independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Avalanche
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 3 of 6 <123456>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Reply #60 posted 05/20/10 5:23pm

bellanoche

errant said:

Another song where Prince confuses politics, spirituality, and his own personal business struggles in the record industry, and one of the most glaringly wrong-headed instances of his stance as a shallow political gadfly where he regurgitates some vaguely interesting, yet unfounded contrarian view of world history that some wacko convinced him of one night over cocktails.


beautiful song though lol


This is the typical response of someone who does not know or does not want to accept the truth. There is nothing confusing about this song. I LOVE it and have been listening to it frequently in the past couple of weeks. Can you point out what is untrue or vague about any of it? As 2elijah so eloquently stated, the song recounts facts be they related to Lincoln whose ideology of black inferiority slaughtered the hopes,dreams, lives, etc. of black folks; Duke Ellington who was a musical genius who did not reap the financial rewards of his gift due to greedy predators who slaughtered his rights with predatory contracts; or Native American women and children who were slaughtered at Wounded Knee by racists who shared Lincoln's view of non-white inferiority.

Are you saying that some "wacko" made up these documented historical events and convinced poor, simple minded Prince of them after he was plied with alcohol? rolleyes
perfection is a fallacy of the imagination...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #61 posted 05/20/10 5:25pm

bellanoche

thaCONcept said:

I love the song even though Prince is a little misguided with his information? He kinda makes more problems with the song than he fixes but I still love the actual "SONG"


I'm confused by the people who keep referring to this song as "misguided" or "confused." Can those of you who feel this way please explain to me what is misguided or confusing about the information provided in this song?
[Edited 5/20/10 20:46pm]
perfection is a fallacy of the imagination...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #62 posted 05/20/10 5:25pm

NDRU

avatar

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

billymeade said:

It's no accident he chose white snowflakes as his metaphor - the song is more racist drivel (see: Rainbow Children, One Nite Alone Live).


Are there other colored snowflakes besides white? lol


how about yellow? smile
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #63 posted 05/20/10 5:27pm

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

bellanoche said:

thaCONcept said:

I love the song even though Prince is a little misguided with his information? He kinda makes more problems with the song than he fixes but I still love the actual "SONG"


I'm confused by the people who keep referring to this song as "misguided" or "confused." Can those of you who feel this way please explain to me waht is misguided or confusing about the information provided in this song?

The information provided might be factually correct but without Lincoln's actions which is intentionally being diminished, the black race would have been F*cked even more. This is a fact which goes unrecognized too.....
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #64 posted 05/20/10 5:31pm

errant

avatar

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

bellanoche said:



I'm confused by the people who keep referring to this song as "misguided" or "confused." Can those of you who feel this way please explain to me waht is misguided or confusing about the information provided in this song?

The information provided might be factually correct but without Lincoln's actions which is intentionally being diminished, the black race would have been F*cked even more. This is a fact which goes unrecognized too.....



it isn't even factually correct. it's one of those theories hung on a thread of semi-believable truth dug up out of context from a sentence among thousands of writings that nutjob intellectually inch-deep philosophers and commentators run with because they overheard it at a cocktail party. see also: Jay-Z, Rihanna & Beyonce being devil-worshiping tools of the Illuminati.
"does my cock look fat in these jeans?"
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #65 posted 05/20/10 5:33pm

2elijah

NDRU said:

The song bugs me.

It's another case of Prince wanting to expose some sort of hidden truth, but in this case even if what he says is true about Lincoln, I think that it's fair to judge this particular man by his actions and not his personal flaws.

A lot of people have the right beliefs but do not make the right decisions when it really matters. That is no better than having fucked up beliefs and making the right decisions--I think it's a lot worse, in fact.

Whatever his personal beliefs or his motivations do not change the fact that he did the right thing and made maybe the single most important decision/change this country has ever seen! He ended slavery in this country!! And died for it.


Actually that line about Lincoln just happen to be the line that gets one's attention, because it is a strong and true statement, in which Lincoln is historically tied to freeing black slaves, but not because of his compassion for them or he would have viewed blacks as equal to his own, but he didn't. He set them free, most with "nothing" in hand after many worked the fields, worked in the slave owners' homes, took care of the slave owner's children, many slave women taken advantage of sexually and used for breeding purposes, like insurance policies, and many built the foundation of this land with no compensation, on the basis of manipulation, greed, from those in power at that time.

Mentioning Lincoln, describes a particular period of time that Lincoln was a major part of, but showed doesn't dismiss the fact that Lincoln had his own agenda and views about the black slaves he's given credit for freeing. Prince then slides takes the lyrics of "Avalanche" into another situation of manipulation/greed in America's history when he talks about the American Indians and mentions the period of the battle at Wounded Knee. The sufferings of the the American Indians that died fighting in that battle, and taken advantage of by those in power and wealth. Then the songs continues to make its way into the future, by pinpointing the early era of when many talented, but not wealthy black artists were lured/manipulated/taken advantage of by those who knew they could make money off of them. He ties all 3 situations together, to show how wealth and power can often take advantage, destroy, manipulate and buy the "have nots" so-to-speak, often mistreated/used/taken advantage of and often being "cheated" by those with power/wealth.

Prince was very clever in tying all 3 situations together as well as their similarities. There's no special requirement for anyone t expose or tell the truth about America's uncomfortable truths, even if it comes from the mouth and lyrics of a musician/artist. There's no reason he should be branded guilty for expressing "uncomfortable" truths.
[Edited 5/20/10 17:42pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #66 posted 05/20/10 5:38pm

PurpleDiamond2
009

bellanoche said:

errant said:

Another song where Prince confuses politics, spirituality, and his own personal business struggles in the record industry, and one of the most glaringly wrong-headed instances of his stance as a shallow political gadfly where he regurgitates some vaguely interesting, yet unfounded contrarian view of world history that some wacko convinced him of one night over cocktails.


beautiful song though lol


This is the typical response of someone who does not know or does not want to accept the truth. There is nothing confusing about this song. I LOVE it and have been listening to it frequently in the past couple of weeks. Can you point out what is untrue or vague about any of it? As 2elijah so eloquently stated, the song recounts facts be they related to Lincoln whose ideology of black inferiority slaughtered the hopes,dreams, lives, etc. of black folks; Duke Ellington who was a musical genius who did not reap the financial rewards of his gift due to greedy predators who slaughtered his rights with predatory contracts; or Native American women and children who were slaughtered at Wounded Knee by racists who shared Lincoln's view of non-white inferiority.

Are you saying that some "wacko" made up these documented historical events and convinced poor, simple minded Prince of them after he was plied with alcohol? rolleyes


clapping
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #67 posted 05/20/10 5:42pm

bellanoche

2elijah said:

tricky99 said:

Sometimes I think some fans see Prince as an honorary white person. Anytime he thrusts issues of race/blackness out there they have a problem with him. I don't believe prince has ever written a song that has any political content without it being heavily critized by his fans (from Ronnie talk to russia to Dreamer).


I think it's because of his image in the early 1980s, the Purple Rain era, where he crossed racial lines, so when he sings about "social/political issues", many are uncomfortable because they may not be able to relate to the situation he sings about, and they see him as an artist that has managed to be successful in crossing racial lines, so I think think some are taken back, when he does sing about race or other social/political issues.

He is an international artist, and many of his fans are not American, so many of them may also not be aware of specific race or other societal/political issues, he has referenced or still references in some of his songs.

Many, not all, who don't like him singing those type of songs, you'll often find, will result in calling him names, as a way of expressing their anger/dislike for daring to sing such lyrics. But what does being angry at him for doing that changes? Nothing really, especially if the song is already released. You either like it or you don't. That's just about it.
[Edited 5/20/10 9:52am]

2elijah hug THANK YOU SO MUCH for being on this thread. I have been listening to One Nite Alone for about two or three weeks in my car. Therefore, it was funny for me to come here and see this. I was simply checking for updates on the Time concert that was cancelled yesterday and decided to post. I came here today and saw this!

These kinds of threads are part of the reason that I rarely post here anymore. It boggles my mind how people get angry at Prince for reminding them that he is black, and as such has shared the experience of racism, hatred, inequality and injustice that other blacks in this country have faced. They get angry at this rich and successful black man for having the audacity to talk about these issues because it makes them uncomfortable. They are more comfortable with the lie of bi-racial, half-black, half-Italian Prince who is impervious to racism.

It is insulting and annoying when I read the types of posts that I see on this thread from people who refuse to accept facts. If it were not for the 13th Ammendment, would Prince not have been born in slavery? Regardless of his "love" of the music, was John Hammond not a white man who got wealthy off of talented black musicians by slumming in Harlem and elsewhere, then thumbing his nose at the white establishment to partially fulfill his own inflated, rebellious savior of the Negro ego?

Anyway, thanks for adding your trademark wisdom and eloquence to this thread. thumbs up!
[Edited 5/20/10 20:36pm]
perfection is a fallacy of the imagination...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #68 posted 05/20/10 5:45pm

Hatman

avatar

ernestsewell said:

It's gutter trash.


Oh is THAT what Gaff was saying to Deckard? The lyrics to Avalanche.
Take it - like Clarence said:
"I got a million of them -
all different U know."
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #69 posted 05/20/10 5:57pm

bellanoche

mozfonky said:

Prince should have been very careful, white people are the most sensitive people on earth when it comes to stereotypical comments coming their way. Some of us like me shrug our shoulders when some mexican, black or other persuasion is wronged and it comes out on the news, we just realize that's always underneath the surface. People want to deny it they can but it's there. As for the song, I thought Prince was only wrong in trying to feminize and distance his own blackness throughout his career, and like Michael did, only grasped to blackness when it suited him. However, the song itself is a masterpiece, innacurrate lyrics and all. My interpretation was it was a geyser of resentment and self denial expressed itself in that song. I love an emotional artist even if they are a little wrong. His biggest innaccuracy in the song in my mind was his lyrics about John Hammond and Duke Ellington, he was plain wrong about both these men. John Hammond was an integrator and a boon for american culture who discovered and brought out more black and white music than anyone ever. But..., he never had a damned thing to do with Duke Ellington and Duke was a character so monumental, nothing like being black ever contained his personality. He would never have been victimized by anyone to the degree the song tries to portray, and I repeat, he never worked with Hammond. I've heard they had prickly encounters but never did business and never really liked each other, it does not equal what Prince is saying in the song.


I understand what you are saying about not knowing if they worked together. I have no idea. However, I do not think that John Hammond was as wonderful as some people think. He reminds me of many white men who exploited the talents of blacks for their own benefit, especially during the time that he lived. Who knows, Duke being a strong personality might have seen through John Hammond's facade, which might be why they were not fond of each other.I just don't get all warm and fuzzy about stories about him or others like him.

Duke was a strong personality for sure, but he definitely did not reap the rewards of his genius the way he should have. Whether it be a bogus deal with John Hammond or someone like him, Duke got had - maybe not as badly as others, but had nonetheless. Look at Prince, he is a strong personality who knew a lot about the biz going in, and he still got had. Again, not as bad as others, but he still got had. I think that is the parallel he draws in this song though not explicitly stated. There's no difference in mentalities between Lincoln and the slaves, the colonists and the Native Americans, John Hammond and Duke Ellington or WB and Prince.

I think Prince has always known that he was black. He played the game to market himself to mainstream white audiences, who as Arthur Ashes stated in his autobio, "like their blacks in token amounts." So the lie of a mixed Prince with his multi-racial band played much better than light-skinned, two black parents having Prince who listens to Dick Gregory and knows Abraham Lincoln was a racist. However, unlike MJ, Prince has maintained an identifiable blackness, especially in his post-Revolution days after he cemented his legacy. One could take him to task for the fact that he played the game at all, but the difference between MJ and Prince to me is that Prince knew he was playing a game.

Here is an interesting bit on John Hammond that mentions Duke as well.

http://www.press.uchicago...89222.html
perfection is a fallacy of the imagination...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #70 posted 05/20/10 5:59pm

Fenwick

Seeing that this is probably my favorite song on my absolute favorite post 1988 Prince record, I can not tell you how much I love this track.

I love the emotive delivery of the lyrics. The somber slide down on the chorus. The backgrounds during the second verse, "Who is it". I love, love love this song.

But as far as the lyrics go, I will say this and then go away because there is absolutely NO WINNING this debate. People simply feel too strongly about this on one side against the other. It's literally like trying to debate abortion. People just feel too strongly about certain subjects.

For me, despite how much I love this song, the lyrics during the first verse of this song are a bleeping avalanche. It reads like someone went to their freshman history class and their college professor said, "hey, have you opened your eyes to this version of the truth".

For those of you that love them, I'm happy they speak to you. To me, they are divisive, dismiss context of time and are the mental/emotional equivalent of running into a crowded theatre and yelling "FIRE"!!!!

I'm not "correct" in how these lyrics speak to me. And no one else is "incorrect" in how these lyrics speak to them.

But again, as far as the song itself is concerned, I consider it one of the best in his entire catalog. And certainly in the top 5 of the 2000s.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #71 posted 05/20/10 6:05pm

2elijah

bellanoche said:

2elijah said:



I think it's because of his image in the early 1980s, the Purple Rain era, where he crossed racial lines, so when he sings about "social/political issues", many are uncomfortable because they may not be able to relate to the situation he sings about, and they see him as an artist that has managed to be successful in crossing racial lines, so I think think some are taken back, when he does sing about race or other social/political issues.

He is an international artist, and many of his fans are not American, so many of them may also not be aware of specific race or other societal/political issues, he has referenced or still references in some of his songs.

Many, not all, who don't like him singing those type of songs, you'll often find, will result in calling him names, as a way of expressing their anger/dislike for daring to sing such lyrics. But what does being angry at him for doing that changes? Nothing really, especially if the song is already released. You either like it or you don't. That's just about it.
[Edited 5/20/10 9:52am]

2elijah hug THANK YOU SO MUCH for being on this thread. I have been listening to One Nite Alone for about two or three weeks in my car. Therefore, it was funny for me to come here and see this. I was simply checking for updates on the Time concert that was cancelled yesterday and decided to post. I came here today and saw this!

These kinds of threads are part of the reason that I rarely post here anymore. It boggles my mind how people get angry at Prince for reminding him that he is black, and as such has shared the experience of racism, hatred, inequality and injustice that other blacks in this country have faced. They get angry at this rich and successful black man for having the audacity to talk about these issues because it makes them uncomfortable. They are more comfortable with the lie of bi-racial, half-black, half-Italian Prince who is impervious to racism.

It is insulting and annoying when I read the types of posts that I see on this thread from people who refuse to accept facts. If it were not for the 13th Ammendment, would Prince not have been born in slavery? Regardless of his "love" of the music, was John Hammond not a white man who got wealthy off of talented black musicians by slumming in Harlem and elsewhere, then thumbing his nose at the white establishment to partially fulfill his own inflated, rebellious savior of the Negro ego?

Anyway, thanks for adding your trademark wisdom and eloquence to this thread. :tuhmbsup:


Wow, as always, I appreciate your comments and insights on these topics as well. Thanks again, much appreciated. I've seen many of those remarks you speak of on these forums. Prince hasn't committed any crime because he dares to speak of uncomfortable truths in his lyrics, and expresses them boldly. Other artists have done it. I think in this time period, so many are jaded by the music that's out there today, with no real message, that when they run across one of Prince's songs revealing some uncomfortable truths, suddenly they're shocked into a place in reality, they're mind is not ready to go to. So for some, it's easier to harshly criticize him for exposing those truths in his lyrics, rather than try and figure out what those lyrics mean. Especially when they lyrics touches on a historical/social/political topic or individual, I find that many rather throw insults at him for writing those lyrics or accuse him of being brainwashed by specific individuals, instead of researching the facts of the historical topic/issue he referenced in his lyrics, that a fan feels made them uncomfortable or angry.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #72 posted 05/20/10 6:26pm

2elijah

Fenwick said:

Seeing that this is probably my favorite song on my absolute favorite post 1988 Prince record, I can not tell you how much I love this track.

I love the emotive delivery of the lyrics. The somber slide down on the chorus. The backgrounds during the second verse, "Who is it". I love, love love this song.

But as far as the lyrics go, I will say this and then go away because there is absolutely NO WINNING this debate. People simply feel too strongly about this on one side against the other. It's literally like trying to debate abortion. People just feel too strongly about certain subjects.

For me, despite how much I love this song, the lyrics during the first verse of this song are a bleeping avalanche. It reads like someone went to their freshman history class and their college professor said, "hey, have you opened your eyes to this version of the truth".

For those of you that love them, I'm happy they speak to you. To me, they are divisive, dismiss context of time and are the mental/emotional equivalent of running into a crowded theatre and yelling "FIRE"!!!!

I'm not "correct" in how these lyrics speak to me. And no one else is "incorrect" in how these lyrics speak to them.

But again, as far as the song itself is concerned, I consider it one of the best in his entire catalog. And certainly in the top 5 of the 2000s.



Prince writes a song that touches on a part of America's ugly history, and because he exposes uncomfortable truths, its lyrics are met with high criticism, and dismissed by some fans. It focuses on manipulation, social/economic discrimination, greed, mistreatment, power, wealth. etc. Games that the "Haves" over a course of time, played with the "Have nots", so-to-speak.

Now what happened in America's history is part of the reason many of us are here today. The part that this country is so afraid to discuss out in the open :: shhh not so loud someone may hear us:: is pretty much always dismissed as though the individuals lives' who suffered during that time period, were worhtless.

I think it is sad that we tend to be hush, hush ( even in song), about the enslavement of blacks in America and also how the Natives were invaded on their own land, but yet America seems to have no problem discussing the Holocaust out in the open, adding value to it and recognizing the lives/existence of those that suffered and survived through it.

This is the reason I see these discussion divisive, not because of exposing the details of those tragedies, but basically the fact that the sufferings of specific groups are constantly dismissed, as though their lives had no importance and value, yet all Americans today, continue to reap the benefits of those particular groups' sufferings.
[Edited 5/20/10 21:29pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #73 posted 05/20/10 6:43pm

Fenwick

2elijah said:

Fenwick said:

Seeing that this is probably my favorite song on my absolute favorite post 1988 Prince record, I can not tell you how much I love this track.

I love the emotive delivery of the lyrics. The somber slide down on the chorus. The backgrounds during the second verse, "Who is it". I love, love love this song.

But as far as the lyrics go, I will say this and then go away because there is absolutely NO WINNING this debate. People simply feel too strongly about this on one side against the other. It's literally like trying to debate abortion. People just feel too strongly about certain subjects.

For me, despite how much I love this song, the lyrics during the first verse of this song are a bleeping avalanche. It reads like someone went to their freshman history class and their college professor said, "hey, have you opened your eyes to this version of the truth".

For those of you that love them, I'm happy they speak to you. To me, they are divisive, dismiss context of time and are the mental/emotional equivalent of running into a crowded theatre and yelling "FIRE"!!!!

I'm not "correct" in how these lyrics speak to me. And no one else is "incorrect" in how these lyrics speak to them.

But again, as far as the song itself is concerned, I consider it one of the best in his entire catalog. And certainly in the top 5 of the 2000s.


What happened in America's history is part of the reason many of us are here today. The part that this country is so afraid to discuss out in the open :: shhh not so loud someone may hear us:: is pretty much always dismissed as though the individuals lives' who suffered during that time period, were worhtless.

I think it is sad that we tend to be hush, hush ( even in song), about the enslavement of blacks in America and also how the Natives were invaded on their own land, but yet America seems to have no problem discussing the Holocaust out in the open, adding value to it and recognizing the lives/existence of those that suffered and survived through it.

This is the reason I see these discussion divisive, not because of exposing the details of those tragedies, but basically the fact that the sufferings of specific groups are constantly dismissed, as though their lives had no importance and value, yet all Americans today, continue to reap the benefits of those particular groups' sufferings.
[Edited 5/20/10 18:27pm]


I'm not going to get drawn into this with you 2elijah.

I heap a ton of praise upon the song and give you my reasons for not wanting to engage.

You think it's brilliant, insightful and that it tells the truth. The truth you want to hear and embrace. I don't. And my desire not to enter into it has NOTHING to do with fear. And I'm also not trying to stifle/hush any further discussions you and others may want to have. Have at it.

Again, like on another thread you and I went back and forth on recently, it comes down to the AGENDA people want to push on threads like this.

Sorry, but Prince lobbing a grenade isn't the forum for it and certainly isn't a means to whatever predetermined truth any of us think we know. If you step back and think about it, do you REALLY think there is anythiing I could say to sway your mind on this issue? Really? (And I'm not being confrontational, I'm genuinely asking you a question).

You're smart. Well spoken. Assertive. And confident in what you believe. I might as well try to knock down a brick wall with a tennis ball. (That is not a judgment of whether your stance is right or wrong, just a commentary on the firmness of your beliefs).

But again, because this point will get overlooked, I LOVE this song!!!

The shock value of the lyrics aside.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #74 posted 05/20/10 6:49pm

jdcxc

I think people are having a hard time in distinguishing from political theater and artistic license vs. a history lesson. The legacy of Lincoln is way to complex to evaluate in a 5 minute pop song. I interpret Prince's declaration that "Lincoln was a racist" as a attention-getting rallying cry about the falsehoods in the interpretation of American history. It is about getting past what we (black and white) have been taught and developing a new framework and understanding about the same old debate. It's opening a discussion by bashing a holy tenant. Prince has always been the contrarian.

But some truths must be cleared up to continue this discussion:

*Lincoln was instrumental in keeping the country together and pushing forward a path toward the elimination of slavery.

*Lincoln was not an abolishionist. He viewed the end of slavery in more strategic terms. The Emancipation Proclamation only freed slaves in certain confederate states as a military tool. Slavery was not outlawed until the 13th ammendment. He initially ran on a platform that did not explicitly call for the end of slavery. After the Civil War, Lincoln flirted with the idea of sending free blacks back to Africa. He believed in the intellectual superiority and supremacy of whites.

Also, not all whites were racists, supremacists and oppressors. There were many abolishionists, radicals and humanitarians who were opposed to slavery and the mistreatment of blacks. These outside fighters always get lost in the debate. People assume that white people had no options in their political and social views.

It's a cop out to excuse racist oppression at any time in history.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #75 posted 05/20/10 7:13pm

mozfonky

avatar

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

mozfonky said:


haha, have you seen pics of him in the early days? I've heard people say he wasn't doing all the fem stuff in the early days and even in his chris rock interview he just said it was "rock and roll" or something to that effect. I never really bought all the fem stuff and we all know he's a very homophobic guy for whatever reason.

The GOP and right wing Christianity is full of self loathing closet cases. Ever considered that?

yes i have. we don't really know the real man either way.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #76 posted 05/20/10 7:15pm

bellanoche

jdcxc said:

I think people are having a hard time in distinguishing from political theater and artistic license vs. a history lesson. The legacy of Lincoln is way to complex to evaluate in a 5 minute pop song. I interpret Prince's declaration that "Lincoln was a racist" as a attention-getting rallying cry about the falsehoods in the interpretation of American history. It is about getting past what we (black and white) have been taught and developing a new framework and understanding about the same old debate. It's opening a discussion by bashing a holy tenant. Prince has always been the contrarian.

But some truths must be cleared up to continue this discussion:

*Lincoln was instrumental in keeping the country together and pushing forward a path toward the elimination of slavery.

*Lincoln was not an abolishionist. He viewed the end of slavery in more strategic terms. The Emancipation Proclamation only freed slaves in certain confederate states as a military tool. Slavery was not outlawed until the 13th ammendment. He initially ran on a platform that did not explicitly call for the end of slavery. After the Civil War, Lincoln flirted with the idea of sending free blacks back to Africa. He believed in the intellectual superiority and supremacy of whites.

Also, not all whites were racists, supremacists and oppressors. There were many abolishionists, radicals and humanitarians who were opposed to slavery and the mistreatment of blacks. These outside fighters always get lost in the debate. People assume that white people had no options in their political and social views.

It's a cop out to excuse racist oppression at any time in history
.


I'm glad that you stated this. Someone in an earlier post stated that Prince's statement that Lincoln was a racist does not take context of time into account. However, I HATE that excuse. As you stated, there were many whites who, regardless of the time, opposed slavery and did not view blacks as inherently inferior to whites. Lincoln's ideologies were racist, which in turn makes him a racist. He, like Thomas Jefferson, is lauded as a great man. However, in my opinion neither of them is great because of their racist beliefs.
perfection is a fallacy of the imagination...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #77 posted 05/20/10 7:19pm

SupaFunkyOrgan
grinderSexy

avatar

bellanoche said:

jdcxc said:

I think people are having a hard time in distinguishing from political theater and artistic license vs. a history lesson. The legacy of Lincoln is way to complex to evaluate in a 5 minute pop song. I interpret Prince's declaration that "Lincoln was a racist" as a attention-getting rallying cry about the falsehoods in the interpretation of American history. It is about getting past what we (black and white) have been taught and developing a new framework and understanding about the same old debate. It's opening a discussion by bashing a holy tenant. Prince has always been the contrarian.

But some truths must be cleared up to continue this discussion:

*Lincoln was instrumental in keeping the country together and pushing forward a path toward the elimination of slavery.

*Lincoln was not an abolishionist. He viewed the end of slavery in more strategic terms. The Emancipation Proclamation only freed slaves in certain confederate states as a military tool. Slavery was not outlawed until the 13th ammendment. He initially ran on a platform that did not explicitly call for the end of slavery. After the Civil War, Lincoln flirted with the idea of sending free blacks back to Africa. He believed in the intellectual superiority and supremacy of whites.

Also, not all whites were racists, supremacists and oppressors. There were many abolishionists, radicals and humanitarians who were opposed to slavery and the mistreatment of blacks. These outside fighters always get lost in the debate. People assume that white people had no options in their political and social views.

It's a cop out to excuse racist oppression at any time in history
.


I'm glad that you stated this. Someone in an earlier post stated that Prince's statement that Lincoln was a racist does not take context of time into account. However, I HATE that excuse. As you stated, there were many whites who, regardless of the time, opposed slavery and did not view blacks as inherently inferior to whites. Lincoln's ideologies were racist, which in turn makes him a racist. He, like Thomas Jefferson, is lauded as a great man. However, in my opinion neither of them is great because of their racist beliefs.


A bad man who did something that actually advanced the black race in this country. I understand why it would hurt you to think of Lincoln as a great president but good or bad he did something that changed the history of this nation. But this agenda has no room for that. it's really bizarre.
2010: Healing the Wounds of the Past.... http://prince.org/msg/8/325740
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #78 posted 05/20/10 7:20pm

mozfonky

avatar

bellanoche said:[quote]

2elijah said:



? Regardless of his "love" of the music, was John Hammond not a white man who got wealthy off of talented black musicians by slumming in Harlem and elsewhere, then thumbing his nose at the white establishment to partially fulfill his own inflated, rebellious savior of the Negro ego?

Anyway, thanks for adding your trademark wisdom and eloquence to this thread. :tuhmbsup:


I don't know much about the finances other than Hammond came from money, didn't need to do anything in music, he loved it. He never made a dollar off of duke and it's just wrong to drag a good man's name through the mud. Was Duke ripped off? yes, but not by Hammond.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #79 posted 05/20/10 7:39pm

mozfonky

avatar

bellanoche said:

mozfonky said:

Prince should have been very careful, white people are the most sensitive people on earth when it comes to stereotypical comments coming their way. Some of us like me shrug our shoulders when some mexican, black or other persuasion is wronged and it comes out on the news, we just realize that's always underneath the surface. People want to deny it they can but it's there. As for the song, I thought Prince was only wrong in trying to feminize and distance his own blackness throughout his career, and like Michael did, only grasped to blackness when it suited him. However, the song itself is a masterpiece, innacurrate lyrics and all. My interpretation was it was a geyser of resentment and self denial expressed itself in that song. I love an emotional artist even if they are a little wrong. His biggest innaccuracy in the song in my mind was his lyrics about John Hammond and Duke Ellington, he was plain wrong about both these men. John Hammond was an integrator and a boon for american culture who discovered and brought out more black and white music than anyone ever. But..., he never had a damned thing to do with Duke Ellington and Duke was a character so monumental, nothing like being black ever contained his personality. He would never have been victimized by anyone to the degree the song tries to portray, and I repeat, he never worked with Hammond. I've heard they had prickly encounters but never did business and never really liked each other, it does not equal what Prince is saying in the song.


I understand what you are saying about not knowing if they worked together. I have no idea. However, I do not think that John Hammond was as wonderful as some people think. He reminds me of many white men who exploited the talents of blacks for their own benefit, especially during the time that he lived. Who knows, Duke being a strong personality might have seen through John Hammond's facade, which might be why they were not fond of each other.I just don't get all warm and fuzzy about stories about him or others like him.

Duke was a strong personality for sure, but he definitely did not reap the rewards of his genius the way he should have. Whether it be a bogus deal with John Hammond or someone like him, Duke got had - maybe not as badly as others, but had nonetheless. Look at Prince, he is a strong personality who knew a lot about the biz going in, and he still got had. Again, not as bad as others, but he still got had. I think that is the parallel he draws in this song though not explicitly stated. There's no difference in mentalities between Lincoln and the slaves, the colonists and the Native Americans, John Hammond and Duke Ellington or WB and Prince.

I think Prince has always known that he was black. He played the game to market himself to mainstream white audiences, who as Arthur Ashes stated in his autobio, "like their blacks in token amounts." So the lie of a mixed Prince with his multi-racial band played much better than light-skinned, two black parents having Prince who listens to Dick Gregory and knows Abraham Lincoln was a racist. However, unlike MJ, Prince has maintained an identifiable blackness, especially in his post-Revolution days after he cemented his legacy. One could take him to task for the fact that he played the game at all, but the difference between MJ and Prince to me is that Prince knew he was playing a game.

Here is an interesting bit on John Hammond that mentions Duke as well.

http://www.press.uchicago...89222.html


Interesting, I have heard that Hammond was paternalistic but that to me is nearly redundant. White people have always been that way, and he is white. So to me, that doesn't disqualify or outweigh his good characteristics. There is always a yin and yang to everyone i've learned so i just try to take people as they are.
[Edited 5/20/10 19:39pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #80 posted 05/20/10 7:50pm

bellanoche

mozfonky said:[quote]

bellanoche said:

2elijah said:



? Regardless of his "love" of the music, was John Hammond not a white man who got wealthy off of talented black musicians by slumming in Harlem and elsewhere, then thumbing his nose at the white establishment to partially fulfill his own inflated, rebellious savior of the Negro ego?

Anyway, thanks for adding your trademark wisdom and eloquence to this thread. thumbs up!


I don't know much about the finances other than Hammond came from money, didn't need to do anything in music, he loved it. He never made a dollar off of duke and it's just wrong to drag a good man's name through the mud. Was Duke ripped off? yes, but not by Hammond.


I don't know if he was a good man or not. I really cannot say. However, based on what I know of him, I do not see him as any different than Leonard or Phil Chess or others like them. I stand by that. Did he help black artists by opening doors for them that only a white man could open at that time? Yes. Did he profit off of those black artists because he was the white man who could open doors for them? Yes. Was Hammond a white man with the superior attitude that he "knew" the Negro or "knew" what was best for the Negro? Yes. Does that tarnish his "legacy" in my opinion? Yes.That was evidenced by his review of Black, Brown and Beige.

Excerpt from Blowin'Hot and Cool by John Gennari:

A monument to Hammond’s self-importance as an arbiter of both political virtue and racial authenticity, the review defined “black music” in narrow ideological and formal terms that Ellington and many other African American musicians have challenged in a number of ways. By implying that the vitality of jazz was necessarily connected to both a specific political program and an exacting definition of “negroid” aesthetics, Hammond’s review posited a standard of purity that not even Hammond’s favored musicians could attain. Count Basie’s band, with its freewheeling riff style and eschewal of written charts, best matched Hammond’s prescription for authentic black jazz. But not even Hammond ascribed the superiority of Basie’s rhythm section to its players’ concerns about the problems of southern sharecroppers. Ellington had his own ideas about what he called “Negro music,” and they were not limited to the three-minute swing dance tunes Hammond would have preferred that he play. Though unwilling to submit to Hammond’s litmus test, Ellington harbored his own ideas about racial authenticity. He asserted that his aim “has always been the development of an authentic Negro music, of which swing is only one element.” Whether performing for social dancers or concert listeners, reveling in syncopated rhythms or writing complex harmonies, Ellington maintained that his musical aesthetic was “definitely and purely racial.” Whether as a jazz composer and bandleader or as a public celebrity, Ellington felt he certainly didn’t need John Hammond to instruct him on how to represent his race.
perfection is a fallacy of the imagination...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #81 posted 05/20/10 8:02pm

mozfonky

avatar

bellanoche said:

mozfonky said:



I don't know much about the finances other than Hammond came from money, didn't need to do anything in music, he loved it. He never made a dollar off of duke and it's just wrong to drag a good man's name through the mud. Was Duke ripped off? yes, but not by Hammond.


I don't know if he was a good man or not. I really cannot say. However, based on what I know of him, I do not see him as any different than Leonard or Phil Chess or others like them. I stand by that. Did he help black artists by opening doors for them that only a white man could open at that time? Yes. Did he profit off of those black artists because he was the white man who could open doors for them? Yes. Was Hammond a white man with the superior attitude that he "knew" the Negro or "knew" what was best for the Negro? Yes. Does that tarnish his "legacy" in my opinion? Yes.That was evidenced by his review of Black, Brown and Beige.

Well, you're standards are higher than mine, in a way, I really don't expect much of white people so when one of them is halfway decent I give the kudos. Personally, if i had it my way, i would never answer to a white man again, ever. I personally have missed a lot of "opportunities"
Excerpt from Blowin'Hot and Cool by John Gennari:

A monument to Hammond’s self-importance as an arbiter of both political virtue and racial authenticity, the review defined “black music” in narrow ideological and formal terms that Ellington and many other African American musicians have challenged in a number of ways. By implying that the vitality of jazz was necessarily connected to both a specific political program and an exacting definition of “negroid” aesthetics, Hammond’s review posited a standard of purity that not even Hammond’s favored musicians could attain. Count Basie’s band, with its freewheeling riff style and eschewal of written charts, best matched Hammond’s prescription for authentic black jazz. But not even Hammond ascribed the superiority of Basie’s rhythm section to its players’ concerns about the problems of southern sharecroppers. Ellington had his own ideas about what he called “Negro music,” and they were not limited to the three-minute swing dance tunes Hammond would have preferred that he play. Though unwilling to submit to Hammond’s litmus test, Ellington harbored his own ideas about racial authenticity. He asserted that his aim “has always been the development of an authentic Negro music, of which swing is only one element.” Whether performing for social dancers or concert listeners, reveling in syncopated rhythms or writing complex harmonies, Ellington maintained that his musical aesthetic was “definitely and purely racial.” Whether as a jazz composer and bandleader or as a public celebrity, Ellington felt he certainly didn’t need John Hammond to instruct him on how to represent his race.


Well, you're standards are higher than mine, in a way, I really don't expect much of white people so when one of them is halfway decent I give the kudos. Personally, if i had it my way, i would never answer to a white man again, ever. I personally have missed a lot of "opportunities" because i just won't bend with them, and i don't say that in a proud way, i say it in a way that I really don't know what to do about it because it's usually a white face we look at in a power position, they usually are very arrogant and say either blatant or subtle insulting things to try and keep you down and if you don't shut your mouth you will be gone. Recently, I worked for an Indian, you know what? he was even crazier and more arrogant and much more incosistent, leaving me feeling that I would rather work for white people and would never work for an indian again, I really loathe my own people these days, sad but true. As far as the chess bros, well, Chuck berry was always protective of them and had good dealings and never said a word against them, that speaks volumes to me because chuck is an asshole. If they were that bad he would not have actually lied on their behalfs to make them look good. Anyway, speaking of race, it's an old fucking story, Chuck Berry actually had "Indian" on his driver's license in the 50's (as if that was higher on the social ladder?) he also tried to whiten his pics and pass himself off as hawaiain. We all have the illness, it's the whites who want to fake all the indignation and deny it's around and that's ok with me.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #82 posted 05/20/10 8:34pm

bellanoche

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:


A bad man who did something that actually advanced the black race in this country. I understand why it would hurt you to think of Lincoln as a great president but good or bad he did something that changed the history" of this nation. But this agenda has no room for that. it's really bizarre.


Since people have brought up Hitler in this thread, the same could be said of him. "Good or bad he did something that changed the history" of Germany.

It doesn't "hurt" me to think of Lincoln as a great president. The declaration of Lincoln's racism is just fact based on his own words. Facts don't "hurt" me like they apparently "hurt" some here. For example, it doesn't hurt me that it is raining in Chicago tonight. It's just a fact. Abraham Lincoln was a racist. That is just a fact. He believed that the black race should be subjugated because they are black and that the white race should maintain a superior position to blacks - whether free or not. That, my dear, is racist.

I am not debating the role he was forced into playing in this country to keep it together. The role the he was forced into by increased slave uprisings and an abolitionist movement spearheaded by whites who, unlike Lincoln, did not hold the racist belief that blacks were inferior to whites or that the races should be separated.

I have no agenda other than to discuss facts, which are not debatable. What is funny to me is the "agenda" of people who keep pointing to Lincoln's involvement with the Emancipation Proclamation and the 13th Ammendment as a way to distract us from the fact of his racist beliefs. Honestly, one thing has nothing to do with the other. He signed the Emancipation Proclamation/13th Ammendment because it made sense for the future of the country. As the president of the nation, he had to do what was best for the nation. It was not a statement about his beliefs about blacks, who he deemed should be inferior to whites.

What's even funnier is that some of you are calling Prince a racist for a song that relates these very facts. Yet, you will not place that moniker on Lincoln who said the following:

"I will say then that I am not, nor ever have been in favor of bringing about in anyway the social and political equality of the white and black races - that I am not nor ever have been in favor of making voters or jurors of negroes, nor of qualifying them to hold office, nor to intermarry with white people; and I will say in addition to this that there is a physical difference between the white and black races which I believe will forever forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality. And inasmuch as they cannot so live, while they do remain together there must be the position of superior and inferior, and I as much as any other man am in favor of having the superior position assigned to the white race. I say upon this occasion I do not perceive that because the white man is to have the superior position the negro should be denied everything."

-Fourth Debate with Stephen A. Douglas at Charleston, Illinois, September 18, 1858 (The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln edited by Roy P. Basler, Volume III, pp. 145-146.)


and this

"If I could save the Union without freeing any slaves, I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do it, and if I could do it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would also do that"

-Lincoln, (Voices of America, p.138).
perfection is a fallacy of the imagination...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #83 posted 05/20/10 8:42pm

BlackandRising

tricky99 said:

Genesia said:



yeahthat

Prince swallowed Lerone Bennett whole - and this song was the sorry outcome. As ridiculous as the whole chemtrails thing. disbelief
[Edited 5/20/10 9:14am]


You are talking but you are not enlightening. Spell out your views. What exactly is "ridiculous"?
[Edited 5/20/10 9:24am]


you expect way too much here
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #84 posted 05/20/10 8:57pm

2elijah

Fenwick said:

2elijah said:



What happened in America's history is part of the reason many of us are here today. The part that this country is so afraid to discuss out in the open :: shhh not so loud someone may hear us:: is pretty much always dismissed as though the individuals lives' who suffered during that time period, were worhtless.

I think it is sad that we tend to be hush, hush ( even in song), about the enslavement of blacks in America and also how the Natives were invaded on their own land, but yet America seems to have no problem discussing the Holocaust out in the open, adding value to it and recognizing the lives/existence of those that suffered and survived through it.

This is the reason I see these discussion divisive, not because of exposing the details of those tragedies, but basically the fact that the sufferings of specific groups are constantly dismissed, as though their lives had no importance and value, yet all Americans today, continue to reap the benefits of those particular groups' sufferings.
[Edited 5/20/10 18:27pm]


I'm not going to get drawn into this with you 2elijah.

I heap a ton of praise upon the song and give you my reasons for not wanting to engage.

You think it's brilliant, insightful and that it tells the truth. The truth you want to hear and embrace. I don't. And my desire not to enter into it has NOTHING to do with fear. And I'm also not trying to stifle/hush any further discussions you and others may want to have. Have at it.

Again, like on another thread you and I went back and forth on recently, it comes down to the AGENDA people want to push on threads like this.

Sorry, but Prince lobbing a grenade isn't the forum for it and certainly isn't a means to whatever predetermined truth any of us think we know. If you step back and think about it, do you REALLY think there is anythiing I could say to sway your mind on this issue? Really? (And I'm not being confrontational, I'm genuinely asking you a question).

You're smart. Well spoken. Assertive. And confident in what you believe. I might as well try to knock down a brick wall with a tennis ball. (That is not a judgment of whether your stance is right or wrong, just a commentary on the firmness of your beliefs).

But again, because this point will get overlooked, I LOVE this song!!!

The shock value of the lyrics aside.


(Bolded part) Thanks for the compliment and a bit of your humor. We're not joined at the hip when expressing individual opinions, so if we disagree, we just disagree and I'm fine with that.

You say I hear the truth in "Avalanche' because that is what I "Want to hear and embrace," but it's not about what "I want to hear and embrace', it's that historical facts back up what Prince stated about Lincoln, Wounded Knee, and greedy/manipulative people in the music industry that took advantage of many black artists at that time (one artist he named as an example in that song) So my opinion has nothing to do with what "I want to hear and embrace" it has to do with historical facts.

I will say this though, I do believe that no one has s right to tell Prince or any artist, when is the right place or time to express political, historical, social or economic views, regardless if it's in song. No matter where Prince expresses those views, i.e, in a round-table discussion publically or at a one-on-one interview, many fans will still criticize him for discussing those type of issues, while basically telling him, he doesn't have a right to express those views, without their approval.

That makes no sense, none of us own Prince, and I think often, fans forget he's an individual with his own views of the world, and has a right to express those views, just as we do.

You don't have to agree with him, but he has the personal right to express his opinions of social/political/economic situations/historical events. Many say the statement of Lincoln that Prince mentioned in Avalanche was shocking, but it seems many were more upset, than shocked, that he expressed the reality of an ugly truth.
[Edited 5/20/10 21:27pm]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #85 posted 05/20/10 8:59pm

bellanoche

mozfonky said:


Well, you're standards are higher than mine, in a way, I really don't expect much of white people so when one of them is halfway decent I give the kudos. Personally, if i had it my way, i would never answer to a white man again, ever. I personally have missed a lot of "opportunities" because i just won't bend with them, and i don't say that in a proud way, i say it in a way that I really don't know what to do about it because it's usually a white face we look at in a power position, they usually are very arrogant and say either blatant or subtle insulting things to try and keep you down and if you don't shut your mouth you will be gone. Recently, I worked for an Indian, you know what? he was even crazier and more arrogant and much more incosistent, leaving me feeling that I would rather work for white people and would never work for an indian again, I really loathe my own people these days, sad but true. As far as the chess bros, well, Chuck berry was always protective of them and had good dealings and never said a word against them, that speaks volumes to me because chuck is an asshole. If they were that bad he would not have actually lied on their behalfs to make them look good. Anyway, speaking of race, it's an old fucking story, Chuck Berry actually had "Indian" on his driver's license in the 50's (as if that was higher on the social ladder?) he also tried to whiten his pics and pass himself off as hawaiain. We all have the illness, it's the whites who want to fake all the indignation and deny it's around and that's ok with me.


Wow! I really appreciate the honesty of your post. I feel so much of what your are saying and the pain and frustration from which it springs. I am reading Paul Mooney's book "Black is the New White," and he talks quite a bit about these realities and why his career went the way it did. It is, indeed, an old story that keeps repeating itself because, as this thread indicates, folks are afraid of the truth. That means we're stuck in quicksand.

Side note about Chuck Berry: Remember that Chuck was very smart about his music and business. Chuck was a different breed of cat.so the Chess brothers were not able to rip him off the way they did many of the other artists at Chess.
perfection is a fallacy of the imagination...
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #86 posted 05/21/10 4:07am

Celeste7

avatar

The truth may break your heart, but lies will rot the soul.
Please read the Ghost Dance by John Norman...
A novel exploring the assimilation of Native Americans, and the sequence of events leading up to, and including the Massacre at Wounded knee. I could barely breathe through the sobs that wracked me as I read through the uncompromising account of what really went down on that fateful day.
I had not long finished the book before I first heard this track, and aside from any factual inaccuracies (Which I am not qualified to speak on!) the emotional pitch of the song beautifully reflects the tradgedy of assumed colonial superiority, and the almost unspeakable brutality committed in its wake. The bittersweet tone of the melody speaks to me of an acknowledgemnt of Human atrocity, and a quiet rage which may strengthen our resolve to never repeat these heinous acts again.
These are the lessons History holds for us. Do we take notice and vow to move forward to a more enlightened future, or deny the reality of the past, and be therefore doomed to forever replicate the horrific acts borne from the darkest side of Human nature. The choice is ours.....
[Edited 5/21/10 4:19am]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #87 posted 05/21/10 5:08am

tricky99

avatar

Really great discussion guys. I'd like to thank everyone for contributing to this topic.

It's funny how very few of the negative reactions to the song seem to really get down to the heart of what Prince's message is. Racism, genocide, and even war are carried out by individuals. We all have a personal responsibilty to not be a "snowflake" in the "Avalanche". The houlocaust is mainly identified with Hitler and his henchman but there were literally millions of Germans who made the houlocaust possible whether they turned on the gas or just turned a blind eye.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #88 posted 05/21/10 5:57am

jaawwnn

I would have thought most people's problem with this song is Prince suddenly deciding that he's an expert on American History.

Maybe he should have included a bibliography
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #89 posted 05/21/10 6:45am

2elijah

SupaFunkyOrgangrinderSexy said:

bellanoche said:



I'm confused by the people who keep referring to this song as "misguided" or "confused." Can those of you who feel this way please explain to me waht is misguided or confusing about the information provided in this song?

The information provided might be factually correct but without Lincoln's actions which is intentionally being diminished, the black race would have been F*cked even more. This is a fact which goes unrecognized too.....

It does not go unrecognized that Lincoln was involved in the freeing of slaves in the U.S., just because people are "outing" the facts of his intentions, but let's also clear something up-Lincoln was not responsible for the freedom of all "Blacks", and to say that the black race would have been "f*cked" more, as you stated in your post, if Lincoln didn't free them, well their lives were already in that way, under the enslaved conditions that was forced on them. Eventually if it wasn't Lincoln it would have been someone else, as there were other whites, who were disturbed by the enslavement of Blacks, and many whose names will never be known, who helped many slaves escaped. Lincoln does not deserve the sole credit for that.

Lincoln also was not responsible for the "freeing" of all Blacks, so again, to say the "black race" would have been "f*cked" as you stated, if it wasn't for Lincoln's intentions, is not true, since Lincoln had absolutely, positively no nothing to do with the freeing slaves in the Caribbean or in other countries. So let's not give him someone else's credit or forget the fact that there were slave rebellions in the Caribbean among the Natives and Africans, as well as in the U.S.

Lincoln's intentions to free the slaves in the U.S., was not because he loved them and saw them as equals to whites, because he did not view them that way, and telling the truth about Lincoln's intentions to free the slaves, is not attacking him, it is only "outing" a truth that should have been exposed years ago, and while some may be bothered by that ugly truth, the question is, how long will many of America's educational institutions oontinue to teach future generations "comfortable lies?" It's never a crime to reveal an "uncomfortable truth" but is seems some folks will always see it that way,

Prince committed no crime in expressing historical facts in a song, and I think many who are bothered by some of those lyrics in "Avalanche" may be upset by those lyrics, because those uncomfortable truths was revealed by one of their favorite artists. I've read similar reactions from fans to the lyrics in "Dreamer". Just my opinion. shrug
[Edited 5/21/10 7:00am]
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 3 of 6 <123456>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > Prince: Music and More > Avalanche