If anyone gives you any more hints, they're liable to give it away

~ Lizzy
The issues raised in this dilemma are particularly strident for me. At our last Toowoomba Cohen Birthday celebration, we had a number of folk who were there primarily to cater for us, not in the first instance being Cohen fans (and undoubtedly some still aren’t). Anyway, a couple of these folk were subsequently quite critical of us (organisers) for inappropriately exposing a couple of children (girls around 8 to 10 yrs) to LC’s lyrics (such as the “giving me head…” and “…anal sex” ones) on the Saturday live performance night. Though these children were with their parents the whole night, it was still regarded as inappropriate that we had allowed this to occur. Moreover, it was even suggested that it could be tantamount to “child abuse”! It was also intimated that we should have had an “Adult Content” warning on the night!Manna wrote: (4) What age do you feel would be the most age-appropriate for children to first listen to Leonard?
Conception? hehehe
(5) Should parental- or adult-guidance be a part of these initial listening experiences?
I guess that's up to the parent - how much the parent wants to explain. For me, I think I'll have control over what my child hears until I start giving her an allowance, and this music happens to be a part of our house along with Old Timey (fiddle, banjo, swing yer partner, "Tennessee Waltz" for example) & a fair amount of pop that I decide is worthy of a listen. (Though I'm pretty out of touch with the modern music scene.)
I think I'll talk to her and give her straight answers. If she asks me, "What does 'giving me head' mean?" ... hmm, not sure how to answer that for a 4 year old. But I don't know if she would care to ask yet. If she knows this lyric, I imagine she might think it's like the "Give me your foot" game. Soon enough all my sheltering will fly out the school bus window anyway, though, so why not? An accurate-yet-sensitive answer that I haven't yet formulated would, of course, be best.
I agree, Andrew, that this consideration is quite superfluous to the norm and, at best, distracting. Perhaps, a panel discussion of "Beautiful Losers" might justify such a distinction, I feel it's simply over-the-top conservative to suggest it in the context of your Cohen event. Any discussion of these lyrics would likely have taken place prior to that night, anyway.Though we will be in a different venue with different caterers this year, I’m not sure yet what we will do in terms of an “Adult Content” warning. Part of me still finds this strategy a bit unnecessary and unpalatable and possibly even attracting certain people to attend for the wrong reason!![]()
I believe Andrew stated that children were few and far between on the other occasions.Yet, for this to be the first complaint out of 13 years of annual performances...
and then to be in regard to other people's children;
Well, I hope somebody is.They must be having a very difficult time with the broadcasting of rap.
I sure do love this quote, GinaAge has nothing to do with anything important in life (except the shortening of it!)
I must say that's an image I hadn't considered when I asked that question. . . but it shouldn't be so formal as to sit 'em down and get the CDs out with an explanation of why they should like it.
Okie...sorry to steer the thread off course again...and I can't say people didn't warn me...but, we're 47 pages into Beautiful Losers and it's already been interesting. John, to answer your questions, I'm twenty-four, and Dad and I split the book up over however many days we have (so that's about forty pages a day for the next week.) And then we call each other and talk about it. We used to read aloud to each other, but I don't think we could manage that with this one.John Etherington wrote:Hi Beccka,
I'm interested to know two things - your age, and how reading the book with your father works. Do you read chapters simultaneously and then discuss them?
I was thinking about this today while listening to "Dress Rehearsal Rag." I haven't heard that much criticism of Cohen's music for its negative affect on children. I think Weird Al Yankovic has gotten more criticism in recent years. Maybe there's an assumption that kids won't be listening to Cohen by choice. Frankly I'd be more concerned about what kids overhear rather than what they choose to listen to.lizzytysh wrote:It's true the adage, "It takes a community to raise a child;" yet, this incident doesn't seem to have been in that spirit.
On rap, it was an observation made without prejudice.
... and not only that, Beccka ~ it wasn't even the parents who levied the complaint. The complaint was made by someone[s] who didn't even know the parents or the children! It was done by strangers to both... well, probably a stranger to Leonard's music, as well.And for that incident...it's not the responsibility of the *performers* to protect the kids. It's the responsibility of the *parents.* If the parents found the music inappropriate, they could have, well, left!
You're very fortunate, Beccka - my dad has never read a book in his life! If I hadn't inherited some of his traits I would be left to presume that there's a well-read, music loving milkman somewhere....Beccka wrote:I'm twenty-four, and Dad and I split the book up over however many days we have (so that's about forty pages a day for the next week.) And then we call each other and talk about it.