http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...1969-song-features-words-yellow-Chinkees.html
Acceptable in 2015 or not ?
[yt]F3_MfDYVKlg[/YT]
Acceptable in 2015 or not ?
[yt]F3_MfDYVKlg[/YT]
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...1969-song-features-words-yellow-Chinkees.html
Acceptable in 2015 or not ?
[yt]F3_MfDYVKlg[/YT]
[yt]F3_MfDYVKlg[/YT]
I was at school at the time but, I'm sure Blue Mink were regarded as very brave for being an openly multi racial group. I believe they were regarded as equally brave to appear on TOTP. There seems to be so little understanding these days that previous generations had different standards. Attempting to rewrite history won't change history. Must be a nightmare if producers and DJs have to vet every piece of music to see if it fits current thinking.
I know it was a different time and place, but Booker t and the MGs caused enormous consternation for being two white and two black men in the same group in the same place that saw the assassination of Martin Luther King in 1968.
I was thinking about this song the other day. The intentions were good, although the suggestion of turning out "coffee coloured people by the score" would not be taken seriously these days.
Very true, the whole Stax Records think, bearing in mind the time and place, is a fascinating one. Has prompted me to try and find an affordable copy of "Soulsville USA - the story of Stax Records" on Amazon - read it a long time ago. Meanwhile I will rustle up a Stax playlist for todays WFH!
The song is outdated. Instead of that 70s "Let's eliminate difference" theory, I'd rather go for "Let's celebrate diversity" and make sure we all stay different, but appreciate what we all have to offer.
You've probably nailed it. It was released in an era of racial segregation in America and of course apartheid in South Africa. The 1960s hippie view was that we should all break down the barriers between us and become 'humans' as opposed to all these different tribes, cultures, races, creeds, countries, etc. John Lennon's 'Imagine' is based on similar sentiments.
Now as you say that view is seen as old-fashioned and we are encouraged to 'celebrate diversity'. Obviously I can see some merit in that, but on the other hand I'm not 100% convinced that the old 1960s view was wrong.
There was another hit from that era by The Equals, "Black Skinned Blue Eyed Boys" - very similar message, i.e. when there are no more races, there won't be any more wars.
Which song do you think a Chinese person might find most insulting?
1. This cheesy hippy song from the 60s with a now deemed mildly offensive word that was common parlance back then and was overtly about brotherly love? or...
2. A Spice Girls song from 1997 where they refer to a far Eastern person as "Yellow Man in Timbuktu" and thus also lazily confusing the city in Mali with Kathmandu in Nepal or...
3. Fresh off the press in 2015, US rapper and Grammy-nominee, Big Sean has a new song out, Dark Sky Paradise, where he chucks out the casually racist "I'm doing extra numbers like I'm Chinese"
You know what, I'm no expert here but I'm gonna take a punt that it ain't the first one. Funny old world, isn't it?
There was another hit from that era by The Equals, "Black Skinned Blue Eyed Boys" - very similar message, i.e. when there are no more races, there won't be any more wars.