What's a good smear tune that isn't Lassus?
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- Mikebmiller
- Posts: 961
- Joined: Mar 27, 2018
I am doing an instrument demo for a bunch of 4-8 year old kids tomorrow. Last time I did one of these I played Lassus Trombone, but apparently I am not supposed to play that any more. So is there something similar I could play that demonstrates the glissando in a short tune? Extra points if you post a link to a free pdf download.
- ArbanRubank
- Posts: 424
- Joined: Feb 23, 2019
Tiger Rag?
- norbie2018
- Posts: 1051
- Joined: Apr 05, 2018
Why can't you play that anymore?
- Burgerbob
- Posts: 6327
- Joined: Apr 23, 2018
[quote="norbie2018"]Why can't you play that anymore?[/quote]
Oh man. Please tell me this is a joke at this point
Oh man. Please tell me this is a joke at this point
- norbie2018
- Posts: 1051
- Joined: Apr 05, 2018
I asked an honest question. Why not answer it for me if you know?
- norbie2018
- Posts: 1051
- Joined: Apr 05, 2018
I found an article that has answered my question <LINK_TEXT text="https://www.google.com/amp/s/thelasttro ... mbone/amp/">https://www.google.com/amp/s/thelasttrombone.com/2020/06/28/trombone-players-its-time-to-bury-henry-fillmores-lassus-trombone/amp/</LINK_TEXT>
No need to follow up with me at this point.
No need to follow up with me at this point.
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
I like the trombone solo from Pulcinella by Stravinsky. Lots of glissandos in that.
If that's too sophisticated, do a drunken version of "How Dry I Am".
I still feel that if you don't identify the title of Lassus and just play the music, nobody would know or want to take offense. The tune could equally describe a drunken Irishman as much as a lazy African-American unless you read the subtitles Fillmore put on the piece. If asked what it is I would just say it was a funny piece from the early 20th Century. Give it another name: Drunken Paddy Trombone, maybe? :evil: Incidentally, for glisses I like "Shoutin' Liza Trombone" better. The opening sounds like the Hallelujah Chorus from Handel's "Messiah". It actually gave Fillmore his nickname "Hallelujah Trombone". Again, no title, and especially no subtitle.
If that's too sophisticated, do a drunken version of "How Dry I Am".
I still feel that if you don't identify the title of Lassus and just play the music, nobody would know or want to take offense. The tune could equally describe a drunken Irishman as much as a lazy African-American unless you read the subtitles Fillmore put on the piece. If asked what it is I would just say it was a funny piece from the early 20th Century. Give it another name: Drunken Paddy Trombone, maybe? :evil: Incidentally, for glisses I like "Shoutin' Liza Trombone" better. The opening sounds like the Hallelujah Chorus from Handel's "Messiah". It actually gave Fillmore his nickname "Hallelujah Trombone". Again, no title, and especially no subtitle.
- Kdanielsen
- Posts: 609
- Joined: Jul 28, 2019
[quote="BGuttman"]I like the trombone solo from Pulcinella by Stravinsky. Lots of glissandos in that.
If that's too sophisticated, do a drunken version of "How Dry I Am".
I still feel that if you don't identify the title of Lassus and just play the music, nobody would know or want to take offense. The tune could equally describe a drunken Irishman as much as a lazy African-American unless you read the subtitles Fillmore put on the piece. If asked what it is I would just say it was a funny piece from the early 20th Century. Give it another name: Drunken Paddy Trombone, maybe? :evil:[/quote]
Fix bayonets!
If that's too sophisticated, do a drunken version of "How Dry I Am".
I still feel that if you don't identify the title of Lassus and just play the music, nobody would know or want to take offense. The tune could equally describe a drunken Irishman as much as a lazy African-American unless you read the subtitles Fillmore put on the piece. If asked what it is I would just say it was a funny piece from the early 20th Century. Give it another name: Drunken Paddy Trombone, maybe? :evil:[/quote]
Fix bayonets!
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
[quote="Kdanielsen"]...
Fix bayonets![/quote]
Irishmen got his dander up? :evil:
There is no way to put a heroic spin on Lassus Trombone. And I know of no heroic piece that uses a trombone gliss.
Fix bayonets![/quote]
Irishmen got his dander up? :evil:
There is no way to put a heroic spin on Lassus Trombone. And I know of no heroic piece that uses a trombone gliss.
- ArbanRubank
- Posts: 424
- Joined: Feb 23, 2019
I guess I'll have to - literally - spell it out. "Hold That Tiger" doesn't have to be played As. Written. Note-by-note. With E.V.E.R.Y. Note played S.Q.U.A.R.E. on the beat. As a senior in high school, I did a demo to elementary children in an assembly of how a trombone "could" sound.
Here is how it phonetically sounded as best as I can:
Baaaaaaaaah-rum that tiger. Baaaaaaah-rum that tiger. Baaaaaaaaah-rum that tiger. Baaaaaaaaah-rum that tiger.
On the bridge, I didn't play the I.N.D.I.V.I.D.U.A.L notes. I glissed down and up and down and up and down and up - all in good timing, until I got back to the Baaaaaaaaaaaaaah-rum that tiger chorus... At the very end, I did a total gliss down AND up; from top to bottom, holding the last note at about a fff!
Even the band director, who hated me, loved what I did.
Here is how it phonetically sounded as best as I can:
Baaaaaaaaah-rum that tiger. Baaaaaaah-rum that tiger. Baaaaaaaaah-rum that tiger. Baaaaaaaaah-rum that tiger.
On the bridge, I didn't play the I.N.D.I.V.I.D.U.A.L notes. I glissed down and up and down and up and down and up - all in good timing, until I got back to the Baaaaaaaaaaaaaah-rum that tiger chorus... At the very end, I did a total gliss down AND up; from top to bottom, holding the last note at about a fff!
Even the band director, who hated me, loved what I did.
- Pre59
- Posts: 372
- Joined: May 12, 2018
In some other universe, is a cellist pondering how to demonstrate the cello's glissandi possibilities to kids?
I doubt it, and I think that in this one we shouldn't be bringing our instrument into disrepute so willingly.
Leave all that gliss rubbish behind!
I doubt it, and I think that in this one we shouldn't be bringing our instrument into disrepute so willingly.
Leave all that gliss rubbish behind!
- ArbanRubank
- Posts: 424
- Joined: Feb 23, 2019
Most certainly to each their own!
But if the OP does decide to demonstrate the trombone in a more "drunken", "vulgar" or "raucous" style, he might insert some flutter-tongue technique into select glisses to give them more "growl".
But if the OP does decide to demonstrate the trombone in a more "drunken", "vulgar" or "raucous" style, he might insert some flutter-tongue technique into select glisses to give them more "growl".
- soseggnchips
- Posts: 92
- Joined: Jan 29, 2021
[quote="Pre59"]Leave all that gliss rubbish behind![/quote]
Yes!
"But the kids love it!"
Play them a bit of Star Wars, or something else they recognise - they'll remember that a lot longer than some funny noises.
Yes!
"But the kids love it!"
Play them a bit of Star Wars, or something else they recognise - they'll remember that a lot longer than some funny noises.
- VJOFan
- Posts: 529
- Joined: Apr 06, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]I know of no heroic piece that uses a trombone gliss.[/quote]
I guess it is open to opinion, but what about Sabre Dance? It is at least heroic adjacent. Certainly intense.
Might not work without an orchestral backing though.
I guess it is open to opinion, but what about Sabre Dance? It is at least heroic adjacent. Certainly intense.
Might not work without an orchestral backing though.
- CalgaryTbone
- Posts: 1460
- Joined: May 10, 2018
[quote="VJOFan"]<QUOTE author="BGuttman" post_id="175736" time="1649375615" user_id="53">
I know of no heroic piece that uses a trombone gliss.[/quote]
I guess it is open to opinion, but what about Sabre Dance? It is at least heroic adjacent. Certainly intense.
Might not work without an orchestral backing though.
</QUOTE>
The trombone doesn't usually get the tune in that one (just the glisses), but it wouldn't be hard to figure it out to either write out or memorize. Of course, it is Russian music - an issue in a lot of circumstances at the present time.
Jim Scott
I know of no heroic piece that uses a trombone gliss.[/quote]
I guess it is open to opinion, but what about Sabre Dance? It is at least heroic adjacent. Certainly intense.
Might not work without an orchestral backing though.
</QUOTE>
The trombone doesn't usually get the tune in that one (just the glisses), but it wouldn't be hard to figure it out to either write out or memorize. Of course, it is Russian music - an issue in a lot of circumstances at the present time.
Jim Scott
- VJOFan
- Posts: 529
- Joined: Apr 06, 2018
I’ve had passing thoughts about the anti Russian stuff. It was not very long ago that the Canadian government made their formal apologies for the internment of Japanese Canadians in World War II. It’s pretty obvious from how people are behaving at NHL games etc. that in the same situation as WWII, we would do exactly the same thing again.
Tribalism knows no nuance.
Tribalism knows no nuance.
- JohnL
- Posts: 2529
- Joined: Mar 23, 2018
[quote="VJOFan"]I’ve had passing thoughts about the anti Russian stuff. It was not very long ago that the Canadian government made their formal apologies for the internment of Japanese Canadians in World War II. It’s pretty obvious from how people are behaving at NHL games etc. that in the same situation as WWII, we would do exactly the same thing again.[/quote]
I dunno - immediately after 9/11, there were some rather strident cries for internment and/or deportation of Arab-Americans - but it turned out that, while there was a lot of noise being made, it was coming from a fairly small group of people and that most Americans simply weren't in favor of it. A loud noise doesn't necessarily mean a lot of people - more so today than ever before.
I dunno - immediately after 9/11, there were some rather strident cries for internment and/or deportation of Arab-Americans - but it turned out that, while there was a lot of noise being made, it was coming from a fairly small group of people and that most Americans simply weren't in favor of it. A loud noise doesn't necessarily mean a lot of people - more so today than ever before.
- Mikebmiller
- Posts: 961
- Joined: Mar 27, 2018
Well I just played a few glisses to show the kids what they sound like. The highlight of the show was when I had to stop to put my dog out as she wouldn’t stop barking. If you want a non critical audience, play a recital for a bunch of 6 year old kids. They thought I was great, despite lots of clams.
- ArbanRubank
- Posts: 424
- Joined: Feb 23, 2019
Thanks for the follow-up! Glad it went well for you. :good:
- Pre59
- Posts: 372
- Joined: May 12, 2018
It's odd to me that one of the (supposed) markers of a great trombonist, is that you can't hear the slide at all. Not even on the same kind of lyrical passages that on the Cellist would freely almost gliss on.
And here we are..
And here we are..
- ArbanRubank
- Posts: 424
- Joined: Feb 23, 2019
[quote="Pre59"]It's odd to me that one of the (supposed) markers of a great trombonist, is that you can't hear the slide at all. Not even on the same kind of lyrical passages that on the Cellist would freely almost gliss on.
And here we are..[/quote]
It depends upon your perspective of what a "marker" (as you put it) of a great trombonist is. For me, it's hearing that the artist understands he is playing a slide trombone and lets me hear the use of the slide from time-to-time. Not many trombone players can do it well. Most sound horrid and maybe that is the real problem. But anyway, I doubt it applies to classical music all that much; being mostly a jazz concept, I believe.
And here we are..[/quote]
It depends upon your perspective of what a "marker" (as you put it) of a great trombonist is. For me, it's hearing that the artist understands he is playing a slide trombone and lets me hear the use of the slide from time-to-time. Not many trombone players can do it well. Most sound horrid and maybe that is the real problem. But anyway, I doubt it applies to classical music all that much; being mostly a jazz concept, I believe.
- seabrook2022
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Apr 10, 2022
Many dixieland arrangements include a trombone glissando. For example see the "Sheik of Araby" arrangement in ComboPak #13 at East Coast Music.
- Doug_Elliott
- Posts: 4155
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
<YOUTUBE id="vU2EciADd8o">https://youtu.be/vU2EciADd8o</YOUTUBE>
String players have no problem finding tasteful examples in the literature of all genres.
String players have no problem finding tasteful examples in the literature of all genres.
- Wilktone
- Posts: 720
- Joined: Mar 27, 2018
Works best as an ensemble performance, but if you're just looking for a quick demonstration melody Ory's Creole Trombone has some nice moments.
<YOUTUBE id="PWUkShQQwk4">[media]https://youtu.be/PWUkShQQwk4</YOUTUBE>
<YOUTUBE id="PWUkShQQwk4">
- johntarr
- Posts: 368
- Joined: May 07, 2018
This is getting a bit off topic but I’ll post anyway. When we were planning our faculty brass concert for the school where I teach, my colleagues picked standard repertoire for the horn and trumpet. Because I play more than just “legit” styles I wanted to show some of my different sides as well as present the trombone as a multifaceted instrument. I also wanted my portion of the concert to be informative and entertaining.
After much thought, I came up with the romantic aspect and how the slide can produce vocal like sounds, combined with the big band era: I’m getting Sentimental over You. Then on to an arrangement of the Ride, with piano to show the dramatic side of the instrument. After that I’ll be playing two pieces that have me also reciting children’s poems to show that the trombone can be humorous and that performance can incorporate other elements besides just playing. My final piece will be a Psalm and a delay pedal with the alto trombone so I can show that as well. This is the “spiritual” aspect of the trombone.
We’ll see how it’s received next week.
After much thought, I came up with the romantic aspect and how the slide can produce vocal like sounds, combined with the big band era: I’m getting Sentimental over You. Then on to an arrangement of the Ride, with piano to show the dramatic side of the instrument. After that I’ll be playing two pieces that have me also reciting children’s poems to show that the trombone can be humorous and that performance can incorporate other elements besides just playing. My final piece will be a Psalm and a delay pedal with the alto trombone so I can show that as well. This is the “spiritual” aspect of the trombone.
We’ll see how it’s received next week.
- timothy42b
- Posts: 1812
- Joined: Mar 27, 2018
[quote="Doug Elliott"]<YOUTUBE id="vU2EciADd8o">https://youtu.be/vU2EciADd8o</YOUTUBE>
String players have no problem finding tasteful examples in the literature of all genres.[/quote]
Interesting video, and very different from what I was told back in junior high, and quite a number of times since.
Back then "teacher said" a glissando is a series of individual discrete notes like a piano can play, and a portamento is a smooth slide across all the intermediate possible pitches.
A little google today tells me the argument continues. Here's link that supports that position, but there were many hits supporting others as well:
<LINK_TEXT text="https://www.vsl.co.at/community/posts/t ... #post92532">https://www.vsl.co.at/community/posts/t14634-The-ultimate-glissando-vs-portamento-topic#post92532</LINK_TEXT>
String players have no problem finding tasteful examples in the literature of all genres.[/quote]
Interesting video, and very different from what I was told back in junior high, and quite a number of times since.
Back then "teacher said" a glissando is a series of individual discrete notes like a piano can play, and a portamento is a smooth slide across all the intermediate possible pitches.
A little google today tells me the argument continues. Here's link that supports that position, but there were many hits supporting others as well:
<LINK_TEXT text="https://www.vsl.co.at/community/posts/t ... #post92532">https://www.vsl.co.at/community/posts/t14634-The-ultimate-glissando-vs-portamento-topic#post92532</LINK_TEXT>
- Vegasbound
- Posts: 1328
- Joined: Jul 06, 2019
Slippery when wet ? Lots of gliss
- ArbanRubank
- Posts: 424
- Joined: Feb 23, 2019
I liked his demo of the portamento and the way he executed it! That is now a very useable technique for me when I play ballads.
- Doug_Elliott
- Posts: 4155
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
[quote="ArbanRubank"]I liked his demo of the portamento and the way he executed it! That is now a very useable technique for me when I play ballads.[/quote]
Exactly. It can make long intervals sound very smooth without making the gliss part noticeable. And I frequently gliss between shorter intervals. That sort of thing just gives you much more vocabulary for articulation in musical interpretation. And I'm not talking about just jazz or ballads... interpretation nuances are useful in any genre, as evidenced by their extensive use on string instruments. And many other string bowing techniques too.
Exactly. It can make long intervals sound very smooth without making the gliss part noticeable. And I frequently gliss between shorter intervals. That sort of thing just gives you much more vocabulary for articulation in musical interpretation. And I'm not talking about just jazz or ballads... interpretation nuances are useful in any genre, as evidenced by their extensive use on string instruments. And many other string bowing techniques too.
- robcat2075
- Posts: 1867
- Joined: Sep 03, 2018
[quote="Mikebmiller"]So is there something similar I could play that demonstrates the glissando in a short tune? Extra points if you post a link to a free pdf download.[/quote]
In the original essay that kicked this off, Doug Yeo suggests (and links to) "Slidus Trombonus" as substitute smear repertoire..
<LINK_TEXT text="https://thelasttrombone.com/2020/06/28/ ... -trombone/">https://thelasttrombone.com/2020/06/28/trombone-players-its-time-to-bury-henry-fillmores-lassus-trombone/</LINK_TEXT>
EDIT: But now that I have actually listened to "Slidus Trombonus" I'll say that it is utterly lacking in everything that made "Lassus" worth playing.
<YOUTUBE id="GtjTsIwhruc">[media]https://youtu.be/GtjTsIwhruc</YOUTUBE>
In the original essay that kicked this off, Doug Yeo suggests (and links to) "Slidus Trombonus" as substitute smear repertoire..
<LINK_TEXT text="https://thelasttrombone.com/2020/06/28/ ... -trombone/">https://thelasttrombone.com/2020/06/28/trombone-players-its-time-to-bury-henry-fillmores-lassus-trombone/</LINK_TEXT>
EDIT: But now that I have actually listened to "Slidus Trombonus" I'll say that it is utterly lacking in everything that made "Lassus" worth playing.
<YOUTUBE id="GtjTsIwhruc">
- psybersonic
- Posts: 29
- Joined: Jan 29, 2022
Try Bayrische Polka by Georg Lohmann
<YOUTUBE id="EUv76QcT_5c">https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=EUv76QcT_5c</YOUTUBE>
<YOUTUBE id="EUv76QcT_5c">https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=EUv76QcT_5c</YOUTUBE>
- hyperbolica
- Posts: 3990
- Joined: Mar 23, 2018
Tiger Rag is something our quartet uses frequently. It doesn't have the same Lassus gliss, but it uses a lot of slide effects. I suppose if you object to Lassus, you can find a reason to criticize any music ever written. Use your own judgment.
- Gmorganbrass
- Posts: 3
- Joined: Apr 23, 2018
I often use the Pink Panther theme for trombone demonstrations - you can ad lib some small glisses and falls to make it more "trombone-y" as you like.
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="hyperbolica"]I suppose if you object to Lassus, you can find a reason to criticize any music ever written.[/quote]
Please make it stop. :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll:
Please make it stop. :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll: :roll:
- Vegasbound
- Posts: 1328
- Joined: Jul 06, 2019
The Acrobat
- NBischoff
- Posts: 95
- Joined: Jun 04, 2018
I've found The Arkansas Traveler works well for this sort of thing. Think Beaky Buzzard from Looney Tunes
<YOUTUBE id="-UG2xVExfu8">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-UG2xVExfu8</YOUTUBE>
<YOUTUBE id="-UG2xVExfu8">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-UG2xVExfu8</YOUTUBE>
- officermayo
- Posts: 654
- Joined: Jun 09, 2021
[quote="seabrook2022"]Many dixieland arrangements include a trombone glissando.[/quote]
Ooh, he said "Dixieland"!
Isn't that on the same list as Lassus?
Ooh, he said "Dixieland"!
Isn't that on the same list as Lassus?
- hyperbolica
- Posts: 3990
- Joined: Mar 23, 2018
You could use Bolero, but that's a dance that the Spaniards used when they conquered the north Africans, so cancel that. And then there's Bartok Concerto for Orchestra, but Bartok was from Hungary, which is a well known source of exclusion, so we can't play or listen to that any more. And Beethoven was Hitlers favorite, so cancel. And I'm sure Mahler did something we would all regret during his lifetime, so add him to the list. There's the cool gliss in Stravinski Firebird, but we don't even have to mention all the distasteful stuff Stravinski was associated with in a roundabout manner. Let's see. Who's left? Mr. Rodgers and ? Teletubbies?
- CalgaryTbone
- Posts: 1460
- Joined: May 10, 2018
[quote="officermayo"]<QUOTE author="seabrook2022" post_id="175941" time="1649607679" user_id="15102">
Many dixieland arrangements include a trombone glissando.[/quote]
Ooh, he said "Dixieland"!
Isn't that on the same list as Lassus?
</QUOTE>
No, it isn't.
JS
Many dixieland arrangements include a trombone glissando.[/quote]
Ooh, he said "Dixieland"!
Isn't that on the same list as Lassus?
</QUOTE>
No, it isn't.
JS
- johntarr
- Posts: 368
- Joined: May 07, 2018
[quote="hyperbolica"]You could use Bolero, but that's a dance that the Spaniards used when they conquered the north Africans, so cancel that. And then there's Bartok Concerto for Orchestra, but Bartok was from Hungary, which is a well known source of exclusion, so we can't play or listen to that any more. And Beethoven was Hitlers favorite, so cancel. And I'm sure Mahler did something we would all regret during his lifetime, so add him to the list. There's the cool gliss in Stravinski Firebird, but we don't even have to mention all the distasteful stuff Stravinski was associated with in a roundabout manner. Let's see. Who's left? Mr. Rodgers and ? Teletubbies?[/quote]
I think we can be a little more nuanced than that. Was Bolero, the dance created just for the purpose of conquering North Africa or was it appropriated by the military? Was Bartok an exclusionary himself or was that the political situation at the time? I don’t know the answers so more research may be needed.
Beethoven didn’t have much to say about having composed Hitler’s favorite music so I think he’s off the hook. Of course many composers and even performers have done things in their lives that were wrong, the question is how do they handle their mistakes. The thing that distinguishes Lassus is that it was composed with the intention of demeaning a race and culture. That’s what makes it unacceptable.
I think we can be a little more nuanced than that. Was Bolero, the dance created just for the purpose of conquering North Africa or was it appropriated by the military? Was Bartok an exclusionary himself or was that the political situation at the time? I don’t know the answers so more research may be needed.
Beethoven didn’t have much to say about having composed Hitler’s favorite music so I think he’s off the hook. Of course many composers and even performers have done things in their lives that were wrong, the question is how do they handle their mistakes. The thing that distinguishes Lassus is that it was composed with the intention of demeaning a race and culture. That’s what makes it unacceptable.
- hyperbolica
- Posts: 3990
- Joined: Mar 23, 2018
[quote="johntarr"]The thing that distinguishes Lassus is that it was composed with the intention of demeaning a race and culture. That’s what makes it unacceptable.[/quote]
And yet when you play it you don't hear or feel any of that. You wouldn't have known about it until someone went way out of their way to make sure that wound never heals. I know you all think you're doing something righteous, but instead you're perpetuating and recreating everything that was bad long ago. There are a lot of better places to direct energy other than reopening old wounds that everyone has forgotten.
And yet when you play it you don't hear or feel any of that. You wouldn't have known about it until someone went way out of their way to make sure that wound never heals. I know you all think you're doing something righteous, but instead you're perpetuating and recreating everything that was bad long ago. There are a lot of better places to direct energy other than reopening old wounds that everyone has forgotten.
- Kdanielsen
- Posts: 609
- Joined: Jul 28, 2019
[quote="hyperbolica"]<QUOTE author="johntarr" post_id="205313" time="1679325875" user_id="3233">
The thing that distinguishes Lassus is that it was composed with the intention of demeaning a race and culture. That’s what makes it unacceptable.[/quote]
And yet when you play it you don't hear or feel any of that. You wouldn't have known about it until someone went way out of their way to make sure that wound never heals. I know you all think you're doing something righteous, but instead you're perpetuating and recreating everything that was bad long ago. There are a lot of better places to direct energy other than reopening old wounds that everyone has forgotten.
</QUOTE>
YOU don't hear it, but when you know you know. I wrote the following about "Shoutin' Liza" and it definitely applies to Lassus Trombone too:
I firmly believe that bad people can create great art and beauty despite their flaws. If we stopped interacting with art created by racist sexist people from the past that would "cancel" almost the entire canon. I draw the line at the art itself. Was Wagner writing music that is inherently racist? Some say yes, actually, but at its broadest level almost everyone agrees that except for a few specific examples he was not. We need to ask: Is the music itself racist?
In the case of Filmore and The Trombone Family I believe the line has been crossed. Filmore was undoubtedly a racist individual who used racism to sell music to other racists. In addition to the music's origin as a racial caricature, the notes themselves obviously are meant to mock the sounds of an African American church service. The trombone section's "A-Amen" interjections are clearly painting a picture of "Shoutin' Liza" at church on Sunday morning shouting "Amen" after every sentence of the sermon.
So what to do? I say don't play it. Just put that music away. Can we seriously say that this music is of such high quality that we are willing to overlook its origin? If we keep playing it, there is a direct unbroken line connecting us to the everyday racism of the early 20th century, which in turn connects us to the slavery and oppresion of the previous three centuries. When examining the failures of our predecessors we say "they were just a product of their time." I do not want to be a product of their time; I want to be a product of our time. We can do better.
All of this doesn't actually matter. The African American community has spoken out against this music. It's their opinion that matters most of all. If Wycliffe Gordon and Wynton Marsalis showed up at this concert, would you feel comfortable playing this music? What about African American members of our community in the Pioneer Valley? <B>Would you feel comfortable knowing that they are unknowingly tapping their toes along with music that was designed to oppress their ancestors?</B>
The thing that distinguishes Lassus is that it was composed with the intention of demeaning a race and culture. That’s what makes it unacceptable.[/quote]
And yet when you play it you don't hear or feel any of that. You wouldn't have known about it until someone went way out of their way to make sure that wound never heals. I know you all think you're doing something righteous, but instead you're perpetuating and recreating everything that was bad long ago. There are a lot of better places to direct energy other than reopening old wounds that everyone has forgotten.
</QUOTE>
YOU don't hear it, but when you know you know. I wrote the following about "Shoutin' Liza" and it definitely applies to Lassus Trombone too:
I firmly believe that bad people can create great art and beauty despite their flaws. If we stopped interacting with art created by racist sexist people from the past that would "cancel" almost the entire canon. I draw the line at the art itself. Was Wagner writing music that is inherently racist? Some say yes, actually, but at its broadest level almost everyone agrees that except for a few specific examples he was not. We need to ask: Is the music itself racist?
In the case of Filmore and The Trombone Family I believe the line has been crossed. Filmore was undoubtedly a racist individual who used racism to sell music to other racists. In addition to the music's origin as a racial caricature, the notes themselves obviously are meant to mock the sounds of an African American church service. The trombone section's "A-Amen" interjections are clearly painting a picture of "Shoutin' Liza" at church on Sunday morning shouting "Amen" after every sentence of the sermon.
So what to do? I say don't play it. Just put that music away. Can we seriously say that this music is of such high quality that we are willing to overlook its origin? If we keep playing it, there is a direct unbroken line connecting us to the everyday racism of the early 20th century, which in turn connects us to the slavery and oppresion of the previous three centuries. When examining the failures of our predecessors we say "they were just a product of their time." I do not want to be a product of their time; I want to be a product of our time. We can do better.
All of this doesn't actually matter. The African American community has spoken out against this music. It's their opinion that matters most of all. If Wycliffe Gordon and Wynton Marsalis showed up at this concert, would you feel comfortable playing this music? What about African American members of our community in the Pioneer Valley? <B>Would you feel comfortable knowing that they are unknowingly tapping their toes along with music that was designed to oppress their ancestors?</B>
- hyperbolica
- Posts: 3990
- Joined: Mar 23, 2018
Russian music was meant to glorify czarist oligarchy. You can't even imagine the orchestral or chamber music worlds without Russian composers. Mozart largely wrote for the glory of monarchs who treated poor Europeans no better than slaves. Copland was reputedly a communist. You can't throw a stick in Hollywood without knocking over half a dozen people who glorify the misuse of guns, and yet we don't even dare to criticize these people. If you're going to start canceling music without being hypocritical, you really have to do it. Sure, Filmore can't defend himself. Easy target. Care to take on rappers that support violence today? Courage fades. Watch television after dinner and tell me where all this violence comes from, yet there is no backlash. Every problem can be solved with a gun, right? It's very selective and cowardly to pick someone long dead and lay the woes of society at his feet. Look at the damage present day artists are doing to present day culture. The sins of the past become diminishingly small.
- sacfxdx
- Posts: 406
- Joined: Apr 11, 2018
it's not the NRA causing people to shoot each other over trivial disagreements. Well said Hyperbolica.
- ithinknot
- Posts: 1339
- Joined: Jul 24, 2020
You can make a disingenuous 'slippery slope' argument for absolutely anything, and no one here has raised the arguments that you purport to refute.
WRT Lassus:
[quote="hyperbolica"]And yet when you play it you don't hear or feel any of that.[/quote]
Audience depending, this can sometimes be true, but ignorance is an unreliable form of bliss.
Have you read[url=https://thelasttrombone.com/2020/07/06/a-path-forward-from-henry-fillmores-lassus-trombone/]Doug Yeo's follow-up article? He addresses many points that I sincerely think you might find interesting: separation of art and artist (and going on to separate Fillmore Sr.'s hymns from his explicitly racist songs), 'cancellation' etc, along with some of the topics Kris raises above. It's worth bearing in mind that he's hardly a baby-eating pinko like some of us; his cultural perspective is very much of the evangelical right, albeit of a more considered tradition than many prominent in the media.
[quote="hyperbolica"]There are a lot of better places to direct energy other than reopening old wounds that everyone has forgotten.[/quote]
This might be a little rich coming from the person who[url=https://trombonechat.com/viewtopic.php?p=205140#p205140]reopened the political element of this thread, but in any case you got the reaction you obviously wanted.
WRT Lassus:
[quote="hyperbolica"]And yet when you play it you don't hear or feel any of that.[/quote]
Audience depending, this can sometimes be true, but ignorance is an unreliable form of bliss.
Have you read
[quote="hyperbolica"]There are a lot of better places to direct energy other than reopening old wounds that everyone has forgotten.[/quote]
This might be a little rich coming from the person who
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="Kdanielsen"]<QUOTE author="hyperbolica" post_id="205317" time="1679328635" user_id="104">
And yet when you play it you don't hear or feel any of that. You wouldn't have known about it until someone went way out of their way to make sure that wound never heals. I know you all think you're doing something righteous, but instead you're perpetuating and recreating everything that was bad long ago. There are a lot of better places to direct energy other than reopening old wounds that everyone has forgotten.[/quote]
YOU don't hear it, but when you know you know.
</QUOTE>
Exactly. HE doesn't hear it. It's amazing what one fails to hear when one decides to be willfully ignorant.
And yet when you play it you don't hear or feel any of that. You wouldn't have known about it until someone went way out of their way to make sure that wound never heals. I know you all think you're doing something righteous, but instead you're perpetuating and recreating everything that was bad long ago. There are a lot of better places to direct energy other than reopening old wounds that everyone has forgotten.[/quote]
YOU don't hear it, but when you know you know.
</QUOTE>
Exactly. HE doesn't hear it. It's amazing what one fails to hear when one decides to be willfully ignorant.
- hyperbolica
- Posts: 3990
- Joined: Mar 23, 2018
[quote="brassmedic"]
willfully ignorant.[/quote]
Ignorance is anyone who is alive in 2023 and has to go back more than 100 years to pick a composer that only trombonists and historic march buffs remember to find someone behaving badly. Cowardly and completely meaningless to pick someone so forgotten to beat up on when the pickings are so rich in modern day sociopathic artists and performers. Its a headshaking stretch to go all the way back to single out Fillmore, skipping over every one else.
willfully ignorant.[/quote]
Ignorance is anyone who is alive in 2023 and has to go back more than 100 years to pick a composer that only trombonists and historic march buffs remember to find someone behaving badly. Cowardly and completely meaningless to pick someone so forgotten to beat up on when the pickings are so rich in modern day sociopathic artists and performers. Its a headshaking stretch to go all the way back to single out Fillmore, skipping over every one else.
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="hyperbolica"]<QUOTE author="brassmedic" post_id="205328" time="1679339427" user_id="4102">
willfully ignorant.[/quote]
Ignorance is anyone who is alive in 2023 and has to go back more than 100 years to pick a composer that only trombonists and historic march buffs remember to find someone behaving badly. Cowardly and completely meaningless to pick someone so forgotten to beat up on when the pickings are so rich in modern day sociopathic artists and performers. Its a headshaking stretch to go all the way back to single out Fillmore, skipping over every one else.
</QUOTE>
So now it's "cowardly" to refrain from performing racist music? Guess I've heard everything now. If Lassus is so obscure, then what's the harm in not performing it? We're not "beating up" on anyone. For the record, I also plan to refrain from going out on a stage in blackface and singing "Mammy". Or maybe you would argue that if I didn't wear blackface that nobody would know it's a racist song. Whatever - your tortured logic doesn't convince me. There is a difference between a song written by a person who was racist or had some sort of indirect connection to someone else who was racist, and a racist song. Don't know how else to say it. You've been told this over and over, yet continue to pretend otherwise because of your own personal political stance. I find right wing outrage politics to be extremely simplistic and uninteresting. Whataboutism is a weak form of argument, and that seems to be the only thing you have brought to the table here.
willfully ignorant.[/quote]
Ignorance is anyone who is alive in 2023 and has to go back more than 100 years to pick a composer that only trombonists and historic march buffs remember to find someone behaving badly. Cowardly and completely meaningless to pick someone so forgotten to beat up on when the pickings are so rich in modern day sociopathic artists and performers. Its a headshaking stretch to go all the way back to single out Fillmore, skipping over every one else.
</QUOTE>
So now it's "cowardly" to refrain from performing racist music? Guess I've heard everything now. If Lassus is so obscure, then what's the harm in not performing it? We're not "beating up" on anyone. For the record, I also plan to refrain from going out on a stage in blackface and singing "Mammy". Or maybe you would argue that if I didn't wear blackface that nobody would know it's a racist song. Whatever - your tortured logic doesn't convince me. There is a difference between a song written by a person who was racist or had some sort of indirect connection to someone else who was racist, and a racist song. Don't know how else to say it. You've been told this over and over, yet continue to pretend otherwise because of your own personal political stance. I find right wing outrage politics to be extremely simplistic and uninteresting. Whataboutism is a weak form of argument, and that seems to be the only thing you have brought to the table here.
- johntarr
- Posts: 368
- Joined: May 07, 2018
[quote="hyperbolica"]Russian music was meant to glorify czarist oligarchy. You can't even imagine the orchestral or chamber music worlds without Russian composers. Mozart largely wrote for the glory of monarchs who treated poor Europeans no better than slaves. Copland was reputedly a communist. You can't throw a stick in Hollywood without knocking over half a dozen people who glorify the misuse of guns, and yet we don't even dare to criticize these people. If you're going to start canceling music without being hypocritical, you really have to do it. Sure, Filmore can't defend himself. Easy target. Care to take on rappers that support violence today? Courage fades. Watch television after dinner and tell me where all this violence comes from, yet there is no backlash. Every problem can be solved with a gun, right? It's very selective and cowardly to pick someone long dead and lay the woes of society at his feet. Look at the damage present day artists are doing to present day culture. The sins of the past become diminishingly small.[/quote]
As ithinkitnot said, we should all go back and read Doug Yeo’s articles because he addresses these very points. Choosing not to play a piece because of its unacceptable message is not attacking a dead person. Doug also said that we need to treat each individual case separately, so yes, let us have conversations about the Russian composers and how Mozart writing for monarchs makes his music unacceptable. I will definitely read your articles on those topics, hyperbolica.
As far as for violent rappers and Hollywood stars glorifying killing, I agree wholeheartedly. I will certainly not program any of their works written for trombone or any other of their music in my recitals. I also don’t listen to any music that, I am aware of being violent and/or demeaning. If I unwittingly do so, I am thankful for help in learning more so that I can increase my awareness and make better choices in the future.
As ithinkitnot said, we should all go back and read Doug Yeo’s articles because he addresses these very points. Choosing not to play a piece because of its unacceptable message is not attacking a dead person. Doug also said that we need to treat each individual case separately, so yes, let us have conversations about the Russian composers and how Mozart writing for monarchs makes his music unacceptable. I will definitely read your articles on those topics, hyperbolica.
As far as for violent rappers and Hollywood stars glorifying killing, I agree wholeheartedly. I will certainly not program any of their works written for trombone or any other of their music in my recitals. I also don’t listen to any music that, I am aware of being violent and/or demeaning. If I unwittingly do so, I am thankful for help in learning more so that I can increase my awareness and make better choices in the future.
- timothy42b
- Posts: 1812
- Joined: Mar 27, 2018
[quote="Kdanielsen"]Can we seriously say that this music is of such high quality that we are willing to overlook its origin?[/quote]
This becomes complicated, and I'm not sure what the answer is.
But I'm not yet comfortable with blithely accepting something of "high quality" despite its other associations, while cancelling something of "low quality" that causes us no pain to discard. It seems to be ends justifying means again, and an easy rationalization.
This becomes complicated, and I'm not sure what the answer is.
But I'm not yet comfortable with blithely accepting something of "high quality" despite its other associations, while cancelling something of "low quality" that causes us no pain to discard. It seems to be ends justifying means again, and an easy rationalization.
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
You really can't apply 21st century aptitudes toward early 20th century music.
Arthur Pryor had a solo called "Coon Band Revue" which has been renamed "Cake Walk Contest" (long after his death).
In the 19th century we had Minstrel shows that made the Trombone Family subtitles look quite tame. In fact, one of the most popular tunes from the Minstrel shows was called "Dixieland" (now just called "Dixie").
There have been cringe-worthy Black, Jewish, and Italian characters in opera for centuries.
If you don't want to play any of the Trombone Family pieces, have at it. I understand that Fillmore was not racist; he was simply using a trope of his era to sell music.
Back to the original question, I still promote the Stravinsky Pulcinella excerpt.
Arthur Pryor had a solo called "Coon Band Revue" which has been renamed "Cake Walk Contest" (long after his death).
In the 19th century we had Minstrel shows that made the Trombone Family subtitles look quite tame. In fact, one of the most popular tunes from the Minstrel shows was called "Dixieland" (now just called "Dixie").
There have been cringe-worthy Black, Jewish, and Italian characters in opera for centuries.
If you don't want to play any of the Trombone Family pieces, have at it. I understand that Fillmore was not racist; he was simply using a trope of his era to sell music.
Back to the original question, I still promote the Stravinsky Pulcinella excerpt.
- MrHCinDE
- Posts: 1039
- Joined: Jul 01, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]You really can't apply 21st century aptitudes toward early 20th century music.
…
In the 19th century we had Minstrel shows that made the Trombone Family subtitles look quite tame. In fact, one of the most popular tunes from the Minstrel shows was called "Dixieland" (now just called "Dixie").[/quote]
Would you extend the logic from your first sentence about not applying 21st Century aptitudes to early 20th Century music to 19th Century Minstrel shows? As you noted, we had Minstrel shows in the past. Do you think they should be brought back? If not, why are Minstrel shows offensive but not this work by Fillmore?
Please don‘t answer with „nobody knows Lassus is racist“, once you know, you know.
If someone really wants to play Lassus, they should be prepared to stand up and announce the background to it so the audience are fully in the picture and can walk out if they feel so inclined.
I‘m happy to have a conversation about whether other works which include racist/xenophobic/antisemitic caricatures or similar should also be relegated to the past or at least introduced in the performance with some historical context. Is it too much of a nuance to say there is a difference between a piece whose whole Raison d'être is a cheap racist joke or a long opera with one questionable character? Not sure there‘s an easy answer and plenty of room for interpretation, but for me Lassus is clear.
…
In the 19th century we had Minstrel shows that made the Trombone Family subtitles look quite tame. In fact, one of the most popular tunes from the Minstrel shows was called "Dixieland" (now just called "Dixie").[/quote]
Would you extend the logic from your first sentence about not applying 21st Century aptitudes to early 20th Century music to 19th Century Minstrel shows? As you noted, we had Minstrel shows in the past. Do you think they should be brought back? If not, why are Minstrel shows offensive but not this work by Fillmore?
Please don‘t answer with „nobody knows Lassus is racist“, once you know, you know.
If someone really wants to play Lassus, they should be prepared to stand up and announce the background to it so the audience are fully in the picture and can walk out if they feel so inclined.
I‘m happy to have a conversation about whether other works which include racist/xenophobic/antisemitic caricatures or similar should also be relegated to the past or at least introduced in the performance with some historical context. Is it too much of a nuance to say there is a difference between a piece whose whole Raison d'être is a cheap racist joke or a long opera with one questionable character? Not sure there‘s an easy answer and plenty of room for interpretation, but for me Lassus is clear.
- Kdanielsen
- Posts: 609
- Joined: Jul 28, 2019
[quote="MrHCinDE"]<QUOTE author="BGuttman" post_id="205380" time="1679406211" user_id="53">
You really can't apply 21st century aptitudes toward early 20th century music.
…
In the 19th century we had Minstrel shows that made the Trombone Family subtitles look quite tame. In fact, one of the most popular tunes from the Minstrel shows was called "Dixieland" (now just called "Dixie").[/quote]
Would you extend the logic from your first sentence about not applying 21st Century aptitudes to early 20th Century music to 19th Century Minstrel shows? As you noted, we had Minstrel shows in the past. Do you think they should be brought back? If not, why are Minstrel shows offensive but not this work by Fillmore?
Please don‘t answer with „nobody knows Lassus is racist“, once you know, you know.
If someone really wants to play Lassus, they should be prepared to stand up and announce the background to it so the audience are fully in the picture and can walk out if they feel so inclined.
I‘m happy to have a conversation about whether other works which include racist/xenophobic/antisemitic caricatures or similar should also be relegated to the past or at least introduced in the performance with some historical context. Is it too much of a nuance to say there is a difference between a piece whose whole Raison d'être is a cheap racist joke or a long opera with one questionable character? Not sure there‘s an easy answer and plenty of room for interpretation, but for me Lassus is clear.
</QUOTE>
I think it’s interesting that the folks who are most worried about cancel culture are also the most vague/least nuanced in their criticism.
I think it’s pretty fishy to want to keep lassus trombone but cancel contemporary hip hop artists for rapping about police and gang violence.
You really can't apply 21st century aptitudes toward early 20th century music.
…
In the 19th century we had Minstrel shows that made the Trombone Family subtitles look quite tame. In fact, one of the most popular tunes from the Minstrel shows was called "Dixieland" (now just called "Dixie").[/quote]
Would you extend the logic from your first sentence about not applying 21st Century aptitudes to early 20th Century music to 19th Century Minstrel shows? As you noted, we had Minstrel shows in the past. Do you think they should be brought back? If not, why are Minstrel shows offensive but not this work by Fillmore?
Please don‘t answer with „nobody knows Lassus is racist“, once you know, you know.
If someone really wants to play Lassus, they should be prepared to stand up and announce the background to it so the audience are fully in the picture and can walk out if they feel so inclined.
I‘m happy to have a conversation about whether other works which include racist/xenophobic/antisemitic caricatures or similar should also be relegated to the past or at least introduced in the performance with some historical context. Is it too much of a nuance to say there is a difference between a piece whose whole Raison d'être is a cheap racist joke or a long opera with one questionable character? Not sure there‘s an easy answer and plenty of room for interpretation, but for me Lassus is clear.
</QUOTE>
I think it’s interesting that the folks who are most worried about cancel culture are also the most vague/least nuanced in their criticism.
I think it’s pretty fishy to want to keep lassus trombone but cancel contemporary hip hop artists for rapping about police and gang violence.
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
My point is Lassus is a product of its time. I played Shoutin' Liza and described its non-PC background and the audience did not walk out.
There are non-PC characters all over the place. Swart Pete accompanies St. Nicholas in Holland and steals bad children. Monostatos tries to rape Pamina in "The Magic Flute". Should we drop all of these? I vote no. We must understand these things in the context of their time. We don't have to idolize them, though. Separate water fountains in Alabama is history. Bringing them back is a travesty.
I'm not putting the Fillmore Trombone Family in the same bucket as "The Magic Flute". Mozart wrote much better music than Fillmore. In fact, Fillmore wrote better music than the Trombone Family ("Americans We" as one example). I accept the music for what it is and try to look past the questionable aspects of its past.
There are non-PC characters all over the place. Swart Pete accompanies St. Nicholas in Holland and steals bad children. Monostatos tries to rape Pamina in "The Magic Flute". Should we drop all of these? I vote no. We must understand these things in the context of their time. We don't have to idolize them, though. Separate water fountains in Alabama is history. Bringing them back is a travesty.
I'm not putting the Fillmore Trombone Family in the same bucket as "The Magic Flute". Mozart wrote much better music than Fillmore. In fact, Fillmore wrote better music than the Trombone Family ("Americans We" as one example). I accept the music for what it is and try to look past the questionable aspects of its past.
- ithinknot
- Posts: 1339
- Joined: Jul 24, 2020
[quote="Kdanielsen"]I think it’s pretty fishy to want to keep lassus trombone but cancel contemporary hip hop artists for rapping about police and gang violence.[/quote]
Yes, the implications of that particular whataboutasegue were fairly obvious.
Separately:
[quote="BGuttman"]I understand that Fillmore was not racist; he was simply using a trope of his era to sell music.[/quote]
This is an absurd position. It's true that you and I both probably have no idea about Fillmore's private behavior, but "doing racist stuff for money" is not a morally neutral proposition... and it's definitely more racist than, you know, not doing that.
(In any case, the point is irrelevant because 'the man himself' is not what's being considered - it's the specific piece of music.)
[quote="BGuttman"]My point is Lassus is a product of its time. I played Shoutin' Liza and described its non-PC background and the audience did not walk out.[/quote]
And of course you're free to do that. Indeed, in a pedagogical context there's absolutely a case for introducing 'problematic' material in an informative manner.
But as entertainment to foist upon others, it's an interesting choice. After all, there are so many other ways to bum out the audience...
Yes, the implications of that particular whataboutasegue were fairly obvious.
Separately:
[quote="BGuttman"]I understand that Fillmore was not racist; he was simply using a trope of his era to sell music.[/quote]
This is an absurd position. It's true that you and I both probably have no idea about Fillmore's private behavior, but "doing racist stuff for money" is not a morally neutral proposition... and it's definitely more racist than, you know, not doing that.
(In any case, the point is irrelevant because 'the man himself' is not what's being considered - it's the specific piece of music.)
[quote="BGuttman"]My point is Lassus is a product of its time. I played Shoutin' Liza and described its non-PC background and the audience did not walk out.[/quote]
And of course you're free to do that. Indeed, in a pedagogical context there's absolutely a case for introducing 'problematic' material in an informative manner.
But as entertainment to foist upon others, it's an interesting choice. After all, there are so many other ways to bum out the audience...
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]My point is Lassus is a product of its time. I played Shoutin' Liza and described its non-PC background and the audience did not walk out.
There are non-PC characters all over the place. Swart Pete accompanies St. Nicholas in Holland and steals bad children. Monostatos tries to rape Pamina in "The Magic Flute". Should we drop all of these? I vote no. We must understand these things in the context of their time. We don't have to idolize them, though. Separate water fountains in Alabama is history. Bringing them back is a travesty.
I'm not putting the Fillmore Trombone Family in the same bucket as "The Magic Flute". Mozart wrote much better music than Fillmore. In fact, Fillmore wrote better music than the Trombone Family ("Americans We" as one example). I accept the music for what it is and try to look past the questionable aspects of its past.[/quote]
So now an opera character who does something bad is comparable in your mind to a song written specifically to denigrate an entire race? You guys are really reaching.
There are non-PC characters all over the place. Swart Pete accompanies St. Nicholas in Holland and steals bad children. Monostatos tries to rape Pamina in "The Magic Flute". Should we drop all of these? I vote no. We must understand these things in the context of their time. We don't have to idolize them, though. Separate water fountains in Alabama is history. Bringing them back is a travesty.
I'm not putting the Fillmore Trombone Family in the same bucket as "The Magic Flute". Mozart wrote much better music than Fillmore. In fact, Fillmore wrote better music than the Trombone Family ("Americans We" as one example). I accept the music for what it is and try to look past the questionable aspects of its past.[/quote]
So now an opera character who does something bad is comparable in your mind to a song written specifically to denigrate an entire race? You guys are really reaching.
- MrHCinDE
- Posts: 1039
- Joined: Jul 01, 2018
Credit to Bruce for giving his audience an opportunity to choose, hopefully he would do the same with Lassus if he chose to play it. I don‘t thing it’s vague or lacking nuance to suggest, as I did, that if people really want to play this stuff they could do as Bruce has done, seems to me like a pretty unambiguous suggestion which empowers the audience to choose for themselves.
I prefer to hear everyone‘s point of view and be able to have a mature conversation about it, hence the question about whether Bruce would propose to bring back Minstrel shows and if not, why they are different to Lassus. I think the question was clear and direct, vague is the last word I‘d use to describe it. So far, Bruce chose not to answer that, which is absolutely his right, if he doesn‘t want to talk about it, so be it.
Whether Mozart or anything else I‘m not suggesting we should automatically cancel all characters who do or say something „bad“, whatever that means. I would prefer that people can think about this in context and make their own minds up what their personal threshold between non-PC and outright racist is.
As I see it, one character as part of a much wider plot is somewhat different to something which is entirely focussed on exploiting the prevalent racism at the time it was written. Even those defending the performance of Lassus seem to accept it was written as a deliberate caricature based on racial stereotypes and I don’t think I‘ve seen any post yet claiming it is anything more or less than that.
I prefer to hear everyone‘s point of view and be able to have a mature conversation about it, hence the question about whether Bruce would propose to bring back Minstrel shows and if not, why they are different to Lassus. I think the question was clear and direct, vague is the last word I‘d use to describe it. So far, Bruce chose not to answer that, which is absolutely his right, if he doesn‘t want to talk about it, so be it.
Whether Mozart or anything else I‘m not suggesting we should automatically cancel all characters who do or say something „bad“, whatever that means. I would prefer that people can think about this in context and make their own minds up what their personal threshold between non-PC and outright racist is.
As I see it, one character as part of a much wider plot is somewhat different to something which is entirely focussed on exploiting the prevalent racism at the time it was written. Even those defending the performance of Lassus seem to accept it was written as a deliberate caricature based on racial stereotypes and I don’t think I‘ve seen any post yet claiming it is anything more or less than that.
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
I don't want to bring back Minstrel shows; they wouldn't appeal to today's audiences anyway. Maybe a single performance to show what the genre was.
I also think it's wrong to choose not to play anything by Henry Fillmore (or any of his pen names) just because of the Trombone Family; any more than you should stop playing all Arthur Pryor solos because he wrote a piece called "Coon Band Revue". (Incidentally, I tried playing this piece, now renamed Cake Walk Contest, and I thought he wrote a lot better stuff to perform.)
As trombone pieces that feature the gliss (smear, portamento), Fillmore's pieces are better than some others. That's why we still see them from time to time.
Note that I chose to play Shoutin' Liza because I prefer it to Lassus (and I could point out the quote from Handel). I rarely play any of the other pieces because I just don't like them.
I also think it's wrong to choose not to play anything by Henry Fillmore (or any of his pen names) just because of the Trombone Family; any more than you should stop playing all Arthur Pryor solos because he wrote a piece called "Coon Band Revue". (Incidentally, I tried playing this piece, now renamed Cake Walk Contest, and I thought he wrote a lot better stuff to perform.)
As trombone pieces that feature the gliss (smear, portamento), Fillmore's pieces are better than some others. That's why we still see them from time to time.
Note that I chose to play Shoutin' Liza because I prefer it to Lassus (and I could point out the quote from Handel). I rarely play any of the other pieces because I just don't like them.
- MrHCinDE
- Posts: 1039
- Joined: Jul 01, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]I don't want to bring back Minstrel shows;[/quote]
On this at least we agree.
Would you share the reasons why you look at Minstrel shows differently to Lassus? You don‘t say explicitly that it’s the lack of audience appeal, is that it, or is there more to it?
On this at least we agree.
Would you share the reasons why you look at Minstrel shows differently to Lassus? You don‘t say explicitly that it’s the lack of audience appeal, is that it, or is there more to it?
- MrHCinDE
- Posts: 1039
- Joined: Jul 01, 2018
And by the way, as well as explaining to the audience, in my opinion the suggestion from Michael Dease and quoted in Doug Yeo‘s follow-up article to discuss with a black friend or colleague prior to performance is very meaningful. Did any of those posting on here who would like to perform Lassus after becoming aware of its background do this already?
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
[quote="MrHCinDE"]<QUOTE author="BGuttman" post_id="205412" time="1679423329" user_id="53">
I don't want to bring back Minstrel shows;[/quote]
On this at least we agree.
Would you share the reasons why you look at Minstrel shows differently to Lassus? You don‘t say explicitly that it’s the lack of audience appeal, is that it, or is there more to it?
</QUOTE>
The offensive part of Minstrel shows is not the music but the banter between the two comedians in blackface making jokes about Blacks. I find ethnic humor about any group but mine cringeworthy; and sometimes even jokes about my group that don't appear to be funny.
I don't want to bring back Minstrel shows;[/quote]
On this at least we agree.
Would you share the reasons why you look at Minstrel shows differently to Lassus? You don‘t say explicitly that it’s the lack of audience appeal, is that it, or is there more to it?
</QUOTE>
The offensive part of Minstrel shows is not the music but the banter between the two comedians in blackface making jokes about Blacks. I find ethnic humor about any group but mine cringeworthy; and sometimes even jokes about my group that don't appear to be funny.
- spencercarran
- Posts: 689
- Joined: Oct 17, 2020
Just popping in to observe that in this thread, as in every discussion of Lassus (or alleged "cancel culture" more broadly) it seems that the people getting most worked up about it are the ones who think they should be allowed to say/do racist things without consequence.
No one's passed a law banning Lassus Trombone (or blackface for that matter), but yeah at this point if you do that stuff in public people are gonna draw some conclusions about what sort of person you are.
No one's passed a law banning Lassus Trombone (or blackface for that matter), but yeah at this point if you do that stuff in public people are gonna draw some conclusions about what sort of person you are.
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]I also think it's wrong to choose not to play anything by Henry Fillmore (or any of his pen names) just because of the Trombone Family; any more than you should stop playing all Arthur Pryor solos because he wrote a piece called "Coon Band Revue".[/quote]
Are you aware that nobody here has suggested doing so? I believe Doug's article is titled, "It’s time to bury Henry Fillmore’s “Lassus Trombone.”, not "It's time to bury everything ever written by Henry Fillmore. "
Are you aware that nobody here has suggested doing so? I believe Doug's article is titled, "It’s time to bury Henry Fillmore’s “Lassus Trombone.”, not "It's time to bury everything ever written by Henry Fillmore. "
- MrHCinDE
- Posts: 1039
- Joined: Jul 01, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]The offensive part of Minstrel shows is not the music but the banter between the two comedians in blackface making jokes about Blacks. I find ethnic humor about any group but mine cringeworthy; and sometimes even jokes about my group that don't appear to be funny.[/quote]
Thanks Bruce for your explanation.
Isn‘t the sole purpose of Lassus also cringeworthy ethnic humour, at the very least? I think the facts are clear that it was intended to be entertainment based on racial stereotypes, much like Minstrel shows.
Thanks Bruce for your explanation.
Isn‘t the sole purpose of Lassus also cringeworthy ethnic humour, at the very least? I think the facts are clear that it was intended to be entertainment based on racial stereotypes, much like Minstrel shows.
- timothy42b
- Posts: 1812
- Joined: Mar 27, 2018
[quote="MrHCinDE"]
Isn‘t the sole purpose of Lassus also cringeworthy ethnic humour, at the very least?[/quote]
I don't see how that follows.
I've played that since I was a kid in many community bands, and the editions we used didn't contain the racist descriptions in the title. None of us knew about either the titles or that it came from the minstrel show era. The sole purpose was to play a catchy tune, which it is.
It's only relatively recently that this became more well known.
Up until now my main gripe about Lassus was the inability of the average community band to deal with the road map (multiple repeats, DS's, codas, etc.). It's been quietly shelved now in the bands I play with.
Isn‘t the sole purpose of Lassus also cringeworthy ethnic humour, at the very least?[/quote]
I don't see how that follows.
I've played that since I was a kid in many community bands, and the editions we used didn't contain the racist descriptions in the title. None of us knew about either the titles or that it came from the minstrel show era. The sole purpose was to play a catchy tune, which it is.
It's only relatively recently that this became more well known.
Up until now my main gripe about Lassus was the inability of the average community band to deal with the road map (multiple repeats, DS's, codas, etc.). It's been quietly shelved now in the bands I play with.
- MrHCinDE
- Posts: 1039
- Joined: Jul 01, 2018
[quote="timothy42b"]
I don't see how that follows.
I've played that since I was a kid in many community bands, and the editions we used didn't contain the racist descriptions in the title. None of us knew about either the titles or that it came from the minstrel show era. The sole purpose was to play a catchy tune, which it is.
It's only relatively recently that this became more well known.
Up until now my main gripe about Lassus was the inability of the average community band to deal with the road map (multiple repeats, DS's, codas, etc.). It's been quietly shelved now in the bands I play with.[/quote]
Well I‘m not suggesting that anyone who played it as a kid and did not know about the background should somehow be held accountable for that.
It‘s about choosing to play it now once in full possession of the facts.
I don't see how that follows.
I've played that since I was a kid in many community bands, and the editions we used didn't contain the racist descriptions in the title. None of us knew about either the titles or that it came from the minstrel show era. The sole purpose was to play a catchy tune, which it is.
It's only relatively recently that this became more well known.
Up until now my main gripe about Lassus was the inability of the average community band to deal with the road map (multiple repeats, DS's, codas, etc.). It's been quietly shelved now in the bands I play with.[/quote]
Well I‘m not suggesting that anyone who played it as a kid and did not know about the background should somehow be held accountable for that.
It‘s about choosing to play it now once in full possession of the facts.
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
I got a version of the 12 Rags when I was a kid with those same subtitles. My reaction? Geez! How racist. But back then a lot of things like that were still in public. Think of Rochester, Jack Benny's chauffeur. Amos 'n' Andy. Lots of the Loony Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons with black caricatures. Steppin Fetchit was still around. I learned to just turn off when that happened. Divorced from the awful subtitles, the Fillmore Trombone Rags are above average music. None of my Black friends ever said anything, but maybe they were being polite (or trying to not draw attention).
This whole thing exploded when a White Woke bass trombonist took offense. I only heard Black members of this Forum being vocal after the fact. Maybe they were also trying to not draw attention up to then. Now everybody is joining in to jump on the bandwagon finding all the typical "Darkie" artifacts of 100 years ago offensive. I am not fond of these either, but I leave them in their context. If you feel you don't want to listen to Amos 'n' Andy or a Jack Benny episode with Rochester (which made the actor who played him a wealthy man), be my guest. Don't play Pryor's "Coon Band Revue" either. But much like with today's Pro Lifers, please let everybody make their own choices.
This whole thing exploded when a White Woke bass trombonist took offense. I only heard Black members of this Forum being vocal after the fact. Maybe they were also trying to not draw attention up to then. Now everybody is joining in to jump on the bandwagon finding all the typical "Darkie" artifacts of 100 years ago offensive. I am not fond of these either, but I leave them in their context. If you feel you don't want to listen to Amos 'n' Andy or a Jack Benny episode with Rochester (which made the actor who played him a wealthy man), be my guest. Don't play Pryor's "Coon Band Revue" either. But much like with today's Pro Lifers, please let everybody make their own choices.
- spencercarran
- Posts: 689
- Joined: Oct 17, 2020
[quote="BGuttman"]This whole thing exploded when a White Woke bass trombonist took offense. I only heard Black members of this Forum being vocal after the fact. Maybe they were also trying to not draw attention up to then. Now everybody is joining in to jump on the bandwagon finding all the typical "Darkie" artifacts of 100 years ago offensive. I am not fond of these either, but I leave them in their context. If you feel you don't want to listen to Amos 'n' Andy or a Jack Benny episode with Rochester (which made the actor who played him a wealthy man), be my guest. Don't play Pryor's "Coon Band Revue" either. But much like with today's Pro Lifers, please let everybody make their own choices.[/quote]
Not sure that I would characterize Douglas Yeo as "woke." But in any case, as I said before - there's no law against playing Lassus trombone. You can go ahead and play it as much as you like, if you're not bothered by the social judgment you might face for doing so. The OP in this thread asked only for alternatives that don't have the same historical baggage, but instead of "let[ting] everybody make their own choices" you and a few others got all in a tizzy at the idea that someone would prefer not to perform music with a racist origin.
Not sure that I would characterize Douglas Yeo as "woke." But in any case, as I said before - there's no law against playing Lassus trombone. You can go ahead and play it as much as you like, if you're not bothered by the social judgment you might face for doing so. The OP in this thread asked only for alternatives that don't have the same historical baggage, but instead of "let[ting] everybody make their own choices" you and a few others got all in a tizzy at the idea that someone would prefer not to perform music with a racist origin.
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
[quote="spencercarran"]<QUOTE author="BGuttman" post_id="205479" time="1679494076" user_id="53">This whole thing exploded when a White Woke bass trombonist took offense. I only heard Black members of this Forum being vocal after the fact. Maybe they were also trying to not draw attention up to then. Now everybody is joining in to jump on the bandwagon finding all the typical "Darkie" artifacts of 100 years ago offensive. I am not fond of these either, but I leave them in their context. If you feel you don't want to listen to Amos 'n' Andy or a Jack Benny episode with Rochester (which made the actor who played him a wealthy man), be my guest. Don't play Pryor's "Coon Band Revue" either. But much like with today's Pro Lifers, please let everybody make their own choices.[/quote]
Not sure that I would characterize Douglas Yeo as "woke." But in any case, as I said before - there's no law against playing Lassus trombone. You can go ahead and play it as much as you like, if you're not bothered by the social judgment you might face for doing so. The OP in this thread asked only for alternatives that don't have the same historical baggage, but instead of "let[ting] everybody make their own choices" you and a few others got all in a tizzy at the idea that someone would prefer not to perform music with a racist origin.
</QUOTE>
You REALLY misunderstand me. I don't care whether you choose to play Lassus or not. I suggested another thing to the OP (the Stravinsky Pulcinella trombone solo). I object to people deciding what I should do. My Dixieland Band used to love to play Lassus. I didn't. But I did it anyway because they wanted me to. One of the problems of playing in an ensemble is that you have to play what the leader (or sometimes the rest of the group) want to even if you don't agree or can't hack it. When the piece is too hard for me to play I practice what I can, and do my best.
I still cringe when I see titles like "Coon Band Revue" or "Darktown Strutters' Ball". I also cringe when a cartoon with "negro" crows do imitations of Stepin' Fetchit. I don't listen to Amos 'n' Andy programs. I tune out a lot of Jack Benny. I never even liked Redd Foxx in Sanford and Son". Not that I dislike Black performers (incidentally, Amos 'n' Andy were two white guys). I love listening to Paul Robeson, William Warfield, Kathleen Battle, and others who slip my mind.
Now I am in a situation where I can only play for my own enjoyment. So I can pull out Fake Books and play the tunes I like. I skip tunes I can't figure out or don't care for. I may embellish or improvise over ones I can master. People listening here tell me they enjoy listening to me. If they don't like it they seem to just not listen (an easy feat when you need hearing aids ;) ).
If someone close to me asks me to not play a piece, I will bow to their preference. Part of civilization is learning to live with each other.
Not sure that I would characterize Douglas Yeo as "woke." But in any case, as I said before - there's no law against playing Lassus trombone. You can go ahead and play it as much as you like, if you're not bothered by the social judgment you might face for doing so. The OP in this thread asked only for alternatives that don't have the same historical baggage, but instead of "let[ting] everybody make their own choices" you and a few others got all in a tizzy at the idea that someone would prefer not to perform music with a racist origin.
</QUOTE>
You REALLY misunderstand me. I don't care whether you choose to play Lassus or not. I suggested another thing to the OP (the Stravinsky Pulcinella trombone solo). I object to people deciding what I should do. My Dixieland Band used to love to play Lassus. I didn't. But I did it anyway because they wanted me to. One of the problems of playing in an ensemble is that you have to play what the leader (or sometimes the rest of the group) want to even if you don't agree or can't hack it. When the piece is too hard for me to play I practice what I can, and do my best.
I still cringe when I see titles like "Coon Band Revue" or "Darktown Strutters' Ball". I also cringe when a cartoon with "negro" crows do imitations of Stepin' Fetchit. I don't listen to Amos 'n' Andy programs. I tune out a lot of Jack Benny. I never even liked Redd Foxx in Sanford and Son". Not that I dislike Black performers (incidentally, Amos 'n' Andy were two white guys). I love listening to Paul Robeson, William Warfield, Kathleen Battle, and others who slip my mind.
Now I am in a situation where I can only play for my own enjoyment. So I can pull out Fake Books and play the tunes I like. I skip tunes I can't figure out or don't care for. I may embellish or improvise over ones I can master. People listening here tell me they enjoy listening to me. If they don't like it they seem to just not listen (an easy feat when you need hearing aids ;) ).
If someone close to me asks me to not play a piece, I will bow to their preference. Part of civilization is learning to live with each other.
- BaronVonBone
- Posts: 36
- Joined: Feb 20, 2023
There's a version of The Muppet Show Theme that puts a serious smear where the brief "tenor sax solo" is in the original--replaces that whole transition, IIRC. Even if the kids these days aren't familiar with it any more, it's a great song for kiddos (of all ages).
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]
This whole thing exploded when a White Woke bass trombonist took offense. I only heard Black members of this Forum being vocal after the fact.[/quote]
Yeah, how dare you invent racism, Doug Yeo.
Doug Yeo didn't make it explode, YOU did, Bruce. The thread was pretty relaxed, for about 9 posts, at which time you decided to drop in and start defending Lassus and suggesting that we are all hypocrites if we stop playing Lassus but still play Wagner (an argument that I STILL find to be incredibly weak). I don't know why you are so hell bent on making this a personal crusade, but you need to stop.
<LINK_TEXT text="viewtopic.php?t=15627&hilit=lassus">https://trombonechat.com/viewtopic.php?t=15627&hilit=lassus</LINK_TEXT>
This whole thing exploded when a White Woke bass trombonist took offense. I only heard Black members of this Forum being vocal after the fact.[/quote]
Yeah, how dare you invent racism, Doug Yeo.
Doug Yeo didn't make it explode, YOU did, Bruce. The thread was pretty relaxed, for about 9 posts, at which time you decided to drop in and start defending Lassus and suggesting that we are all hypocrites if we stop playing Lassus but still play Wagner (an argument that I STILL find to be incredibly weak). I don't know why you are so hell bent on making this a personal crusade, but you need to stop.
<LINK_TEXT text="viewtopic.php?t=15627&hilit=lassus">https://trombonechat.com/viewtopic.php?t=15627&hilit=lassus</LINK_TEXT>
- norbie2018
- Posts: 1051
- Joined: Apr 05, 2018
Wagner's music was used by the Nazis. The danger is conflating Wagner's music with Nazism and having it banned from performance by decent folk. It is not that far a stretch, given our current political climate at universities and in the performing arts. A previous poster mentioned how a lot of great composers had relationships with seedy characters; will those composers become off-limits? I do not think this is a far stretch; our freedom of speech/expression is always under threat of censorship.
I am glad we have this forum to express common interests and appreciate all the points made by everyone. I posted merely because I thought the argument re other composers and their backgrounds is significant. Now I'm off to play trombone, the second love of my life.
I am glad we have this forum to express common interests and appreciate all the points made by everyone. I posted merely because I thought the argument re other composers and their backgrounds is significant. Now I'm off to play trombone, the second love of my life.
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
Brad, I didn't say Doug Yeo invented racism. All he did is take umbrage at the racist titles on the Fillmore Trombone Rags. He is right to do that; there is no justification for those subtitles.
I say that absent the dissemination of the subtitles, there is only marginal indication that the music is derogatory to African-Americans. When I first heard Lassus Trombone I never thought it was about Black folks. I suspect a lot of other people feel the same way.
What I am hearing from the Yeo supporters is arguments similar to what I have been hearing from people who want to ban books in our libraries because the book is about something they consider "wrong" (Gay marriage, the premise that the US was founded on unpaid slave labor, teenage gender insecurity, etc.). I don't think we should discard music simply because it takes on a controversial subject. In fact, if we decide that a tune is really controversial, it will probably sink to the realm of the unperformed. If that happened to the Fillmore Trombone Rags, I have no problem with that.
It is kind of sad that everybody who has to demonstrate the trombone to kids seems to feel that the Glissando is a major feature of the instrument and should be emphasized. I get very few opportunities in my playing to use a Glissando (at least intentionally ;) ).
I say that absent the dissemination of the subtitles, there is only marginal indication that the music is derogatory to African-Americans. When I first heard Lassus Trombone I never thought it was about Black folks. I suspect a lot of other people feel the same way.
What I am hearing from the Yeo supporters is arguments similar to what I have been hearing from people who want to ban books in our libraries because the book is about something they consider "wrong" (Gay marriage, the premise that the US was founded on unpaid slave labor, teenage gender insecurity, etc.). I don't think we should discard music simply because it takes on a controversial subject. In fact, if we decide that a tune is really controversial, it will probably sink to the realm of the unperformed. If that happened to the Fillmore Trombone Rags, I have no problem with that.
It is kind of sad that everybody who has to demonstrate the trombone to kids seems to feel that the Glissando is a major feature of the instrument and should be emphasized. I get very few opportunities in my playing to use a Glissando (at least intentionally ;) ).
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
Well you may believe that racism is not wrong, but is only "wrong" in the same sense that the far right in the US believes gay marriage and telling the truth about history is "wrong". I could not disagree more. I believe racism is objectively wrong, and people who say otherwise will not be judged well by history. The irony is that none of these racist things we have talked about have been banned in the US. We only have private companies and individuals who have decided not to present certain racist art, literature, or advertising (which is their right). What HAS been banned in the US are things that ackowledge the existence of LGBTQ people, or acknowlege that our country has a racist past (and present). It is indeed frightening, but not for the reason you think. Keep digging that hole, Bruce.
- johntarr
- Posts: 368
- Joined: May 07, 2018
[quote="norbie2018"]Wagner's music was used by the Nazis. The danger is conflating Wagner's music with Nazism and having it banned from performance by decent folk. It is not that far a stretch, given our current political climate at universities and in the performing arts. A previous poster mentioned how a lot of great composers had relationships with seedy characters; will those composers become off-limits? I do not think this is a far stretch; our freedom of speech/expression is always under threat of censorship.
I am glad we have this forum to express common interests and appreciate all the points made by everyone. I posted merely because I thought the argument re other composers and their backgrounds is significant. Now I'm off to play trombone, the second love of my life.[/quote]
Exactly, and this is why we need more nuance and differentiation in our discussions, and Doug Yeo has generously and carefully given us material for such a discussion. He didn’t say anything about banning Filmore’s other works, he followed up with another article, and reached out to other colleagues who also happen to be African American, to hear their perspectives. Doug also addressed the white washing by the publisher, and said, that it’s important to consider each situation separately, meaning, not using the argument that, because such and such composer’s music was also associated with racism, any further discussions are superfluous. It’s also illogical to claim that (mostly) collectively deciding to stop performing a work based on newly presented information will lead to further losses of freedom of speech. Referring to the above quote, we are talking about Lassus Trombone here, we can discuss Wagner or any other composer in another thread. As I wrote in an earlier post in this thread, I welcome further discussions on other works which might carry negative messages or are inappropriate for any other reasons.
The argument that, with the racial slurs removed from the manuscript, most people will not know of/hear the music’s original intent, is perhaps trickier for some. I was asked to perform Lassus Trombone here in Sweden and I declined, citing the reasons presented in Doug’s article. My colleague argued that no one here has any knowledge about the original racist intent, making those issues irrelevant. For me, knowing what I now know about the the piece, I simply could not feel good about playing it, even if the audience would never have a clue as to what was behind the composition.
As I navigate the second half of my life, I’ve become more sensitive to, and concerned with what kind of verbal and musical messages I communicate. I am convinced that as a musician and teacher, I have a responsibility to examine my own thoughts, biases and beliefs, and if I find something that could be, or is harmful to another being, revise my thinking. This does not mean that I don’t unwittingly think, say and play stupid things, but if I become aware of my errors, I hope to correct them and learn. I have played Lassus Trombone many times in a big band show, many years ago but will never play it again, and encourage fellow trombonists to do the same. Let us move forward.
Respectfully,
John
I am glad we have this forum to express common interests and appreciate all the points made by everyone. I posted merely because I thought the argument re other composers and their backgrounds is significant. Now I'm off to play trombone, the second love of my life.[/quote]
Exactly, and this is why we need more nuance and differentiation in our discussions, and Doug Yeo has generously and carefully given us material for such a discussion. He didn’t say anything about banning Filmore’s other works, he followed up with another article, and reached out to other colleagues who also happen to be African American, to hear their perspectives. Doug also addressed the white washing by the publisher, and said, that it’s important to consider each situation separately, meaning, not using the argument that, because such and such composer’s music was also associated with racism, any further discussions are superfluous. It’s also illogical to claim that (mostly) collectively deciding to stop performing a work based on newly presented information will lead to further losses of freedom of speech. Referring to the above quote, we are talking about Lassus Trombone here, we can discuss Wagner or any other composer in another thread. As I wrote in an earlier post in this thread, I welcome further discussions on other works which might carry negative messages or are inappropriate for any other reasons.
The argument that, with the racial slurs removed from the manuscript, most people will not know of/hear the music’s original intent, is perhaps trickier for some. I was asked to perform Lassus Trombone here in Sweden and I declined, citing the reasons presented in Doug’s article. My colleague argued that no one here has any knowledge about the original racist intent, making those issues irrelevant. For me, knowing what I now know about the the piece, I simply could not feel good about playing it, even if the audience would never have a clue as to what was behind the composition.
As I navigate the second half of my life, I’ve become more sensitive to, and concerned with what kind of verbal and musical messages I communicate. I am convinced that as a musician and teacher, I have a responsibility to examine my own thoughts, biases and beliefs, and if I find something that could be, or is harmful to another being, revise my thinking. This does not mean that I don’t unwittingly think, say and play stupid things, but if I become aware of my errors, I hope to correct them and learn. I have played Lassus Trombone many times in a big band show, many years ago but will never play it again, and encourage fellow trombonists to do the same. Let us move forward.
Respectfully,
John
- BaronVonBone
- Posts: 36
- Joined: Feb 20, 2023
[quote="brassmedic"]Well you may believe that racism is not wrong ...[/quote]
I don't think that's what Bruce was trying to say.
We should all, always give each other the benefit of doubt.
It's too easy, esp with distance, to let our own sensibilities inform us.
Just the vagaries of human brain ownership--no one's at fault for the inclination.
I don't think that's what Bruce was trying to say.
We should all, always give each other the benefit of doubt.
It's too easy, esp with distance, to let our own sensibilities inform us.
Just the vagaries of human brain ownership--no one's at fault for the inclination.
- MrHCinDE
- Posts: 1039
- Joined: Jul 01, 2018
The fact that we are having a discussion about it and to my knowledge (apologies if I missed it) nobody has yet proposed an absolute ban on Lassus is evidence that freedom of speech is still alive and well.
I found this case in the UK to be very interesting:
[url]<LINK_TEXT text=" https://m.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/ ... 63814.html"> https://m.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/uk/man-wins-appeal-over-black-and-white-minstrel-performance-at-work-party/38163814.html</LINK_TEXT>
On appeal the court could not be sure that the „performer“ intended to be abusive towards a black colleague when he performed a blackface number in her presence. The burden of proof is rather high it seems…
I don’t believe anyone posting on here intends to deliberately cause harm to their audience members or fellow performers. However, I ask them to consider that it should be up to the potential victims of that abuse to decide whether they consider it abusive for someone to knowingly play music to them which is rooted in the racism of its time, not the potential abusers.
Maybe those who are exercising their right to free speech by knowingly performing music with a racist heritage are the very ones who may drive tighter legislation for us all? I’d rather not get to the point where these sorts of things have to be legally banned. I still like to think we can rely on basic human decency and consideration of others.
I found this case in the UK to be very interesting:
On appeal the court could not be sure that the „performer“ intended to be abusive towards a black colleague when he performed a blackface number in her presence. The burden of proof is rather high it seems…
I don’t believe anyone posting on here intends to deliberately cause harm to their audience members or fellow performers. However, I ask them to consider that it should be up to the potential victims of that abuse to decide whether they consider it abusive for someone to knowingly play music to them which is rooted in the racism of its time, not the potential abusers.
Maybe those who are exercising their right to free speech by knowingly performing music with a racist heritage are the very ones who may drive tighter legislation for us all? I’d rather not get to the point where these sorts of things have to be legally banned. I still like to think we can rely on basic human decency and consideration of others.
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="BaronVonBone"]<QUOTE author="brassmedic" post_id="205525" time="1679527739" user_id="4102">Well you may believe that racism is not wrong ...[/quote]
I don't think that's what Bruce was trying to say.
We should all, always give each other the benefit of doubt.
It's too easy, esp with distance, to let our own sensibilities inform us.
Just the vagaries of human brain ownership--no one's at fault for the inclination.
</QUOTE>
Bruce wrote:
"What I am hearing from the Yeo supporters is arguments similar to what I have been hearing from people who want to ban books in our libraries because the book is about something they consider "wrong" (Gay marriage, the premise that the US was founded on unpaid slave labor, teenage gender insecurity, etc.). I don't think we should discard music simply because it takes on a controversial subject. "
I read that as equating those of us who don't perform Lassus Trombone with those who ban books about critical race theory and LGBTQ people. I don't see ANY equivalency between the two. Then he says not to discard music "simply because it takes on a controversial subject". I don't consider Lassus to be "simply taking on a controversial subject." There is a difference between addressing racism and being racist.
If that is not what Bruce wrote, kindly tell me what he DID write.
I don't think that's what Bruce was trying to say.
We should all, always give each other the benefit of doubt.
It's too easy, esp with distance, to let our own sensibilities inform us.
Just the vagaries of human brain ownership--no one's at fault for the inclination.
</QUOTE>
Bruce wrote:
"What I am hearing from the Yeo supporters is arguments similar to what I have been hearing from people who want to ban books in our libraries because the book is about something they consider "wrong" (Gay marriage, the premise that the US was founded on unpaid slave labor, teenage gender insecurity, etc.). I don't think we should discard music simply because it takes on a controversial subject. "
I read that as equating those of us who don't perform Lassus Trombone with those who ban books about critical race theory and LGBTQ people. I don't see ANY equivalency between the two. Then he says not to discard music "simply because it takes on a controversial subject". I don't consider Lassus to be "simply taking on a controversial subject." There is a difference between addressing racism and being racist.
If that is not what Bruce wrote, kindly tell me what he DID write.
- norbie2018
- Posts: 1051
- Joined: Apr 05, 2018
[quote="MrHCinDE"]Maybe those who are exercising their right to free speech by knowingly performing music with a racist heritage are the very ones who may drive tighter legislation for us all? I’d rather not get to the point where these sorts of things have to be legally banned.[/quote]
You cannot have them banned as that would be unconstitutional in the U.S. Even if most people in American society agree that certain speech - or in this case the heritage of a tune - is reprehensible does not mean it can be banned.
We are unique in the world when it comes to our free speech rights and for the sake of the people - us - I am glad government cannot intervene in the vast majority of cases. I'd rather work things out between us than have big brother try to do so.
You cannot have them banned as that would be unconstitutional in the U.S. Even if most people in American society agree that certain speech - or in this case the heritage of a tune - is reprehensible does not mean it can be banned.
We are unique in the world when it comes to our free speech rights and for the sake of the people - us - I am glad government cannot intervene in the vast majority of cases. I'd rather work things out between us than have big brother try to do so.
- ithinknot
- Posts: 1339
- Joined: Jul 24, 2020
[quote="MrHCinDE"]I found this case in the UK to be very interesting:
[url]<LINK_TEXT text=" https://m.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/ ... 63814.html"> https://m.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/uk/man-wins-appeal-over-black-and-white-minstrel-performance-at-work-party/38163814.html</LINK_TEXT>[/quote]
The judge said Davies was not “a man of profound intelligence, wisdom or judgment”i.e. you're so stupid you might actually have thought this was ok
- MrHCinDE
- Posts: 1039
- Joined: Jul 01, 2018
[quote="ithinknot"]<QUOTE author="MrHCinDE" post_id="205595" time="1679596795" user_id="3472">
I found this case in the UK to be very interesting:
[url]<LINK_TEXT text=" https://m.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/ ... 63814.html"> https://m.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/uk/man-wins-appeal-over-black-and-white-minstrel-performance-at-work-party/38163814.html</LINK_TEXT>[/quote]
</QUOTE>
Indeed
I found this case in the UK to be very interesting:
The judge said Davies was not “a man of profound intelligence, wisdom or judgment”i.e. you're so stupid you might actually have thought this was ok
</QUOTE>
Indeed
- MrHCinDE
- Posts: 1039
- Joined: Jul 01, 2018
Right, I know the right to freedom of speech is extremely valued in the US.
However unlikely, even the mighty US constitution could theoretically be amended with enough popular and political support (I have something about 2/3 of both houses in the back of my mind?).
To be absolutely clear, I‘m not suggesting constitutional change is necessary for Lassus or any other freedom of performance topic. Better we are able to question ourselves whether we should be playing it.
However unlikely, even the mighty US constitution could theoretically be amended with enough popular and political support (I have something about 2/3 of both houses in the back of my mind?).
To be absolutely clear, I‘m not suggesting constitutional change is necessary for Lassus or any other freedom of performance topic. Better we are able to question ourselves whether we should be playing it.
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
Freedom of Speech allows a lot of unpopular topics to be covered. You can print out anything you like that denigrates Blacks, Hispanics, Jews, Irish, Italians, etc. You are not allowed to deny any of these people their rights. We allow the publication of pornography, and we allow people to demonstrate against it.
You folks have every right to bring up the racist subtitles (or even racist titles) of music. I value the comments of people of the targeted factions expressing disapproval. If only the most radical of these people are willing to provide an opinion, I consider that not a general opinion. I still agree with everyone that the subtitles are not complimentary to African-Americans.
I haven't played Lassus in a long time, and now I probably won't ever more (no more Dixieland Band). I am just pointing out that sensibilities of the early 20th Century are different from sensibilities of the early 21st Century. What people considered acceptable then is not what is considered acceptable now. I am certain that if Henry Fillmore was writing those Trombone Rags now he would never have attached those offensive subtitles and would probably have attached a different backstory to them.
You folks have every right to bring up the racist subtitles (or even racist titles) of music. I value the comments of people of the targeted factions expressing disapproval. If only the most radical of these people are willing to provide an opinion, I consider that not a general opinion. I still agree with everyone that the subtitles are not complimentary to African-Americans.
I haven't played Lassus in a long time, and now I probably won't ever more (no more Dixieland Band). I am just pointing out that sensibilities of the early 20th Century are different from sensibilities of the early 21st Century. What people considered acceptable then is not what is considered acceptable now. I am certain that if Henry Fillmore was writing those Trombone Rags now he would never have attached those offensive subtitles and would probably have attached a different backstory to them.
- Burgerbob
- Posts: 6327
- Joined: Apr 23, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]
I haven't played Lassus in a long time, and now I probably won't ever more (no more Dixieland Band). I am just pointing out that sensibilities of the early 20th Century are different from sensibilities of the early 21st Century. What people considered acceptable then is not what is considered acceptable now. I am certain that if Henry Fillmore was writing those Trombone Rags now he would never have attached those offensive subtitles and would probably have attached a different backstory to them.[/quote]
...which is why we shouldn't play them now. Done!
I haven't played Lassus in a long time, and now I probably won't ever more (no more Dixieland Band). I am just pointing out that sensibilities of the early 20th Century are different from sensibilities of the early 21st Century. What people considered acceptable then is not what is considered acceptable now. I am certain that if Henry Fillmore was writing those Trombone Rags now he would never have attached those offensive subtitles and would probably have attached a different backstory to them.[/quote]
...which is why we shouldn't play them now. Done!
- BaronVonBone
- Posts: 36
- Joined: Feb 20, 2023
[quote="brassmedic"]Bruce wrote:
"What I am hearing from the Yeo supporters is arguments similar to what I have been hearing from people who want to ban books in our libraries because the book is about something they consider "wrong" (Gay marriage, the premise that the US was founded on unpaid slave labor, teenage gender insecurity, etc.). I don't think we should discard music simply because it takes on a controversial subject. "
I read that as equating those of us who don't perform Lassus Trombone with those who ban books about critical race theory and LGBTQ people. I don't see ANY equivalency between the two. Then he says not to discard music "simply because it takes on a controversial subject". I don't consider Lassus to be "simply taking on a controversial subject." There is a difference between addressing racism and being racist.
If that is not what Bruce wrote, kindly tell me what he DID write.[/quote]
Whet he didn't say, to the point I made, is that he doesn't think racism is wrong. Maybe you didn't pull that out of thin air, but don't you think there's a good bit more room for the benefit of doubt before going with that kind of conclusion? The problem with human brain ownership is that when you go there--when you choose a conclusion--you've started to dig in, and the facts start to degrade in importance and interest, even if just a little. It only gets worse from there, unless the human brain owner at the helm is self-aware enough to realize what's happening, and can muster up the fortitude to swallow some pride, recuse personal sensibilities and perceptions, and put sincere effort into making the correction.
For the record, I'm more in agreement with you on the underlying discussion. It's easy for me to take that position though, because I dislike music that makes a cartoon of the trombone to begin with. It can be comical given the right context, but absent such context it's just boorish to me, At the very least I would move over a section and switch to euphonium on a song like Lassus, even aside from the nastiness of the concept and message of the piece. But when a song makes a cartoon of people (not in a fun way, but rather nasty--not characters like clowns or Mr. Magoo, but our neighbors--our fellow citizens of humanity), that's 14 orders or so more ugly.
I'll have to check into the history on Wagner (maybe starting by seeing what's been said about it in here), because I do like that music. I won't any longer, though, if what I learn imbues it with a dark, ugly meaning, targeting people. Although Wagner isn't a composer I listen to on a regular basis, so it's likely likely to be A Thing for me any time soon, and to that end I again have an easier choice than many, because it's not a very significant personal sacrifice on behalf of my fellow citizens.
But more important than my position or your position or anyone else's position on this stuff, is that we maintain the humility to accept that others are deserving of respect whether they agree with us or not, as long as they don't get nasty and hateful and disrespectful about it and spend their benefit of doubt about such things. That's a bigger problem, because it kills genuine dialog--ensures no one learns about others' positions or the bases for them, and such. And when it does get into nasty territory I advocate the there but for the grace of God go I ethic (or there but for the vagaries of the cosmos or of nature if you prefer). It becomes very hard to hate or vilify if you can internalize that ethic. It's also a hard ethic to argue against ... and there's a very good reason for that.
"What I am hearing from the Yeo supporters is arguments similar to what I have been hearing from people who want to ban books in our libraries because the book is about something they consider "wrong" (Gay marriage, the premise that the US was founded on unpaid slave labor, teenage gender insecurity, etc.). I don't think we should discard music simply because it takes on a controversial subject. "
I read that as equating those of us who don't perform Lassus Trombone with those who ban books about critical race theory and LGBTQ people. I don't see ANY equivalency between the two. Then he says not to discard music "simply because it takes on a controversial subject". I don't consider Lassus to be "simply taking on a controversial subject." There is a difference between addressing racism and being racist.
If that is not what Bruce wrote, kindly tell me what he DID write.[/quote]
Whet he didn't say, to the point I made, is that he doesn't think racism is wrong. Maybe you didn't pull that out of thin air, but don't you think there's a good bit more room for the benefit of doubt before going with that kind of conclusion? The problem with human brain ownership is that when you go there--when you choose a conclusion--you've started to dig in, and the facts start to degrade in importance and interest, even if just a little. It only gets worse from there, unless the human brain owner at the helm is self-aware enough to realize what's happening, and can muster up the fortitude to swallow some pride, recuse personal sensibilities and perceptions, and put sincere effort into making the correction.
For the record, I'm more in agreement with you on the underlying discussion. It's easy for me to take that position though, because I dislike music that makes a cartoon of the trombone to begin with. It can be comical given the right context, but absent such context it's just boorish to me, At the very least I would move over a section and switch to euphonium on a song like Lassus, even aside from the nastiness of the concept and message of the piece. But when a song makes a cartoon of people (not in a fun way, but rather nasty--not characters like clowns or Mr. Magoo, but our neighbors--our fellow citizens of humanity), that's 14 orders or so more ugly.
I'll have to check into the history on Wagner (maybe starting by seeing what's been said about it in here), because I do like that music. I won't any longer, though, if what I learn imbues it with a dark, ugly meaning, targeting people. Although Wagner isn't a composer I listen to on a regular basis, so it's likely likely to be A Thing for me any time soon, and to that end I again have an easier choice than many, because it's not a very significant personal sacrifice on behalf of my fellow citizens.
But more important than my position or your position or anyone else's position on this stuff, is that we maintain the humility to accept that others are deserving of respect whether they agree with us or not, as long as they don't get nasty and hateful and disrespectful about it and spend their benefit of doubt about such things. That's a bigger problem, because it kills genuine dialog--ensures no one learns about others' positions or the bases for them, and such. And when it does get into nasty territory I advocate the there but for the grace of God go I ethic (or there but for the vagaries of the cosmos or of nature if you prefer). It becomes very hard to hate or vilify if you can internalize that ethic. It's also a hard ethic to argue against ... and there's a very good reason for that.
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="BaronVonBone"]<QUOTE author="brassmedic" post_id="205596" time="1679597296" user_id="4102">Bruce wrote:
"What I am hearing from the Yeo supporters is arguments similar to what I have been hearing from people who want to ban books in our libraries because the book is about something they consider "wrong" (Gay marriage, the premise that the US was founded on unpaid slave labor, teenage gender insecurity, etc.). I don't think we should discard music simply because it takes on a controversial subject. "
I read that as equating those of us who don't perform Lassus Trombone with those who ban books about critical race theory and LGBTQ people. I don't see ANY equivalency between the two. Then he says not to discard music "simply because it takes on a controversial subject". I don't consider Lassus to be "simply taking on a controversial subject." There is a difference between addressing racism and being racist.
If that is not what Bruce wrote, kindly tell me what he DID write.[/quote]
Whet he didn't say, to the point I made, is that he doesn't think racism is wrong. Maybe you didn't pull that out of thin air, but don't you think there's a good bit more room for the benefit of doubt before going with that kind of conclusion? The problem with human brain ownership is that when you go there--when you choose a conclusion--you've started to dig in, and the facts start to degrade in importance and interest, even if just a little. It only gets worse from there, unless the human brain owner at the helm is self-aware enough to realize what's happening, and can muster up the fortitude to swallow some pride, recuse personal sensibilities and perceptions, and put sincere effort into making the correction.
For the record, I'm more in agreement with you on the underlying discussion. It's easy for me to take that position though, because I dislike music that makes a cartoon of the trombone to begin with. It can be comical given the right context, but absent such context it's just boorish to me, At the very least I would move over a section and switch to euphonium on a song like Lassus, even aside from the nastiness of the concept and message of the piece. But when a song makes a cartoon of people (not in a fun way, but rather nasty--not characters like clowns or Mr. Magoo, but our neighbors--our fellow citizens of humanity), that's 14 orders or so more ugly.
I'll have to check into the history on Wagner (maybe starting by seeing what's been said about it in here), because I do like that music. I won't any longer, though, if what I learn imbues it with a dark, ugly meaning, targeting people. Although Wagner isn't a composer I listen to on a regular basis, so it's likely likely to be A Thing for me any time soon, and to that end I again have an easier choice than many, because it's not a very significant personal sacrifice on behalf of my fellow citizens.
But more important than my position or your position or anyone else's position on this stuff, is that we maintain the humility to accept that others are deserving of respect whether they agree with us or not, as long as they don't get nasty and hateful and disrespectful about it and spend their benefit of doubt about such things. That's a bigger problem, because it kills genuine dialog--ensures no one learns about others' positions or the bases for them, and such. And when it does get into nasty territory I advocate the there but for the grace of God go I ethic (or there but for the vagaries of the cosmos or of nature if you prefer). It becomes very hard to hate or vilify if you can internalize that ethic. It's also a hard ethic to argue against ... and there's a very good reason for that.
</QUOTE>
I don't think you read what I wrote. I never claimed that Bruce said racism wasn't wrong. I only pointed out that he equated it to the book bannings that are going on in the South right now, which are happening for reasons he labeled as "wrong" (In quotes, i.e., only situationally wrong and not absolutely wrong.) And I said I disagree. Lampooning black people and portraying them as inferior to white people is wrong, and it always WAS wrong, whether or not it was allowed by society. It's not wrong only because someone labeled it as wrong; it IS wrong. This is my opinion, not a fault in my brain, thank you very much. :roll: Can't just take the first part of a sentence out of context. And I'm perfectly open to Bruce explaining how that wasn't what he meant.
And I'm gonna go ahead and disagree with you - I don't believe we have to respect other people's opinions if those opinions are objectively immoral.
"What I am hearing from the Yeo supporters is arguments similar to what I have been hearing from people who want to ban books in our libraries because the book is about something they consider "wrong" (Gay marriage, the premise that the US was founded on unpaid slave labor, teenage gender insecurity, etc.). I don't think we should discard music simply because it takes on a controversial subject. "
I read that as equating those of us who don't perform Lassus Trombone with those who ban books about critical race theory and LGBTQ people. I don't see ANY equivalency between the two. Then he says not to discard music "simply because it takes on a controversial subject". I don't consider Lassus to be "simply taking on a controversial subject." There is a difference between addressing racism and being racist.
If that is not what Bruce wrote, kindly tell me what he DID write.[/quote]
Whet he didn't say, to the point I made, is that he doesn't think racism is wrong. Maybe you didn't pull that out of thin air, but don't you think there's a good bit more room for the benefit of doubt before going with that kind of conclusion? The problem with human brain ownership is that when you go there--when you choose a conclusion--you've started to dig in, and the facts start to degrade in importance and interest, even if just a little. It only gets worse from there, unless the human brain owner at the helm is self-aware enough to realize what's happening, and can muster up the fortitude to swallow some pride, recuse personal sensibilities and perceptions, and put sincere effort into making the correction.
For the record, I'm more in agreement with you on the underlying discussion. It's easy for me to take that position though, because I dislike music that makes a cartoon of the trombone to begin with. It can be comical given the right context, but absent such context it's just boorish to me, At the very least I would move over a section and switch to euphonium on a song like Lassus, even aside from the nastiness of the concept and message of the piece. But when a song makes a cartoon of people (not in a fun way, but rather nasty--not characters like clowns or Mr. Magoo, but our neighbors--our fellow citizens of humanity), that's 14 orders or so more ugly.
I'll have to check into the history on Wagner (maybe starting by seeing what's been said about it in here), because I do like that music. I won't any longer, though, if what I learn imbues it with a dark, ugly meaning, targeting people. Although Wagner isn't a composer I listen to on a regular basis, so it's likely likely to be A Thing for me any time soon, and to that end I again have an easier choice than many, because it's not a very significant personal sacrifice on behalf of my fellow citizens.
But more important than my position or your position or anyone else's position on this stuff, is that we maintain the humility to accept that others are deserving of respect whether they agree with us or not, as long as they don't get nasty and hateful and disrespectful about it and spend their benefit of doubt about such things. That's a bigger problem, because it kills genuine dialog--ensures no one learns about others' positions or the bases for them, and such. And when it does get into nasty territory I advocate the there but for the grace of God go I ethic (or there but for the vagaries of the cosmos or of nature if you prefer). It becomes very hard to hate or vilify if you can internalize that ethic. It's also a hard ethic to argue against ... and there's a very good reason for that.
</QUOTE>
I don't think you read what I wrote. I never claimed that Bruce said racism wasn't wrong. I only pointed out that he equated it to the book bannings that are going on in the South right now, which are happening for reasons he labeled as "wrong" (In quotes, i.e., only situationally wrong and not absolutely wrong.) And I said I disagree. Lampooning black people and portraying them as inferior to white people is wrong, and it always WAS wrong, whether or not it was allowed by society. It's not wrong only because someone labeled it as wrong; it IS wrong. This is my opinion, not a fault in my brain, thank you very much. :roll: Can't just take the first part of a sentence out of context. And I'm perfectly open to Bruce explaining how that wasn't what he meant.
And I'm gonna go ahead and disagree with you - I don't believe we have to respect other people's opinions if those opinions are objectively immoral.
- BaronVonBone
- Posts: 36
- Joined: Feb 20, 2023
[quote="brassmedic"]I don't think you read what I wrote. I never claimed that Bruce said racism wasn't wrong. I only pointed out that he equated it to the book bannings that are going on in the South right now, which are happening for reasons he labeled as "wrong" (In quotes, i.e., only situationally wrong and not absolutely wrong.) And I said I disagree. Lampooning black people and portraying them as inferior to white people is wrong, and it always WAS wrong, whether or not it was allowed by society. It's not wrong only because someone labeled it as wrong; it IS wrong. This is my opinion, not a fault in my brain, thank you very much. :roll: Can't just take the first part of a sentence out of context. And I'm perfectly open to Bruce explaining how that wasn't what he meant.[/quote]
Not sure where the "fault in your brain" thing came from, but no problem. That all seems fair enough to me. My apologies if I misread your post and/or your intent.
[quote="brassmedic"]And I'm gonna go ahead and disagree with you - I don't believe we have to respect other people's opinions if those opinions are objectively immoral.[/quote]
TheWhoWhatNow did I say!?
Never said we had to respect anyone's opinions, just others--people, and to the extent that they haven't spent their burden of doubt, at which point there but for the vagaries of the cosmos go I comes into play.
No worries. Humans and words are involved--things will get messy--care has to be taken to avoid various forms of ... ruptures.
Yup--heh.
Not sure where the "fault in your brain" thing came from, but no problem. That all seems fair enough to me. My apologies if I misread your post and/or your intent.
[quote="brassmedic"]And I'm gonna go ahead and disagree with you - I don't believe we have to respect other people's opinions if those opinions are objectively immoral.[/quote]
TheWhoWhatNow did I say!?
Never said we had to respect anyone's opinions, just others--people, and to the extent that they haven't spent their burden of doubt, at which point there but for the vagaries of the cosmos go I comes into play.
No worries. Humans and words are involved--things will get messy--care has to be taken to avoid various forms of ... ruptures.
Yup--heh.
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="BaronVonBone"]
<QUOTE author="brassmedic" post_id="205640" time="1679622812" user_id="4102">And I'm gonna go ahead and disagree with you - I don't believe we have to respect other people's opinions if those opinions are objectively immoral.[/quote]
TheWhoWhatNow did I say!?
Never said we had to respect anyone's opinions, just others--people, and to the extent that they haven't spent their burden of doubt, at which point there but for the vagaries of the cosmos go I comes into play.
</QUOTE>
I didn't say you said that. What you said was, "others are deserving of respect whether they agree with us or not", and I said they are NOT deserving of respect IF their opinions are immoral. What's complicated about that?
Oh, I see - you're nitpicking that I said "people's opinions" and you said "people". Um... ok - I don't agree that we have to respect people who hold immoral opinions. Obvious example: I don't respect Hitler. Is that more clear to you now?
<QUOTE author="brassmedic" post_id="205640" time="1679622812" user_id="4102">And I'm gonna go ahead and disagree with you - I don't believe we have to respect other people's opinions if those opinions are objectively immoral.[/quote]
TheWhoWhatNow did I say!?
Never said we had to respect anyone's opinions, just others--people, and to the extent that they haven't spent their burden of doubt, at which point there but for the vagaries of the cosmos go I comes into play.
</QUOTE>
I didn't say you said that. What you said was, "others are deserving of respect whether they agree with us or not", and I said they are NOT deserving of respect IF their opinions are immoral. What's complicated about that?
Oh, I see - you're nitpicking that I said "people's opinions" and you said "people". Um... ok - I don't agree that we have to respect people who hold immoral opinions. Obvious example: I don't respect Hitler. Is that more clear to you now?
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
Brad, I think you are confusing the fact that I said racism was common in the early part of the 20th Century with my endorsing racism. I do not endorse racism. Or anti Irish, Italian, Chinese, Polish, Chicano, or other types of prejudice.
I just say we should understand the situation under which the music was written. Why aren't you folks going after Darktown Strutters Ball? Darktown was an uncomplimentary way of describing the African-American ghetto. Also comes from the same period of time.
I just say we should understand the situation under which the music was written. Why aren't you folks going after Darktown Strutters Ball? Darktown was an uncomplimentary way of describing the African-American ghetto. Also comes from the same period of time.
- BaronVonBone
- Posts: 36
- Joined: Feb 20, 2023
.
I moved this tangent about respecting others vs. others' highly objectionable notions discussion to Tangents. It's developed a life of its own.
If there's any life left in the Lassus discussion, this tangent shouldn't derail it..
I moved this tangent about respecting others vs. others' highly objectionable notions discussion to Tangents. It's developed a life of its own.
If there's any life left in the Lassus discussion, this tangent shouldn't derail it..
- Mr412
- Posts: 207
- Joined: May 20, 2022
Smart move, if it works. LOL!
The OP probably left the room shaking his head wondering why we can't just answer his freaking question. Uh, no - we can't, without drama. Welcome to the Trombone Chat. :horror:
The OP probably left the room shaking his head wondering why we can't just answer his freaking question. Uh, no - we can't, without drama. Welcome to the Trombone Chat. :horror:
- BaronVonBone
- Posts: 36
- Joined: Feb 20, 2023
[quote="Mr412"]Smart move, if it works. LOL!
The OP probably left the room shaking his head wondering why we can't just answer his freaking question. Uh, no - we can't, without drama. Welcome to the Trombone Chat. :horror:[/quote]
Heh ... humans in groups.
This is why, when a company comes up with one of the worst possible responses to a problem, we know odd are a committee came up with it.
The OP probably left the room shaking his head wondering why we can't just answer his freaking question. Uh, no - we can't, without drama. Welcome to the Trombone Chat. :horror:[/quote]
Heh ... humans in groups.
This is why, when a company comes up with one of the worst possible responses to a problem, we know odd are a committee came up with it.
- harrisonreed
- Posts: 6479
- Joined: Aug 17, 2018
Maybe the real problem with the OP's question is just the premise -- "Good" smear tune? Never heard of one.
Next slide
Next slide
- Burgerbob
- Posts: 6327
- Joined: Apr 23, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]
I just say we should understand the situation under which the music was written. Why aren't you folks going after Darktown Strutters Ball? Darktown was an uncomplimentary way of describing the African-American ghetto. Also comes from the same period of time.[/quote]
Bruce, for the 1000th time, "whataboutism." Stoppit. Please. just stop.
I just say we should understand the situation under which the music was written. Why aren't you folks going after Darktown Strutters Ball? Darktown was an uncomplimentary way of describing the African-American ghetto. Also comes from the same period of time.[/quote]
Bruce, for the 1000th time, "whataboutism." Stoppit. Please. just stop.
- MrHCinDE
- Posts: 1039
- Joined: Jul 01, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]I just say we should understand the situation under which the music was written.[/quote]
Considering the situation the music was written is is precisely the reason I don‘t play it, namely that it was targeted to make fun of a group of people based on racist stereotypes.
Considering the situation the music was written is is precisely the reason I don‘t play it, namely that it was targeted to make fun of a group of people based on racist stereotypes.
- BaronVonBone
- Posts: 36
- Joined: Feb 20, 2023
[quote="harrisonreed"]Maybe the real problem with the OP's question is just the premise -- "Good" smear tune? Never heard of one.[/quote]
I tend to agree on that one, although I do like The Muppet Show Theme with the glissando, and they are a great fit with Dixieland Jazz.
Has to be loud, noisy music, basically. I'm generally less of a fan of loud and noisy, but there are exceptions--a lot of exceptions in rawk.
I tend to agree on that one, although I do like The Muppet Show Theme with the glissando, and they are a great fit with Dixieland Jazz.
Has to be loud, noisy music, basically. I'm generally less of a fan of loud and noisy, but there are exceptions--a lot of exceptions in rawk.
- harrisonreed
- Posts: 6479
- Joined: Aug 17, 2018
Yes, but you don't "program" the muppet song. It's like, transition music. Maybe you'd play it between acts in a show.
It's catchy but...
It's catchy but...
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
[quote="Burgerbob"]<QUOTE author="BGuttman" post_id="205658" time="1679635855" user_id="53">
I just say we should understand the situation under which the music was written. Why aren't you folks going after Darktown Strutters Ball? Darktown was an uncomplimentary way of describing the African-American ghetto. Also comes from the same period of time.[/quote]
Bruce, for the 1000th time, "whataboutism." Stoppit. Please. just stop.
</QUOTE>
No. You are busy singling out a small set of pieces from an enormous oeuvre and claiming that because there are some racist subtitles (and we agree on that) is reason enough to commit them to the dustbin. What about other music with racist titles? The first time we went at this Robcat came up with a bunch of others. Or do you not care about anything else and you just have it in for Fillmore's one work? And if so, why just that?
Incidentally, going back to the original question, Sensation Rag uses trombone glisses in some versions.
I just say we should understand the situation under which the music was written. Why aren't you folks going after Darktown Strutters Ball? Darktown was an uncomplimentary way of describing the African-American ghetto. Also comes from the same period of time.[/quote]
Bruce, for the 1000th time, "whataboutism." Stoppit. Please. just stop.
</QUOTE>
No. You are busy singling out a small set of pieces from an enormous oeuvre and claiming that because there are some racist subtitles (and we agree on that) is reason enough to commit them to the dustbin. What about other music with racist titles? The first time we went at this Robcat came up with a bunch of others. Or do you not care about anything else and you just have it in for Fillmore's one work? And if so, why just that?
Incidentally, going back to the original question, Sensation Rag uses trombone glisses in some versions.
- Burgerbob
- Posts: 6327
- Joined: Apr 23, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]<QUOTE author="Burgerbob" post_id="205723" time="1679682149" user_id="3131">
Bruce, for the 1000th time, "whataboutism." Stoppit. Please. just stop.[/quote]
No. You are busy singling out a small set of pieces from an enormous oeuvre and claiming that because there are some racist subtitles (and we agree on that) is reason enough to commit them to the dustbin. What about other music with racist titles? The first time we went at this Robcat came up with a bunch of others. Or do you not care about anything else and you just have it in for Fillmore's one work? And if so, why just that?
</QUOTE>
I'm all for not playing those either. But this (and the previous) thread are about Lassus Trombone.
Again, in what world are these played all the time? I've only seen the music for even one of these 1 time in my life. Maybe play in different circles if this comes up this often for you.
Bruce, for the 1000th time, "whataboutism." Stoppit. Please. just stop.[/quote]
No. You are busy singling out a small set of pieces from an enormous oeuvre and claiming that because there are some racist subtitles (and we agree on that) is reason enough to commit them to the dustbin. What about other music with racist titles? The first time we went at this Robcat came up with a bunch of others. Or do you not care about anything else and you just have it in for Fillmore's one work? And if so, why just that?
</QUOTE>
I'm all for not playing those either. But this (and the previous) thread are about Lassus Trombone.
Again, in what world are these played all the time? I've only seen the music for even one of these 1 time in my life. Maybe play in different circles if this comes up this often for you.
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
Fortunately, they aren't played all the time. I don't even play most of the Trombone Rags in public (I did play Shoutin' Liza after comparing to Handel's Messiah). I just want to point out that what we consider cringeworthy now was not considered cringeworthy 100 years ago. In fact, I was in local bands playing Lassus 30 years ago. They didn't think the music cringeworthy (but they also did not see the racist subtitles). Maybe we were less Woke back then.
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]Brad, I think you are confusing the fact that I said racism was common in the early part of the 20th Century with my endorsing racism. I do not endorse racism. Or anti Irish, Italian, Chinese, Polish, Chicano, or other types of prejudice.
[/quote]
I never said that.
[/quote]
I never said that.
- Burgerbob
- Posts: 6327
- Joined: Apr 23, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]Maybe we were less Woke back then.[/quote]
Sure sounds like it.
Sure sounds like it.
- spencercarran
- Posts: 689
- Joined: Oct 17, 2020
[quote="MrHCinDE"]<QUOTE author="BGuttman" post_id="205658" time="1679635855" user_id="53">
I just say we should understand the situation under which the music was written.[/quote]
Considering the situation the music was written is is precisely the reason I don‘t play it, namely that it was targeted to make fun of a group of people based on racist stereotypes.
</QUOTE>
Yeah, the line of reasoning Bruce is pursuing makes no sense to me. The entire reason anyone objects to Lassus is because of its historical context. "Oh, it was a different time" Yes, and now in modern times we agree that minstrelsy is inappropriate and we discourage it.
I just say we should understand the situation under which the music was written.[/quote]
Considering the situation the music was written is is precisely the reason I don‘t play it, namely that it was targeted to make fun of a group of people based on racist stereotypes.
</QUOTE>
Yeah, the line of reasoning Bruce is pursuing makes no sense to me. The entire reason anyone objects to Lassus is because of its historical context. "Oh, it was a different time" Yes, and now in modern times we agree that minstrelsy is inappropriate and we discourage it.
- harrisonreed
- Posts: 6479
- Joined: Aug 17, 2018
30 years ago? This tune has come up in community bands I've played in up until around 2010. I guarantee you nobody knew the background of the piece in the bands. And I guarantee they wouldn't play now it if they did.
This isn't about singling out one tune, or necessarily making people feel bad about playing it in the past, especially if they didn't know what it was about. It's about looking into the repertoire, especially now that information is ubiquitous, and making the right choice.
I don't think I could get retroactively mad at people (including myself) for playing Lassus Trombone in, say, 2005, if they literally had no idea about the piece other than it was put on their stand. But we can spread the word, and do our research from now on.
This isn't about singling out one tune, or necessarily making people feel bad about playing it in the past, especially if they didn't know what it was about. It's about looking into the repertoire, especially now that information is ubiquitous, and making the right choice.
I don't think I could get retroactively mad at people (including myself) for playing Lassus Trombone in, say, 2005, if they literally had no idea about the piece other than it was put on their stand. But we can spread the word, and do our research from now on.
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]
I just say we should understand the situation under which the music was written.[/quote]
You mean the "situation" that Fillmore was being racist? And no, "other people did it too" is not a valid argument.
I just say we should understand the situation under which the music was written.[/quote]
You mean the "situation" that Fillmore was being racist? And no, "other people did it too" is not a valid argument.
- BGuttman
- Posts: 7368
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
Sorry, I just don't buy your (and Doug Yeo's) premise. Fillmore had an idea to write a "funny N**** piece". Only one piece. We don't find any other racist music in his oeuvre. I can accept banishing the subtitles and maybe renaming the pieces. Maybe if we had something of comparable difficulty but more PC this one can dissolve into the dustbin of the unplayed. That has happened to a lot of other music.
Let's not "woke" ourselves into book burning.
Let's not "woke" ourselves into book burning.
- Mr412
- Posts: 207
- Joined: May 20, 2022
Is there an app for this? Before I say or do anything in public, I want to be able to look it up to see if it's okay.
- timothy42b
- Posts: 1812
- Joined: Mar 27, 2018
[quote="harrisonreed"]
This isn't about singling out one tune, or necessarily making people feel bad about playing it in the past, especially if they didn't know what it was about. It's about looking into the repertoire, especially now that information is ubiquitous, and making the right choice.
[/quote]
In theory I think you're right.
But in practice it seems (to me anyway) to have resulted in singling out one tune, thinking we've done our part for justice, and moving on. And that particular tune, while having an odious subtitle, is probably the least consequential example of racial insensitivity you could find. It is (or was, we've all shelved it) played only by community bands to community band audiences, both of which are a very small niche in most locations, and both groups largely ignorant of the tune's history or title.
look here for example:
<LINK_TEXT text="https://www.ala.org/news/press-releases ... -book-bans">https://www.ala.org/news/press-releases/2022/09/ala-releases-preliminary-data-2022-book-bans</LINK_TEXT>
Banning books that mention Rosa Parks - really? Racism (and sexism, genderism, any attempt to diminish the worth of a group of people) are reaching a peak again in the US.
This isn't about singling out one tune, or necessarily making people feel bad about playing it in the past, especially if they didn't know what it was about. It's about looking into the repertoire, especially now that information is ubiquitous, and making the right choice.
[/quote]
In theory I think you're right.
But in practice it seems (to me anyway) to have resulted in singling out one tune, thinking we've done our part for justice, and moving on. And that particular tune, while having an odious subtitle, is probably the least consequential example of racial insensitivity you could find. It is (or was, we've all shelved it) played only by community bands to community band audiences, both of which are a very small niche in most locations, and both groups largely ignorant of the tune's history or title.
look here for example:
<LINK_TEXT text="https://www.ala.org/news/press-releases ... -book-bans">https://www.ala.org/news/press-releases/2022/09/ala-releases-preliminary-data-2022-book-bans</LINK_TEXT>
Banning books that mention Rosa Parks - really? Racism (and sexism, genderism, any attempt to diminish the worth of a group of people) are reaching a peak again in the US.
- ithinknot
- Posts: 1339
- Joined: Jul 24, 2020
[quote="Mr412"]Is there an app for this? Before I say or do anything in public, I want to be able to look it up to see if it's okay.[/quote]
I know you think this is a clever remark, but all anyone is suggesting is that having already been told an activity or statement is potentially a massive bummer for your audience, you might consider not repeating it. It's not a question of prosecuting past actions or thoughts; it's a suggestion for your conscience in future.
[quote="BGuttman"]Fillmore had an idea to write a "funny N**** piece".[/quote]
Yes, and that's a Bad Thing, the badness of which is freestanding and not relative to other works by Fillmore, which is why we're not discussing those.
[quote="BGuttman"]Maybe if we had something of comparable difficulty but more PC this one can dissolve into the dustbin of the unplayed. That has happened to a lot of other music.[/quote]
Yes, and this is precisely and entirely what DY and others have suggested, which surely you know at this point.
[quote="BGuttman"]Let's not "woke" ourselves into book burning.[/quote]
and
[quote="timothy42b"]Banning books that mention Rosa Parks - really?[/quote]
Specious reasoning, as has already been pointed out - we're suggesting that the library is the perfect place for these scores to remain.
I'm not going to participate in the infinite spiral of this discussion any further. I would simply recommend that people revisit both of the Yeo articles, and think carefully about what is (and - perhaps more importantly - what is not) being suggested. Not the slippery slopes of heated imagination, just what's actually being said.
Also, and I don't want to sound too rude in the way I put this, but it does seem to be an obvious room elephant:
Bruce, your apparent desire to (charitably) prolong (or uncharitably, s***-stir) these discussions would seem to create tension with your role as a Moderator. Of course you're free to participate as you see fit, but the wider perception of "above the fray" status might require not being consistently "below the fray" whenever certain political themes arise. I do appreciate the work you put into this place otherwise.
I know you think this is a clever remark, but all anyone is suggesting is that having already been told an activity or statement is potentially a massive bummer for your audience, you might consider not repeating it. It's not a question of prosecuting past actions or thoughts; it's a suggestion for your conscience in future.
[quote="BGuttman"]Fillmore had an idea to write a "funny N**** piece".[/quote]
Yes, and that's a Bad Thing, the badness of which is freestanding and not relative to other works by Fillmore, which is why we're not discussing those.
[quote="BGuttman"]Maybe if we had something of comparable difficulty but more PC this one can dissolve into the dustbin of the unplayed. That has happened to a lot of other music.[/quote]
Yes, and this is precisely and entirely what DY and others have suggested, which surely you know at this point.
[quote="BGuttman"]Let's not "woke" ourselves into book burning.[/quote]
and
[quote="timothy42b"]Banning books that mention Rosa Parks - really?[/quote]
Specious reasoning, as has already been pointed out - we're suggesting that the library is the perfect place for these scores to remain.
I'm not going to participate in the infinite spiral of this discussion any further. I would simply recommend that people revisit both of the Yeo articles, and think carefully about what is (and - perhaps more importantly - what is not) being suggested. Not the slippery slopes of heated imagination, just what's actually being said.
Also, and I don't want to sound too rude in the way I put this, but it does seem to be an obvious room elephant:
Bruce, your apparent desire to (charitably) prolong (or uncharitably, s***-stir) these discussions would seem to create tension with your role as a Moderator. Of course you're free to participate as you see fit, but the wider perception of "above the fray" status might require not being consistently "below the fray" whenever certain political themes arise. I do appreciate the work you put into this place otherwise.
- BaronVonBone
- Posts: 36
- Joined: Feb 20, 2023
[quote="ithinknot"]... all anyone is suggesting is that having already been told an activity or statement is a massive bummer for your audience, you might consider not repeating it. It's not a question of prosecuting past actions or thoughts; it's a suggestion for your conscience in future.[/quote]
It would sure be nice if about half of humanity (it seems) didn't immediately button down the hatches, seal off the walls and launch into RED ALERT - IT'S NOT MY FAULT/DON'T BLAME ME! mode (or the judgmental reverse) whenever a subject like this is broached?
Everything's not about fault or blame. And if we seize up and revert to a mental version of the fetal position any time the notion of learning that we can be better than we are about something, there's no better way to establish a posture of slowly dying and maintain that posture until it actually happens.
And it shouldn't be about judging anyone for having century old views who lived a century ago. It's impressive for anyone to overcome the overwhelming norms of their native culture. It shouldn't be expected that anyone would without some pretty significant exposure to clearly contradictory evidence.
And it's not like we can't make (or at least advocate) cultural social improvements without vilifying anyone who hasn't yet gotten there with us, since after all we figured it out and made the move yesterday.
It would sure be nice if about half of humanity (it seems) didn't immediately button down the hatches, seal off the walls and launch into RED ALERT - IT'S NOT MY FAULT/DON'T BLAME ME! mode (or the judgmental reverse) whenever a subject like this is broached?
Everything's not about fault or blame. And if we seize up and revert to a mental version of the fetal position any time the notion of learning that we can be better than we are about something, there's no better way to establish a posture of slowly dying and maintain that posture until it actually happens.
And it shouldn't be about judging anyone for having century old views who lived a century ago. It's impressive for anyone to overcome the overwhelming norms of their native culture. It shouldn't be expected that anyone would without some pretty significant exposure to clearly contradictory evidence.
And it's not like we can't make (or at least advocate) cultural social improvements without vilifying anyone who hasn't yet gotten there with us, since after all we figured it out and made the move yesterday.
- Mr412
- Posts: 207
- Joined: May 20, 2022
This ^^^^^^^ Wholeheartedly.
Now give me the friggin' app. LOL!
Now give me the friggin' app. LOL!
- Burgerbob
- Posts: 6327
- Joined: Apr 23, 2018
[quote="Mr412"]This ^^^^^^^ Wholeheartedly.
Now give me the friggin' app. LOL![/quote]
Be a decent person. Done!
Now give me the friggin' app. LOL![/quote]
Be a decent person. Done!
- mbarbier
- Posts: 367
- Joined: May 17, 2018
[quote="ithinknot"]
Also, and I don't want to sound too rude in the way I put this, but it does seem to be an obvious room elephant:
Bruce, your apparent desire to (charitably) prolong (or uncharitably, s***-stir) these discussions would seem to create tension with your role as a Moderator. Of course you're free to participate as you see fit, but the wider perception of "above the fray" status might require not being consistently "below the fray" whenever certain political themes arise. I do appreciate the work you put into this place otherwise.[/quote]
^^^^this one right here^^^^^
similar to the past threads about LGBTQ trombonists the person bringing trans- and homophobic things into that discussion (whether being willfully or unintentionally so doesn't really matter) is one of the people who is supposed to be moderating it, much like he's one of the people meant to moderate this one. i'm not going to engage in debate with/around Bruce cause that was totally fruitless last time, but as a transperson I really hope you consider your involvement in these discussions because your role as a moderator has a larger effect than just your role in the debate.
fully agree with locking the thread- it's long past productive, but i do encourage anyone who hasn't to read Doug's articles. they're great and have been a really great start to dicussions with my CalArts students about the art/artist debate with more recent composers such as Webern, Morton Feldman, and Murray Schafer.
Also, and I don't want to sound too rude in the way I put this, but it does seem to be an obvious room elephant:
Bruce, your apparent desire to (charitably) prolong (or uncharitably, s***-stir) these discussions would seem to create tension with your role as a Moderator. Of course you're free to participate as you see fit, but the wider perception of "above the fray" status might require not being consistently "below the fray" whenever certain political themes arise. I do appreciate the work you put into this place otherwise.[/quote]
^^^^this one right here^^^^^
similar to the past threads about LGBTQ trombonists the person bringing trans- and homophobic things into that discussion (whether being willfully or unintentionally so doesn't really matter) is one of the people who is supposed to be moderating it, much like he's one of the people meant to moderate this one. i'm not going to engage in debate with/around Bruce cause that was totally fruitless last time, but as a transperson I really hope you consider your involvement in these discussions because your role as a moderator has a larger effect than just your role in the debate.
fully agree with locking the thread- it's long past productive, but i do encourage anyone who hasn't to read Doug's articles. they're great and have been a really great start to dicussions with my CalArts students about the art/artist debate with more recent composers such as Webern, Morton Feldman, and Murray Schafer.
- mahlertwo
- Posts: 289
- Joined: Apr 03, 2019
Personally, I think it might be time to lock all of these and ban new Lassus threads. The info is all out there now, there's no point in continuing this "dialogue".
- brassmedic
- Posts: 1447
- Joined: Dec 14, 2018
[quote="ithinknot"]
Also, and I don't want to sound too rude in the way I put this, but it does seem to be an obvious room elephant:
Bruce, your apparent desire to (charitably) prolong (or uncharitably, s***-stir) these discussions would seem to create tension with your role as a Moderator. Of course you're free to participate as you see fit, but the wider perception of "above the fray" status might require not being consistently "below the fray" whenever certain political themes arise. I do appreciate the work you put into this place otherwise.[/quote]
Thank you for saying this.
Also, and I don't want to sound too rude in the way I put this, but it does seem to be an obvious room elephant:
Bruce, your apparent desire to (charitably) prolong (or uncharitably, s***-stir) these discussions would seem to create tension with your role as a Moderator. Of course you're free to participate as you see fit, but the wider perception of "above the fray" status might require not being consistently "below the fray" whenever certain political themes arise. I do appreciate the work you put into this place otherwise.[/quote]
Thank you for saying this.
- BaronVonBone
- Posts: 36
- Joined: Feb 20, 2023
[quote="mahlertwo"]Personally, I think it might be time to lock all of these and ban new Lassus threads. The info is all out there now, there's no point in continuing this "dialogue".[/quote]
Topics aren't difficult to ignore, are they, particularly if you find them a waste of time?
Would you really find it more equitable, or palatable, to ban a topic for others rather than simply ignoring it?
Topics aren't difficult to ignore, are they, particularly if you find them a waste of time?
Would you really find it more equitable, or palatable, to ban a topic for others rather than simply ignoring it?
- Burgerbob
- Posts: 6327
- Joined: Apr 23, 2018
[quote="BaronVonBone"]<QUOTE author="mahlertwo" post_id="205814" time="1679770972" user_id="5762">Personally, I think it might be time to lock all of these and ban new Lassus threads. The info is all out there now, there's no point in continuing this "dialogue".[/quote]
Topics aren't difficult to ignore, are they, particularly if you find them a waste of time?
Would you really find it more equitable, or palatable, to ban a topic for everyone rather than simply ignoring it?
</QUOTE>
Ugh.
Topics aren't difficult to ignore, are they, particularly if you find them a waste of time?
Would you really find it more equitable, or palatable, to ban a topic for everyone rather than simply ignoring it?
</QUOTE>
Ugh.
- blast
- Posts: 671
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
Sorry guys, I didn't read this thread until asked to as I cannot stand the trombone being turned into some kind of bad joke and I'm simply not interested in the subject. It seems to go hand in hand here with the 'debate' that has yet again ensued. Let's end this as it brings no credit to the forum.
Someone else can pull the plug.
Someone else can pull the plug.
- harrisonreed
- Posts: 6479
- Joined: Aug 17, 2018
[quote="BGuttman"]Only one piece. We don't find any other racist music in his oeuvre.
[/quote]
Fact Check -- He wrote at least 15, from what I'm counting. And not all at one time, it was over at least a decade.
Also, yeah it seems like it is me and 30 people vs 1 at this point. I'll bow out as Blast suggests.
[/quote]
Fact Check -- He wrote at least 15, from what I'm counting. And not all at one time, it was over at least a decade.
Also, yeah it seems like it is me and 30 people vs 1 at this point. I'll bow out as Blast suggests.
- Doug_Elliott
- Posts: 4155
- Joined: Mar 22, 2018
Locked