoubtedly so so that they can capitalize on a specific market. If you don’t think minstrelsy was acceptable in the 19th century, then you’re using a hammer to drive in a screw. I can’t fault Fillmore for using a common marketing tactic in his market, even though I can call it repulsive and indignant. There’s a difference there that I don’t think some of the people reading understand.
I also can’t personally fault the music itself. I just can’t. Go to IMSLP and you can find a public-domain edition of the piece from Fillmore with absolutely no mentions of any of the racist content. I would actually venture that most of us who have performed the piece have played from an edition with no mention of racist advertising. So then I have to ask myself: Is there identifiable racism in the piece itself? Is the glissando itself inherently racist? No. Is the “trombone smear” itself inherently racist? No. Do I have to know an enormous amount of historical-contextual information to decide that this piece is racist? Yes. And then I have to decide what to do next, and as Tim mentioned above, I cannot help but notice that the piece survived 100 years on esthetics alone when publishers, editors, and arrangers scrubbed the overtly racist content from it.
Doug’s argument, in a reduction is: This piece of music was conceived and built in racism, and should be wholly discarded on those grounds alone.
The counter to that is: Two entire generations of musicians preserved the piece in absentia of the racist materials as strictly a novelty piece, on esthetic grounds alone.
If we’re going to follow Doug’s principle, then we need to start looking hard at all music that was conceived and built in racism, regardless of how we now perceive it as modern musicians. And we have to decide if we’re going to define racism as just the Black experience in America, or as a prevailing 19th century institution that was very much invested in “othering” all over the globe. Either way, you’re going to have to cherry pick your examples. I don’t think Doug Yeo gets to be the arbiter of what is tasteful and what is not. I don’t think anyone does. But if you want to follow Doug’s reasoning to its logical conclusions, you need to eliminate huge parts of the Western canon. Wagner is just the tip of the iceberg. But if we’re not going to allow music to speak for itself, and we’re going to make these decision on supplementary materials, then yes, you’re cancelling a lot of stuff. BurgerBob is fine with that, which is his right. I assume when he takes his next audition, he won’t play the Wagner excerpts because they were written by one of the most explicitly racist composers in western history, and if the creative context is racist, the piece itself must also be. If you’re jumping to cancel “Lassus Trombone,” my broader question is are you ready to cancel things with a lot more historical importance, or are you jumping on this pile because it’s an easy lift? Everyone from Bach to Mile Davis is waiting for that answer.
Or, do you take the counter to Doug’s approach? Do you acknowledge the racism present at the piece’s creation, and then acknowledge the intentional stripping of that racist content by subsequent generations of musicians? Why do we get to ignore them and their esthetic tastes, when the piece in question was preserved because of its musical value? There are ample examples in the visual arts of paintings that were “sanitized” to represent contemporary values. There are also ample examples of pieces destroyed because of vulgarity. I know we’re not talking about burning copies, but we ARE talking about erasing a piece of music from the our collective conscious. Doug’s call is specifically we should ALL stop playing this piece. Again, this piece is a easy lift.
I have to wonder if our current immediate cancellation-reaction is not a symptom of the rise of neo-facism. In other other fascist states, history has shown similar movement to purge the artistic record of undesirable content. I know that’s outside the scope of this thread, but it’s a thought that’s been playing on a loop in my head.
I want to reiterate that I have no problem at all with a person saying they don’t want to perform this piece. I have real problems with telling someone else not to perform it, and that is what we are debating.
Lol are you for real dude? You rest your entire argument on the entire premise of “WELL WHAT ABOUT X?!?”brtnats wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 3:53 pm
I’m not defending the racist content in this piece. I’m saying that if you’re going to cancel Fillmore on those grounds, and not Mozart or Tchaikovsky on those same grounds, then that’s arbitrary.
@Redthunder: You’re too busy screaming to listen. I’m done with you. Pax.
Is there an element of self importance and elitism permeating this discussion?
Bruce, I asked you yesterday to provide a clear example of anybody advocating for banning music of any kind. I considered your argument. You did not bother to respond. That is hardly "talking past" one another. I have asked questions to BOTH brtnats and Timothy42b, and they simply DO NOT answer them. I'm not "talking past" anybody.
Labeling something as. "whataboutism" when that is exactly what it is, when somebody tries to redirect from a discussion about one topic to try and prove "hypocrisy" is hardly a "refusal to engage". Whataboutism is a logical fallacy and has been recognized as such as a tactic for changing the focus of a debate on a new, irrelevant topic.I'm seeing a lot of "don't confuse me with facts, I've made up my mind", labeling contradicting examples as "whataboutism" and a clear refusal to engage in constructive discussion.
I ask you AGAIN, where can you demonstrate that "mob censorship" is happening?I believe this is a "slippery slope" and as we start down this path many other things that may have more artistic merit will be attacked in the spirit of "Woke". As somebody who lost a considerable amount of family between 1940 and 1945, and who has a cousin who managed to escape from FIVE different Death Camps, living 2 years in the forest, I am very sensitive to this kind of mob censorship.
Oh my god Bruce. You are trying to discredit one accusation of a fallacious argument by using an even more egregious fallacy with the "slippery slope".BGuttman wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 5:36 pm Just look at the title. You want to censor 15 pieces of music for being "unwoke". Where do you go from here? Beckmesser in "Meistersinger" is a caricature of a Jew. Do we now ban Meistersinger> The dialog in Huck Finn shows illiterate Blacks. Do we ditch that as well?
OK. I see the Whataboutism charge coming up. But that's the actual argument. If we destroy this piece for not being "woke" do we move on to other items that are not of our current mindset? Where does it stop? Or will we be left with nothing but Kenny G?
Then the discussion of those traditions would be very different! I’m not at all against talking about racism in music, and I totally agree with Tim above, that there’s a lot of elitism built in. But I don’t understand, functionally, how someone like Doug Yeo decides ‘this piece is racist enough that I’m going to leverage my position to make everybody know I disapprove of it’ but simultaneously looks past so many other examples that are as bad or worse. Some people in this room may say I’m engaging in whataboutism, but when you’re having a discussion about a principle, then other similar examples are relevant. I honestly don’t see how anyone can claim to objectively judge the offensive content of an artwork, especially without indulging in some serious biography digging.
Since you clearly don't know what "whataboutism" is and why it's a bad way to defend something, here's an article for you.brtnats wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 5:45 pm Then the discussion of those traditions would be very different! I’m not at all against talking about racism in music, and I totally agree with Tim above, that there’s a lot of elitism built in. But I don’t understand, functionally, how someone like Doug Yeo decides ‘this piece is racist enough that I’m going to leverage my position to make everybody know I disapprove of it’ but simultaneously looks past so many other examples that are as bad or worse. Some people in this room may say I’m engaging in whataboutism, but when you’re having a discussion about a principle, then other similar examples are relevant. I honestly don’t see how anyone can claim to objectively judge the offensive content of an artwork, especially without indulging in some serious biography digging.
I disagree with Doug Yeo on a lot of things. This is just another. He has clearly incited a mob of righteous warriors to his cause. I wish he was here to here to help nuance the discussion.
OK. So we can't discuss anything but "Lassus Trombone"? And just because there was a pretty slanderous advertisement for it in 1915?Redthunder wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 5:40 pmOh my god Bruce. You are trying to discredit one accusation of a fallacious argument by using an even more egregious fallacy with the "slippery slope".BGuttman wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 5:36 pm Just look at the title. You want to censor 15 pieces of music for being "unwoke". Where do you go from here? Beckmesser in "Meistersinger" is a caricature of a Jew. Do we now ban Meistersinger> The dialog in Huck Finn shows illiterate Blacks. Do we ditch that as well?
OK. I see the Whataboutism charge coming up. But that's the actual argument. If we destroy this piece for not being "woke" do we move on to other items that are not of our current mindset? Where does it stop? Or will we be left with nothing but Kenny G?
What part of "ditch Lassus Trombone" is not an incitement to mob rule? We have a slogan. "Lock Her Up".Redthunder wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 5:40 pm Also, the title is not in any way shape or form, censorship of any kind, or a mob rule.
Not "unwoke," Bruce, very actively racist. What is the obsession with downplaying the actual racist content in this music?BGuttman wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 5:36 pm Just look at the title. You want to censor 15 pieces of music for being "unwoke". Where do you go from here? Beckmesser in "Meistersinger" is a caricature of a Jew. Do we now ban Meistersinger? The dialog in Huck Finn shows illiterate Blacks. Do we ditch that as well?
I think that makes 100% participation in that particular straw man argument from people on one side of this. This discussion is not about other pieces of music, it's about Lassus Trombone. As for the rest, let's burn that bridge when we come to it. The point is, we're here now, and we're having THIS conversation now, and there's a troubling amount of resistance to even acknowledging that this piece is very clearly racist.
Doug's article is about how Lassus Trombone is a racist piece of music, and because of that, Lassus trombone should not be played as entertainment anymore. When you bring up things like "What about Wagner!" you are trying to say that Doug is a hypocrite because "what about all of these other things that he DIDN'T write blog posts about".
Really? And I'm the one being accused of lacking nuance?What part of "ditch Lassus Trombone" is not an incitement to mob rule? We have a slogan. "Lock Her Up".
This is total destruction not constructivism. What can we play instead that won't put our audience to sleep and is of reasonably low difficulty?
Paul, I have an immense amount of respect for you, but that’s the part you’re not hearing. The actual music doesn’t have any racist content. The titles used to. The marketing did. But in the intervening years, the titles were changed and the marketing materials dropped. I don’t think anybody here is saying that those elements weren’t racist. People are asking a totally valid question and getting chided like children: If we are to remove these 15 pieces from concerted repertoire because of how they were originally conceived, and pay no regard to what they have evolved to, why? People can throw a whataboutism fallacy all over the place, but if one removes the actual racist content from a piece of music, and still deems it racist because of original intent, that feels likely slippery ground, and some of us are asking about the theoretical limits. It seems absolutely pertinent to ask the question and get a straight answer without having accusations levied. It’s certainly how I thought we operated here.
BGuttman wrote: ↑Tue Jun 30, 2020 7:42 pm Where I'm having trouble with this is how you define Lassus Trombone as racist.
No doubt the ad from 1915 has some really problematic descriptions. But absent the title and the description, what is racist? Is it the trombone smears? Stravinsky uses some in "Pulcinella". If you had this piece with a different title, say, "Snowflakes Falling on a Red Field", would it still be racist?
What next? White supremacists like the tune "Dixie" It was written by a Northerner, Dan Emmett, for a Minstrel show. And Abraham Lincoln was said to enjoy the tune.
Understand. I am horrified by cops taking it out o Blacks. I agree that there are barriers put in the path of Blacks by White owned businesses. There's lots of injustice out there. But is this where we have to draw the line?
Just rinse and repeat.
I think that makes 100% participation in that particular straw man argument from people on one side of this. This discussion is not about other pieces of music, it's about Lassus Trombone. As for the rest, let's burn that bridge when we come to it. The point is, we're here now, and we're having THIS conversation now, and there's a troubling amount of resistance to even acknowledging that this piece is very clearly racist.
If you believe that by taking collective action to not play this racist piece of music ever again, that we're hopping on a train with no brakes to Nazi Germany, then I'm sorry- I can't see a lot of room for growth or progress in your mindset.