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Reply #120 posted 06/17/16 3:27pm

EmmaMcG

jaypotton said:

djThunderfunk said:



jaypotton said:


djThunderfunk said:



I'm not sure I understand your point. Are you saying that an artist is responsible for how people may react to the art?

Nonsense. Movies, books, songs, paintings, etc have long portrayed murderers, rapists, terrorists, whathaveyou. It is not the responsibility of the creator of the art to ensure that people of "lower intelligence or warped psychology" can tell the difference between fiction and condoning an evil act. If this were true bookstores, video stores & music stores (okay Netflix, Amazon & iTunes) would hardly have anything to sell.

In our society we don't dumb everything down in fear of the setting such people off. It's art. It's fiction. In this case it's art that the artist decided to not release. I am amazed at how twisted people are getting over lyrics they legally should not have heard.




So I will ask my question again (revised)... If the lyrics had been about Prince committing mass murder or being a child molester (with no guilt or consequence or indication that Prince himself was disgusted by the act) then would that be ok too? And yes I absolutely do think an artist has a responsibility to be clear on whether they feel a heinous act such as rape is wrong or acceptable. I am not by any means advocating censorship but I do believe an artist needs to make a statement rather being morally ambiguous. Let's face it, the world is full of nutters, just look at what happened in Orlando! It isn't that much of a stretch of the imagination that some nutter a Prince fan decided rape was ok because Prince "said so" or at least "indicated it was ok because he would do it"! Oh and saying movies books etc have portrayed these type of people...yes indeed but very rarely if ever from a morally ambiguous or ambivalent position! A post earlier refers to Kubriks Clockwork Orange. Now any sane person watching that was disgusted by it and the "hero" gets his just deserts. However, some nutters went out and copied the film. What did the artist do? He withdrew it from cinemas and had it banned (in the UK) for years. That is being responsible. I guess Prince did the same as he didn't release it with the rape lyrics. [Edited 6/17/16 9:27am]


- There are plenty of songs, books, movies, etc that have characters that commit mass murder or molesting children already, and yes that is okay to depict in art in a free society, whether deplorable or not. I will not opine on what if Prince did it as he did not.

- In a free society we do not restrict our speech or our art so as to not set off "nutters".

- Your last statement is correct, Prince did not release it. Therefore he has no responsibility at all to those that have listened to it through illicit means.




You are missing the point. Those books and movies rarely if ever depict those committing the crimes as the heroes. There are consequences for their actions. It doesn't glamourise the acts.

AND you still didn't answer my question. If prince had sung about being a child molester would that be ok?
[Edited 6/17/16 14:46pm]



The average action movie shows the hero murder lots of people without blinking an eye but almost always with a cool liner. So I think that's an example of glamourising murder...

As for singing about being a child molester, of course that wouldn't be OK. Not in my opinion anyway. I wouldn't want to hear it. So I just wouldn't listen to it. If other people see no harm in it, I wouldn't judge them for liking such a song. As long as they're not actually molesting kids, then they're free to listen to and say whatever they want.
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Reply #121 posted 06/17/16 3:45pm

morningsong

Even the music changes at that part that says a lot.

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Reply #122 posted 06/17/16 3:50pm

FUNKNROLL

.

.

[Edited 6/18/16 13:48pm]

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Reply #123 posted 06/17/16 5:05pm

djThunderfunk

avatar

jaypotton said:

djThunderfunk said:

- There are plenty of songs, books, movies, etc that have characters that commit mass murder or molesting children already, and yes that is okay to depict in art in a free society, whether deplorable or not. I will not opine on what if Prince did it as he did not.

- In a free society we do not restrict our speech or our art so as to not set off "nutters".

- Your last statement is correct, Prince did not release it. Therefore he has no responsibility at all to those that have listened to it through illicit means.


You are missing the point. Those books and movies rarely if ever depict those committing the crimes as the heroes. There are consequences for their actions. It doesn't glamourise the acts. AND you still didn't answer my question. If prince had sung about being a child molester would that be ok? [Edited 6/17/16 14:46pm]

You are missing my point. Prince never published the lyrics in question. They were released illegally. He should not be judged for them.

AND I did say that I would NOT answer the question. Prince did not sing about being a child molester so I refuse to entertain the fantasy of "what if he did".




[Edited 6/17/16 17:21pm]

Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors.
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Reply #124 posted 06/17/16 11:44pm

jaypotton

EmmaMcG said:

The average action movie shows the hero murder lots of people without blinking an eye but almost always with a cool liner. So I think that's an example of glamourising murder...


Actually that is is very good point, you are right. I guess what those movies are saying is at murder is fine as long as you are killing the bad guys!
'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything.
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Reply #125 posted 06/17/16 11:59pm

jaypotton

djThunderfunk said:



jaypotton said:


djThunderfunk said:



- There are plenty of songs, books, movies, etc that have characters that commit mass murder or molesting children already, and yes that is okay to depict in art in a free society, whether deplorable or not. I will not opine on what if Prince did it as he did not.

- In a free society we do not restrict our speech or our art so as to not set off "nutters".

- Your last statement is correct, Prince did not release it. Therefore he has no responsibility at all to those that have listened to it through illicit means.




You are missing the point. Those books and movies rarely if ever depict those committing the crimes as the heroes. There are consequences for their actions. It doesn't glamourise the acts. AND you still didn't answer my question. If prince had sung about being a child molester would that be ok? [Edited 6/17/16 14:46pm]


You are missing my point. Prince never published the lyrics in question. They were released illegally. He should not be judged for them.

AND I did say that I would NOT answer the question. Prince did not sing about being a child molester so I refuse to entertain the fantasy of "what if he did".






[Edited 6/17/16 17:21pm]



Well we clearly have different views on what is and isn't acceptable. I have not said and nor do I judge Prince.

By refusing to answer my question you are swerving the issue at hand...that is where is the line that gets crossed? I am assuming you think rape is wrong ergo child molesting or murder is wrong? So what I don't understand is why in your opinion it is okay to sing about rape in a morally ambiguous way but you haven't said whether it would be alright to sing about child molesting? This isn't about a fantasy "what if" situation, this is about understanding where your moral compass is at? It is hard to have a debate when one of the parties involved refuses to be clear on the fundamental point being discussed.

The OP asked how we felt about the rape lyrics and I gave my opinion. For my moral compass singing about rape in a morally ambiguous way is wrong (just as it would be for other hideous crimes). I am not saying Prince should not sing about rape, but in doing so his position on it should be clear. IMO artists do have a responsibility to make their position on a subject clear rather than ambiguous. Prince was responsible because the song was never officially released in that format and when he did release it he changed it.

I think that is the nature of art, the best can stimulate debate on difficult subjects (clearly this is one). However, I think artists (and I am not talking specifically about Prince here) who hide behind moral ambiguity are actually being lazy and using a hackneyed conceit to get their work discussed rather than making a statement (which is actually far more brave because you are being definitive rather than saying..."oh it is up to you to interpret how you want" that just says to me that the artist doesn't have a voice and is being controversial for self promotion.

I am totally NOT a supporter of censorship but I personally prefer an artist to be clear on where they stand. Extra loveable in it's original form would have been more palatable (to me) if Prince could have worked in some form of self reprimand or further lyric to show that he had shocked himself and wouldn't do it really.

As a sane person nobody could argue that rape is ok. But not everyone in the world is sane! There are many many who are insane so why give gem ammunition! As a sane person I do not for one minute think Prince was advocating rape or saying he would do it...but what about the looney down the road?
[Edited 6/18/16 0:03am]
[Edited 6/18/16 0:05am]
[Edited 6/18/16 0:08am]
'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything.
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Reply #126 posted 06/18/16 12:56am

databank

avatar

As a straight but queer man who's been sexually abused by a woman as a child, and as a feminist, I certainly do not feel very excited about the notion of P apparently endorsing rape in some of his lyrics.

However:

1/ There is a lot of sexual violence in 1999 (Let's Pretend, Automatic, Lady Cab Driver...), and yes it is art, and Prince's work at the time was a lot about expressing the unbearable sexual frustrations of a young man, and his sentimental misery (Something in The Water, How Come, Computer Blue, Nikki, Beautiful Ones...). The young man may or may not be Prince: songs can be fiction and are often a gross exaggeration of reality. As Ufoclub once said, Prince's songs tend to make everything super-intense, from religion to love to sex to any topic he addressed.

2/ Prince has always been a feminist in more way than one, and lots of songs express his feminist views, so it's more like 2 songs that he wrote for himself, where he just snapped. After all both are unreleased and we were never supposed 2 hear them. He also wrote a horrible thing about overweight people with Work That Fat. When he wrote for Morris some lyrics were super macho. Artists are entitled to creating dark and extreme works that do not necessarily express their opinion. In the end Prince will mostly be remembered as a feminist artist.


3/ It seems Extraloveable was considered for V6: whether it was written for V6 or not, this is how P considered releasing it at the time. Then the reversal (a woman saying the rape line) would have made it a feminist provocation, a daring thing for a woman to say in 1982. I dig that!


4/ Prince evidently chose to suppress the rape line when he finally released the song.


5/ I believe for the sake of human heritage those 2 tacks deserve to be released eventually, as such. Censoring works of art is what fascists and communists do, I can't ever, ever consone that for any reason whatsoever. Extraloveable 82 and Lust U Always won't be #1 at the Top 40 u know, so it's not like every 13 year old boy will hear them. And if by any chance one ever does and think, as said above, that "if Prince said so it's cool", we can't possibly censor the song because there are idiots in the world. Once again songs are works of fiction, even if based on real feelings or experience. Fiction has a right to portray wrong ideas.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #127 posted 06/18/16 1:04am

databank

avatar

jaypotton said:

djThunderfunk said:

You are missing my point. Prince never published the lyrics in question. They were released illegally. He should not be judged for them.

AND I did say that I would NOT answer the question. Prince did not sing about being a child molester so I refuse to entertain the fantasy of "what if he did".




[Edited 6/17/16 17:21pm]

Well we clearly have different views on what is and isn't acceptable. I have not said and nor do I judge Prince. By refusing to answer my question you are swerving the issue at hand...that is where is the line that gets crossed? I am assuming you think rape is wrong ergo child molesting or murder is wrong? So what I don't understand is why in your opinion it is okay to sing about rape in a morally ambiguous way but you haven't said whether it would be alright to sing about child molesting? This isn't about a fantasy "what if" situation, this is about understanding where your moral compass is at? It is hard to have a debate when one of the parties involved refuses to be clear on the fundamental point being discussed. The OP asked how we felt about the rape lyrics and I gave my opinion. For my moral compass singing about rape in a morally ambiguous way is wrong (just as it would be for other hideous crimes). I am not saying Prince should not sing about rape, but in doing so his position on it should be clear. IMO artists do have a responsibility to make their position on a subject clear rather than ambiguous. Prince was responsible because the song was never officially released in that format and when he did release it he changed it. I think that is the nature of art, the best can stimulate debate on difficult subjects (clearly this is one). However, I think artists (and I am not talking specifically about Prince here) who hide behind moral ambiguity are actually being lazy and using a hackneyed conceit to get their work discussed rather than making a statement (which is actually far more brave because you are being definitive rather than saying..."oh it is up to you to interpret how you want" that just says to me that the artist doesn't have a voice and is being controversial for self promotion. I am totally NOT a supporter of censorship but I personally prefer an artist to be clear on where they stand. Extra loveable in it's original form would have been more palatable (to me) if Prince could have worked in some form of self reprimand or further lyric to show that he had shocked himself and wouldn't do it really. As a sane person nobody could argue that rape is ok. But not everyone in the world is sane! There are many many who are insane so why give gem ammunition! As a sane person I do not for one minute think Prince was advocating rape or saying he would do it...but what about the looney down the road? [Edited 6/18/16 0:03am] [Edited 6/18/16 0:05am] [Edited 6/18/16 0:08am]

Prince didn't release this so I agree with Thunder: he can't be held responsible for looneys hearing the song.

In the end if he had, sang by himself, then there would be cause for debate about it and he certainly would have been attacked on all fronts and would have had to explain himself, as every artist who release a work of art that appears to condone a criminal activity has (remember Oliver Stone and Natural Born Killers?).

But he didn't. he didn't want us to hear it. He didn't want it out. Therefore Prince can't be asked to make amends later in the song. When he released it in 2011 there was no rape line anymore. And if we found a song in the vault advocating fist-fucking toddlers I would say the same: it would be weird for sure, but Prince couldn't be accused of inciting people to do it because the song would have stayed in the vault.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #128 posted 06/18/16 5:41am

jaypotton

databank said:



jaypotton said:


djThunderfunk said:



You are missing my point. Prince never published the lyrics in question. They were released illegally. He should not be judged for them.

AND I did say that I would NOT answer the question. Prince did not sing about being a child molester so I refuse to entertain the fantasy of "what if he did".







[Edited 6/17/16 17:21pm]



Well we clearly have different views on what is and isn't acceptable. I have not said and nor do I judge Prince. By refusing to answer my question you are swerving the issue at hand...that is where is the line that gets crossed? I am assuming you think rape is wrong ergo child molesting or murder is wrong? So what I don't understand is why in your opinion it is okay to sing about rape in a morally ambiguous way but you haven't said whether it would be alright to sing about child molesting? This isn't about a fantasy "what if" situation, this is about understanding where your moral compass is at? It is hard to have a debate when one of the parties involved refuses to be clear on the fundamental point being discussed. The OP asked how we felt about the rape lyrics and I gave my opinion. For my moral compass singing about rape in a morally ambiguous way is wrong (just as it would be for other hideous crimes). I am not saying Prince should not sing about rape, but in doing so his position on it should be clear. IMO artists do have a responsibility to make their position on a subject clear rather than ambiguous. Prince was responsible because the song was never officially released in that format and when he did release it he changed it. I think that is the nature of art, the best can stimulate debate on difficult subjects (clearly this is one). However, I think artists (and I am not talking specifically about Prince here) who hide behind moral ambiguity are actually being lazy and using a hackneyed conceit to get their work discussed rather than making a statement (which is actually far more brave because you are being definitive rather than saying..."oh it is up to you to interpret how you want" that just says to me that the artist doesn't have a voice and is being controversial for self promotion. I am totally NOT a supporter of censorship but I personally prefer an artist to be clear on where they stand. Extra loveable in it's original form would have been more palatable (to me) if Prince could have worked in some form of self reprimand or further lyric to show that he had shocked himself and wouldn't do it really. As a sane person nobody could argue that rape is ok. But not everyone in the world is sane! There are many many who are insane so why give gem ammunition! As a sane person I do not for one minute think Prince was advocating rape or saying he would do it...but what about the looney down the road? [Edited 6/18/16 0:03am] [Edited 6/18/16 0:05am] [Edited 6/18/16 0:08am]

Prince didn't release this so I agree with Thunder: he can't be held responsible for looneys hearing the song.


In the end if he had, sang by himself, then there would be cause for debate about it and he certainly would have been attacked on all fronts and would have had to explain himself, as every artist who release a work of art that appears to condone a criminal activity has (remember Oliver Stone and Natural Born Killers?).


But he didn't. he didn't want us to hear it. He didn't want it out. Therefore Prince can't be asked to make amends later in the song. When he released it in 2011 there was no rape line anymore. And if we found a song in the vault advocating fist-fucking toddlers I would say the same: it would be weird for sure, but Prince couldn't be accused of inciting people to do it because the song would have stayed in the vault.



Yeah cool as I said I was not questioning Prince or his motives. Totally acknowledged several times he did not release it. However, the discussion was broader and ventured into art per se.

I will stick to my position that an artist is being lazy and using a hackneyed cliche to say "it is up to you to interpret". Even though I would not agree I would have more respect for an artist who said "I think rape is ok" than someone who could be misconstrued as thinking it was ok. As an artist you still have responsibilities and do need to recognise the potential impact of what you say, show or do.

And databank I am sorry but if there was a song in the vault about fist fucking toddlers (that was ambiguous as to whether Prince thought that was good or bad) then I hope it would make any sane human being question what kind of monster he was rather than just think "it was weird"!!!!


[Edited 6/18/16 5:41am]
[Edited 6/18/16 5:45am]
[Edited 6/18/16 5:52am]
'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything.
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Reply #129 posted 06/18/16 5:51am

djThunderfunk

avatar

jaypotton said:

djThunderfunk said:

You are missing my point. Prince never published the lyrics in question. They were released illegally. He should not be judged for them.

AND I did say that I would NOT answer the question. Prince did not sing about being a child molester so I refuse to entertain the fantasy of "what if he did".




[Edited 6/17/16 17:21pm]

Well we clearly have different views on what is and isn't acceptable. I have not said and nor do I judge Prince. By refusing to answer my question you are swerving the issue at hand...that is where is the line that gets crossed? I am assuming you think rape is wrong ergo child molesting or murder is wrong? So what I don't understand is why in your opinion it is okay to sing about rape in a morally ambiguous way but you haven't said whether it would be alright to sing about child molesting? This isn't about a fantasy "what if" situation, this is about understanding where your moral compass is at? It is hard to have a debate when one of the parties involved refuses to be clear on the fundamental point being discussed. The OP asked how we felt about the rape lyrics and I gave my opinion. For my moral compass singing about rape in a morally ambiguous way is wrong (just as it would be for other hideous crimes). I am not saying Prince should not sing about rape, but in doing so his position on it should be clear. IMO artists do have a responsibility to make their position on a subject clear rather than ambiguous. Prince was responsible because the song was never officially released in that format and when he did release it he changed it. I think that is the nature of art, the best can stimulate debate on difficult subjects (clearly this is one). However, I think artists (and I am not talking specifically about Prince here) who hide behind moral ambiguity are actually being lazy and using a hackneyed conceit to get their work discussed rather than making a statement (which is actually far more brave because you are being definitive rather than saying..."oh it is up to you to interpret how you want" that just says to me that the artist doesn't have a voice and is being controversial for self promotion. I am totally NOT a supporter of censorship but I personally prefer an artist to be clear on where they stand. Extra loveable in it's original form would have been more palatable (to me) if Prince could have worked in some form of self reprimand or further lyric to show that he had shocked himself and wouldn't do it really. As a sane person nobody could argue that rape is ok. But not everyone in the world is sane! There are many many who are insane so why give gem ammunition! As a sane person I do not for one minute think Prince was advocating rape or saying he would do it...but what about the looney down the road? [Edited 6/18/16 0:03am] [Edited 6/18/16 0:05am] [Edited 6/18/16 0:08am]


- NO. I'm not entertaining that question because it is not on point. Prince did not write about those subjects, he did write Extraloveable. That is the discussion, not "what if he wrote something he didn't". As far as finding my moral compass, see post #116.

- You say you're not judging Prince in one sentence and then you judge him in another: "singing about rape in a morally ambiguous way is wrong".

- I do not giving a flying fukkk about "the looney down the road". I do not believe that as a society we should dumb down art in fear that it might set off such people. That's a dangerous road to go down and will always lead to censorship. There used to be a group known as the PMRC. They were specifically worried about how lyrics affected children. In that case I felt the same, it is not the artist's responsibility to worry about the children, that is for the parents. Some people today believe that art should not offend Muslim extremists so as to no set them off. Art should never be restricted or stifled by such concerns.

- Bottom line: Prince did not publish the lyrics. Judging him for writing lyrics that he chose not to publish is unfair NO MATTER what the subject is (in this case rape). As he did not release the lyrics he is NOT responsible for providing a way for you or anyone else to find them morally acceptable. He already did the responsible thing by self censoring so if anything he should be commended.

[Edited 6/18/16 6:01am]

Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors.
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Reply #130 posted 06/18/16 7:43am

Blakbear

My response to this one is " Meh." He wrote about sex with his sister, for chrissakes, are you really surprised he would write about rape?

I don't think he would have done either, nor do I think he would have condoned either. And he obviously thought he'd gone a little too far and revised the song.

I can see how it would be upsetting for others, though, anf I can't in good conscience expect those ot offendee to just 'get over it'. They have a right to be offended by it; who am I to tell them they can't be because it's art? Rape is an uncomfortable subject, and a terrifying experience.
[Edited 6/18/16 7:47am]
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Reply #131 posted 06/18/16 8:04am

djThunderfunk

avatar

Blakbear said:

I can't in good conscience expect those ot offendee to just 'get over it'. They have a right to be offended by it; who am I to tell them they can't be because it's art? Rape is an uncomfortable subject, and a terrifying experience.


I agree that those that hear it have a right to be offended by it. That is absolutely true.

I still maintain, any judgement of Prince for writing it should be tempered by the fact that he did not publish it.

wink

Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors.
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Reply #132 posted 06/18/16 9:05am

jaypotton

djThunderfunk said:



jaypotton said:


djThunderfunk said:



You are missing my point. Prince never published the lyrics in question. They were released illegally. He should not be judged for them.

AND I did say that I would NOT answer the question. Prince did not sing about being a child molester so I refuse to entertain the fantasy of "what if he did".







[Edited 6/17/16 17:21pm]



Well we clearly have different views on what is and isn't acceptable. I have not said and nor do I judge Prince. By refusing to answer my question you are swerving the issue at hand...that is where is the line that gets crossed? I am assuming you think rape is wrong ergo child molesting or murder is wrong? So what I don't understand is why in your opinion it is okay to sing about rape in a morally ambiguous way but you haven't said whether it would be alright to sing about child molesting? This isn't about a fantasy "what if" situation, this is about understanding where your moral compass is at? It is hard to have a debate when one of the parties involved refuses to be clear on the fundamental point being discussed. The OP asked how we felt about the rape lyrics and I gave my opinion. For my moral compass singing about rape in a morally ambiguous way is wrong (just as it would be for other hideous crimes). I am not saying Prince should not sing about rape, but in doing so his position on it should be clear. IMO artists do have a responsibility to make their position on a subject clear rather than ambiguous. Prince was responsible because the song was never officially released in that format and when he did release it he changed it. I think that is the nature of art, the best can stimulate debate on difficult subjects (clearly this is one). However, I think artists (and I am not talking specifically about Prince here) who hide behind moral ambiguity are actually being lazy and using a hackneyed conceit to get their work discussed rather than making a statement (which is actually far more brave because you are being definitive rather than saying..."oh it is up to you to interpret how you want" that just says to me that the artist doesn't have a voice and is being controversial for self promotion. I am totally NOT a supporter of censorship but I personally prefer an artist to be clear on where they stand. Extra loveable in it's original form would have been more palatable (to me) if Prince could have worked in some form of self reprimand or further lyric to show that he had shocked himself and wouldn't do it really. As a sane person nobody could argue that rape is ok. But not everyone in the world is sane! There are many many who are insane so why give gem ammunition! As a sane person I do not for one minute think Prince was advocating rape or saying he would do it...but what about the looney down the road? [Edited 6/18/16 0:03am] [Edited 6/18/16 0:05am] [Edited 6/18/16 0:08am]


- NO. I'm not entertaining that question because it is not on point. Prince did not write about those subjects, he did write Extraloveable. That is the discussion, not "what if he wrote something he didn't". As far as finding my moral compass, see post #116.

- You say you're not judging Prince in one sentence and then you judge him in another: "singing about rape in a morally ambiguous way is wrong".

- I do not giving a flying fukkk about "the looney down the road". I do not believe that as a society we should dumb down art in fear that it might set off such people. That's a dangerous road to go down and will always lead to censorship. There used to be a group known as the PMRC. They were specifically worried about how lyrics affected children. In that case I felt the same, it is not the artist's responsibility to worry about the children, that is for the parents. Some people today believe that art should not offend Muslim extremists so as to no set them off. Art should never be restricted or stifled by such concerns.

- Bottom line: Prince did not publish the lyrics. Judging him for writing lyrics that he chose not to publish is unfair NO MATTER what the subject is (in this case rape). As he did not release the lyrics he is NOT responsible for providing a way for you or anyone else to find them morally acceptable. He already did the responsible thing by self censoring so if anything he should be commended.

[Edited 6/18/16 6:01am]



As I have said, I went past talking specifically about Prince. Clearly I love Prince or I wouldn't be here. As I have said he didn't release the song as is so to all intents and purposes it was for private consumption.

I am still trying understand why in your opinion it is ok to sing about raping someone because that is art but refuse to answer whether it would therefore be ok to sing about molesting children because that is art? What is the difference? It doesn't matter that he didn't sing about molesting children because that is not the point of THIS discussion But you still refuse to respond to the point about where the line should be drawn!

For me moral ambiguity about rape is wrong. For you it clearly is not and you will cite the right of an artist not to be censored.

For me it is clear...if someone is morally ambiguous about something that is non consensual and causes harm to an individual then it is abhorrent and wrong. A child does not consent to being molested. A human does not consent to being murdered. A woman (or man) does not consent to being raped. For that reason I do not think it is appropriate to call it art and hide behind that as an excuse for moral ambiguity.

You say art should never be stifled or restricted...and generally I agree with you. But are you saying absolutely any subject with total moral ambiguity is ok? By your rationale it would be okay to sing about being a happy child molester because that is art!

As for singing about incest in Sister. Yes shocking to our western judo-Christian ethics and society but clearly consensual so in a completely different league (for me at least...remember this is all about personal opinion).

As to your point about not giving a flying funk about the looney down the road. Fine. But what if that looney raped your mother/sister/wife and then said "Prince made me do it because he sang about about it and it was ok".

And don't go down the "he didn't release it" path again because we are talking hypothetically about the power and influence of art here rather than specifically about Prince himself!


[Edited 6/18/16 9:10am]
[Edited 6/18/16 9:27am]
[Edited 6/18/16 9:43am]
[Edited 6/18/16 9:43am]
'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything.
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Reply #133 posted 06/18/16 1:26pm

djThunderfunk

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I have stated my position:

djThunderfunk said:

"Movies, books, songs, paintings, etc have long portrayed murderers, rapists, terrorists, whathaveyou. It is not the responsibility of the creator of the art to ensure that people of "lower intelligence or warped psychology" can tell the difference between fiction and condoning an evil act. If this were true bookstores, video stores & music stores (okay Netflix, Amazon & iTunes) would hardly have anything to sell. In our society we don't dumb everything down in fear of the setting such people off. It's art. It's fiction."

It is okay to portray ANY deplorable act in fiction. The more deplorable the smaller the audience, but, yes it's okay. Just as it is okay to find it offensive. The artist is the only one that can draw the line in it's creation. The audience is free to draw their own line as to what they will accept.

I have not avoided the point I merely avoided speculating on what if Prince did it.

Clearly you think the artist should make this judgement based on how the dumbest or most deranged of society might react. I take the position that the reactions those type of people may have should be irrelevant to the artist or the art.

Where does this type of thinking end? I'm sure there's some crazy out there that might see a horror movie and decide it's a good idea to put on a hockey mask, pick up a machete and head out to the woods to kill teenagers that are partying and having sex, but that should not be a reason to make such a movie.

You want to know what I think is deplorable enough to draw the line and say that it should not be portrayed because a crazy or stupid person may act on it. My answer is and always has been there is no line for society and that each artists should draw their own line for themselves.

Cool? cool

Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors.
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Reply #134 posted 06/18/16 1:59pm

jumptheysaid

Sad and sorry to hear of some the experiences here

Extraloveable wasn't published as it was for perhaps this reason

I was uncomfortable with "return of the bump squad" and it's line about rap

(Comparisons that the slave situation was comparable to rape) that made me a tad uncomfortable
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Reply #135 posted 06/18/16 2:26pm

jaypotton

djThunderfunk said:

I have stated my position:


djThunderfunk said:




"Movies, books, songs, paintings, etc have long portrayed murderers, rapists, terrorists, whathaveyou. It is not the responsibility of the creator of the art to ensure that people of "lower intelligence or warped psychology" can tell the difference between fiction and condoning an evil act. If this were true bookstores, video stores & music stores (okay Netflix, Amazon & iTunes) would hardly have anything to sell. In our society we don't dumb everything down in fear of the setting such people off. It's art. It's fiction."

It is okay to portray ANY deplorable act in fiction. The more deplorable the smaller the audience, but, yes it's okay. Just as it is okay to find it offensive. The artist is the only one that can draw the line in it's creation. The audience is free to draw their own line as to what they will accept.

I have not avoided the point I merely avoided speculating on what if Prince did it.

Clearly you think the artist should make this judgement based on how the dumbest or most deranged of society might react. I take the position that the reactions those type of people may have should be irrelevant to the artist or the art.

Where does this type of thinking end? I'm sure there's some crazy out there that might see a horror movie and decide it's a good idea to put on a hockey mask, pick up a machete and head out to the woods to kill teenagers that are partying and having sex, but that should not be a reason to make such a movie.

You want to know what I think is deplorable enough to draw the line and say that it should not be portrayed because a crazy or stupid person may act on it. My answer is and always has been there is no line for society and that each artists should draw their own line for themselves.

Cool? cool



Hey it is cool with me that you have a different view to me. That is what makes the world go round and life interesting. Peace!
'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything.
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Reply #136 posted 06/18/16 3:00pm

djThunderfunk

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jaypotton said:

djThunderfunk said:

Cool? cool

Hey it is cool with me that you have a different view to me. That is what makes the world go round and life interesting. Peace!

Agreed! wink

Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors.
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Reply #137 posted 06/19/16 12:50am

Exetergirl

If you look deep enough into any human soul there is some darkness and evil. Myself, I would admit that at one time I really would have liked to murder my ex. If you ever met me, at that time or in the present, you would doubt that I was capable of executing the deed, never mind considering it.

I have no problem acknowledging that Prince wrote these lyrics, but I don't agree that it should be released if that was not his wish.

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Reply #138 posted 06/19/16 10:44am

databank

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jaypotton said:

databank said:

Prince didn't release this so I agree with Thunder: he can't be held responsible for looneys hearing the song.

In the end if he had, sang by himself, then there would be cause for debate about it and he certainly would have been attacked on all fronts and would have had to explain himself, as every artist who release a work of art that appears to condone a criminal activity has (remember Oliver Stone and Natural Born Killers?).

But he didn't. he didn't want us to hear it. He didn't want it out. Therefore Prince can't be asked to make amends later in the song. When he released it in 2011 there was no rape line anymore. And if we found a song in the vault advocating fist-fucking toddlers I would say the same: it would be weird for sure, but Prince couldn't be accused of inciting people to do it because the song would have stayed in the vault.

Yeah cool as I said I was not questioning Prince or his motives. Totally acknowledged several times he did not release it. However, the discussion was broader and ventured into art per se. I will stick to my position that an artist is being lazy and using a hackneyed cliche to say "it is up to you to interpret". Even though I would not agree I would have more respect for an artist who said "I think rape is ok" than someone who could be misconstrued as thinking it was ok. As an artist you still have responsibilities and do need to recognise the potential impact of what you say, show or do. And databank I am sorry but if there was a song in the vault about fist fucking toddlers (that was ambiguous as to whether Prince thought that was good or bad) then I hope it would make any sane human being question what kind of monster he was rather than just think "it was weird"!!!! [Edited 6/18/16 5:41am] [Edited 6/18/16 5:45am] [Edited 6/18/16 5:52am]

To put in another way I once wrote (and published, without a disclaimer) a 1st person narrative poem where a person explains that he murdered a newborn baby and that it was a good thing. Obviously it was fiction, I had an angle that justified me writing it and anyone in their right mind would understand it's a work of irony about an insane character. But if someone was to murder a baby and say it was because of my poem, I refuse, as an artist to be held responsible for what a maniac did, and because I wrote a text that endorses murdering babies doesn't mean I'm the character in the poem and that I endorse doing such a thing.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #139 posted 06/19/16 1:06pm

jaypotton

databank said:



jaypotton said:


databank said:


Prince didn't release this so I agree with Thunder: he can't be held responsible for looneys hearing the song.


In the end if he had, sang by himself, then there would be cause for debate about it and he certainly would have been attacked on all fronts and would have had to explain himself, as every artist who release a work of art that appears to condone a criminal activity has (remember Oliver Stone and Natural Born Killers?).


But he didn't. he didn't want us to hear it. He didn't want it out. Therefore Prince can't be asked to make amends later in the song. When he released it in 2011 there was no rape line anymore. And if we found a song in the vault advocating fist-fucking toddlers I would say the same: it would be weird for sure, but Prince couldn't be accused of inciting people to do it because the song would have stayed in the vault.



Yeah cool as I said I was not questioning Prince or his motives. Totally acknowledged several times he did not release it. However, the discussion was broader and ventured into art per se. I will stick to my position that an artist is being lazy and using a hackneyed cliche to say "it is up to you to interpret". Even though I would not agree I would have more respect for an artist who said "I think rape is ok" than someone who could be misconstrued as thinking it was ok. As an artist you still have responsibilities and do need to recognise the potential impact of what you say, show or do. And databank I am sorry but if there was a song in the vault about fist fucking toddlers (that was ambiguous as to whether Prince thought that was good or bad) then I hope it would make any sane human being question what kind of monster he was rather than just think "it was weird"!!!! [Edited 6/18/16 5:41am] [Edited 6/18/16 5:45am] [Edited 6/18/16 5:52am]

To put in another way I once wrote (and published, without a disclaimer) a 1st person narrative poem where a person explains that he murdered a newborn baby and that it was a good thing. Obviously it was fiction, I had an angle that justified me writing it and anyone in their right mind would understand it's a work of irony about an insane character. But if someone was to murder a baby and say it was because of my poem, I refuse, as an artist to be held responsible for what a maniac did, and because I wrote a text that endorses murdering babies doesn't mean I'm the character in the poem and that I endorse doing such a thing.



Fair enough but (there is always a but) if that did happen would you not feel at all bad or guilty that your work of art inspired a nutter regardless of what your intent was? I am sure if it happened the mother of that baby wouldn't even consider wishing you had not written that poem! She wouldn't and shouldn't blame you but she sure will wish you hadn't written it!
'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything.
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Reply #140 posted 06/19/16 1:40pm

databank

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jaypotton said:

databank said:

To put in another way I once wrote (and published, without a disclaimer) a 1st person narrative poem where a person explains that he murdered a newborn baby and that it was a good thing. Obviously it was fiction, I had an angle that justified me writing it and anyone in their right mind would understand it's a work of irony about an insane character. But if someone was to murder a baby and say it was because of my poem, I refuse, as an artist to be held responsible for what a maniac did, and because I wrote a text that endorses murdering babies doesn't mean I'm the character in the poem and that I endorse doing such a thing.

Fair enough but (there is always a but) if that did happen would you not feel at all bad or guilty that your work of art inspired a nutter regardless of what your intent was? I am sure if it happened the mother of that baby wouldn't even consider wishing you had not written that poem! She wouldn't and shouldn't blame you but she sure will wish you hadn't written it!

I would obviously feel bad and contemn the act with extreme virulence, and feel very sorry for the victims, but I certainly wouldn't allow myself to feel guilty or even regret for writing and publishing the text, for I wouldn't be responsible, and I would condemn anyone who says that I am. Now if I had written an article or an essay seriously saying that babies should be murdered yes, I would share responsability, but not in the context of a work of art, absolutely not.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #141 posted 06/19/16 2:06pm

djThunderfunk

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I'm with you on this completely, databank! wink

Don't hate your neighbors. Hate the media that tells you to hate your neighbors.
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Reply #142 posted 06/20/16 12:14am

jaypotton

databank said:



jaypotton said:


databank said:


To put in another way I once wrote (and published, without a disclaimer) a 1st person narrative poem where a person explains that he murdered a newborn baby and that it was a good thing. Obviously it was fiction, I had an angle that justified me writing it and anyone in their right mind would understand it's a work of irony about an insane character. But if someone was to murder a baby and say it was because of my poem, I refuse, as an artist to be held responsible for what a maniac did, and because I wrote a text that endorses murdering babies doesn't mean I'm the character in the poem and that I endorse doing such a thing.



Fair enough but (there is always a but) if that did happen would you not feel at all bad or guilty that your work of art inspired a nutter regardless of what your intent was? I am sure if it happened the mother of that baby wouldn't even consider wishing you had not written that poem! She wouldn't and shouldn't blame you but she sure will wish you hadn't written it!

I would obviously feel bad and contemn the act with extreme virulence, and feel very sorry for the victims, but I certainly wouldn't allow myself to feel guilty or even regret for writing and publishing the text, for I wouldn't be responsible, and I would condemn anyone who says that I am. Now if I had written an article or an essay seriously saying that babies should be murdered yes, I would share responsability, but not in the context of a work of art, absolutely not.



I hear you. Personally I do not think you (or the artist) would be responsible either. I was interested to know how you would feel for inspiring the act.

It is clearly dangerous ground/topic for discussion.

Personally I am uncomfortable with an artist being morally ambiguous but you and djthunderfunk are not. As I said to him, all cool as I have enjoyed the debate. Neither of us has persuaded the other about our argument and that's fine. Total respect for your opinion even if I do not share it (and I trust you respect mine).

If we were face to face I would suggest grabbing a beer and talking about something else ... as I am British it would probably be the weather lol
[Edited 6/20/16 0:17am]
[Edited 6/20/16 0:20am]
'I loved him then, I love him now and will love him eternally. He's with our son now.' Mayte 21st April 2016 = the saddest quote I have ever read! RIP Prince and thanks for everything.
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Reply #143 posted 06/20/16 6:18am

databank

avatar

jaypotton said:

databank said:

I would obviously feel bad and contemn the act with extreme virulence, and feel very sorry for the victims, but I certainly wouldn't allow myself to feel guilty or even regret for writing and publishing the text, for I wouldn't be responsible, and I would condemn anyone who says that I am. Now if I had written an article or an essay seriously saying that babies should be murdered yes, I would share responsability, but not in the context of a work of art, absolutely not.

I hear you. Personally I do not think you (or the artist) would be responsible either. I was interested to know how you would feel for inspiring the act. It is clearly dangerous ground/topic for discussion. Personally I am uncomfortable with an artist being morally ambiguous but you and djthunderfunk are not. As I said to him, all cool as I have enjoyed the debate. Neither of us has persuaded the other about our argument and that's fine. Total respect for your opinion even if I do not share it (and I trust you respect mine). If we were face to face I would suggest grabbing a beer and talking about something else ... as I am British it would probably be the weather lol [Edited 6/20/16 0:17am] [Edited 6/20/16 0:20am]

The beer would be nice.

It's cool, neither of us is a fascist and I believe our disagreement is not so radical in the end, it's not like u advocated censorship by law. Obviously my stand is also influenced by my line of work beyond the mere philosophical stand.

A COMPREHENSIVE PRINCE DISCOGRAPHY (work in progress ^^): https://sites.google.com/...scography/
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Reply #144 posted 06/23/16 11:24pm

artist76

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I'm so glad he removed Andy's "rap" before finally officially releasing it on Hit and Run! To leave THAT would have been a real travesty and lapse in judgement for sure!
smile
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Reply #145 posted 06/26/16 9:29pm

ksgemini63

I'd like to think this was incredibly immature poorly worded lyric writing. Given some stories shared in this thread it is neither art nor harmless. I'd like to think days of wild was the real Prince talking....
[Edited 6/26/16 21:30pm]
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Reply #146 posted 07/06/16 5:51pm

QueenofCardboa
rd

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.

[Edited 7/28/16 14:11pm]

"I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose voters," Donald Trump
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Reply #147 posted 07/06/16 6:08pm

jstar69

its art - move on!!!

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Reply #148 posted 07/06/16 9:03pm

QueenofCardboa
rd

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.

[Edited 7/28/16 14:12pm]

"I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose voters," Donald Trump
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Reply #149 posted 07/09/16 12:46pm

Azifwekare319

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I'm really suprised a rag like the Enquirer hasn't discovered this outtake yet and used it as an "exclusive" to bash Prince.

If you ever lose someone dear 2 U, never say the words "they're gone". They'll come back.
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