The Early Days of Rock and Roll Censorship on TV

Ed Sullivan Censorship

Photo : By Maurice Carnes LaClaire [Public domain or Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

It was 48 years ago this month that British invaders, The Rolling Stones, arrived at a television studio in New York to perform their new single, “Let’s Spend the Night Together” only to be told the host, a particularly ornery gent by the name of Ed Sullivan, was offended by the title. In one of the most famous compromises based on rock and roll censorship, Mick Jagger and team agreed to change the song’s lyrics to “Let’s Spend Some Time Together,” a decidedly different sensibility but perhaps not so catastrophic a change in the end. Still, it clearly angered the band as evidenced by Jagger’s continuous eye rolls during the broadcast or, even better, when the Rolling Stones returned to the stage wearing Nazi uniforms garnering them not only a rebuke from Mr. Sullivan but a ban from the show for over two years.

More Rock and Roll Censorship

It doesn’t take much digging to discover the rock history book is filled with examples of this type of censorship and controversy. There’s The Who’s hit “My Generation” that was banned by the BBC because they thought the stuttering on the line “Why don’t you all f-f-f-fade away” was meant to imply another “f” word of slightly more vulgar connotation. John Lennon’s classic, “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” was banned for its hallucinogenic references. Or another infamous moment involving Ed Sullivan where The Doors agreed to change the lyrics of their smash hit “Light My Fire” for the performance only to have singer Jim Morrison belt out the original offending lyric “Girl we couldn’t get much higher” on live television.

In one of the stranger twists on this theme, The Kinks seminal hit, “Lola,” was even banned not because of its references to a transvestite but because the line “tastes just like Coca Cola” was considered a product endorsement. Singer and songwriter Ray Davies was forced to go back into the studio and re-record the line as “tastes just like cherry cola” in order to get the song on the airwaves.

But none of these compare to the bizarre and almost conspiratorial story surrounding The Kingsmen’s massive hit, “Louie Louie,” a rock and roll staple that was nearly ripped from the airwaves for obscenity even though nobody could actually understand the lyrics at all. After the song’s release in May 1963 rumors began circulating that the muddied, almost inaudible lyrics, were intentionally garbled to cover up profanity and depictions of a graphic sexual encounter. Crumpled pieces of paper containing what were claimed to be the “true” lyrics to the song began circulating amongst teens across the country and word spread that “Louie Louie” was as explicit as it could get.

Despite numerous attempts by the band and its management to explain that in reality the song was simply a sailor’s ode to his dream girl, the song was banned on multiple radio stations and even prohibited throughout the entire state of Indiana by its governor, Matthew Welsh. The rumor mill continued to grind until the buzz reached such epic proportions that the Federal Bureau of Investigation found themselves responding to so many obscenity complaints they decided to take up the case.

A 31-month investigation ensued involving researchers listening to the song backwards, forwards, and at different speeds only to find that no matter what they tried the lyrics were simply “indecipherable.” The investigation officially ended with the FBI throwing up their hands claiming they were simply “unable to interpret any of the wording in the record”. Oddly, investigators never contacted the one person who had the answers to what the slurred words actually were, Kingsmen singer Jack Ely.

Despite the controversy, or perhaps because of it, The Kingsmen’s version of the song spent 16 weeks on Billboard’s Hot 100 and became a standard at teen parties everywhere. In 1995, the song was acknowledged by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as one of the 500 songs that shaped rock and roll and Rolling Stone declared it one of the “40 songs that changed the world”.

In an ironic epilogue, Kingsmen drummer Lynn Easton admitted many years later that 54 seconds into the song he screamed the word “F*ck” as he fumbled with his drum sticks.

Written by Michael Quinn

 

Songs About Snow
10 Best Songs About Snow
Standells Songs
Top 10 Standells Songs
Triumph Songs
Top 10 Triumph Songs
Jeff Healey Band Songs
Top 10 Jeff Healey Songs
10 Perfect Rock Albums From The 1990s
James Taylor Albums
Top 10 James Taylor Albums
10 Best Sounding Albums Of All Time
10 Best Sounding Albums Of All Time
116 Albums With Identical Titles By Different Artists
116 Albums With Identical Titles By Different Artists
Frampton Comes Alive
 Was It Really 50 Years Ago That ‘Frampton Comes Alive’ Was Released?
Muscle Shoals Legends On Display At the Country Music Hall Of Fame
Tom Jones and CSNY's Unforgettable 1969 Performance
When Worlds Collided: Tom Jones and CSNY’s Unforgettable 1969 Performance
Ace Frehley Interview
Ace Frehley, Founding Guitarist of Kiss, Dies at 74
An Interview With Chris Thomson Of Manfred Mann's Earth Band
An Interview With Chris Thomson Of Manfred Mann’s Earth Band
An Interview With Billy Morrison Of Billy Idol's Band And Formerly Of The Cult
An Interview With Billy Morrison Of Billy Idol’s Band And Formerly Of The Cult
An Interview With George Vjestica of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
An Interview With George Vjestica of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
Bill Leverty Of FireHouse Interview
Bill Leverty Of FireHouse: The ClassicRockHistory.com Interview
The SteelDrivers Band Members
Complete List Of The SteelDrivers Albums And Songs
Complete List Of Ani DiFranco Albums And Songs
Complete List Of Ani DiFranco Albums And Discography
Outlaws Albums
Complete List Of Outlaws Albums And Discography
The Prodigy Albums
Complete List Of The Prodigy Albums And Songs
11 Classic Bands Who Returned With New Music After A Long Gap
11 Classic Bands Who Returned With New Music After A Long Gap
Complete List Of All Super Bowl Halftime Performers Since 1967
Complete List Of All Super Bowl Halftime Performers Since 1967
10 Gifts Not To Buy An Old-School Music Fan
10 Gifts Not To Buy An Old-School Music Fan
20 Worst Moments In Rock Music History
20 Worst Moments In Rock Music History
Three Dog Night 1968 Debut Album Review
Review Of Living in the Material World 50th Anniversary Reissue
Review Of Living in the Material World 50th Anniversary Reissue
10 Best Breakup Songs For Shattered Hearts
10 Best Breakup Songs For Shattered Hearts
Billy Idol Rebel Yell 40th Anniversary Vinyl Review