Monday, April 13, 2009

"We're talking about words...

...and I don't believe that there is any word that needs to be suppressed." -- Frank Zappa, Crossfire, March 28, 1986
In that fascinating clip that echo posted, Zappa takes the position that there's no combination of words that would need to be censored. He's absolutely right.

The panel on the show repeatedly dances around the issue of Prince's "Sister", without ever referencing it directly. In 1986, Prince singing about his 'lovely and loose' 32-year old sister seemed outrageous. That's only two years before Straight Outta Compton, and six years before Ice T would sing about killing cops. For entertainment's sake, I wish we could have reconvened this panel twenty years later to get their reaction to Eminem's "Kim", wherein he depicts the brutal murder of his wife. Novak & Co. would probably be stunned to learn that TIME would name The Marshall Mathers LP one of its All-Time 100 Albums.

What really fascinates me in that clip is how cyclical the arguments are. At one point, Zappa says that he's more concerned with America's progress towards becoming a 'fascist theocracy' than he is with dirty pop lyrics. Great minds think alike! In 2005, Harold Bloom would say to Charlie Rose in all seriousness, "I'm a very frightened man. At 75, I find that increasingly I'm living in a theocracy." Both men would have done better to stick to the subject at hand, which brings me back to this old chestnut of censorship.

The 'X-rated' music of David Allan Coe couldn't be more obviously offensive. A song like "Nigger Fucker" is so thoroughly racist that, though it was recorded in jest, it's relegated Coe to the dunce's corner with all the other problematic artists like Wagner. Discussion of these artists apparently must never forget to reference whichever issue it is that got them in to hot water: Stockhausen will never escape reference to his comments about 9/11; Sinead O'Connor's brilliance will always be qualified by her stunt on SNL. Before the arguments run their course, there's a good chance Hitler will have been referenced and someone will posit that the only responsible thing to do is ban or boycott their work.

These cyclical arguments are more appropriately considered thought ruts. As an optimist, I tend to imagine these perennial debates as a car trapped in a snow bank. To free the car, you have to rock it back and forth over the same ground for what seems like an eternity. Hopefully, retreading these arguments decade after decade ends up getting us somewhere.

The goal for those of us on Zappa's side of the argument, or at least for me, isn't to get to a world that openly embraces offensive art. The ideal would be to get to a point where such work isn't sequestered artificially. Let the work sink or swim on its own merits.

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2 Comments:

Blogger Darryl Von Rokk said...

I have that Prince album, and really enjoy it....Sister being one of the reasons!

3:01 PM  
Blogger jodru said...

It is a great album.

9:22 PM  

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