Oh! Susanna (With Original Racist and Offensive Lyrics)

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2020
  • A look at the Stephen Foster classic "Oh! Susanna". WARNING: THIS VERSION INCLUDES FOSTER'S RACIST AND OFFENSIVE ORIGINAL SECOND VERSE. This verse is included as a reminder of America's horrible racist past and present. Recorded by Tom Roush.
    To completely judge Foster based on these lyrics, however, may be somewhat unfair. While many of his songs were written for minstrel shows and do include troubling lyrics, he was somewhat a product of his time and he made great efforts later in his career to remove any racist imagery and content from his music. He was also a strong proponent of abolition.

Komentáře • 3,9K

  • @Mahdi-ug1qy
    @Mahdi-ug1qy Před 2 lety +8975

    History should be shown as it is, not as how people want it to be.

    • @lando6420
      @lando6420 Před 2 lety +149

      Exactly

    • @neon_mossstone9246
      @neon_mossstone9246 Před 2 lety +274

      Yeah I agree manigga

    • @jacksonguillory8114
      @jacksonguillory8114 Před 2 lety +343

      @@neon_mossstone9246 you have to use a hard "er" with it to be historically accurate...

    • @aleksatorbica2890
      @aleksatorbica2890 Před 2 lety +53

      Yeah but it's art man it's good melody and it could be a good song only if it's not racists as it was so why not changing for audiences

    • @jacksonguillory8114
      @jacksonguillory8114 Před 2 lety +183

      @@aleksatorbica2890 imagine being a liberal 👁👄👁

  • @ch64621
    @ch64621 Před 10 měsíci +3516

    As a black man I am happy to learn the original lyrics, history should be shown to all and not hidden.

    • @flap7024
      @flap7024 Před 10 měsíci +69

      Happy to learn, disappointed that it had to be this way. Not that you said this, but never be happy to see and hear how your people were called out of their names.

    • @gtworldzhd4137
      @gtworldzhd4137 Před 9 měsíci +98

      Of course we should learn about history to prevent it from happening. Should we glorify certain things then? No, but it should definitely not be hidden.

    • @Smiljana2226
      @Smiljana2226 Před 9 měsíci +11

      Amen!🙏

    • @Deontjie
      @Deontjie Před 9 měsíci +28

      Great. I don't mind you calling me names. Sometimes it is a joke, other times I deserve it.

    • @hegeliansours1312
      @hegeliansours1312 Před 8 měsíci +23

      ​@@DeontjieExactly! Integration requires consideration from all sides involved. No one rolls over and gives up without anything in return and expect the relationship to last long.

  • @derekvanderwoude3407
    @derekvanderwoude3407 Před rokem +1069

    History should never be erased. Even the worst part of history should always be shown.

    • @TheRealist2022
      @TheRealist2022 Před 6 měsíci +9

      @derekvanderwoude3407 The problem is... that on the whole, " history is written by the victors". Captain John Price, 22 SAS.

    • @tonypastor705
      @tonypastor705 Před 5 měsíci +5

      derekvanderwoude3407- Yes, just like Roots the Mini series was an important thing to show.

    • @gus.1997
      @gus.1997 Před 5 měsíci +12

      Yes, but not with pride. It must be exposed as something negative, always accompanied by a context explaining why it is something bad and that it should not be forgotten or appreciated.

    • @tonypastor705
      @tonypastor705 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@gus.1997Absolutely

    • @iamthegreenarrow762
      @iamthegreenarrow762 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Even though this song may be racist, it’s very catchy, sounds better than most modern music to me

  • @josephmatthews9866
    @josephmatthews9866 Před 7 měsíci +380

    As a person of color, not offended by the song at all ,i was very surprised to discover there more lyrics then I'd ever knew about!!
    Thanks for the story!!

    • @zeeqayum4834
      @zeeqayum4834 Před 4 měsíci

      How is this not offensive? I’ve read dumb comments but this takes the cake. Uncle Tom would be proud of you

    • @THECONTINENTALMAN
      @THECONTINENTALMAN Před 3 měsíci +2

      i learnt it on piano in like 10 mins lol

    • @BEP4LIFE
      @BEP4LIFE Před 2 měsíci

      You're not even Black

    • @trentrez6643
      @trentrez6643 Před 29 dny

      So, you dont get offended by someone trying to offend you. Great, lol. $100 says you think you are a Republican too

    • @crunchnmunchsweettreats
      @crunchnmunchsweettreats Před 29 dny +5

      “As a person of color” Oh brother…

  • @kevinbotwinick3009
    @kevinbotwinick3009 Před 2 lety +3860

    This is a perfect example of how music really can really tell a story of a time period.

    • @zay_gzs5635
      @zay_gzs5635 Před 2 lety

      @@chopholtz4950 Exactly back then they didn’t really know no better it’s wrong but all of human history not just white people every race and ethnic group of people and religion has done it to one another it’s even going on in China right now with Muslims it’s basically their holocaust

    • @Zulf85
      @Zulf85 Před rokem +38

      Ikr? It's always fascinating to see the prejudices of a previous time period. It's also funny to see the right-wing snowflakes get upset over the concept of someone performing their own version of these song that represents modern standards.

    • @UTO7
      @UTO7 Před rokem

      @@Zulf85 Which is hilarious because the same people do a 180 when you point out how their portrayal of native americans as bloodthirsty and primitive is not accurate, or how the founding fathers owned slaves. They're ok with that stuff being revised, but god forbid they can't sing the n-word in a verse.

    • @Zulf85
      @Zulf85 Před rokem +1

      @kay van oof, some little baby snowflake got upset I see. Hope someone kisses your boo-boos better

    • @nigerianprince_1443
      @nigerianprince_1443 Před rokem +1

      You can say that again!

  • @marycahill546
    @marycahill546 Před rokem +4987

    Thank you for this original version. History should not be wiped out.

    • @francesrude3007
      @francesrude3007 Před rokem +76

      it's DECEPTION, not wiped out, but hidden on purpose.

    • @KelpyGYT
      @KelpyGYT Před rokem +122

      @@francesrude3007 not a good idea even the most evil vile history should be shown as a reminder of what never to repeat

    • @jack002tuber
      @jack002tuber Před rokem +61

      Hiding the TRUTH about the past can only result in repeating it. Tell it, show it. You don't have to agree with it, but don't hide it or lie about it.

    • @krokuke
      @krokuke Před rokem +34

      @@KelpyGYT How does this song show history? It is just a racist song, with no purpose. What are we supposed to take away from it? Don't write racist songs?

    • @mhdfrb9971
      @mhdfrb9971 Před rokem +49

      @@krokuke meanwhile Gangsta rap nigga:

  • @syourke3
    @syourke3 Před 9 měsíci +93

    Stephen Foster was a genius songwriter and was not a racist at all. His songs are full of sympathy for the slaves and he was a northerner, and sympathetic to the abolitionist cause. He should be honored.

    • @AshanBhatoa
      @AshanBhatoa Před 7 měsíci +12

      Correct, simultaneously we can condemn or morally analyse his earlier sentiments. As long as that's acknowledged, it's pretty simple. It's a product of the day and currently we understand better.

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 Před 7 měsíci

      @@AshanBhatoa The word “nigger” was not used as a racial slur in those days. It comes from “negro”, the Spanish word for “black”. Most of the slaves from Africa went to South America, only around ten percent went to the USA. We should not think of Foster’s use of the word as a racial slur any more than we should think of Mark Twain’s use of the word as a racial slur.

    • @thetoastedhippies1997
      @thetoastedhippies1997 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Foster had the same power in his rhythms as Beethoven, but he was able to access them in a simpler format.

    • @MrChrisdube
      @MrChrisdube Před 7 měsíci +8

      Simply being a northerner does NOT make one sympathetic to the abolitionist cause.
      As a matter of FACT, there is an Ivy League school that is named for a slave trader (Brown University who paid the institution to change its name from Rhode Island College). he got his money shipping slaves and making hugh profits.
      To be fair, one of his sons, Moses Brown, knew how revolting the slave trade was and became an abolitionist.

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 Před 7 měsíci +11

      @@MrChrisdube No one ever said that being a northerner made you an abolitionist sympathizer. I said that he was a northerner and was sympathetic to the cause of abolitionism. So what’s your point?

  • @MPERIALENTERTAINMENTD
    @MPERIALENTERTAINMENTD Před rokem +99

    I remember singing this as a child. I learned it in elementary school. It's part of history.

    • @heythislookslikeakidsgame
      @heythislookslikeakidsgame Před rokem +4

      what you do when n word part

    • @depair112
      @depair112 Před 11 měsíci +9

      ​​@@heythislookslikeakidsgamerobably was cut out

    • @Persun_McPersonson
      @Persun_McPersonson Před 3 měsíci

      And you sang the altered version that tries to hide the racism of its history.

    • @jad2290
      @jad2290 Před 16 dny

      ​@@heythislookslikeakidsgame
      Just sing it?? Lol
      It's fine to say nword in songs

    • @blaze_dynamo
      @blaze_dynamo Před 10 dny

      The whole point of the song... ​@@heythislookslikeakidsgame

  • @DouglasJWilkening
    @DouglasJWilkening Před rokem +1744

    Sang this in grade school in NYC in the 1950’s. The second verse, as you say, was omitted, and the rest of the song was carefully edited to remove any hint of the narrator’s race. No faux black dialect, no reference to “darkies”, etc. In fact, given what’s known about the attitudes of the day, it’s surprising how few words need to be changed to clean it up to suit modern sensibilities. I never knew the song was about a black man until later in life when I heard versions closer to the original.

    • @wix7657
      @wix7657 Před rokem +82

      I am British and I can remember singing this a primary school in the 1980s. If any teacher had children sing this song now they would be serving a jail sentence!
      It’s sad how times have changed in such a short time!😔

    • @doraran2138
      @doraran2138 Před rokem +61

      @@wix7657 Go to Canda, where this song will still get you jailed, byt at least current Canadian CDC is promoting 'glory holes'.

    • @chewy99.
      @chewy99. Před rokem +24

      @@doraran2138 Wow I just researched that and that is absolutely the one of if not the stupidest thing I’ve heard about…

    • @doraran2138
      @doraran2138 Před rokem

      @@chewy99. The glory hole thing was right off the Canadian CDC site. After so much controversy by people who actually pay attention, it got pulled. Apparently you limit your research to Candian Broadcast Co, CNN, MSNBC and other places tha selectively feed their sheep, I mean subjects, what strained information necessary to keep the blissfully obedient.

    • @thinkwithurdipstick
      @thinkwithurdipstick Před rokem +19

      Hmm, sounds like northern bigotry against the southern accent to me. For shame, NYC

  • @allthenewsordeath5772
    @allthenewsordeath5772 Před rokem +667

    You know given the time, This could have been a lot worse, I was kind of expecting a progression where each verse got increasingly more racist in a comedic manner, but that might just be because I’ve watched too many key and Peele sketches.

    • @Zulf85
      @Zulf85 Před rokem +29

      Ikr lmao? As someone who isn't part of US culture (UK is close enough though), I'm glad to have heard this version and its story today. If we don't learn from history, we really are doomed to repeat it and make fools of ourselves. Also Key and Peele is some top-shelf stuff.

    • @inventions178
      @inventions178 Před rokem

      @Emmanuel Goldstein So nothing wrong with the part where it says he kills 500 black people. Okay.

    • @OrangPasien
      @OrangPasien Před rokem +20

      Ordeath; I agree that one would expect the natural progression of verses to include the “n” world used once or twice more. I think the reason the word was used so frugally is that it wasn’t considered as derogatory (if at all derogatory) as it is now. Thus there was no intent to be “edgy” when he wrote it, that’s just the way people spoke. The Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn books support that idea as well. When did this change occur? I could be wrong but it would seem that it happened post-Civil War during reconstruction when the klan became a real force. The word was coupled with anger and hate thus becoming the vitriolic slur as we know it today. But the initial anger and hate was actually directed towards the Federal government in the south who was trying to ensure the hard won freedoms (to vote) of the CW to which blacks were entitled. Thus it was the Federal Gov, of primarily Republicans (party of Lincoln), trying to ensure those rights, against the klan, primarily Democrats (anti-Lincoln, anti-Rep) who were trying to steal them away. In fact the CW was as much R vs D as it was N vs S (R-N vs D-S). Many people are unaware of all this because they’d rather burn books, tear down statues, block web sites, and silence Twitter accounts. This is the value of understanding history.

    • @michalC92
      @michalC92 Před rokem +7

      The banjos are a-strumming and the drums are a-banging, let's get the boys together and have ourselfs a han....

    • @TazmilyGum
      @TazmilyGum Před rokem +1

      @@michalC92 WHAT?! IM TALKING ABOUT TIRES!

  • @teencykizmitt9955
    @teencykizmitt9955 Před 7 měsíci +24

    I'm 70 yrs old and NEVER HEARD this song sung like this and I live in Louisiana. We sang this song always a child, sang to my babies as a put to sleep song. Never have I ever heard this version!!!!!!!

  • @ggpowerwashing2045
    @ggpowerwashing2045 Před rokem +49

    I understand why the second verse is removed when sung in modern day. But it is important to remember history and understand the true historical meaning of songs. This is a very informative video 👍

  • @suehamilton8727
    @suehamilton8727 Před rokem +223

    My grandpa used to sing this to me when I was little, back in the 1960’s, I had no idea where the song came from, and he only ever sung the chorus, so really liked this explanation. And enjoyed hearing it again .

    • @royale7620
      @royale7620 Před 8 měsíci

      @@theflipbook1280 cry more wokie kid

    • @shellnexus1
      @shellnexus1 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@theflipbook1280😂😂

  • @astero5124
    @astero5124 Před rokem +514

    You just dug up a childhood memory I forgot existed, I'm from Poland and we had to learn this song on the recorder at school. The lyrics in the textbook were in Polish and completely innocent, now I feel weird

    • @saturnas
      @saturnas Před rokem +49

      I'm brazilian and I identify with your comment. Lots of non north american people know this song based on local translations only. I never learnt it on school, but I recognize it from old cartoons and tv shows.
      In brazilian portuguese, the song even lost the verses about weather and all; it's literally just a man traveling by horse on a road full of bumps and holes.

    • @ccane978
      @ccane978 Před rokem +15

      Same as an Italian

    • @cheezdoodle96
      @cheezdoodle96 Před rokem +34

      Same here as a Norwegian. My mom used to sing this to me when I was a child, and it was always one of my favourites. The Norwegian version was written by one of Norway's most beloved (primarily children's) writers, Thorbjørn Egner, and tells the tale of a guy named Ferdinand who does nothing but play his guitar all day and ends up travelling the world trying to make some gold so he and his dear Susanne (with an e) can get married. He tries several different vocations without luck, but finally finds a place his knack for playing the guitar comes in handy: The radio, who happes to be in need of a guitarist. He finally starts making some gold and the two sweethearts can get married at last.

    • @donut9719
      @donut9719 Před rokem +26

      Im quite surprised on the global reach this song had. Poland, Brazil, Italy, Norway? Pretty different places. I wonder why honestly

    • @niagarafallski3
      @niagarafallski3 Před rokem +8

      "(...) Jutro będę w Alabamie, no a tam najmilszą mam. O, Zuzanno! Nie płacz, no już dość. Ja jadę z banjo na kolanie, twój z Południa gość". I think it was in 60. - in Polish TV, there was a program with American country music with Polish lyrics.

  • @frankdrevinpolicesquad2930
    @frankdrevinpolicesquad2930 Před 7 měsíci +160

    Less offensive than most Rap music

    • @holyfool5605
      @holyfool5605 Před 3 dny +1

      "art disturbs the comforted" applies to you.

  • @Dafoodmaster
    @Dafoodmaster Před 7 měsíci +39

    i often speak about "iconic potential" in melody, when discussing music with friends.
    to me it seems the prevalence of this song, despite it's dark history, is due to the strength of it's melody.
    it is undeniably iconic. "iconic potential" is immediately palpable in a melody. you know it when you hear it. at least, that's my theory.

  • @Riskmangler
    @Riskmangler Před rokem +141

    Still uses the N word 499 less times than your average rap lyric.

    • @LuznoLindo
      @LuznoLindo Před 13 dny +4

      There's no point in trying to explain to you how a modern rap song using the word is different from a song from the 1800s using the word. You aren't going to listen, and I'm just happy virtually nobody here bothered engaging you.

    • @Riskmangler
      @Riskmangler Před 13 dny +15

      @@LuznoLindo Congratulations - You are "virtually nobody." Still just happy smarty-pants?

    • @TheLordOfNothing
      @TheLordOfNothing Před 11 dny +5

      @@LuznoLindo You screwed up that wordin' pretty bad. You just admitted you're "virtually nobody".
      Oh wait 74 people agreed with him

    • @Yoghurtslinger
      @Yoghurtslinger Před 11 dny

      Never met an educated black person who uses the word 'N'.
      Real Africans are embarrassed by blacks in the USA.

    • @mercifulhorror4935
      @mercifulhorror4935 Před 10 dny +3

      ​​​​​@@LuznoLindothere isn't any difference, everyone has free will and are able to say it, no matter WHO or WHAT says it, it is still a hateful word. So you can't possibly prove anything, that word hasn't changed since the 1800s, so the meaning is the same, kinda funny how you say it's not worth it trying to explain so, (because you don't actually have good reasoning) but the fact you commented a comment, while saying it's useless to explain a point, you have that nobody in the comment section, seems to share.

  • @mickeyscott7479
    @mickeyscott7479 Před rokem +1165

    If one erases the past they are doomed to make the same mistakes.

    • @oppressormk2op547
      @oppressormk2op547 Před rokem +12

      Don't even got to erase it to make the same mistakes

    • @hotchocolateconnoisseur
      @hotchocolateconnoisseur Před rokem +50

      @@oppressormk2op547 but erasing it makes it 100 times easier to make those mistakes

    • @fvjisinferno207
      @fvjisinferno207 Před rokem +3

      @@oppressormk2op547 noob

    • @shaunpatrick8345
      @shaunpatrick8345 Před rokem +17

      Take a look around and have a think about whether they made mistakes back then compared to now. Attempts to impose equality and end disparate outcomes are leading to societal decline, based on not wanting to repeat "mistakes".

    • @Zulf85
      @Zulf85 Před rokem +13

      @@shaunpatrick8345 oof, some little boy got triggered today

  • @Tonyandfloyd
    @Tonyandfloyd Před 7 měsíci +36

    I’m a black man (65) and all while I was growing up and old, I have sung the song and never heard the verses as sung in this video. My response? So what! I still wouldn’t know those verses if the social justice warrior who feels the need to right all wrongs of the past hadn’t posted this. There will be some that will vow never to sing this song again and that’s their choice. I’m not that thin skinned. If I should ever hear the song or sing it again, I will do so without the inclusion of the racial lyrics and just sing it as I was taught. By the way, I really detest troublemaking social justice warriors who through their efforts to expose past transgressions do so much damage to any existing peace and harmony.

  • @sophieharding1824
    @sophieharding1824 Před rokem +15

    This is a good representation of how music can tell a story. There can be so much history behind a song.

  • @Ed-zn4xn
    @Ed-zn4xn Před 2 lety +1717

    A 175 year old song reflective of it's time. In a way it'd be fun to go to the Year 2195 to see see how future social justice warriors judge today's filthy and talentless pop and rap music the way this song is judged.

    • @whereis99
      @whereis99 Před 2 lety

      difference is rap and pop isn’t racist. dummy

    • @samraizshoaib585
      @samraizshoaib585 Před 2 lety +65

      I mean if they (or you) look into the underground rap then it'll be hard to say rap was talentless.

    • @WillCamx
      @WillCamx Před rokem +177

      There's more chance they'll still be playing this song than 95% of the crap produced today.

    • @fieldagentryan
      @fieldagentryan Před rokem +1

      NWA was african americans until they wuz saved by BLM a largely white masked gruop of burners of sanctuary cities .. ah suure this america is great - and they killed billy the kid so henry mccarthy and his irish roots would be scottish ... be the hokoey

    • @robmartin217
      @robmartin217 Před rokem

      Rap is n crap......bye communist...

  • @emptyhand777
    @emptyhand777 Před rokem +1244

    Sang this in grade school in the late 70s, never knew it was from a black perspective.
    As for the contrary lyrics such as so hot i froze to death, I remember a lot of old folk songs had similar absurd lyrics. I thought it was done for humor, not to depict someone as ignorant.
    But when you realize that black-face was wildly popular for 100 years in the USA, this song is par for the course.

    • @standingbear998
      @standingbear998 Před rokem +64

      black face was never racist. look at who is condemned for it and who is defended for it? it isn't about race, it is about who does it. creating racial problems by making stuff up.

    • @butterflyslinky
      @butterflyslinky Před rokem +23

      I vaguely recall learning the censored version of this song in school, and I think the explanation my (Black) music teacher gave was that the "rain" on the night the day he left was a metaphor for the narrator's sorrow over having to leave Susanna to begin with. I don't remember how she explained the freezing hot sun though since that was over 20 years ago.

    • @FalonGrey
      @FalonGrey Před rokem +15

      I always thought it being dry was because all the water had fallen, and been absorbed into he ground, and the "froze to death" was referring to heat shivers you get when too hot.

    • @redbullsauberpetronas
      @redbullsauberpetronas Před rokem +1

      Majority of people who are alive today and who have ever lived are racist, it's just natural in-group preference

    • @emptyhand777
      @emptyhand777 Před rokem +12

      @@redbullsauberpetronas - it's in our DNA. We were safe in our clans, and everyone in our clan looked similar. Other clans were a threat and looked different. It is basic survival, hard to overcome.

  • @oddbod8655
    @oddbod8655 Před 6 měsíci +24

    I see that the title of this says with original racist and offensive lyrics. I hadnt realised I had given someone else authority to decide on my behalf what I should be finding offensive.

  • @OverseerMoti
    @OverseerMoti Před rokem +5

    This is why I prefer contextual information over revision; revision can blind the audience of the actual "taste" of the past, while contextual information gives an understanding of it.
    I'm one of the few who assumes revision of a finished work as a censorship, no matter the intentions of the people revising it. This is the stance I hold adamantly.

  • @treaclelester7285
    @treaclelester7285 Před rokem +1720

    I’m not offended or horrified. It’s of its time and still a great tune.

  • @bettyswunghole3310
    @bettyswunghole3310 Před rokem +420

    The trick, when listening to this song, is to remember that "offense" is *_taken,_* not *_given..._*

    • @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244
      @deaddocreallydeaddoc5244 Před rokem +1

      That's always been the strategy, to become the victim of a word, not master it. Many Germans moved into the South in the 19th century. "Neger" is a German word that just means "black."

    • @bipedalbob
      @bipedalbob Před rokem +10

      An interesting perspective.

    • @richardreinertson1335
      @richardreinertson1335 Před rokem +17

      An enlightened comment

    • @amiralsrbani24
      @amiralsrbani24 Před rokem +3

      You are a true philosopher!

    • @amiralsrbani24
      @amiralsrbani24 Před rokem +2

      We need to take that Obama Nobel peace prize back and give it to you , which is well deserved !

  • @valdirbergamobergamo5396
    @valdirbergamobergamo5396 Před 4 měsíci +4

    It is art and history in a single song. Of course millions of people neglect the entire lyrics. Even in cartoons, movies, we hear only the nice and permitted lyrics. Thanks for publishing it.

  • @jayleeds2006
    @jayleeds2006 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Thanks for posting this. I remember this song from watching Bugs Bunny, back in the 80's. I thought I knew all the lyrics. We should present history exactly as it was, without revising it(omitting the n-word, removing phrases, "cleaning" things up etc), to help show how far we've come as Americans over the generations.
    Unfortunately, too many people use history to dig up issues to divide us. But we need to teach children how to separate the past from the present and judge people on an individual bases (as opposed to judging strangers based on the actions of other people who look like them (who lived in the past and are no longer alive today)).

  • @chrisbrowne4669
    @chrisbrowne4669 Před rokem +1012

    I find the glimpse into true history refreshing and educational, the song has power the way it was written, and it would be a shame to have anyone other than Stephen Foster tell me what I can and cannot hear.

    • @josie4065
      @josie4065 Před rokem +8

      This.

    • @ilovebeinggay6794
      @ilovebeinggay6794 Před rokem +7

      Indeed. It should be shown or listened to in all it's splendor and glory. Everyone needs to know the true history of the dirty maggot-infested country we live in.

    • @caioaugusto3138
      @caioaugusto3138 Před rokem +32

      - 👴🏻

    • @jeannebouwman1970
      @jeannebouwman1970 Před rokem +9

      People perform the way they want. The author doesn't have sole authority on how a piece of music is to be performed, the performer has that right. You can seek out different performances, like this one, that are closer to the original if you want. Music is the art of giving your own spin to what has come before, no music is truly original

    • @0g0mogosepikworld31
      @0g0mogosepikworld31 Před rokem +20

      I agree. We shouldn't forget that these people were horrible racists and omitting the facts doesn't change the truth

  • @CarlosSantos-ln7xe
    @CarlosSantos-ln7xe Před rokem +471

    There is nothing to be gained and much to be lost by sanitizing history to avoid hurting feelings.

    • @williamdrybread8925
      @williamdrybread8925 Před rokem

      Fuck feelings

    • @TheBrooklynbodine
      @TheBrooklynbodine Před rokem +27

      Yep. Last time i checked the Constitution guaranteed free speech. Not one word, however, about having the right not to have your feelings hurt.

    • @a.verosa8228
      @a.verosa8228 Před rokem +28

      @@TheBrooklynbodine spoken like a man who's never received any injustice for his race

    • @wilmer89
      @wilmer89 Před rokem +17

      @@a.verosa8228 but... but muh feelins

    • @rope7741
      @rope7741 Před rokem +24

      @@a.verosa8228 hey I'm black and have experienced racism and I agree with Gary plus this song is really funny and nice

  • @jameskevinporter4996
    @jameskevinporter4996 Před 9 dny

    In grade school, maybe 3rd grade in music/singing class there was a small note that referenced the original lyrics. I don’t remember where it was, but I looked it up in the school library. Mid ‘70’s

  • @flightlesschicken7769
    @flightlesschicken7769 Před 3 měsíci

    I love all the context you give to the song through the video. Acknowledging how thing were but giving context to it and not glorifying the racism in it

  • @Quillons1
    @Quillons1 Před rokem +138

    Wow. 48 years old and a history buff and this is the first I've ever heard this version.

    • @janicem9225
      @janicem9225 Před rokem +1

      I don't think it's original, but was actually inserted later to cause outrage.

    • @randymerlo4070
      @randymerlo4070 Před rokem +6

      What outrage it's a nice song and there is nothing racist about it

    • @Zerosen89
      @Zerosen89 Před rokem +9

      @@janicem9225 Actually it is the 1848 original lyrics

    • @Ronaldthevelociraptor1457
      @Ronaldthevelociraptor1457 Před rokem

      @@randymerlo4070 idiot it’s racist

    • @Bewefau
      @Bewefau Před 5 měsíci

      that's why our education system is so screwed lol

  • @daniwalano2622
    @daniwalano2622 Před 2 lety +631

    I remember this tune from when I was a kid. While we hear this song and how offensive it is, for its time this song was nothing out of the norm. I wouldn’t be surprised if someone said the same about the rap music we play today in a hundred years.

    • @jospeciale1361
      @jospeciale1361 Před 2 lety +111

      drugs gangbanging and murder is fine, but a song about old dan tucker

    • @ambrosiobertodazo
      @ambrosiobertodazo Před rokem

      The problem with leftist, democrats, media and black Americans is you always dig every little thing you can find in the past to use today for your hateful propaganda against the whites for the crimes of their great grand fathers and the few who remained ignorant.
      We Filipino Americans were enslaved by the Spaniards for over 300 years until 1898 and we as a people were treated perhaps 5 times worse than how black slaves are treated by whites. At that time the antagonism was so intense that it culminated in several very violent and brutal but failed rebellions. But in only less than a decade after the Spaniards left us in 1898 we have stopped hating them and the only evidence of their atrocities are contained in the documents and the books and the writing inside dark prison wall but no longer in our hearts. The Spaniards that stayed in the Philippines mingled with Filipinos and were not constantly assessed about their sins in the past. I know the stories because my great grandfather was a 30 years old Spanish soldier who used undue influence to intimidate and marry my 17 yrs. old great grandmother.
      We Filipinos surely have so many bad traits but seeking and promoting vengeance for crimes committed against us centuries ago is not one of them.

    • @masondixon2675
      @masondixon2675 Před rokem +65

      I don't consider "rap," music.

    • @rayvoith1344
      @rayvoith1344 Před rokem +5

      @@masondixon2675 line

    • @harvey1954
      @harvey1954 Před rokem +40

      Nobody is gonna give a rat's ass about rap 100 years from now.

  • @TheRealist2022
    @TheRealist2022 Před 6 měsíci +5

    As a grown up, it has always puzzled me why so many people are "offended" by name calling. If your kid comes to you and says "Freddie called me names"!... what do we say? We say "ignore him"...and yes, that's the best advice.
    Since when did "sticks and stones" stop being relevant?

  • @KnotsOfWonders
    @KnotsOfWonders Před měsícem +2

    That Key and Peele skit wasn't lying xD

  • @bigboiganiga8356
    @bigboiganiga8356 Před rokem +19

    Heard a modern rap far more offensive than this.

    • @AwRighttttt
      @AwRighttttt Před rokem +5

      Every single rap song is more 'offensive' than this yet the traitors call it all normal

    • @lenney872
      @lenney872 Před rokem +5

      Certain people today: *insert cookie cutter song about murdering friends and family for drug money and abusing women* “wow this is a banger”

    • @vanity1602
      @vanity1602 Před 2 měsíci

      The things some people say just so they can deflect historical reality that paints things they like in bad light. Crazy how you immediately jumped to "what about [insert]"
      If you have problems with rap, sure, there might be a discussion that could be had. But why are you bringing up here on this video? What compelled you to mention that? You don't have to become defensive just because a song you liked was found to promote racist stereotypes and make fun of black people. Pointing the finger at black music just make it look like you're looking for a reason to ignore the things presented in the video. Just accept and move on. No need to say this.

    • @Soundeagle3456
      @Soundeagle3456 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@vanity1602 why are you soo salty?

  • @phillipminer4641
    @phillipminer4641 Před rokem +134

    Those who forget history tend to repeat it there's nothing wrong with learning the past

    • @monoped8437
      @monoped8437 Před 6 měsíci +5

      i'm not as worried about the past, as i am, the future

    • @ralphbooger4756
      @ralphbooger4756 Před 4 měsíci +1

      just dont forget that those writing and teaching history are fully aware of this fact... this is why history keeps repeating itself!
      the parts of history that you are not allowed to question are the most important to question!!!

    • @monoped8437
      @monoped8437 Před 4 měsíci

      history is getting banned@@ralphbooger4756

    • @plusultra4961
      @plusultra4961 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@ralphbooger4756everyone teaching history will tell u this is bullshit, history cant never be repeated because historical context its always different.
      Hitler, Napoleon, Caesar or Stalin, all are products of their era and they will never come back

  • @rush8531
    @rush8531 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Wow, that was... interesting. But man, I wonder if Foster wanted to omit the second verse or if like it said in the presentation people who sang it wanted to be more lighthearted. Really interesting how songs change like that over time. Very informative video thank you!

  • @nachtvupk
    @nachtvupk Před rokem +79

    Shit I’ma nigga and this song hot as shit 😂😂😂.. Ain’t no worse than our music today

    • @TexanChristianConservative
      @TexanChristianConservative Před 3 měsíci +6

      You aren't a thug, right?

    • @THECONTINENTALMAN
      @THECONTINENTALMAN Před 3 měsíci +9

      ​@@TexanChristianConservativelmao

    • @Persun_McPersonson
      @Persun_McPersonson Před 3 měsíci

      Except the part where this was a white man making fun of black people?

    • @Aaron067
      @Aaron067 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@TexanChristianConservativethank you for proving that people like you are racist rednecks. Good job!

    • @joanyow7952
      @joanyow7952 Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@Persun_McPersonson , you don't think that is a two-way street?

  • @willscorner8423
    @willscorner8423 Před 2 lety +391

    I don’t think it’s offensive. It is a piece of history. History isn’t offensive, it is just what it is - history. A musical picture of another time. Censoring does never any good.

    • @HTJB60
      @HTJB60 Před 2 lety +19

      I agree in part because I'm white. I can see why it's offensive to other's. I'm also a Brit, so American History, is just that, American History.

    • @willscorner8423
      @willscorner8423 Před rokem +2

      @@HTJB60 doesn’t matter it’s history. And when black people call themselves their “bad n word” their hypocrites when they feel offended when other people do it or it appears in very old songs.
      They should take an example of the American Chinese people for example, they aren’t pussies about anything just because japanese or ya even the white California people treated them like dirt - they got the fuck over it and ya know why? Because every culture has dirt and blood on it’s hands. Just like black people who in fact alongside Arabs sold their own people into slavery and treated themselves much much worse.
      There aren’t innocent victims in any cultural history. The one who play the innocent victim card are hypocrites- nothing more.

    • @Oprey22
      @Oprey22 Před rokem +74

      People who feel history isn't offensive are usually not the people who have experienced the sharp end of it.

    • @alandavies55
      @alandavies55 Před rokem

      @@Oprey22 People who do not feel history, both good and bad, are unlikely to truly feel anything real.

    • @meltzerboy
      @meltzerboy Před rokem +6

      As long as you apply the same standards of freedom of choice without censorship to violent or sexually explicit imagery. Do you?

  • @BrookeKwortnik
    @BrookeKwortnik Před 2 lety +102

    It’s a catchy tune and is very historical, but the second verse can offend many. It is interesting to learn about the real and raw lyrics.

  • @GGProductions-wk5if
    @GGProductions-wk5if Před 13 dny +1

    History like this shouldn’t be hidden, no matter how horrible it is. We must learn from our mistakes or else we may repeat them.

  • @jonesy4588
    @jonesy4588 Před 7 měsíci +18

    who cares if its racist or offensive to anyone , don't listen to it if your weak mind has issues

  • @eminemthegoatfrnocap2032
    @eminemthegoatfrnocap2032 Před rokem +79

    “This was the tunes back in my day 👴🏻”

  • @pchts1
    @pchts1 Před rokem +52

    As I recall back in the 1950’s I sang this in music class in one of the many schools that I attended in the North! It was an abbreviated version This is the first time I’ve heard the whole lyrics!

    • @harpsichordkid
      @harpsichordkid Před rokem +2

      Stephen Foster was a Northerner, living in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Ohio, & New York. His only time In the South was during his honeymoon.
      His music, though meant to depict Southern Culture, was written for Northern audiences who were strangely repelled and attracted to an almost mythical view of the South. This juxtaposition played itself out in Foster’s life as he wrote music for minstrel shows, but also supported abolitionists.
      I’m sure there’s things we don’t give a second thought to today which in 200 years folks will look back on us with the same confusion. And if we could look into the future, what would seem blatantly hypocritical to us, won’t cause people of the future any guilt at all.

    • @ojmikey
      @ojmikey Před rokem +1

      bro how old are you 80??

    • @ojmikey
      @ojmikey Před rokem +1

      71 💀

    • @Soundeagle3456
      @Soundeagle3456 Před 2 měsíci

      @@ojmikey ageist.

  • @DrDoobie4Twenty
    @DrDoobie4Twenty Před rokem +22

    0:59 most replayed 💀

  • @KaiserDriphelm1871
    @KaiserDriphelm1871 Před 7 měsíci +6

    It's like a god damn jumpscare

  • @douglasmeek9774
    @douglasmeek9774 Před rokem +77

    If you don’t like the song don’t listen to it.. leave history the way it is ..

    • @CavinLee
      @CavinLee Před rokem +3

      I’m fine with this song being available. But if it’s something you enjoy, you’re racist.

  • @francesrude3007
    @francesrude3007 Před rokem +78

    OMG!! I am 80 yrs old( in Nov.) this is the 1st time I ever heard these lyrics. I actually brought tears to my eyes. Thank you for posting this.

    • @l.salisbury1253
      @l.salisbury1253 Před rokem +7

      Happy birthday to you... Happy birthday to you...

    • @Hclann1
      @Hclann1 Před rokem +10

      Why did it bring tears to your eyes

    • @francesrude3007
      @francesrude3007 Před rokem +8

      @@Hclann1 because i sang this to my children when they were little, and the lyrics were hidden, and it's racial.

    • @francesrude3007
      @francesrude3007 Před rokem +6

      @@Hclann1 and also it's PURPOSELY HIDDEN to DECEIVE, as I stated in another comment.

    • @Hclann1
      @Hclann1 Před rokem +2

      @@francesrude3007 well that’s your opinion, you may be right, but you may also be wrong and should consider that.

  • @chetthedebt2169
    @chetthedebt2169 Před rokem +5

    How many songs has the N-word been used in over the past 30 years? Honestly, this is probably the least offensive use of it in a song.

  • @thecaptain3773
    @thecaptain3773 Před 7 měsíci +1

    We were singing this version up until the 90's in California, We had an ancient music teacher who had a mimeograph of an original draft of the song. Mrs KIng made sure to tell us all about the antebellum south, and why these songs were important, so long as we understood the context of the music.

  • @jamesmcinnis208
    @jamesmcinnis208 Před rokem +46

    The demand for racism exceeds the supply, so dig up the past.

  • @knockshinnoch1950
    @knockshinnoch1950 Před rokem +3

    I had no idea! Thanks for bringing this to attention.

  • @robbrown6495
    @robbrown6495 Před 5 měsíci +5

    We tend to forget that presentism is a modern woke attitude being applied, in this case to a song written almost 200 years ago.
    I remember playing golf with a dark skinned guy that I had never met before. Setting the tone for the rest of the day he pushed his way to the front of the tee, and announcing he was first by simply saying "N"s up!
    So the question has to be asked - if blacks can use the word about blacks.........

  • @stevekearney5340
    @stevekearney5340 Před 6 měsíci +8

    This song is part of history like many other things - no need to hide or destroy things like this, but use it as a stepping stone for how far we have come over the years.

  • @Ar-xo2qt
    @Ar-xo2qt Před 3 lety +25

    Black lives matter but people need to stop getting offended by a song made in the 1800's

    • @Gunslinger353
      @Gunslinger353 Před 3 lety +5

      I disagree with you, I think only human lives matter. those people have too much melanin to be considered humans.

    • @Ar-xo2qt
      @Ar-xo2qt Před 3 lety +10

      @@Gunslinger353 Melanin doesn't define if you are human or not

    • @simon_eats_beans
      @simon_eats_beans Před 3 lety +5

      @@Gunslinger353 You are a such a sad person that you have to hate on black people for just existing to make yourself feel better about your pathetic excuse of a life.

    • @simon_eats_beans
      @simon_eats_beans Před 3 lety +3

      @@Ar-xo2qt I agree with you logo frontier

    • @devdixit2440
      @devdixit2440 Před 3 lety +1

      @Manifest Destiny Because humans need to care about other human lives, its what is morally right, no matter what religion, race or creed you are from. Black, white, brown, we are all human.
      Clearly your parents taught you neither manners, nor basic human decency. Yet you criticize the humanity of others.
      'Those in glass houses, do not cast stones at others'.

  • @charlietheanteater3918
    @charlietheanteater3918 Před rokem +73

    No one:
    14 year olds in COD lobbies: 1:03

  • @l.salisbury1253
    @l.salisbury1253 Před 5 měsíci +4

    "Oh, Susanna, don't you cry for me
    I'll dig n dig for lots of gold- V for Victory!" -Elmer Fudd c.1943

  • @StrewthSeeker
    @StrewthSeeker Před rokem +5

    They could never make a movie like Blazing Susanna today!

  • @blipblop9094
    @blipblop9094 Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you, been searching original lyrics of famous childrens song.

  • @penelopepitstop762
    @penelopepitstop762 Před 2 lety +51

    I can remember singing this in elementary school, but I’m sure they removed that second verse - at least I hope - it was the 70’s…

    • @fkthedemlibscum7026
      @fkthedemlibscum7026 Před rokem +10

      The second verse was cute... Why remove anything? You must be a Dem/Lib... LOL

    • @aljoschalong625
      @aljoschalong625 Před rokem +36

      @@fkthedemlibscum7026 I'm sorry to hear you're insane.

    • @fkthedemlibscum7026
      @fkthedemlibscum7026 Před rokem

      @@aljoschalong625 .... Yes, I agree the D/L's are hypocrites, that's so very true, and the D/L's are bad people too.... There are so many older, newer & current "RAP" noise songs with "THE SAME WORDS" as in the words in this fun Country/Folk song, so if the people of today can use the same words, why be sad, angry & miserable over this very old historical song???... So yes, I agree the D/L's are deplorable hypocrites, and very bad people.... and yes, that makes them the INSANE ones, not me... LOL

    • @Oprey22
      @Oprey22 Před rokem +2

      Yes. I'm 62 and in the gap between my primary schooldays and my son's, the well known nursery rhyme became "Catch a spider by his toe/If he squeals, let him go". About a third of my son's classmates were black or brown.

    • @TheBrooklynbodine
      @TheBrooklynbodine Před rokem +6

      @@Oprey22 I'm 59, and it was "Catch a TIGER by the toe."

  • @ZiggysDad
    @ZiggysDad Před 7 měsíci

    Finally something interesting from the CZcams algorithm. I'm from Australia and we were taught this in primary school. (Grade 2 or 3) Not with the offensive words though. As my dad would say. "You learn something new everyday." Thanks very much.

  • @thatoneguy4649
    @thatoneguy4649 Před 21 dnem +1

    Those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it.
    Those who alter or erase history INTEND to repeat it.

  • @robgrillo5573
    @robgrillo5573 Před 3 lety +72

    That was the vernacular of the day. Offensive to us, but not to a nineteenth century American.

    • @apprenticelee
      @apprenticelee Před 2 lety +15

      Yes indeed. If you disregard the racisim, the song actually sounds quite sympathetic towards the poor guy.

    • @aljoschalong625
      @aljoschalong625 Před rokem +9

      Yes, sure. The 19th century black Americans were probably absolutely happy to be regarded as subhumans.

    • @vzxvz9929
      @vzxvz9929 Před rokem

      @@aljoschalong625 Dang dog, excellent 150 year old virtue signaling!

    • @Oprey22
      @Oprey22 Před rokem

      Not to a white nineteenth century American. And if you weren't white, who gave a shit what you thought?

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 Před rokem

      Well it wouldn’t offend white people and black people would’ve had bigger problems in the south than how they were labelled and hardly in a position to demand respect from these people

  • @ghost750x1
    @ghost750x1 Před rokem +14

    Rip Tom Roush you and your voice will be missed the best hidden folk singer wished I'd heard of you sooner

  • @romance3624
    @romance3624 Před 7 měsíci +15

    racist and offensive lyris ? hahahahhahahaha

  • @sihibrizi
    @sihibrizi Před rokem +2

    Only 5 hundred? What a rookie number

  • @samyoung3592
    @samyoung3592 Před rokem +22

    oh good lord, get over yourself, it's a song based in a time period that accepted every word, black or white.

    • @Persun_McPersonson
      @Persun_McPersonson Před 3 měsíci +4

      You mean it's a song from a time period where racism was socially accepted.

    • @deplorabledegenerate2630
      @deplorabledegenerate2630 Před 3 měsíci

      Yes.

    • @vanity1602
      @vanity1602 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Huuuh???

    • @player17wastaken
      @player17wastaken Před 2 měsíci +1

      Presenting it without the context given here would be giving undue weight to outdated and harmful ideas. And none of the song is censored. This is how it should be presented.

    • @Licw-Luxus
      @Licw-Luxus Před měsícem

      @@Persun_McPersonson This song is not racist, lol.

  • @Kooobf
    @Kooobf Před rokem +17

    "With Original Racist and Offensive Lyrics"
    Ah, just my kind of music

    • @Calyrekt
      @Calyrekt Před rokem +5

      gotta respect that title lol

  • @GhostKoffee
    @GhostKoffee Před 3 měsíci

    I was unsure in the second verse what the old word Bullgine was referring to. So I asked ChatGPT if I could translate the second verse to “modern tongue”. I thought you all might like to see what it said:
    Sure, here's a modernized version of those lyrics:
    I hopped on the train, went down the river,
    The electric power surged, caused a fatal shiver.
    The engine broke, the horse bolted away,
    I thought it was my last day;
    Closed my eyes, held my breath tight,
    Susanna, keep calm, everything's alright.
    Pretty interesting!
    Thank you for posting the unfiltered, Unwashed, unsanitized historic version! I was born in 1999 and I’m glad I got a chance to receive this information as it is a part of my oldest memories. Thank you

  • @Charles-js3ri
    @Charles-js3ri Před 2 měsíci +2

    How can we grow if we're not allowed to know? I'd find it suspicious if suddenly this becomes someone's favorite version. But it's usual information.

  • @littleferrhis
    @littleferrhis Před rokem +19

    This is how you present this stuff. Not hiding anything, but providing a lot of context.

  • @moshedayl3064
    @moshedayl3064 Před rokem +5

    There are so many cookie cutter responses here, are y'all the same sock puppet account?
    Though I am at least partially in agreement, it's better that the original lyrics are known, lest we fall into the trap of assuming the past was ideal, the good old days were good, and that the issues of yesteryear weren't actually a big deal. We should know the lyrics and truth of the song so that we can analyze and criticize who we were before, and have it serve as a reminder to be better.

  • @grantwithers
    @grantwithers Před 7 měsíci +2

    To translate, as best I can figure out, he seems to be talking about using the telegraph to tell someone he's coming (or else getting on a steamship named the Telegraph). He then observes or causes the electricity to go up in magnitude (sees primitive electric lights get brighter as pressure is building up in the boiler more, generating more electricity, or else he is using a primitive electric control to make the pressure higher in the steam engine). This he says killed 500 people as the steam engine boiler (bullgine) will then catastrophically burst, presumably the thing that does the killing of 500 as in other steam ship accidents. And a horse ran off and he figured he'd die. Presumably as this was for minstrel shows it was intended to be an indication he caused this as he was in a hurry to see the woman, or else the ship was incompetently run, and it was carrying 500+ black people.

  • @peterlisk3802
    @peterlisk3802 Před rokem +5

    Idc how racist this song is it goes hard

  • @patji123
    @patji123 Před rokem +27

    As popular as this song was, I’d argue that “Beautiful Dreamer “ was his most popular.

    • @peggydoglover
      @peggydoglover Před rokem +2

      And also ,"I Dream Of Jeannie", which I think says more about this very sensitive man. Didn't he lose his girlfriend, wife,? and wrote beautifully about that in those two songs? I sing both songs in videos on my CZcams channel as background music for two reasons. One, they're beautiful, and two, they are public domain, meaning royalty free since they're so old, and belong to us all.

    • @47ejecting2
      @47ejecting2 Před rokem

      I'd argue that his two state songs ("My Old Kentucky Home" and "Old Folks at Home") are more popular than "Beautiful Dreamer," as is "Camptown Races" and "Old Black Joe." Regardless, "Oh! Susanna" is certainly one of his most recognizable tunes.

  • @raystory7059
    @raystory7059 Před rokem +4

    I played Steven Foster in a 1960 fifth grade musical and sang "Oh Susanna" for the entire school but never heard the second verse until now.

  • @bikramkc4448
    @bikramkc4448 Před 3 měsíci +2

    HI , Im from Nepal. When i was child i hear this song first time in he tom and jerry . And still its my one of the best song ever. ❤❤❤

  • @PryorTravis
    @PryorTravis Před 4 měsíci +2

    Thank you for presenting the original. I had no idea. You can't learn from history if you wipe it out.

  • @anthonytucci8301
    @anthonytucci8301 Před 2 lety +17

    I have heard this beat before, never knowing the actual meaning. After learning about it it is very sad.

  • @luisgustavo9986
    @luisgustavo9986 Před rokem +6

    a lot of white old people saying stuff like "this song its ok for its time"

    • @headshotmaster138
      @headshotmaster138 Před rokem +6

      Cry about it.

    • @Anonymity038
      @Anonymity038 Před rokem +1

      I mean It was a Okay thing in The south at this time it's not okay anymore of course

    • @zackkilgore528
      @zackkilgore528 Před rokem +3

      @@Anonymity038 Why? Because it said The N-Word once? Dude listen to modern music, even white rappers say that word way more then necessary.

    • @Soundeagle3456
      @Soundeagle3456 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Anonymity038 read the history the southerners banned this song, the song was written by a northerner who visited the south only once. and the whole song is supposed to mock southerners for their 'stupidity' and poverty. the n word here is only used as a descriptor and holds little meaning to the song.

  • @crisrose521
    @crisrose521 Před rokem +6

    The second verse is not “ racist “ . People continue to misuse that word . It may be “ prejudice “ or foul but not racist it the true sense of the word. Nor is it “ indefensible “ . Get out of your safe place . 🙏

  • @1papaya2papaya
    @1papaya2papaya Před rokem +3

    Oh! Sus.
    Joking aside, thank you for making this. Our history should not be forgotten, especially the parts that are uncomfortable to acknowledge

  • @suepem
    @suepem Před rokem +35

    My Granddad used to sing this to me as a little girl in 1960s England.

    • @nickmiller76
      @nickmiller76 Před rokem +4

      Yeah, I can remember singing it at primary school on the Isle of Wight in the early sixties. I never realised there was a "troublesome" verse that had been excised.

  • @someonegaming7710
    @someonegaming7710 Před 3 lety +83

    Well that escalated quickly

  • @Soma81
    @Soma81 Před 10 dny +2

    Best version. Let the easily offended cry

  • @DaviArruda-rm2rz
    @DaviArruda-rm2rz Před 5 měsíci +11

    How is this racist ?

    • @bobevans9996
      @bobevans9996 Před 5 měsíci +6

      today everything is racist - history facts truths ...

    • @InfiniteDimensionalRifts
      @InfiniteDimensionalRifts Před dnem

      The song uses the N-word to refer to black people, which was (and still is) considered to be a racist term. To be fair, though, it's usage in this song isn't quite as racist as usual.

  • @glummdelclitch451
    @glummdelclitch451 Před rokem +30

    Obviously the song is more interesting, more serious with the second verse.
    Just using the word "nigger" does NOT in my view make it "racist" or
    "offensive".
    The whole point of the verse is that he is horrified by what happened. It was not
    written as a denigration.
    Pieties about so-called "racism" merely indicate that those don't get the point,
    and are blinded by that which exists only in their own bigoted minds.

    • @jimrhoads9810
      @jimrhoads9810 Před rokem

      100% right

    • @alfieburns9019
      @alfieburns9019 Před rokem +3

      And I'm sure the songs protagonist would be similarly disturbed if he saw 500 white men get killed. Considering the first derogatory use of the n word was recorded in 1775, it is fairly safe to say that by the time this song came out it was deeply ingrained in society that the word was used to demean and upset black people which makes it inherently offensive. The song also is clearly written in the way a black person would stereotypically sound and is completely untrue and extremely racist.
      To say that this verse isn't offensive is to ignore all the offensive weight that the n word holds and that all the stereotypical stuff about black people is true. What actually behoves you to defend a song with the n word in it that is sung by a white man? Do you think that white people should revert to calling black people "negroes?" Do you think that you should be allowed to call them the n word if they say something you don't like? I'm all for preserving history, but to glorify any of the bad parts, i.e. racism and slavery is pretty abhorrent, don't you think?

    • @kalburgy2114
      @kalburgy2114 Před rokem +3

      The "n" word was simply how southerners pronounced "negro". It was not considered a slur until long after this song was written.
      With people still referred to as " black" or "white" I can't say we are any less racist today than they were then.

    • @alfieburns9019
      @alfieburns9019 Před rokem

      @@kalburgy2114 you're trying to tell me that we, today, are about as racist as 1840s Americans? Are you perhaps short of a screw? So that fact that black people were basically seen as chattle in the USA until 1863 isn't racist? The fact that we used to lynch black people until the 60s for untrue or small things such as wolf whistling, (Emmet Till, a 15 year old boy who was left wholly unrecognisable after being tortured by white people), wasn't racist? The fact that black people were seen as sub-human in comparison to white people wasn't racist?
      If you genuinely believe that we are as racist today as people in the 1840s were, then you are either uneducated and need to actually read a history book, or you are a racist trying to make, arguably, the worst time for black people to live in America sound not as bad.

    • @englandtehbest1922
      @englandtehbest1922 Před rokem

      Honestly when I listened to the song I generally got confused about what was actually happening in the second verse but this just clears it up for me abit, thanks!

  • @psycho_ocelot
    @psycho_ocelot Před rokem +9

    The guy in the story/song is black
    He referred to himself as "darkie"
    So he has the n-word pass

  • @rickdarby3420
    @rickdarby3420 Před 5 měsíci +4

    Hey there, son. Stephen Foster was America's first great songwriter. By performing "Oh! Susanna," you are -- in a musical sense -- cashing in on his talent. It does not reflect well on you that you then turn around and indulge in moral exhibitionism by proclaiming one of his verses to be "racist and offensive."
    I would have no problem with it if you simply didn't perform that verse. That's what almost all players do today. (So would I.) But to deliberately include the offensive words and then put a curse on them (and by extension, Stephen Foster) is just virtue signaling.

  • @cuddlybear4524
    @cuddlybear4524 Před měsícem +1

    You can't change history but you can learn from it. If you erase it, what is there to learn?

  • @HTJB60
    @HTJB60 Před 2 lety +26

    Well I'm a Brit and in my 70's and know this song from way back. Just listened to Neil Young & Crazy Horse's version and bought the album with it on... It's a catch tune and I'm glad I did a search about it. Never knew the true meaning. Just goes to show, the expression "you learn something everyday" hold's true, even when you're 74. Thank you for posting and I've also enjoyed reading some of the comment's.

    • @embwee
      @embwee Před rokem

      Every day, (each single) not everyday (which means ordinary, run of the mill), so I guess it's true. You learn something new every day! I am not just out to correct, and it's keeping me from going after all the comments who cry "snowflake" and prefer to bury our dark past.

    • @stevethecountrycook1227
      @stevethecountrycook1227 Před rokem

      @@embwee "Bury our dark past" yes, that is exactly what the cancel culture is trying to do! The past is just that, History!! Learn from it, or repeat it!

    • @fintonmainz7845
      @fintonmainz7845 Před rokem

      So what's the true meaning.
      please explain.

    • @davidcadman4468
      @davidcadman4468 Před rokem

      74 in 5 mths time, and this is the first time I've heard about the history of this song. Always thought it was about a guy headed west to make his fortune. Now they got me wondering about other songs from back then. Yeah, and we sung this in music class. The cleaned up version probably.

    • @GMW712
      @GMW712 Před rokem +2

      You would do better to clean up the current mess in society rather than critical to the point of changing history. It is easy to criticize the past, especially when you don’t hold yourself to the same level of accountability.

  • @AcceptableAsGenerallyDecent

    great! just what ive been lookin for!

  • @theredrenegade8684
    @theredrenegade8684 Před 7 měsíci +2

    “Those who do not learn history are doomed to repeat it.” George Santayana

  • @avjb1872
    @avjb1872 Před měsícem +1

    I am so glad that we live in such enlightened times when we can all point to what is wrong. A sanitized, perfect society.

  • @randywilson944
    @randywilson944 Před rokem +11

    I remember Elmer Fudd and Bugs Bunny singing this song 🎶

  • @thomaskennedy5728
    @thomaskennedy5728 Před rokem +24

    The song is a great reflection of how badly Africans were treated. Don't try to erase. One should know history to not let it repeat again

    • @joanyow7952
      @joanyow7952 Před 2 měsíci

      do the lyrics reflect any ill treatment/ It is about a man trying to find his woman. Written before the war by a man from Pennsylvania whose only trip to the south was to New Orleans.

  • @Robertz1986
    @Robertz1986 Před 7 měsíci +2

    That generation doesn't owe this generation an explanation for anything.

  • @bradleyyoung8899
    @bradleyyoung8899 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Yep, can not find a single copy of 'Song of the South'; may I borrow yours?