HBergeron
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2017
- Posts
- 10,371
Is that because music is about the listening, so you can sort of block out the 'person' much more than when you're watching an actor play a role? I'd say that composition and all the other things you mentioned are the tools of the trade of a musician, just as the actor has tools at their disposal to play a role convincingly. Do you 'empathise' with a musician when you're listening to their music? Perhaps that's a key to why tainted actors are more difficult to watch?
I think that is exactly it. How can I look at Cosby's face as 'America's Dad' in a rerun and not wonder if he raped an unconscious woman that day after work? We took him to heart - he was beloved, and he betrayed us.
Listening to 'Thriller' doesn't have that effect, but under the surface we all know it's there. That's why I'm tossed about it.
If some historian were to dig up dirt on Beethoven, does his body of work then need to disappear?
I agree with this 100%.
It really is different for actors.
Even though I never cared for Michael Jackson's music or for the person because I've always believed he was a pedophile.. same with R. Kelly. I believe that others should be able to enjoy it but they need to know about who he was as a person.
That's like my love of James Brown's music. He is one of my all time favorite musicians but I know that he was a horrible person who beat his wives and was violent with other people, screwed over his band and was just an overall bad person but I just love the music and his impact on music.
Agree or disagree, people will always believe what they want and their opinions can rarely be changed.
At least with R. Kelly, we may get the satisfaction of seeing him go to jail if found guilty. I believe Jackson should have been found guilty when he was alive. I only like a select few of his songs anyway, but it's the principle that's perplexing. Should his heirs not benefit from a legitimate body of work? Did they know about his degeneracy (I'm thinking they MUST have known something)?
Sexual abuse cases are undismissable, but how far down the ladder of un-political correctness do we take things?
I was talking with a friend about just this: My favorite band, Lynyrd Skynyrd had touted Confederate Colors for years - an identification mark of their Southern roots. Yet I'm sure that when they played with that flag as a backdrop on their concerts, they weren't espousing slavery. Sorry, but even with that lyric that makes me cringe: "In Birmingham they love the governor (George Wallace)" I'm not giving up listening to them.


