CocoRosie member goes to "Kill Whitey" Ironic dance parties and gets called out by brainwashed.com as racist

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because no rock 'n roll person has ever used the word "bitch" in a song or conversation

yeah, I meant to follow that up with a clarification and I got pelted w/ work emails. I personally find that for some reason I turn a blind eye to a lot offensive content in hip hop I probably not tolerate in other genres ..? not sure why that is. so it's not so much an indictment of rap as it is of my weird double standards. or something.

proof-texting my way into state legislature (will), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 13:32 (thirteen years ago) link

e.g. i was listening Back For the First Time and (especially) Project Pat's Mista Don't Play this weekend for the first time in a looong time while my gf (who is a hueg nerd and basically only listens to NPR and Paul Simon) and I were cooking and I have to tell you, it was weirdly embarrassing. i mean, she's a grown up and can handle it/ whatever, but it certainly sparked some conflicting feelings that a 22 year old me probably would not have experienced. but maybe this is for another thread.

proof-texting my way into state legislature (will), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 13:44 (thirteen years ago) link

"what you want your girlfriend and her sister listening to/can you escape bad/questionable language in modern pop?"

proof-texting my way into state legislature (will), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 13:53 (thirteen years ago) link

Wives or servants, surely?

emil.y, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 13:54 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah lots of otm responses...I don't necessarily think that CR are racist, or that they had anything less than the best intentions, but as HI DERE pointed out, the n-word sticks out like a sore thumb...it feels very exploitative; it sounds like the girls basically decided to borrow the horror and hatefulness of the word to make their song, and the underlying point behind it, sound more urgent and meaningful than it really was. Which is really shit.

dont forget B.Manning's shout-out to Dock Ellis (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 14:54 (thirteen years ago) link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5lMxWWK218

Beach Pomade (Adam Bruneau), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 14:58 (thirteen years ago) link

^^^great song btw

I don't think that Lennon is being exploitative, or at least as exploitative as CocoRosie is being. The hatred he is evoking by using that word is being used towards a very real end; he's saying "If you think it's bad for a black person in America, that's how it is for women everywhere." I mean, I don't think you can say that Lennon is dropping the N-word to make his point seem more urgent and meaningful than it really is.

Whereas, with CocoRosie, they use the word right off the bat to paint Christianity as this malevolent force in American society, but when it comes to develop this theme, it's like "Christianity is bad bcz now we can't kiss our fathers very long...?" They use racism to prop up their song and pretend to be ironic with it, but really it's just treating something very serious as if it was something very frivolous.

dont forget B.Manning's shout-out to Dock Ellis (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:05 (thirteen years ago) link

you know actually:

seriously, black people don't need to hear me talking out of my ass about cocorosie!

― m@tt h (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, June 22, 2010 1:00 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark

dont forget B.Manning's shout-out to Dock Ellis (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:38 (thirteen years ago) link

That attitude bugs me for an entirely different set of reasons.

Basically, by saying it isn't your place to object to this shit (even though the objection you raise is similar, if not identical, to mine), you are implicitly saying it is MY RESPONSIBILITY to object to this shit; furthermore, you are saying that these objections are only credible when coming from black people, who by raising these objections often find themselves placed in the "you're just being sensitive" pile by the people who did the objectionable thing, and by not getting corroborating objections from others regardless of race, the seriousness/breadth of the objection is undercut.

Or, to put it more simply/confrontationally, it's fucking bullshit that people who feel the same way I do have this easy way of ducking out of the fight and not causing controversy, leaving me out to dry.

HI DERE, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:45 (thirteen years ago) link

i agree with a lot of what's being said here, but i'm still somewhat uncomfortable with the intensity of condemnation attached to cocorosie over this song. when compared to something like patti smith's rock n roll nigger (a song i love, btw), the use of the word in jesus loves me seems more careful and substantial - more well justified. pashmina talks about reading the lyrics of the song and finding them rather dumb/obvious, but the words alone don't get even half the message across. you have to hear the delivery and music to really get the whole picture. again, the song tries to link the blues to religiosity and religion to racism, washing it all down with a horrifying parody of "negro dialect". at the same time, it pretends this naive childishness about the horrors contained in the language it uses and the ideas it raises. in that sense, it's also about how children hear and learn things, how words like "nigger" can be inextricable from ideas like "blues music" or "salvation", both in adult society and through a child's eyes. on a more basic level, of course, it's an unsubtle attack on the racism that religion often disguises - that's the sense in which i'm bummed by the song's didacticism.

i disagree that it tries to pretend its language consists of "mere words", devoid of real power. perhaps CR have defended it in those terms somewhere, but if so, i missed it and am more concerned with the song itself, anyway. it seems to me that the song is fully cognizant of the horror evoked by its language, and is trying not merely to exploit certain words for their shock value, but to address something profoundly tragic and difficult. i've read pretty much the entire thread so far and strongly disagree with shakey mo's "this person is stupid" assessment of bianca's defense of the song. she doesn't sound brilliant to me, but nor does she sound terribly stupid. mostly she sounds as though she's speaking off the cuff to someone she's at least slightly uncomfortable with - there's an awkward hesitancy present throughout the interview, a quality of nearly paranoid reticence. moreover, the basic concept she's trying to get across (that the song is likewise trying to get across) strikes me as both valid and interesting.

finally, i get where hi dere is coming from with the "song by some people who hate religion and black people" criticism, but respectfully disagree. i can see as how CR's use of the word might strike some as insulting or hurtful, and might agree that the song is insensitive on that level. but imputing racist hate to the band on the basis of a single, perhaps thoughtless, lyrical experiment seems excessively and narrowly condemnatory. cocorosie are attempting to address something painful in this song, and they've chosen a painful way to go about it, but that doesn't necessarily mean that they were motivated by hate. by that measure, any artist who's ever built a song around the world "bitch" is a misogynist who deserves comparable condemnation. and many (many) songs built around the word "bitch" are far less compassionate and morally responsible in their examination of the issues involved. i mean, i can't claim to know what CR were thinking or feeling. perhaps they really are racists on some level or another. but i strongly reject the idea that we can assume that based on their use of the word "nigger" in this one song.

finally, nabisco otm about their whiteness and perceived middle-classness. i described them in those terms since that's they way they'd been framed in recent discussion (and cuz i drew certain conclusions based on other stuff i'd read about them). but it's unfair to pigeonhole them so neatly.

contenderizer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:50 (thirteen years ago) link

but imputing racist hate to the band on the basis of a single, perhaps thoughtless, lyrical experiment seems excessively and narrowly condemnatory. cocorosie are attempting to address something painful in this song, and they've chosen a painful way to go about it, but that doesn't necessarily mean that they were motivated by hate.

they make some of my favorite music around but this song is not the only instance of them copping some bullshit "provocative" racial stuff (feel free to check "japan" off of ghosthorse & stillborn for "no, seriously, what the fuck is wrong with you people" stuff)

get your bucket of free wings (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:52 (thirteen years ago) link

I'd like to point out that cutting out the "but only realize that they hate religion" from my quote removes 90% of the argument I'm making.

HI DERE, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:53 (thirteen years ago) link

eriously, black people don't need to hear me talking out of my ass about cocorosie!

― m@tt h (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, June 22, 2010 1:00 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark

this was supposed to be a joke

m@tt h (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:54 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah I got that, but it got reappropriated in a seemingly earnest manner to shut down a line of thinking I strongly agree with and I was responding to that

HI DERE, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:56 (thirteen years ago) link

i have heard the song--it's awful

call all destroyer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:57 (thirteen years ago) link

i don't think the song deepens the lyrics, at all

call all destroyer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 18:58 (thirteen years ago) link

It most certainly doesn't; if anything, it makes the lyrics stick out even more.

Like, my main takeaway from it was "thanks for ruining a harmless church song"

HI DERE, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:01 (thirteen years ago) link

mostly i just want art to be intelligent, interesting and aesthetically coherent... if anything, i wish that "jesus loves me" were a bit more subtle, conflicted, genuinely confused about its statement, because i find its crude didacticism at least as off-putting as its insensitivity.

See, I'd say that the crude didacticism and the inconsistency in the lyrics w/r/t characterizations of minorities makes the song aesthetically incoherent. It seems like a number of us in this thread would have less of a problem with them and the song if it was more aesthetically coherent, with people citing country teasers as an example of something that is.

I was listening to that Patti Smith song recently, and I really did cringe when she used that word.

i don't know whether it's really popular in Canada as well (sarahel), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:10 (thirteen years ago) link

^^^ completely OTM re: "Jesus Loves Me" and aesthetic incoherency

HI DERE, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:12 (thirteen years ago) link

but when it comes to develop this theme, it's like "Christianity is bad bcz now we can't kiss our fathers very long...?" They use racism to prop up their song and pretend to be ironic with it, but really it's just treating something very serious as if it was something very frivolous.

― dont forget B.Manning's shout-out to Dock Ellis (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, June 22, 2010 11:05 AM (44 minutes ago) Bookmark

i've said more than enough, but wanted to touch on this. it seems to me that the song presents a series of textbook lessons. "jesus loves me" is the first lesson - a gentle, almost crushingly saccharine affirmation of childlike faith. this is followed up by instructions like "wash behind your ears," "cover them freckles," "don't ask don't tell," and eventually "kiss your papa but not too long." so we move from that first gentle blessing into superficial body/dirt shame and then to deeper and more troubling sorts of sexual shame, all within the framework of childhood's simple life lessons. the song is reminiscent of little red riding hood, in terms of how it calls attention to the adult horrors hidden within the gentle, coded nudges we give our children. worth noting that "don't forget that apple spell" is one of the first lessons mentioned - important because the song consistently attempts to link an awful word to the oppression of women in manner that's very similar to lennon's woman is the nigger of the world (if a good deal more oblique).

i find it a very sad song, much more sad than shocking. the sadness arises from the tension between the protected innocence it describes, the idealized state of a child we wish to shield from the world, and the tragic adult realities that it admits, with its talk of choosing between scars or bruises on the road to the wedding rings that will supposedly make everything better for us when we grow up. i can't ultimately endorse or even condone it because i don't think it ultimately justifies its decision to hammer the n-word home over and over again at every chorus, but its conflation of racism and religion isn't as simpleminded as it might initially seem.

contenderizer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:16 (thirteen years ago) link

it's a sloppily written poorly constructed lyric. There's nothing inherently racist in Christianity, Jesus didn't say anything preposterous on the level of "I hate niggers" and the song draws this line clumsily by just associating the one with the other in the crudest manner possible. It doesn't give any consideration to how black people and Christianity actually intersect, no nuance or actual understanding of history is evident. If I want to think about how racism and Christianity have been intertwined in America, there are any number of Ice Cube lines that are more informative and interesting than this garbage.

xp

"go to church but they tease us/with a picture of a blue eyed jesus"

The conflation of racism and religion is actually as simple-minded as it seems if you know one iota of American history.

HI DERE, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:22 (thirteen years ago) link

I prefer the Vaselines version of "Jesus Wants Me for a Sunbeam" to this song

i don't know whether it's really popular in Canada as well (sarahel), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:23 (thirteen years ago) link

sorry HI DERE I didn't mean to duck out...I was just getting second thoughts about whether I was actually contributing to the discussion rather than 1) parroting other people's opinions, or 2) spouting off about stuff that I don't have a lot of firsthand knowledge about.*

*This is probably just a euphemistic way of restating what it was that pissed you off.

dont forget B.Manning's shout-out to Dock Ellis (Drugs A. Money), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:26 (thirteen years ago) link

I'd like to point out that cutting out the "but only realize that they hate religion" from my quote removes 90% of the argument I'm making.

― HI DERE, Tuesday, June 22, 2010 11:53 AM (22 minutes ago) Bookmark

accept that i'm alone in even half-defending this song. but i meant no offense, hi dere, in cutting out the closing line of your argument about CR's racism. i understand that your point was that they are not aware of their own racism, but in responding, i wasn't primarily concerned with what we might assume about their self-awareness. i was simply talking about what we might fairly assume about their basic motives. frankly, i think it's less fair to assume that they're racist and blind to their own racism than simply to assume that they're racist. but unfair in either case.

i don't think the song deepens the lyrics, at all

― call all destroyer, Tuesday, June 22, 2010 11:58 AM (17 minutes ago) Bookmark

this makes no sense to me. without the music and the delivery, you lose the constant connection of the blues to religiosity, and you lose the weird, soul-sick minstrel show vibe. the sadness, the forced naïveté and the painfully fake black dialect are a huge part of the song's point - for better or worse.

contenderizer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:27 (thirteen years ago) link

I suppose it's a question of which is unfairer, thinking someone is unintentionally racist (my take) or intentionally stupid (your take).

HI DERE, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:30 (thirteen years ago) link

Because every word you write in defense of them highlights more of their terrible artistic choices (the dialect, the fake blues styling, the minstrel show vibe) and the idea that anyone with even half a brain in modern America could look at this song as it was shaping up and think "Wow! This captures my point perfectly!" and then be shocked and amazed when people think you are a narcissistic racist, particularly when you also attend racist, ironic Kill Whitey parties, it is amazing that your brain functions well enough to keep your subconscious processes going.

HI DERE, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:34 (thirteen years ago) link

There's nothing inherently racist in Christianity, Jesus didn't say anything preposterous on the level of "I hate niggers" and the song draws this line clumsily by just associating the one with the other in the crudest manner possible. It doesn't give any consideration to how black people and Christianity actually intersect, no nuance or actual understanding of history is evident. If I want to think about how racism and Christianity have been intertwined in America, there are any number of Ice Cube lines that are more informative and interesting than this garbage.

xp

― in my day we had to walk 10 miles in the snow for VU bootleg (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, June 22, 2010 12:17 PM (10 minutes ago) Bookmark

agree in part. especially agree that the song "doesn't give any consideration to how black people and Christianity actually intersect, no nuance or actual understanding of history is evident." i'm not sure that it has to, as it seems to me that the song describes an outsider's view of that intersection, and moreover a deliberately childish version of an outsider's view. but i'd agree that this is the song's biggest weakness: it "daringly" goes somewhere very complicated and dangerous but doesn't equip itself with much real insight to justify its provocations.

that said, i think you could easily make the case that christianity has a complicated relationship with racism in america, and that the song's argument makes a certain amount of sense in light of that.

contenderizer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:34 (thirteen years ago) link

"complicated relationship" in implied scare-quotes there...

contenderizer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:36 (thirteen years ago) link

i'm generally in favor of artists taking risks, and ambiguity and messiness, and works that "problematize" issues - but there are certain subjects, and certain language that are extremely volatile and potent that require greater sensitivity and care taken with their use.

i don't know whether it's really popular in Canada as well (sarahel), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:37 (thirteen years ago) link

The conflation of racism and religion is actually as simple-minded as it seems if you know one iota of American history.

I really don't think this can be stressed enough - sure you can point out that white racists used Christianity to justify their way of life, and that they forced the religion onto the black slave population, but that's only a part of the picture, and is a ridiculously narrow view that ignores the role of Christianity in the abolitionist movement, or the way black slaves managed to take Christianity and subvert it to their own ends, using it to preserve other cultural and musical traditions, with it eventually becoming one of the pillars/driving forces behind the civil rights movement. there are a LOT of nuances. I don't think MLK would be too down with this "Jesus hates black people" nonsense. And taking the tack that because you put the words "Jesus" and "nigger" in the same song makes you some kind of incisive social provacateur just makes you look stupid.

xp

he song describes an outsider's view of that intersection, and moreover a deliberately childish version of an outsider's view.

who is this hypothetical "oustider"? someone who is neither white nor black nor Christian or American presumably...? that makes no sense.

is this the classic Native American/Syrian take on American racial relations and Xtianity, is that what you're getting at...? they're deliberately hiding behind a character? one that doesn't understand how provocative/inciteful the language being used is? wtf

yeah, that gets at the main problem with reception for an American audience - and might explain why they're better received in Belgium - here in America (with a few exceptions) no one is really an outsider with regards to this.

i don't know whether it's really popular in Canada as well (sarahel), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:43 (thirteen years ago) link

i'm generally in favor of artists taking risks, and ambiguity and messiness, and works that "problematize" issues - but there are certain subjects, and certain language that are extremely volatile and potent that require greater sensitivity and care taken with their use.

― i don't know whether it's really popular in Canada as well (sarahel), Tuesday, June 22, 2010 12:37 PM (52 seconds ago) Bookmark

yeah, i know. i want to defend CR cuz i like most of the record and respect the risks they took on "jesus loves me", but there's a horrible train-wreck quality to the final product. and i try to excuse the song by saying, "well, it HAD to be horrible, didn't it? to be less than wrenchingly awful would be dishonest." but i can't quite get myself to buy that. i won't condemn them, but i can't get behind this song. almost, but not quite.

contenderizer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:46 (thirteen years ago) link

contenderizer - have you seen the movie "Farewell Uncle Tom"? (title might be Goodbye Uncle Tom) made by the Italians that did Mondo Cane?

i don't know whether it's really popular in Canada as well (sarahel), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:47 (thirteen years ago) link

David Allan Coe IS playing a character you ninnies

Fox Force Five Punchline (sexyDancer), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:48 (thirteen years ago) link

who is this hypothetical "oustider"? someone who is neither white nor black nor Christian or American presumably...? that makes no sense.

― in my day we had to walk 10 miles in the snow for VU bootleg (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, June 22, 2010 12:40 PM (5 minutes ago) Bookmark

i was unclear. it was suggested that CR were speaking in generalized, ignorant terms of the relationship of black american culture to christianity. my point was that the character in the song is not necessarily someone who knows much about that relationship, and thus can perhaps be forgiven for a lack of deep understanding. the character might, for instance, be a non-black child. thus an "outsider" to that issue, on a certain level. (i grant the larger "no one is an outsider" argument but i'm talking about simple awareness, not about the complexities of involvement.)

contenderizer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:51 (thirteen years ago) link

i think you're making an admirable effort to try and unpack the motives and structure and ideas in the song, but for a number of us, it's cringeworthy enough to make us have no desire to go to that effort.

i don't know whether it's really popular in Canada as well (sarahel), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:54 (thirteen years ago) link

have you seen the movie "Farewell Uncle Tom"? (title might be Goodbye Uncle Tom) made by the Italians that did Mondo Cane?

― i don't know whether it's really popular in Canada as well (sarahel), Tuesday, June 22, 2010 12:47 PM (4 minutes ago) Bookmark

no. based on what i've read about africa addio, i forswore the jacopetti/prosperi films. is farewell uncle tom worth a look?

contenderizer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:57 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah i think this thread would be pretty awful if it was just everybody sagely agreeing abt what massive assholes CR are

plax (ico), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:59 (thirteen years ago) link

farewell uncle tom is probably the most uncomfortable movie watching experience i have ever had that was not a horror movie of the "torture porn" subgenre.

i don't know whether it's really popular in Canada as well (sarahel), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 19:59 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah, i've heard good and bad things said about it. it sounds uncomfortable and ill-advised. like the song?

contenderizer, Tuesday, 22 June 2010 20:06 (thirteen years ago) link

it's basically the problem people have with the song magnified 1000x - except the music is better than cocorosie's.

i don't know whether it's really popular in Canada as well (sarahel), Tuesday, 22 June 2010 20:10 (thirteen years ago) link

a ridiculously narrow view that ignores the role of Christianity in the abolitionist movement, or the way black slaves managed to take Christianity and subvert it to their own ends, using it to preserve other cultural and musical traditions, with it eventually becoming one of the pillars/driving forces behind the civil rights movement

This is very important to remember. It's something completely ignored by this song.

Beach Pomade (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 23 June 2010 03:38 (thirteen years ago) link

With their Native American background, perhaps they substituted a personally appropriate slur for something more sensationalist .

Beach Pomade (Adam Bruneau), Wednesday, 23 June 2010 03:48 (thirteen years ago) link

jamie stewart didn't really suck a horse's dick, sorry about that guys

A B C, Wednesday, 23 June 2010 04:44 (thirteen years ago) link

i've said more than enough, but wanted to touch on this. it seems to me that the song presents a series of textbook lessons. "jesus loves me" is the first lesson - a gentle, almost crushingly saccharine affirmation of childlike faith. this is followed up by instructions like "wash behind your ears," "cover them freckles," "don't ask don't tell," and eventually "kiss your papa but not too long."

indie kids seem pretty hung up on their early childhoods tbh

The Black Keys - white boys can still throw down (crüt), Wednesday, 23 June 2010 05:05 (thirteen years ago) link


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