1980
Fearing association with its theme, Mercury Records refuses to release Frank
Zappa's single "I Don't Wanna Get Drafted."
A representative of the New York State Division of Substance Abuse Services
suggests a tax on musicians whose songs promote drug use.
In October, Youth Minister Art Diaz organizes a group of local teenagers who
conduct a record burning at the First Assembly Church of God in Des Moines,
Iowa, including albums by the Beatles, Ravi Shankar, Peter
Frampton, and the
soundtrack to the movie Grease. A similar burning takes place a few
months later in Keoku, Iowa, where a church group burns the work of The
Carpenters,
John Denver, and Perry Como.
1981
A municipal judge in Newark, Ohio, bans rock concerts at the Legend Valley
Park because they pose a public nuisance.
Believing that rock condones drug abuse and promiscuous sex, Carroll, Iowa,
nightclub owner Jeff Jochims renounces his transgressions and sets fire to
$2,000 worth of rock records.
The morals of Provo and Salt Lake City residents are saved when two radio
stations ban Olivia Newton John's hit single "Physical." The stations fear
that the song's lyrics may be a bit too suggestive much for their heavily Mormon
audiences.
1982
Ozzy Osbourne is forbidden from performing in San Antonio, Texas, after he
is arrested for urinating on the Alamo. Osbourne's various legal troubles also
prevent him from playing in several other cities, including Boston, Baton Rouge,
Corpus Christi, Las Vegas, and Philadelphia and Scranton, Pennsylvania.
California assemblyman Phil Wyman introduces a bill to outlaw the practice
of including subliminal messages in rock records.
1983
Roger Wilcher, a Baptist youth minister in Emporia, Virginia, petitions the
city council to remove MTV from the local cable system.
Voice of America programmer Frank Scott issues a directive to staff that they
are not permitted to play music which might offend any portion of their audience.
1984
Rick Allen and his wife express concerns over a Prince album to their local
PTA meeting in Cincinnati, Ohio. This action started the mid-80s music censorship
movement that eventually results in the RIAA universal parental warning sticker.
Following a complaint by Wal-Mart, PolyGram Records changes the cover of the
Scorpions' Love At First Sting. The original features a partially nude couple
locked in an embrace; the man is giving the woman a tattoo on her thigh.
In May, popular Surgeon General C. Everett Koop speaks out against rock music
when he insists that rock video fans have been "saturated with what I think
is going to make them have trouble having satisfying relationships with the
opposite sex ... when you're raised with rock music that uses both pornography
and violence."
Dade Christian School in Miami, Florida, forbids students from attending a
local concert by the Jackson Brothers, because they fear it will lead the youth
to use drugs, drink, behave irresponsibly, and participate in lewd dancing.
Any student who attends the concert is guaranteed fifteen demerits.
Critics call for boycotts of Bruce Springsteen's Born
In The U.S.A. after
it is widely rumored that the cover depicts "the Boss" urinating on an American
Flag.
After issuing a report on the violence in music videos, in December the National
Coalition on Television Violence calls for the federal government to regulate
rock music on television.
Fearing that MTV induces a "temporary state of insanity" over patients,
Dr. Richard Bridgberg orders the staff of the Institute of Living, in Hartford,
Connecticut, to remove MTV from the mental hospital's television system. Even
though patients are allowed to watch listen to radios, recorded music, and
watch the evening news and popular movies, hospital spokesperson Robert Fagan
says MTV is "too inciting" and can potentially cause hallucinations.
1985
The parents of John McCullom sue Ozzy Osbourne, claiming that his song "Suicide
Solution" "aided, or advised, or encouraged" their son to commit suicide. The
judge in the case decides that overt lyrics are protected speech and that evidence
is insufficient to connect the song to the suicide.
Following attacks from a conservative group lead by the Reverend Jimmy
Swaggart,
Wal-Mart discontinues sales of all major rock magazines such as Rolling
Stone,
Hard Rock, Spin, and Tiger Beat.
The group "Women Against Pornography" provides a lecture program in public
high schools about "the sexist and violent content of rock videos."
Provo, Utah, apartment complex owner and Mormon bishop Leo Weidner bans MTV
from his tenant's apartments. Weidner says music videos are "pornographic" and
feels they are harmful to his tenants. Weidner later admits that he has never
seen a music video.
Following a meeting at St. Columbia's Church in Washington, D.C. in early
May, Tipper Gore, Susan Baker, and twenty wives of influential Washington politicians
and businessmen form the Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC). The PMRC's goals
are to lobby the music industry for: lyrics printed on album covers; explicit
album covers kept under the counter; a records ratings system that is similar
to that used for films; a ratings system for concerts; reassessment of contracts
for those performers who engage in violence and explicit sexual behavior on
stage; and a media watch by citizens and record companies that will pressure
broadcasters to not air "questionable talent."
Christian rock band DeGarmo & Key see their video for "Six, Six, Six." banned
by the channel because their music video is too violent.
MCA Records sends radio stations an urgent letter that encourages them to
stop playing Al Hudson's "Let's Talk." The company fears they may be subject
to obscenity prosecutions because of the song's sexually suggestive lyrics.
After receiving a letter from the PMRC expressing their concerns over rock
lyrics, Eddie Fritts, head of the National Association of Broadcasters, writes
a letter to the heads of forty-five major record companies. In his letter,
Fritts requests that lyrics sheets accompany all songs released to radio.
The PMRC writes to music industry presidents and CEOs and requests a rating
system for music lyrics and imagery. The letter contains a list of the "filthy
fifteen" (the artists initially targeted by the PMRC), those artists are 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.
During an addresses at the New York Television Academy, televangelist and
presidential candidate Pat Robertson calls for content regulation of rock music
on radio and television.
Determining that music videos are "decadent, moraly degrading, and evil," two
women in the Boston suburb of Weymouth, Massachusetts, petition city officials
to eliminate MTV from their local cable system.
Under the leadership of mayor (and future Clinton cabinet member) Henry
Cisneros,
city officials in San Antonio, Texas, pass an ordinance forbidding children
under the age of fourteen from attending rock concerts at any city-owned facility.
At the urging of the Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC), the Senate Committee
on Commerce, Science, and Transportation holds hearings on music lyrics and
proposed systems to rate or sticker albums that contain violent or sexually-themed
lyrics on Septmber 19th. Representatives from the PMRC and National PTA, Senator
Paula Hawkins, and Dr. Joe Stuessy speak in support of regulating music, while
three musicians - Frank Zappa, Dee Snider (of Twisted
Sister), and John
Denver - speak in defense of popular music.
In October, President Ronald Reagan insinuates that "reactionary" and "obscene" rock
music does not deserve Constitutional protection. Reagan states "I don't believe
that our Founding Fathers ever intended to create a nation where the rights
of pornographers would take precedence over the rights of parents, and the
violent and malevolent would be given free rein to prey upon our children."
American Bandstand producers refuse to let Sheena Easton perform her hit song "Sugar
Walls" because it has been targeted by the PMRC.
In November, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) strikes
a deal with the National PTA and the PMRC to create a universal parental warning
sticker that will be placed on all albums containing graphic depictions of
sex and/or violence.
William Steding, vice-president of KAFM in Dallas, forms the National Music
Review Council, whose mission is to inform broadcasters and parents about music
that features controversial themes and lyrics.
The title of Marvin Gaye's song "Sanctified Pussy" is changed to "Sanctified
Lady" for a posthumous release, Dream of a Lifetime.
Columbia Records wraps the Rolling Stones' Dirty Work in dull red plastic,
hiding certain words and song titles.
1986
In February, CBS Music sets a strict, yet vague, company-wide policy regarding
explicit lyrics. The policy is meant to dissuade artists from releasing any
albums that may be deemed "controversial."
After complaints from groups such as the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination
Committee, the Cure requests that radio stations pull "Killing An Arab" from
airplay.
Meyer Music Markets places an "explicit lyrics" warning sticker on Frank
Zappa's
Jazz from Hell - even though the album is entirely instrumental.
First Lady Nancy Reagan withdraws her support for an eleven-hour anti-drug
rock concert because promoters refuse to drop certain acts who are targets
of the PMRC.
The families of two young men sue the British heavy metal band Judas
Priest,
alleging their 1978 album Stained Class encouraged the young men to commit
suicide.
Maryland Delegate Judith Toth introduces legislation aimed at amending the
state's obscenity statutes to include records, tapes, and laser discs.
Jello Biafra of the Dead Kennedys is charged with violating section 313.1
("Distribution of Harmful Materials to Minors") of the California state penal
code for a poster included in the band's Frankenchrist LP. The offending poster
contains a painting by noted Swiss artist H.R. Giger (best known for his Academy
Award winning art design work for the 1980 film Alien) entitled, "Landscape
#20, Where Are We Coming From?" The painting features about a dozen sets of
interlocked male and female genitalia. After a court battle, the charges are
dropped.
1987
Fearing eviction, many mall retailers refuse to carry new releases containing
the word "fuck" in the title.
A part-time record clerk is arrested in April in Callaway, Florida, for selling
a copy of 2 Live Crew's album 2 Live Is What We Are to a fourteen year old
boy.
Radio stations in Pittsburgh, New Orleans, Cincinnati, Minneapolis, Denver,
and New York ban George Michael's single "I Want Your Sex" because of its explicit
sexual content.
In an attempt to thwart an upcoming concert by the Beastie Boys, the city
of Jacksonville, Florida, passes an ordinance in August that requires all "adult" acts
to put a "For Mature Audiences Only" notice on all concert tickets and advertisements.
An unidentified congressperson commissions a study by the Congressional Research
Service to determine if Congress has the Constitutional authority to regulate
albums that contain explicit lyrics by restricting their sale.
MTV refuses to air the video for the Replacements "The Ledge" because executives
fear it may encourage teens to commit suicide.
1988
Some retailers refuse to stock Nothing's Shocking, Jane's Addiction's debut
album for Warner Brothers, because of its cover.
A faculty advisor, at a Newark, New Jersey, student radio station yanks all
heavy metal from the station's playlists in April because he fears it will
cause young listeners to commit suicide.
The co-owner of Taking Home the Hits in Alexandria, Alabama, is arrested in
June for selling 2 Live Crew's Move Somethin' to an undercover police officer.
After initially agreeing to broadcast the world premiere of Neil Young's "This
Note's For You" on July 1st, MTV refuses to air the video clip. MTV eventually
reconsiders the matter and begins airing the video.
Retailers across the country refuse to carry Prince's Love
Sexy, protesting
the record's cover, which contains a nude, yet unrevealing, photograph of Prince.
Protestors in Santa Cruz, California, picket retailers carrying Guns
'N Roses'
debut album Appetite for Destruction, despite the fact that the offensive cover
art has already been replaced.
1989
In January, Yusef Islam, better known as folk singer Cat
Stevens, is misquoted
regarding the Ayatollah Khomeni's call for the death of The Satanic Verses author Salman Rushdie. Following press reports of the statement pronouncement,
radio stations across the U.S. pull his records from play. Radio talk show
host Tom Leykis runs a steam roller over a collection of Cat Stevens records
in protest.
The City Council of New Iberia, Louisiana, enacts an emergency ordinance that
adds music to the list of materials that must be kept from view of unmarried
people under age 17.
The RIAA releases its black and white universal parental warning sticker in
early March that reads, "Explicit Lyrics - Parental Warning."
A Pepsi commercial set to Madonna's song "Like A Prayer" is pulled after one
airing because religious groups are offended by the song's accompanying video.
Guns 'N Roses are cut from the New York AIDS benefit "Rock And A Hard Place," because
of the lyrics to their song "One In A Million."
Following complaints about Cher's video for "If I Could Turn Back Time," several
video channels drop or restrict the music clip.
MTV refuses to air a Fuzztones video that contains an oblique reference to
condoms. MTV demands that the lyric "rubbers" (an antiquated term for foul-weather
footwear) be changed to "raincoat" before it will air the video.
The Hastings Record Store chain institutes a policy that states certain rap
and rock titles cannot be sold to minors in its 130 stores nationwide.
The Pennsylvania house passes a bill requiring a warning label on all albums
with explicit lyrics. The Pennsylvania legislators place the burden of enforcement
(and criminal liability) on the backs of local retailers.
The Federal Communications Commission launches a campaign to clean up a backlog
of radio obscenity complaints, handing out thousands of dollars in fines to
stations in order to discourage them from playing risqué music.
Officials at the FBI write to gangsta rap group N.W.A. in August, informing
the performers that the bureau does not appreciate their song "Fuck Tha Police."
Also in August, MTV enacts a policy that a lyric sheet must accompany all
videos submitted to the network. The network rejects videos it feels endorses
or promotes violence, illegal drugs, excessive alcohol consumption, or explicit
depictions of sexual practices.
After protests from the gay community in September, Los Angeles radio station
KDAY pulls from rotation the song "Truly Yours," by Kool G. Rap and
D.J. Polo from rotation.
In Texarkana, Texas, city officials force the Dimension Cable Service to offer
channel-blockers to prevent MTV from entering the homes of concerned families.
After the channel-blockers are offered free of charge to Dimension's 22,000
subscribers, only 40 units are requested by customers.
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