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#21
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12-16-2014, 12:06 PM
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Re: Police Car Appears to Blast 'Sweet Home Alabama' at Protest
"The southern men who comprised Lynyrd Skynyrd were huge fans of Neil Young and his music, but they felt that Young had gone too far in launching his broadside attack against the entire South and all its (white) people. The Skynyrd boys weren't racists; what gave Neil Young the right to judge them? Or, as band frontman Ronnie Van Zant put it in a 1974 interview with Rolling Stone magazine, "We thought Neil was shooting all the ducks to kill one or two." Not every southern man was a cross-burning bigot; was every white southerner supposed to feel ashamed merely for being who he was?" |
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#23
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12-17-2014, 10:06 AM
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Re: Police Car Appears to Blast 'Sweet Home Alabama' at Protest
Neil Young himself said he regretted the song. Nor do I believe Young ever lived in the south. So his opinion isn't one he came too from baring witness. He could have made the same song about the north. When blacks started moving to Detroit in large numbers, the whites left in huge numbers.
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#30
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12-18-2014, 12:45 AM
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Re: Police Car Appears to Blast 'Sweet Home Alabama' at Protest
Young doesn't regret the song, he only wishes his tone had been less accusatory and that the lyrics were less easily misconstrued (his words). Oh, and since when is it necessary to have lived in the south to know it has a lasting legacy of racism. To use your astoundingly simplistic logic, one can or should only write songs about first hand experiences... |