Stones to retire classic song 'Brown Sugar' following backlash

Cantaro

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After 50 years they decided the song is racist or inappropriate? I thought it was about heroin.


The Rolling Stones retired one of their most popular rock songs due to lyrics that depict the horrors of slavery.

The Stones have not played the 1971 hit "Brown Sugar" on their current tour and said the blues classic has been removed from their setlist.

"You picked up on that, huh?," Keith Richards, 77, responded to the LA Times when asked if the Stones had cut the second-most-performed tune in their catalog amid a climate of heightened cultural sensitivity.

"I don’t know. I’m trying to figure out with the sisters quite where the beef is. Didn’t they understand this was a song about the horrors of slavery? But they’re trying to bury it."

The first verse of the hit song depicts slaves being sold and beaten in Louisiana, with references to a "slaver" who whips "women just around midnight."

The famous chorus portrays a non-consensual sex encounter between the violent master and a young female slave, while possibly also alluding to heroin use.

In the next verse, the song describes the abuse suffered by slaves on a plantation. Lead singer Mick Jagger ends the tune by singing, "How come you taste so good … just like a black girl should."

"We’ve played ‘Brown Sugar’ every night since 1970," Richards told the newspaper.

"So sometimes you think, ‘We’ll take that one out for now and see how it goes.’ We might put it back in."

The Stones have played the song live 1,136 times, second to only "Jumpin’ Jack Flash," according to setlist.fm.

"At the moment I don’t want to get into conflicts with all of this s–t," Richard said of criticism of the song. "But I’m hoping that we’ll be able to resurrect the babe in her glory somewhere along the track."

The Stones were five shows into their "No Filter" tour Wednesday. The concerts marked the septuagenarians’ first gigs since 2019, and the first performances without drummer Charlie Watts, who died in August at the age of 80.

Jagger is clearly not singing the song in the first person, but the danceable tune has been slammed in recent years, with some critics dubbing it "stunningly crude and offensive."

Other commentators have conceded it is "gross, sexist, and stunningly offensive," but still rocking.

"I never would write that song now," Jagger told Rolling Stone in 1995. "I would probably censor myself. I’d think, ‘Oh God, I can’t. I’ve got to stop. I can’t just write raw like that.’"

 
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poker

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Jun 1, 2006
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Niagara
They did this on there own... lol... there was no backlash. Mick Jagger, in 1996, said he would not write that song today.

To be honest... while its a great tune, you can barely make out any of the words he is singing.
 
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poker

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Jun 1, 2006
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Niagara
"Brown Sugar"

Gold coast slave ship bound for cotton fields
Sold in a market down in New Orleans
Scarred old slaver knows he's doing alright
Hear him whip the women just around midnight

Brown sugar how come you taste so good?
Brown sugar just like a young girl should

Drums beating, cold English blood runs hot
Lady of the house wonderin' where it's gonna stop
House boy knows that he's doing alright
You shoulda heard him just around midnight

Brown sugar how come you taste so good, now?
Brown sugar just like a young girl should, now

Ah, get along, brown sugar how come you taste so good, baby?
Ah, got me feelin' now, brown sugar just like a black girl should

I bet your mama was a tent show queen
And all her boyfriends were sweet sixteen
I'm no schoolboy but I know what I like
You shoulda heard me just around midnight

Brown sugar how come you taste so good, baby?
Ah, brown sugar just like a young girl should, yeah

I said yeah, yeah, yeah, woo
How come you... how come you taste so good?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, woo
Just like a... just like a black girl should
Yeah, yeah, yeah, woo
 

Cantaro

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They did this on there own... lol... there was no backlash. Mick Jagger, in 1996, said he would not write that song today.

To be honest... whilenits a great tune, you can barely make out out any of the words he is singing.
I can't understand what they're saying either. Lots of songs are some kind of poetry that don't make a lot of sense.
 

Insidious Von

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Social Justice warriors are also after Dave Chappelle, if they silence him, cultural fascism will have won.

Obviously they didn't watch his latest Netflix special The Closer. There was nothing inflammatory about what he said about trans people, i thought it was enlightening.

There are other songs Mick wouldn't write today.

 

frankcastle

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Feb 4, 2003
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I dunno ive never been able to understand the lyrics till now. Im not offended by the song. But thats really not the metric of whether or not they should play it.

If mick says he wouldnt write the song today. Then i think its also fair to say he woyldnt perform it today. His song. His choice. I can respect that.
 

mandrill

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Stray Cat Blues, Midnight Rambler, Brown Sugar are all pretty cringe. And yes, I was a huge Stones fan back in the day and knew all the lyrics and could sing along. But I was 15 years old and it was the early '70's. The early 70's were a time that was so asexual and repressed that any reference to sex or violence (or both) was revolutionary and counter culture. It was also pre Feminism. Pre law reform on sex crimes and domestic violence. And highly racist.

Rock singers routinely made reference to fucking 15 year olds. No one cared. It was the 70's. White rock singers routinely presented Blacks and Black music as hyper sexual. No one cared. It was the early 70's.

Times change. These songs are now embarrassing and out of date. Even by the late 70's, you were getting far better lyric writing by acts like Elvis Costello and The Jam and Springsteen.

I have a lot of respect for Keith and a little less for Mick. But they are relics of a different time and it's good that they are editing their acts a bit.
 
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