Subject: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Black Auk Date: 21 Feb 25 - 08:47 AM I've started singing Sweep, Chimney Sweep and I'm wondering if the phrase "Black as any moor" is taboo these days. I don't believe moor was ever a derogatory word, but ya never knows... |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 21 Feb 25 - 11:18 AM You could always sing black as any CROW. I dont expect there will be any crows in the audience and they probably would not understand any way, but if you get attacked on your way home by crows do not blame me |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Gnab Date: 21 Feb 25 - 11:43 AM Not heard of the Jim Crow laws? |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Black Auk Date: 21 Feb 25 - 12:56 PM Thanks, Sandman. It would be safer. I am all for not insulting people but sometimes it's take too far... |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: DaveRo Date: 21 Feb 25 - 01:05 PM It doesn't rhyme: "Girls came unto the door I look as black as any crow," |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Dave the Gnome Date: 21 Feb 25 - 01:47 PM Saddleworth Moor is pretty black at night and grim through the day. You could tell folk it means that ;-) |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 21 Feb 25 - 04:53 PM BLACK as Any boor, boar, whore. anyway who woories about rhyming |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: John MacKenzie Date: 21 Feb 25 - 05:04 PM As black as chimney stoor. Scots dialect word for dust, could be used to denote soot. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 21 Feb 25 - 05:10 PM stoor, that is a good one |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: MoorleyMan Date: 21 Feb 25 - 07:15 PM C'mon, surely this is over-reacting even in our days of taboo-focused culture.. Next we won't be able to sing "Black Is The Colour"... Seriously, tho', it's likely the word referenced in the Copper Family song is Blackamoor, abbreviated to Moor and cited thus: "It's important to understand that Blackamoors emerged as a response to the Moorish occupation of Europe. They were Arabic, hence the turbans and tunics you see in many of them. They were a curiosity—there were not many Africans in Italy at the time. So that's where the tradition came from." And per the OED: "noun, archaic - a black African or a very dark-skinned person." Origin: early 16th century: from black + Moor. Factual, not an insult, nor offensive, thus not unacceptable. As is the obvious picture painted of a sweep having a face black with soot. I rest my case. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,.gargoyle Date: 21 Feb 25 - 10:25 PM "It is what it is..." Sincerely, Gargoyle Sing it our and sing it true |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,PHJim Date: 22 Feb 25 - 02:36 AM Two girls came up to my door I wished that there were more I am constant and true as the day |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: DaveRo Date: 22 Feb 25 - 03:11 AM 'Stoor' is incomprehensible, except in Scotland. John Boden sang this on AFSAD: “From the Copper family come this strange and lyrically somewhat questionable number but one hell of a tune.https://www.afolksongaday.com/?p=1334 He wasn't referring to the Moor. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 22 Feb 25 - 03:24 AM Bobby Moore, would fit, and it rhymes |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 22 Feb 25 - 03:57 AM Why, sing the song, are the lyrics good or are you singing it because you like the tune? |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Manitas_at_home Date: 22 Feb 25 - 05:26 AM Bobby Moore would make even less sense as he was very blond. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Raggytash Date: 22 Feb 25 - 06:20 AM "I don't believe moor was ever a derogatory word, but ya never knows..." You are quite correct BLack Auk, if you read the attached link it will explain the meaning of the term https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moors |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Black Auk Date: 22 Feb 25 - 07:22 AM Why sing the song? Because I can. I think it's a great song. Why ask? Well, there have been worse questions than this asked here. Some people will take offence for the sake of it, I guess. Why, in the 80s one London borough banned the use of black bags, insisting people use purple ones instead. A black mate who lived in the borough couldn't understand the stupidity. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Backwoodsman Date: 22 Feb 25 - 08:00 AM ”Why, in the 80s one London borough banned the use of black bags, insisting people use purple ones instead” What reason did the Borough give for changing from black bags to purple? |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: DaveRo Date: 22 Feb 25 - 08:12 AM Purple? "Under the headline 'the racist binliner is blacked', Chester Stern claimed in the Mail on Sunday that 'black bin liners have been banned at Bernie Grant's left-wing Haringey council because the are 'racially offensive'. This was supported by an alleged statement from an anonymous 'storeman' at the north London council's central depot and by a quote from a councillor who said, 'there was no written ban on the use of black sacks' but added that the council had 'a strong anti-racist policy'. Stern ended his piece with: 'The council has now changed over to grey sacks to avoid offending West Indian workers in the cleaning department'.""The report, notwithstanding the citation of an anonymous source, is without substance. The council had not decided to ban black bin liners. Indeed, days after the article appeared, the Civic Services Committee accepted a tender from a local supplier of black bin liners, since these were the cheapest on offer. Stern, of course, could not have known about this decision, since it was taken after he wrote the report for the Mail on Sunday. Chester Stern was not available for comment…""On 9th March 1986 the Mail on Sunday published a small and misleading 'update' on the binliners story. Under the headline 'Race peace in the bag' on 9th March 1986 we learn that 'black dustbin liners at the centre of a council race storm are not to be banned after all'. What had previously been presented as fact was repeated as such by Today, is now presented as a proposal subsequently withdrawn. "(Clice Soley, MP, from Hansard) |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,IS Date: 22 Feb 25 - 08:20 AM Stoor doesn't rhyme with door either. Also in Scots you'd probably say "stoor o' the lum" instead of "chimney stoor". |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Backwoodsman Date: 22 Feb 25 - 08:35 AM Hmmmmm, more Daily Mail bollocks then. Why am I not surprised? That’s why I asked the question. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 22 Feb 25 - 09:23 AM Why do you think its a greats song is it the lyrics or the tune or both? |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Black Auk Date: 22 Feb 25 - 09:40 AM I don't think it was just the Daily Fail at the time. Don't I also recall a lot of Border Morris teams stopped blacking up and used different colours, despite not being anything to do with race and skin colour? > Why do you think its a greats song is it the lyrics or the tune or both? I didn't really think about why I like it, but I guess I like both the tune and the song - not so much the words per se, but the song itself (if that makes sense). |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 22 Feb 25 - 10:34 AM no, that does not make sense, but its up to you. i generally like a song because of the words or the tune. chacun son gout |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Backwoodsman Date: 22 Feb 25 - 11:38 AM ”Don't I also recall a lot of Border Morris teams stopped blacking up and used different colours, despite not being anything to do with race and skin colour?” One of the reasons they stopped blacking up was precisely because it was felt by many, although of course not everyone, to be racist and/or racial stereotyping. And as someone who worked for thirteen years for a company which made coloured plastic in primary form (i.e. granules and powder form, raw materials for manufacture of plastic objects), I can tell you that black is amongst the cheapest, if not the cheapest, colour to manufacture. And, of course, black plastic bags are highly opaque. I’m pretty sure the choice of black for refuse sacks is a case of pragmatism and economics, nothing to do with racism or trying to offend people of colour. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 22 Feb 25 - 12:06 PM ShermaL Moore, AS BLck as SHERMAL MOORE |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Raggytash Date: 22 Feb 25 - 02:01 PM I think he means Shemar Moore |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Black Auk Date: 22 Feb 25 - 02:52 PM > that does not make sense I guess what I mean is it's the subject matter rather than the words themselves |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Nick Dow Date: 22 Feb 25 - 03:58 PM Girls come to the door I look black with soot I'm sure I am constant and true as the day |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: meself Date: 22 Feb 25 - 04:13 PM Now, someone can correct me if I'm wrong, but I would think that the term "Moor" as indicating a Black person has been out of common usage for some time in the UK - I live on the other side of the pond, so that's just a vague impression. The term itself is perhaps archaic and forgotten enough now that most people in a general audience would have no particular reaction to it. The question then would be whether you feel comfortable with any lyric that compares black and white skin-colour. There is always the remote possibility that someone somewhere will take you task for it, so it comes down to how much that remote possibility does or does not bother you. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: DaveRo Date: 22 Feb 25 - 04:19 PM The only controversy that I recall over the word 'Moor' is when breweries have renamed pubs called 'The Blackamoor' or 'The Moor's Head' because they thought - reasonably IMO - that it might deter potential customers. The predicable 'outrage' (© The Daily Mail') does not come from folk who find the word offensive. One reason for changing that first line might be to make it more understandable to a younger audience who don't know what a Moor is or, if they do, misread it as a racial insult. "Girls came unto the door I look as black as any Moor" It implies he's attractive to girls despite being a dirty sweep. So translate that for your audience. "Though my clothes and face be black, it's not for girls I lack." That's not great, but you get the idea. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch Date: 22 Feb 25 - 04:41 PM “Acceptable” to whom? Kinda matters. Unless you snagged a duet with Beyoncé or Taylor Swift, 8.119 billion folks won't know, much less care. And, truth be told, neither will you. Democratic Socialist convention? Be vewwwy, vewwy quiet. Don't make eye contact and try to back away slowly. Social Democrats are only slightly less anti-social. Local club, family & friends will pretty much know you for what you really are. If everybody already sees you as a lifetime, flaming bigot; you might just be one. Singing a song, or not, won't change much. PS: All vinyl records are racist, except the 'coloured' ones. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler Date: 22 Feb 25 - 05:06 PM But what about the next line, "I'm as constant and true as the day"? I was always told that this was supposed to reflect the character of a black person. There is more to this than apparent at first glance. Robin |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Gallus Moll Date: 22 Feb 25 - 08:05 PM Hahahahaha .....'all vinyl records are racist'?!!! Still laughing at that one!! |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: DaveRo Date: 23 Feb 25 - 02:02 AM Black belt caterpillar wrestler wrote: There is more to this than apparent at first glance.The first line would perhaps make more sense if it were: "Girls, come unto the door though I'm black as any Moor" That is he is encouraging the housemaids to open the door in response to his cry. Maybe there is less to this than my first glance. I expect it's been studied and analysed. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: r.padgett Date: 25 Feb 25 - 04:23 AM Yes, words and language and attitudes continue to change and so do male and female attitudes (Spanish Football chief's kiss for example) Black as any Moor ~ does need an understanding and perhaps a vision of a black turbaned person, maybe Moors in this context rather than common ground and era makes sense Is it really necessary to change this? Maybe Traditional songs do contain many instances of now perceived unacceptable language and actions that were once part and parcel of life ~ we continue to see such on the telly in popular series over 50 plus years. Tradies leave such matters on the club room door, you know what's what Ray |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 25 Feb 25 - 09:59 AM Girls come to the door I look black with soot I'm sure I am constant and true as the day quote nick dow That is perfectly acceptable |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Black Auk Date: 25 Feb 25 - 10:19 AM Nice one! |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,matt milton Date: 25 Feb 25 - 12:01 PM No, it's not acceptable. Find something else that's black, there's a lot of dark things that are easy substitutes. Someone above suggested 'crow', which is what Nick Hart sings in his excellent version of Butter And Cheese And All. https://nickhartmusic.bandcamp.com/track/butter-cheese |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 25 Feb 25 - 01:43 PM I suggested Crow, but Dave ro complained that it did not rhyme. I think Nick Dows suggestion is acceptable...Girls come to the door I look black with soot I'm sure I am constant and true as the day |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: DaveRo Date: 25 Feb 25 - 02:22 PM Saying a sweep is 'black as soot' is silly. And adding 'I'm sure' just to make it rhyme is feeble. Ask yourself - what is this comparison with a Moor supposed to imply? Just that he's dirty? Or more than that: unpleasant? frightful? Personally I'd leave it alone. But changing the 'came' of DT to 'come' is an improvement IMO. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 25 Feb 25 - 02:38 PM Saying a sweep is 'black as soot' is factuaL |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler Date: 25 Feb 25 - 06:43 PM Are crows thought of as constant and true? I thought that was the point of the use of "moor". Robin |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 27 Feb 25 - 04:00 AM Why not ask a Black person |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Black Auk Date: 27 Feb 25 - 08:54 AM I guess I could argue that it refers to a bog moor... |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,John From Kemsing Date: 28 Feb 25 - 10:20 AM Black Auk, Don`t be hamstrung by all this woke bollocks. Just sing it as it was written and let the listeners decide whether they like it or not. If you are cancelled consider it a badge of honour. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Stilly River Sage Date: 28 Feb 25 - 11:55 AM Bad advice from John in Kemsing. If you have an instinct that something is wrong with it, then something probably is. Follow that instinct, change the words or don't sing the song. Don't spread the injury. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 28 Feb 25 - 12:05 PM If you sing it and a black person complains hopefully you will not sing it again and you will have your answer. I would not take any notice of JOHN from Kemsing What is the point of possibly upsetting a black person,John, wont be there to pick up the pieces if you do take his advice., of course if you want to get negative feedback go ahead |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: MaJoC the Filk Date: 28 Feb 25 - 12:47 PM Advice from the trenches: Some songs ain't worth putting your head above the parapet for. I once sang Andy Roberts's Raven on the Roof, saw the thunderous expression on the face of a respected member of the audience in the front row when she heard the last verse, and haven't aired that song in public since. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST Date: 28 Feb 25 - 02:23 PM M t F: Just checked Andy's web site and song "The Raven". What is the meaning of "they found he had a raven in his brain" ? Is that your reference? |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: MaJoC the Filk Date: 28 Feb 25 - 02:39 PM > Is that your reference? Yup. I don't know whether a relative, or perhaps her husband, had died of something nasty, and I thought it imprudent to ask. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: robomatic Date: 28 Feb 25 - 06:12 PM M t F: Thanks. Totally understand, though I'm a nosy bugger. I have a similar lyric problem, although I'm not a professional singer, I enjoy singing even if only hiking by myself. A few years ago I was cheerfully on my own peeling out Stan Rogers' Barrets' Privateers and another hiker crossing paths with me out of the woods chimed in, not so much coincidence as good natured and well educated. My lyric issue is with a Gordon Bok song, "Little River" where the lyric is a poem written by a woman that Bok set to music: Little River lighted-whistle , Cry no more. Sleepy sound from the breakers calling me Back to shore. Whistle it soft to the silver river, Whistle it loud to the drumming sea, Whistle it low to the moon and the morning, Not to me, Never to me. For I'm swinging high in another country, Swinging low . Playing it easy, the dolphins follow me Where I go . Whistle it loud to the flood tide making, Whistle it soft to the wheeling sun , Whistle it wild to my girl's heart - breaking; She'll remember , She was the one . Spring comes warm over Little River, Storm comes black; I was headed home when the Indian Giver Took me back. Whistle it high to the grey-beard breakers Where the secret over the great shoals ran; Whistle the world that was in my pocket When I had pockets, When I was a man That bold line has an ethnic component which I'd like to replace, but the line, like the poem, perfectly expresses itself. Of course, the "Indian Giver" is God. I have not been able to replace the phrase or the line with anything else that scans or rhymes. Otherwise, love the poem and the song, from the album "Bay of Fundy." |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,henryp Date: 03 Mar 25 - 06:03 AM BBC iPlayer adds warnings about outdated language to classic comedies removed from Netflix Message warns that shows ‘reflect the broadcast standards, language and attitudes’ of their time Isobel Lewis The Independent Wednesday 01 July 2020 15:40 BST As TV networks and streaming services around the world reckon with their past use of racist stereotypes on screen, the BBC’s catch-up service added a pop-up warning to shows containing language deemed offensive in 2020. A message accompanying the recent remake of Alan Bennett’s Talking Heads reads: “This film is set in the 1980s and reflects the language and social attitudes of its time.” Meanwhile, a number of classic comedies including The Mighty Boosh and The League of Gentlemen have an added message noting that each show “reflects the broadcast standards, language and attitudes of its time”, adding that “some viewers may find this content offensive.” Both comedies were removed from Netflix in June due to their use of blackface, but have remained on iPlayer throughout. Earlier this week, Channel 4 responded in a similar manner to the news that Netflix had removed a scene containing blackface from a 2004 episode of Peep Show, telling Newsweek that many of the shows in their archive “reflect the time they were made and some contain content which could now be regarded as inappropriate”. They added: “We understand the strong feelings provoked by some of this content but we do not believe that erasing our creative history is a quick fix for the issues affecting our society today.” After Gone With The Wind was removed from HBO Max, the show returned to the streaming service with a pre-roll disclaimer explaining that the film “denies the horrors of slavery”. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler Date: 03 Mar 25 - 06:08 AM So do we have a preamble added to "The merchant of Venice" before each performance? Robin |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch Date: 03 Mar 25 - 08:35 AM RE: Is changing 'black as any moor' acceptable? Yes, no, maybe, what if... |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: DaveRo Date: 03 Mar 25 - 02:26 PM Black belt caterpillar wrestler wrote: So do we have a preamble added to "The merchant of Venice" before each performance?Are there any Shakespeare plays that would not justify a warning that it contains attitudes, language or behaviour no longer considered acceptable? |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Seamus Kennedy Date: 04 Mar 25 - 04:05 PM RE: Is changing 'black as any moor' acceptable? Easy. Try it and see. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch Date: 04 Mar 25 - 07:04 PM Seamus: Easy? Are we reading the same thread? Seriously, not sure if you're referring to the changing or the accepting but I would not call either easy, nor one the same as the other. Artists create, audiences accept… or not… minutes or centuries later. Social media, folk clubs, friends and families have the luxury of simply voting/shouting down their immoral others. If one's vocation is to study, preserve and present the works in their original forms… ethics and law should trump morality. The upfront disclaimers are there for the suits, yours and theirs and the State's (aka: CYA.) 99.9% - don't care. <0.1% - Yes, no, maybe, what if… any subject, any minute or century. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Howard Jones Date: 06 Mar 25 - 07:12 AM I've been struggling to make up my mind about this. There is no simple answer to how to deal with this question where old songs (or indeed any old works of art) are concerned. What aspect of it might be unacceptable? Even when "Moor" was used to describe black people I'm not sure it was necessarily a racial slur, simply the usual term, much as "black" is today. In modern usage the term "Moor" is used only in the context of the mediaeval Muslim occupation of Spain. The term is widely used and is not considered offensive. Whilst the sense of the lyrics are clear, no one today would describe a black person as a "Moor", even if they come from the Maghreb. There should not be a problem with the word itself. The song refers to the sooty appearance of the sweep which makes him look like a black person. Is this offensive? I sense that it might be, but I'm not entirely sure why. The comparison is purely factual and descriptive and is not derogatory. However logic does not always apply to these situations, and I can see that some might be uncomfortable with it. There is a suggestion in the lyrics that despite looking like a black person the sweep is in fact a jolly good fellow, so this might hint at underlying racist attitudes which are no longer acceptable. In that case, alternative suggestions such as "black as any crow" don't alleviate this. However to excise these verses is to remove much of the song. I can see a justification for content warnings on TV programmes where viewers are mainly passive consumers who may start to watch a programme with little prior information about what they might see. I would expect a folk club audience to be aware that these are old songs and of their time and most do not reflect modern ways of thinking about many things, and I do not routinely feel it is necessary to explain this. However that might depend on the audience. My personal conclusion is that whilst this song might make some listeners uncomfortable it is not egregiously offensive. It's not in my repertoire but if it were I would not change it. I can also see that others might take the opposite view and I respect that. As I said at the beginning, there is no simple answer. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Black Auk Date: 06 Mar 25 - 08:05 AM Apparently even calling a black person "coloured" these days is wrong. I have no idea why, but an Asian guy who recently used the word was hauled over the coals and sent to be "re-educated". |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: meself Date: 06 Mar 25 - 11:22 AM I wondered how long it would take before we got to the ol' "we're not even allowed to call them [insert outmoded term here] anymore .... " |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Howard Jones Date: 06 Mar 25 - 11:58 AM Someone should tell the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The trouble is that these terms move in and out of fashion. When I was young it would have been unacceptable to call someone "black", the respectful term was "negro", and "coloured" was also acceptable. Now it's the complete opposite. It's easy to make mistakes, particularly for older people who were brought up to use different terms, or those for whom English is a second language. The distinction between "coloured" (unacceptable) and "people of colour" (acceptable) may not be obvious. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Phil d'Conch Date: 06 Mar 25 - 02:10 PM Change the time, place and/or manner of a performance and the acceptance(s) will play musical chairs to the same beat. 200km east or south of Miami F-L-A and you ain't in Kansas anymore Toto. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler Date: 06 Mar 25 - 03:25 PM I believe that the original intention was to imply that he was "constant and true as the day" because he looked "black as any moor". This would fit with the views of the time. I can't see any minor change to the words that would convey the same message. Robin |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 06 Mar 25 - 03:30 PM I think its not much of a song but if i was going to sing it I would alter it. performance is about interacting well with your audience why do something that could put somebodys back up? |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: robomatic Date: 06 Mar 25 - 03:36 PM I agree that there is a reason to feel a bit punished by events, but the term 'colored' dates from the 30s if not earlier. The term 'Negro' was used in the era from the 50s to 70s and we now not only have to deal with the long existing NAACP (rarely reading out what it stands for), but the phrase "people of color" has brought us close to full circle. A rule of thumb I was introduced to when I moved into a college dormitory that was ethnically 'concentrated' was that people heard a term that may or not be a slur, they reacted much more calmly if you said it with a smile. (You get extra credit if you remember the relevant quote from "The Virginian" by Owen Lister). |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,paperback Date: 06 Mar 25 - 04:30 PM Sandman: bite my lily-white backside ( - ; |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: RTim Date: 06 Mar 25 - 04:53 PM The term "Moor" was used by Europeans to describe people of Arab and Berber descent who lived in North Africa and Spain during the Middle Ages. The Moors were Muslim and established a thriving Islamic culture in Spain from the 8th to 15th centuries. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,paperback Date: 06 Mar 25 - 07:23 PM Nigger has come full circle too. From the more polite version 'negro'(sometimes disparaging spelt knee-groW) to 'nigga'. Funny thing about 'nigga' it seems to have crossed racial lines into the realm of attitude. I would never use it (nigga) but Im old. As far as black as a Moor goes I don't think many people would even know what a Moor is, so maybe try submitting 'well-diggers arse' for Moor and really confuse 'em. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: The Sandman Date: 07 Mar 25 - 12:33 PM people in the folk world have a pretty good idea of who a moor is,Morris dancers for a start, generaaly have an idea that morris comes from moorish.Never underestimate peoples knowledge i am,not intersted in your backside whatever colour it is... Paperback |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,paperback Date: 07 Mar 25 - 03:39 PM I didn't get the connection between Morris and Moor. Thanks. I had a friend who whenever we would talk about going down to Mexico would say "going over to Mexico" instead as if the word down was a poor reflection on Mexico. So I take it saying black is the problem not the word Moor. Something for me to think about. PS: you're alright, sandman; a top man as you blokes would say |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST Date: 08 Mar 25 - 08:37 AM Really shouldn't use the term "Rule of thumb" as that was used to suggest that a man could beat his wife with a stick so long as it was thinner than a thumb. Just sayin' :rofl: |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Manitas_at_home Date: 08 Mar 25 - 10:29 AM No, it was simply a rough measurement. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: meself Date: 08 Mar 25 - 12:07 PM It's somehow appropriate that hyper-sensitivity based on fake etymology would work itself into this thread .... |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,john greaves Date: 09 Mar 25 - 08:09 AM Up here(North York Moors) a black moor is one that grows heather and a white moor is a grass moor, so if the girl is called Heather?.... |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,paperback Date: 10 Mar 25 - 09:26 PM so if the girl is called Heather?....she was probably born in 1975 |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Hesk Date: 11 Mar 25 - 06:15 AM Given that I sing this song from time to time, the lyrics, unaltered, are acceptable to me. I may or may not give a warning first, and I would consider doing this before singing any song with words or meanings that come from an earlier period. Many folk songs offend a small portion of the audience. They usually keep quiet about it, but let their feelings known by the expression on their faces. It is often impossible to predict what they might object to. Sometimes it is the fact that the song is sung too frequently! Vulgarity in a song is a good case in point, whilst many are rolling in the aisles, others are looking grim and furious. My point is that you cannot please everyone, and, therefore, you might as well sing what you enjoy. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: Black belt caterpillar wrestler Date: 11 Mar 25 - 06:50 AM To my mind there is a big debate about what to do about things that were once acceptable but no longer are. If we allow them to be expunged from memory then we risk losing what lessons can be learnt from them. This applies to folk songs, statues of proffiteers from the slave trade and many other subjects. Can we switch between an entertainment mind set and a historic lecture mind set? Robin |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Rossey Date: 11 Mar 25 - 11:02 AM If I had heard the song, my first thought would be that you are referring to land. It very common in Scotland to talk and sing about dark moors, e.g black/dark Drumossie Moor (Culloden). I know of the historical ethnic category of Moors, but that was way to the back of my mind. So there is an ambiguity as to how people interpret the word. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,John From Kemsing Date: 11 Mar 25 - 11:43 AM I think Hesk is touching on the solution. As in many areas of the arts today perhaps clubs and venues should produce "Trigger Warnings" informing the attendees that tonights contents may contain references to mysoginy, murder, child abduction, starvation, antiquated terminology, privations of war, etc., etc. Those who would feel offended or frightened by such public renditions could then decide not attend. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: MaJoC the Filk Date: 11 Mar 25 - 12:07 PM *Agree*, John. But, as in any walk of life, there will always be those who are determined to be offended, however far they have to go in pursuit of the offence. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,Howard Jones Date: 11 Mar 25 - 01:34 PM I start from the position that anyone attending a folk club should be expected to understand that these are old songs and use different language and express different attitudes and ideas from today. Of course that won't stop someone from taking offence at something, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't sing these songs. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: MaJoC the Filk Date: 11 Mar 25 - 02:33 PM .... and we're straight into "What is a folk club?" territory. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: meself Date: 11 Mar 25 - 03:48 PM A common way of dealing with these possibly-but-not-necessarily offensive terms, ideas, etc., is to make the casual proviso that "some of the language may not be politically correct", or words to that effect. You will then, however, for better or for worse, have the audience listening intently for whatever it is that's (possibly) "politically incorrect", so you may wish you hadn't said anything about it ... ! |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,paperback Date: 13 Mar 25 - 10:59 PM RTim said "The Moors were Muslim and established a thriving Islamic culture in Spain from the 8th to 15th centuries." MBGA? |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: meself Date: 14 Mar 25 - 10:56 AM "MBGA"?? |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,John From Kemsing Date: 14 Mar 25 - 01:04 PM Without castigating, cancelling or cursing them, what about those folk who are perhaps not blessed with the ability to sing well but are interested in hearing how they were sung in public in days of yore. |
Subject: RE: Is 'black as any moor' acceptable? From: GUEST,paperback Date: 14 Mar 25 - 02:15 PM Public singing (as in days of yore) may make a comeback once AI runs its course. Stage plays too. Make Britain great again |
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