Home Page Biographies Sign Our Guestbook The Stars' Real Names Some Cool Music Links Questions or Comments This Week In Rock History The 100 Most Played Songs The History Of Banned Rock The 100 Best Selling Records Top Forty Songs From '56 to '80 Classic Rock's Fascinating Facts Died and Gone To Rock and Roll Heaven |
who have tried to control what others should hear. Here is a brief look at: The History Of Banned Rock and Roll |
1954
Rock and Roll had just been born when Michigan congresswoman Ruth Thompson
introduced a bill in the House that would prohibit mailing any pornographic
recording. The offence would be punishable by five years imprisonment and a
$5,000 fine. Just who would decide what is pornographic, is unclear.
1955
Police in Bridgeport, Connecticut cancel a dance at the Ritz ballroom
featuring Fats Domino. Authorities say the cancellation is because they
discovered that "rock and roll dances might be featured" and justify their
action by citing "a recent near riot at the New Haven Arena," where rock &
roll dances were featured.
Chicago radio station WABB received over 15,000 letters of complaint about
the playing of "dirty records". The station's response was a promise that they
would censor all controversial music, especially rhythm and blues.
An unsuccessful bid to change copyright laws that would prohibit white
artists from singing R&B cover tunes was proposed to U.S. Congress by
singer, LaVern Baker. Lucky for Pat Boone and other crooners that this effort
failed.
1956
ABC radio decides not to play Billie Holiday's "Love For Sale" because they
thought it was a song about prostitution. They were also successful in getting
Cole Porter to change the lyric of "I Get A Kick Out Of You", a hit for Frank
Sinatra. Porter's original words were "I get no kick from cocaine". The cleaned
up version was "I get perfume from Spain".
Mitch Miller, who was then the music director of Columbia Records, hosts a
program on CBS TV with two psychiatrists to point out the "potentially negative
effects of rock 'n' roll on teenagers".
1957
Ed Sullivan's producers decide that their cameras would only shoot Elvis
Presley from the waist up, as they considered his hip swinging to be too
suggestive.
Cardinal Stritch of the Catholic archdiocese in Chicago, prohibits all rock
and roll music from their schools, fearing that "its rhythms encourage young
people to behave in a hedonistic manner".
Disc Jockey Al Priddy of KEX, Portland, Oregon is fired for violating the
radio station's ban against playing Elvis Presley's rendition of "White
Christmas."
After hearing reports that many U.S. radio stations had banned Elvis'
Christmas album because of their shock over "the Pelvis" singing religious
songs, DJ Allen Brooks of CKWS in Kingston, Ontario, plays the entire album and
invites listeners to call in their opinion. Of 800 callers, only 56 disapprove
of Presley's sacred music.
1958
The management of St. Louis radio station KWK, had all rock & roll music
banned from its play list. The disc jockeys gave every rock and roll record in
the station library a "farewell spin" before smashing it to pieces. The station
manager, Robert Convey, called the action "a simple weeding out of undesirable
music."
A Minneapolis based Catholic youth magazine, "Contacts", launches a campaign
for "clean lyrics in pop songs." Songs they target include Elvis Presley's "Wear
My Ring Around Your Neck" because it promotes going steady.
1959
Even though it has no lyrics what so ever, the guitar instrumental "Rumble",
by Link Wray was banned by many U.S. radio stations, who feared the title would
promote teen violence. Despite the boycott, the song would still sell over a
million copies and Link would follow it with a tune called "Jack The Ripper".
The BBC in England refuses to play The Coasters' stateside
hit, "Charlie Brown" because of its reference to "throwin' spitballs". Two weeks
later, they give in to public demand and play the song.
Following the stabbing deaths of two teenagers by a 17 year old and other
similar incidents of violence in New York City, WCBS radio in the Big Apple bans
Bobby Darin's hit "Mack the Knife".
1960
Ray Peterson's, "Tell Laura I Love Her" is banned from many radio stations
who objected to the "death theme" of the song. In spite of spotty air play, the
song is still a huge hit for RCA, reaching #7 on the national record charts in
August, 1960. On the other side of the Atlantic however, England's Decca Records
destroyed thousands of copies of the record, claiming it was "in bad taste". A
rival record company felt differently and recorded a cover version by a singer
named Ricky Valance, which went to #1 on the British chart.
1962
Catholic school students in New York are forbidden to dance to Chubby
Checker's "The Twist", by Bishop Burke, who considers it and other dance
craze songs to be "un-Christian". The rest of the country however, thought
different, as "The Twist" went on to be the only record in Rock and Roll history
to be a number one hit on two separate occasions. The first time in the spring
of 1961 and again in 1962, spending an amazing total of nine months on the U.S.
best seller charts.
Britain's BBC bans Bobby "Boris" Pickett's
Halloween song, "Monster Mash".
1963
Bob Dylan
cancels a booking on the Ed Sullivan Show in February after he is told by the
show's producers that he cannot sing "Talking John Birch Paranoid Blues."
1964
The Kingsmen's version of "Louie, Louie" is the subject of much controversy
and was banned by many radio stations because of its indecipherable lyrics,
which were rumoured to contain some naughty words. You can read the real words
to "Louie, Louie" in the Kingsmen 's biography.
1965
The Rolling
Stones early hit, "I Can't Get No Satisfaction", is taken off of many radio
station's play lists, after they receive complaints about the "sexually
suggestive lyrics".
Former New Christie Minstrel, Barry McGuire has his first solo hit "Eve of
Destruction" taken off of retail store shelves and many radio stations play
lists, because of its "end of the world" theme.
Jimi
Hendrix's single "How Would You Feel" is given little airplay on radio
because of the song deals with the plight of blacks in America.
Because of its vague reference to masturbation, many radio stations ban The Who's single
"Pictures of Lily".
After Frank
Zappa refuses to change it, MGM Records electronically alters the recording
of his song, "Money", because it contains a sexual reference.
1966
Singer P.J. Proby has his scheduled appearance on ABC's dance show, "Shindig"
cancelled after he split his pants during a London England concert. It seems he
had used the "pants splitting routine" to gain attention once to often.
Sixties doo-wop group, The Swinging Medallions are forced to re-record a
cleaned up version of a song that would prove to be their only hit record,
"Double Shot Of My Baby's Love", after many radio stations refuse to play the
original. The live recording of the second edition became a rock and roll
classic.
The first of many controversies that John Lennon would be involved in started
in March of 1966, when he told a reporter that "the way (some fans) carry on,
it's like we're more popular than Jesus Christ". Thousands of Beatle records are
smashed and burned at rallies across America and some radio stations refuse to
play their music. Lennon would later apologise, claiming that he was mis-quoted.
Van
Morrison's group, "Them" had their song "Gloria" banned by Chicago radio
station WLS for objectionable lyrics. The song was covered by Chicago's "The
Shadows Of Knight", who took the song into the national Top Ten after changing
the words slightly, from "she comes to my room, just about midnight" to "she
comes around here, just about midnight."
When calls for censorship of Lou Christie's "Rhapsody in
the Rain," started, the singer agreed to change the lyrics and the song went on
to be another in a long series of hits for him.
1967
The BBC bans the Beatles' "A Day In The
Life" from its airwaves, claiming it contained explicit drug references.
The Rolling
Stones appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show was in jeopardy until Mick Jaggar
promised to change the words of "Let's Spend The Night Together" to "Let's spend
some time together." When the line came up during the performance, Mick mumbled
the words.
Sonny
& Cher are barred from Pasadena, California's Tournament of Roses Parade
for supporting some Sunset Strip rioters.
Radio programmers refuse to air Van Morrison's "Brown
Eyed Girl" because the lyrics refer to premarital sex and teenage pregnancy.
Morrison records an alternative version with more acceptable lyrics and the song
becomes his first solo hit in the U.S.
When The
Doors' are booked to appear on the Ed Sullivan Show, producers insist that
Jim Morrison change the lyrics to "Light My Fire". Morrison agreed to alter the
lyric "Girl we couldn't get much higher" but during the live performance,
Morrison sings the original lyric.
Sponsors go into an uproar and threaten to pull support after a television
program shows interracial "touching." During the taping of a duet between Petula Clark
and Henry Belafonte, Clark lays her hand on Belafonte's arm (Clark is white and
Belafonte is black).
1968
An El Paso, Texas radio station deletes all records by Bob Dylan from its play list,
because it is too difficult to understand the lyrics. They do however continue
to play other artists covering Dylan's material.
Chicago mayor Richard Daley ordered local radio stations to not play the
Rolling Stones' single "Street Fighting Man" during the National Democratic
Convention, in anticipation of the rioting that did occur during the convention.
The ban gave the song huge publicity, air play and sales.
1969
The Doors
Jim Morrison is arrested for indecent exposure after he asks the audience, "Do
you wanna see my cock?" and gives them the full Monty, during a Miami concert.
30,000 copies of John Lennon and Yoko Ono's album, "Two Virgins" are seized
by Newark police when the records arrive at the airport. The vice squad shuts
down a retailer carrying the album, which shows the couple naked on the cover.
Detroit's MC5 are forced to replace a live version the song, "Kick Out the
Jams" from the album of the same name because it contains explicit lyrics (the
song's introduction contained the phrase "Kick out the jams, motherf*ckers!").
Concern over political and drug references in songs by the Jefferson Airplane cause
their record label to delay release of their Volunteers album. The band solves
the dilemma by leaving the record label and forming their own.
Despite its status as the number one selling single in the country, many U.S.
radio stations refuse to play "The Ballad of John and Yoko", because the song's
lyrics contain references to Christ and the Crucifixion. ("Christ, you know it
ain't easy")
Eric Clapton, Steve Winwood, Ric Grech and Ginger Baker saw their debut
album, "Blind Faith" banned by several retailers because the cover showed a
naked 11 year old girl. Atco Records was forced to issue two different covers,
although the 'clean' version doesn't sell nearly as well.
1970
Fearing more violence following the shooting deaths of students at Kent State
University, Ohio Governor James Rhodes orders radio stations to ban the song
"Ohio" by Crosby,
Stills, Nash and Young. The ban made the record more popular than ever and
sales grew stronger. No further violence was reported.
MCA Records cancels the recording contracts of 18 of their acts because they
believe the performers promote hard drugs in their songs.
Jefferson
Airplane is fined $1,000 for onstage profanity in Oklahoma City.
Joe McDonald of "Country Joe and the Fish" is fined $500 for uttering an
obscenity during a performance of his song "I Feel Like I'm Fixin' To Die Rag".
Janis
Joplin is convicted of violating local obscenity laws during a performance
in Tampa, Florida. She was fined $200.
President Richard Nixon tells radio broadcasters that rock music lyrics
should be screened for content. He further suggests that any music containing
drug references be banned outright.
Two days after Jimi Hendrix played his feedback filled version of "The Star
Spangled Banner" at the Atlanta Pop Festival, Georgia Governor Lester Maddox
says he will seek legislation to ban all rock festivals in the state.
1971
Officials in Illinois release a list of popular music that contain drug
references. The list includes the popular children's song "Puff The Magic
Dragon" by Peter,
Paul and Mary, as well as The Beatles' "Yellow Submarine".
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) sends all U.S. radio stations a
telegram, threatening to revoke their licenses if they play rock music that
glorifies the use of drugs.
New York radio station WNBC banned the song "One Toke Over the Line" by
Brewer & Shipley because of its alleged drug references. Other stations
around the country follow suit. The composer of the tune, Tom Shipley, responds,
"In this electronic age, pulling a record because of its lyrics is like the
burning of books in the Thirties."
1972
Radio stations across the country ban John Denver's hit song "Rocky
Mountain High," fearing that the song's "high" refers to drugs.
On February 19th, Paul McCartney releases "Give Ireland Back to
the Irish," his commentary about the Britain-Ireland conflict. The song is
immediately banned by the BBC, but the notoriety the song receives from the
banning only increases its popularity in England, and it soars into the Top
Twenty.
In mid-April, one of John Lennon's most controversial singles, "Woman Is the
Nigger Of The World" is released. The song actually reaches #57 on Billboard's
Hot 100, despite virtually every radio station in the country refusing to play
it.
1973
Wings release "Hi, Hi, Hi" which is banned from the BBC because of its
"unsuitable lyrics." The song still managed to be a hit, reaching #5 in the U.K.
and #10 in the U.S. early the next year.
While Curtis Mayfield is lip-synching a performance of his hit "Pusherman"
for television's Soul Train, he learns that the show's producers have edited the
song to delete drug references.
The Rolling
Stones single "Star Star", from the "Goat's Head Soup" album, was banned
from airplay on England's BBC because it contained the word "Star-fucker" in the
chorus. It's not just sung once, but the word is repeated a dozen times.
1975
Loretta Lynn's country song, "The Pill" is banned by radio stations across
the United States because of its references to birth control.
Reverend Charles Boykin of Tallahassee, Florida, conducts his own survey of
1,000 unwed mothers and determines that 984 became pregnant while listening to
rock music. The rest apparently were having sex.
1976
Rod
Stewart's hit "Tonight's The Night" is removed from RKO radio play lists
until the lyric "spread your wings and let me come inside" is edited from the
song.
Following a series of arrests and incidents in the U.K., the Sex Pistols have
trouble obtaining work permits to tour in the United States, because officials
thought the band's music lacked artistic value. The group was eventually allowed
to briefly tour the U.S.
1977
According to the Reverend Jesse Jackson, disco music promotes promiscuity and
drug use and he calls for its removal from U.S. radio stations. This is the same
Jesse Jackson who admitted in January, 2001 that he fathered a child out of
wedlock, behind the back of his wife of 38 years and their five children.
Jefferson
Starship was prevented from staging a free concert in Golden Gate Park in
San Francisco, because of a city by-law against the use of electronic
instruments. The ban was lifted two years later.
Two weeks after signing the Sex Pistols, Virgin Records releases "God Save
the Queen" to coincide with Queen Elizabeth's Silver Jubilee celebration in
June. The tune is banned from British airplay because of its "treasonous
sentiments." Nonetheless, it becomes Number One in the U.K., listed in some
reports with a blank line where the title should be.
1980
A group of Des Moines, Iowa teenagers are lead by Minister Art Diaz in a
record burning rally at the First Assembly Church of God. The burnt offerings
included albums by the Beatles, Ravi Shankar,
Peter
Frampton, and even the soundtrack to the movie Grease. A few months later in
Keoku, Iowa, a similar burning takes place when a church group burns the work
of The
Carpenters,
John Denver, and Perry Como.
Pink Floyd's hit single "Another Brick In The Wall (Part II)", with its
chorus of kids chanting "We Don't Need No Education". is banned by the South
African government. Black children, upset about inferior education, adopt the
song as their anthem. The government says the song is "prejudicial to the safety
of the state."
1981
Olivia Newton
John's hit "Physical" is banned from radio stations in Salt Lake City and
Provo, Utah because its sexual innuendoes were found unsuitable for their Mormon
audiences.
1983
A Baptist youth minister from Emporia, Virginia, named Roger Wilcher,
petitions city council to remove MTV from the local cable system.
1984
Bruce Springsteen's monster hit album, "Born In The U.S.A." comes under fire
from critics, after some say that the cover depicts "the Boss" urinating on Old
Glory.
1985
The most prominent group in the history of music censorship, the PMRC
(Parents Music Resource Center), was formed in Washington, DC by Tipper Gore
(wife of then-senator Al Gore) and Susan Baker. The PRMC's primary focus was
getting record companies to monitor and rate their artists' releases with a
system similar to the MPAA system for movies. Their efforts sparked a renewed
interest by a variety of groups to censor music and lyrics that lasted for more
than five years.
An ultra-conservative group lead by the since disgraced Reverend Jimmy
Swaggert, persuades Wal-Mart to discontinue selling rock and roll magazines such
as Rolling Stone, Hard Rock, Spin, and Tiger Beat.
A Mormon bishop and apartment complex owner, Leo Weidner, bans MTV from his
tenant's apartments in Provo, Utah. Although he later admits that he has never
seen a music video, Weidner claimed that they are "pornographic" and says they
are harmful to his tenants.
Record company presidents and CEOs are contacted by The PMRC, requesting a
rating system for music lyrics and imagery. The letter specifically targets
music by AC/DC, Black Sabbath, Cyndi Lauper, Def Leppard, Judas Priest, Madonna,
Mary Jane Girls, Mercyful Fate, Motley Crüe, Prince, Sheena Easton, Twisted
Sister, Vanity, Venom, and W.A.S.P.
1986
Frank
Zappa's album, "Jazz from Hell" has an "explicit lyrics" warning sticker put
on it by Meyer Music Markets, even though the album is entirely instrumental.
1987
In Callaway, Florida, a record clerk is arrested for selling a copy of 2 Live
Crew's album, George
Michael's single "I Want Your Sex" is removed from the play lists of radio
stations in Pittsburgh, New Orleans, Cincinnati, Minneapolis, Denver, and New
York, because of its explicit sexual content. It is also banned in Britain by
the BBC.
Heavy metal icon Ozzy Ozbourne is unsuccessfully sued by the parents of a 19
year old boy who claimed their son committed suicide after listening to
Ozbourne's song "Suicide Solution".
The Beastie Boys become the first act censored on "American Bandstand".
Jello Biafra, leader of the punk group 'the Dead Kennedys' is acquitted of
distributing pornography. The case involved the artwork by H.R. Giger, featured
on the band's "Frankenchrist" album. Biafra was prosecuted after an attorney's
daughter bought a copy of the record for her brother as a Christmas present.
Copies of the album were seized and destroyed.
1988
Prince's album, "Love Sexy" is removed from store shelves because the
record's cover contains a nude, yet unrevealing, photograph of Prince.
1989
Religious groups are offended by the new Pepsi commercial set to Madonna's
song "Like A Prayer". The ad campaign is quickly dropped.
Los Angeles radio station KDAY in Los Angeles, pulls "Truly Yours" by Kool G.
Rap and D.J. Polo, from rotation after protests from the gay community.
In New Iberia, Louisiana, the City Council passed an emergency ordinance
saying that records falling under the state's definition of obscenity be removed
from the view of unmarried people under the age of 17. Violation carries a
penalty of 60 days in jail and a $500 fine.
After the singer/songwriter formerly known as Cat Stevens endorses an
Iranian death threat on writer Salman Rushdie, many radio station remove his
songs from their playlists. KFI talk host Tom Leykis holds a Cat Stevens record
smashing party.
Also that year, Missouri adopts legislature prohibiting the sale of records
with questionable content that do not have parental warning labels and the
lyrics printed on the album cover. Similar legislation is considered in
Maryland, Delaware, Florida and Kansas.
1990
Twenty-one U.S. states introduce bills that prohibit the sale of records
containing "lyrics that are violent, sexually explicit or perverse".
Four hundred Trans World retail stores announce that they will require proof
of age before selling records with warning stickers, to minors. Disc Jockey,
another record store chain says that it simply will not carry any record that
has the warning sticker.
A Tennessee judge rules that 2 Live Crew's "Nasty As They Wanna Be" and
N.W.A.'s "Straight Outta Compton" are obscene under state law. Conviction for
selling these records could bring fines from $10,000 to $100,000, depending upon
the involvement of minors in the offence.
A Nebraska radio station starts a boycott of k.d. lang records because of her
anti-meat beliefs. Their action is largely symbolic, since the station rarely if
ever played the Canadian singer's records.
In one of the most famous cases of music censorship, police in Dade County,
Florida set up a sting to arrest three retailers selling copies of a record by 2
Live Crew to children under the age of 18. Objections to 2 Live Crew started
with the break-thru of their hit "Me So Horny". Similar prosecutions regarding 2
Live Crew record sales happen in Alabama and Tennessee. No prosecutions result
in standing convictions. Members of 2 Live Crew were also prosecuted for
performing the material live in concert.
Members of the rap group N.W.A. receive a letter from the F.B.I. saying the
agency did not appreciate the song "F*ck The Police". Law enforcement groups all
over the country agree.
A Florida grand jury determines that four rap albums (including "Freedom of
Speech" by Ice-T) are legally obscene. Area retailers quickly pull the records
from the shelves to avoid prosecution.
Metal band Judas Priest is sued by the family of two young men. The families
contend that "hidden" messages in the band's "Stained Class" record prompted
them to beat and choke one of their mothers, walk around town exposing
themselves, and steal money.
Representatives of the Italian Catholic Church announce they'll attempt to
put a stop to Madonna's concerts in Rome because of her alleged inappropriate
use of crucifixes and sacred symbols. The group was successful in halting the
shows.
1991
House Speaker Newt Gingrich tells Broadcasting and Cable magazine that he
strongly encourages advertisers to pull all advertisements on radio stations
that broadcast rap music.
1994
Police in Jacksonville, Florida, arrest singer Marilyn Manson for violating
the "Adult Entertainment Code." Police believed that Manson was inserting a
dildo into his anus while urinating on the audience.
1995
Michael Jackson changes the lyrics to his song "They Don't Care About Us",
following protests that the record is anti-Semitic.
1996
Sheryl Crow's self-titled second album is dropped from Wal-Mart shelves
because one of the songs contains an unflattering comment about the giant
retailer's gun sales policy.
1997
Florida legislator John Grant pushes through an initiative to withhold
$104,000 in Florida Department of Education funding for public radio station
WMNF. Grant's objection to the station noted that the station frequently aired
programming he felt was inappropriate for a publicly supported station.
Objectionable material included on-air praise for Kurt Cobain, and heavy air
play of a social-protest song "Wasteland" by singer Iris DeMent (containing the
lyric "We got CEOs makin' 200 times the workers' pay, but they'll fight like
hell against raisin' the minimum wage").
Because he was wearing a Marilyn Manson tee shirt, 18-year-old John Schroder
is arrested in a New Braunfels, Texas, grocery store and charged with making an
obscene display.
Oklahoma City Council is urged by group calling themselves the "Oklahomans
for Children and Families", to cancel a lease with a concert promoter who is
planning a Marilyn Manson concert at the State Fairgrounds.
In Oxford, Mississippi, the three owners of Lyric Hall are arrested and
sentenced to six months in jail for booking a performance by 2 Live Crew.
A band called "The Crucifucks" and their label, Alternative Tentacles, are
sued by the Philadelphia Fraternal Order of Police, for featuring a photo of a
dead policeman on the cover of the band's album, "Our Will Be Done".
A Marilyn Manson concert is cancelled by city officials in Richmond,
Virginia, because they feel the his songs promote rape, murder, and
self-mutilation.
"The Great Milenko" by Insane Clown Posse, is removed from store shelves
because of the album's lyrical content, just hours after it was issued. The
group is quickly released from their recording contract and the band's label,
Hollywood Records, is dumped by their parent company, Disney, even though
company officials had known of the album's content for nearly a year.
Texas lawmakers pass a law prohibiting state-employee pension funds from
investing any money in record companies whose music "explicitly describes,
glamorizes or advocates" violence, bestiality, gang activity or the denigration
of females. The Employees Retirement System of Texas currently has $7.2 million
(of its $15.2 billion portfolio) invested in Seagram, the owner of Universal
Music Group, home of Interscope Records.)
Officials at Giant Stadium in New Jersey refuse to host the Ozzfest, because
one of the performing acts was the controversial band Marilyn Manson. The courts
disagree, saying the public facility had to be available on a "content neutral"
basis.
Techno band Prodigy found their new single, "Smack My Bitch Up" resulted in
their album being pulled from K-Mart and Wal-Mart store shelves. The album had
been out for almost six months before the single was released. Chain stores that
banned the record had themselves sold more than 150,000 copies of the record
without receiving a single customer complaint.
1998
Eric Van Hoven, an 18-year-old from Zeeland High School in Holland, Michigan,
is suspended for wearing a tee shirt promoting the band Korn, even though the
shirt contains no images or words except the band's name.
At a conference sponsored by Crime Prevention Resource Center in Fort Worth,
Texas, representatives of several local police departments advocate the forced
hospitalization of Marilyn Manson fans, and recommend the classification of
"Goth rock" fans as street gangs.
At Fort Zumwalt North High School in St. Louis, the school band is forbidden
from playing the Jefferson Airplane hit "White Rabbit" because of drug
references in the song's lyrics, even though the band's version of the song is
entirely instrumental.
1999
The school library at Kettle Moraine High School in Wales, Wisconsin,
requires all students to show ID in order to view Rolling Stone magazine. Even
though a child of any age could purchase it at local stores, the school board
decides that students must be 18 years of age to view the magazine's contents.
A Portsmouth, New Hampshire school superintendent, forbids students from
wearing Marilyn Manson tee shirts or any other "Goth" attire.
Ministry's "Dark Side of the Spoon", is removed from K-Mart shelves because
of objections to the album's cover, which shows an nude, overweight woman,
wearing a dunce hat and facing a chalkboard.
Musical artists who support a new trial for death-row inmate Mumia Abu-Jamal
are targeted by the national Fraternal Order of Police in a mass boycott. Rage
Against The Machine and the Beastie Boys are specific targets, but the
association also planed to keep an updated list on its website.
The song, "Slow Motion" by Third Eye Blind, was removed from the band's
second album, "Blue". The group agreed to the removal song, which contained
multiple references to violence, drugs and youth murders similar to the
Columbine shootings earlier in the year.
Eminem's song "My Name Is" was dropped by The National Football League for a
series of four commercials because they felt the song was too controversial,
even though the made for TV versions contained none of the original lyrics.
2000
14-year-old Daniel Shellhammer is ordered by police officers in Northwood,
Ohio, to remove his shirt, which features slogans for the rap group Insane Clown
Posse. The officers inform Shellhammer that Insane Clown Posse clothing is
"banned" in Ohio and that they will rip the shirt off his back and arrest him if
he does not comply.
A roller skating rink in New Iberia, Louisiana, is closed down by police, and
more than 60 CDs are seized, after a fight broke out in the rink's parking lot.
Police said the rink's management sparked the incident by playing music over the
rink's PA system. Among the confiscated CDs are "The Chicken Dance", "Rudolph
the Red Nosed Reindeer", "The Hokey Pokey", and "Jingle Bells".
Four students at a private school in San Antonio, Texas, are suspended for
one day, for attending a Backstreet Boys concert. The students were said to be
violating a school policy forbidding "involvement in inappropriate music [or]
dancing."
Bruce Springsteen is placed on the boycott list of The New York Fraternal
Order of Police. They called for the cancellation of his New York performances,
after The Boss sang a song about the shooting of Amadou Diallo called, "American
Skin".
Police intervened in the middle the "Up In Smoke Tour" (staring Dr. Dre,
Snoop Dogg, Ice Cube, and Eminem) because during the concert, a video is shown
that featured a robbery and partially-naked women.
The U.S. Senate heard arguments by The Federal Trade Commission that
maintained that the entertainment industry (including record companies) should
be regulated and sanctioned for deliberately marketing violent and sexual
content to children.
2001
The Catholic Charismatic Renewal Group in Scotland ran a petition in an
attempt to pressure the promoters of the Glasgow Green festival, into banning
Eminem and Marilyn Manson, claiming that "the violent lyrics of Eminem and the
disgusting stage show of Marilyn Manson" are "totally unacceptable."
Clear Channel Communications, the largest owner of radio stations in the
United States, compiled an advisory list of songs which stations might wish to
avoid playing in the short term following the terrorist attacks on The World
Trade Center and The Pentagon. Steve Miller "Jet Airliner" 2002
A song about money and its corrupting effects on rock music called "The Last
DJ" by Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers kicked up considerable controversy, with
some U.S. radio stations seeing the song as a slap in the face and banning it
from air play.
2003
In November, a New Jersey classic rock station removed all Jethro Tull songs
from their playlist after Tull frontman Ian Anderson made some comments
regarding the American flag in the Asbury Park Press. In the article, Anderson
said, "I hate to see the American flag hanging out of every bloody station
wagon, out of every SUV, every little Midwestern house in some residential area.
It's easy to confuse patriotism with nationalism. Flag waving ain't gonna do
it." The station's program director said that the decision was brought on by
their listeners, who voted "99 percent in favour of the ban."
Many radio stations across North America, including Florida's WKZY as well as
Toronto's CHFI and CHUM, pulled Michael Jackson's songs from their play list
after the singer was arrested on suspicion of child molestation. Television
network CBS announced that they were postponing a Jackson music special that was
set to air.
and
Freedom Of Musical Expression at
"2 Live Is What We Are" to a fourteen year old boy.
That list includes such classic rock
standards as:
Van Halen "Jump"
Queen
"Another One Bites the Dust"
Queen "Killer Queen"
Pat
Benatar "Hit Me with Your Best Shot"
Kansas "Dust in the Wind"
Led Zeppelin "Stairway to Heaven"
The Beatles "A Day in the
Life"
The Beatles "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds"
The
Beatles "Ticket To Ride"
The Beatles "Obla Di, Obla Da"
Bob Dylan "Knockin' on Heaven's Door"
Arthur Brown "Fire"
Paul McCartney and Wings "Live and Let Die"
Billy Joel "Only
the Good Die Young"
Barry McGuire "Eve of Destruction"
Steam "Na Na Na Na Hey Hey"
Drifters "On Broadway"
Shelly Fabares "Johnny Angel"
Los Bravos "Black is Black"
Peter and Gordon "I Go To Pieces"
Peter and Gordon "A World
Without Love"
Elvis "(You're the) Devil in Disguise"
Zombies "She's Not There"
Elton John "Benny & The
Jets"
Elton John "Daniel"
Elton John "Rocket Man"
Jerry Lee Lewis "Great Balls of Fire"
Santana "Evil Ways"
Louis Armstrong "What A Wonderful World"
Youngbloods "Get
Together"
Ad Libs "The Boy from New York City"
Peter Paul and
Mary "Blowin' in the Wind"
Peter Paul and Mary "Leavin' on a Jet
Plane"
Rolling Stones "Ruby Tuesday"
Simon And Garfunkel
"Bridge Over Troubled Water"
Happenings "See You in September"
Carole King "I Feel the Earth Move"
Yager and Evans "In
the Year 2525"
Norman Greenbaum "Spirit in the Sky"
Brooklyn
Bridgevv "Worst That Could Happen"
Three Degrees "When Will I See
You Again"
Cat Stevens "Peace Train"
Cat Stevens "Morning
Has Broken"
Jan and Dean "Dead Man's Curve"
Martha & the
Vandellas "Nowhere to Run"
Martha and the Vandellas/Van Halen
"Dancing in the Streets"
Hollies "He Ain't Heavy, He's My
Brother"
San Cooke / Herman Hermits, "Wonderful World"
Petula
Clark "A Sign of the Times"
Don McLean "American Pie"
J.
Frank Wilson "Last Kiss"
Buddy Holly and the Crickets "That'll Be
the Day"
John Lennon "Imagine"
Bobby Darin "Mack the
Knife"
Surfaris "Wipeout"
Blood Sweat and Tears "And When
I Die"
Dave Clark Five "Bits and Pieces"
Tramps "Disco
Inferno"
Paper Lace "The Night Chicago Died"
Frank Sinatra
"New York, New York"
Creedence Clearwater Revival "Travelin'
Band"
Neil Diamond "America"
Tom Petty "Free Fallin'"
Bruce Springsteen "I'm On Fire"
Bruce Springsteen "Goin'
Down"
Phil Collins "In the Air Tonight"
Chi-Lites "Have
You Seen Her"
Animals "We Gotta Get Out of This Place"
Fontella Bass "Rescue Me"
Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels
"Devil with the Blue Dress"
James Taylor "Fire and Rain"
Edwin Starr "War"
Lynyrd Skynyrd "Tuesday's Gone"
The History Of Banned Music In
America
Freemuse
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