6
by Dovira
Difficult question. I have historically listened to several artists with questionable (read: nazi) sympathies, and I can't deny that part of the reason was a titillation at the taboo nature of it all. But I am also always interested in getting to peer into the mindset and worldview of such a person, and art is kind of the safest place for that. Compare to reading writers like Ernst Jünger or Emil Cioran. Whether there actually is anything to learn from this, I'm somewhat more skeptical of these days.
But then we're talking about the creator being part of the experience of the art. If I were to completely sever the person from the work, would I then bother listening to that music? Following penningtron, likely not. If there's so much other good stuff around, it doesn't really make sense. And I certainly wouldn't recommend it to anybody, so doesn't that kind of show that I always already place it in a different category, never simply looking at its pure artistic value?
Whether I actually do this - completely separate the creator from the product - isn't easy to answer either. Knowing that Justin Bieber is a dickish brat contributes to my dislike of the phenomenon Justin Bieber. Knowing that Steve Vai is a swell dude makes me more tolerant of his music.
I suppose it gets most difficult when it comes to music I have a deeply personal relationship to. I am aware that this relationship is between me and the music and not with the artist, but still I would be disappointed and perhaps feel cheated if it turned out they were really bad people. Even 12 year old me was disturbed by the personal life of Eminem (my favourite at the time), especially how - whether intentional or not - his fanbase was encouraged to join in his wife-hating. In the end though, I kept listening and forgot about it.
born to give