God might have made color, but absolutely no color film or printing medium ever invented sees color quite the same way our eyes do, so a photographer needs to learn to see hues and contrast levels the way their chosen film and printing paper does. Unlike many, I specialized in large format color photography and printmaking first, and only after picked up black and white, and have ever since done both in parallel - strictly real film and real darkroom, zero digital. The problem with color, as far as my own outlook goes, is that far too many color photographers might be capable technicians, but have never learned the difference between effective color and outright noise. Less can often be more. Restriction and limitation within the realistic parameters of a particular film signature can actually be liberating. Too many options to let it all just hang out, like so many digital apps now allow, and there's apt to no sense of direction at all.
Black and white, on the other hand, is inherently an abstracted medium tonality-wise, and relatively straightforward to do in a darkroom. You can make it either as simple as you wish, or take it as far as you wish in terms of sophistication and fine-tuning.