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Wikipedia

Music censorship

Music censorship refers to the practice of editing musical works for various reasons, stemming from a wide variety of motivations, including moral, political, or religious reasons. Censorship can range from the complete government-enforced legal prohibition of a musical work, to private, voluntary removal of content when a musical work appears in a certain context.

Motivations edit

Decency edit

Songs are often edited for broadcast on radio and television to remove content that may be considered objectionable to an outlet's target audience—such as profanity, or references to subjects such as sex and drug usage. This is typically done to comply with any relevant broadcast law or codes of conduct, and to make the songs more marketable to a mainstream audience.[1][2] Songs edited for content in this manner by are often referred to as a "clean version" or a "radio edit" (the latter also referring to songs that may be edited for length on radio airplay—a practice which dates back to the space limitations of 45 RPM vinyl records).[3][4] Common editing techniques include distorting vocals to obscure offending words (including muting, bleeping, and backmasking), or replacing them with alternative lyrics.[5]

The amount of censorship required may vary between.... broadcasters, depending on standards and practices and their target audience; for example, Radio Disney imposes stricter content guidelines than conventional U.S. radio stations, as it primarily targets a youth audience and family listening.[4][2] By contrast, some radio stations may relegate unedited versions of tracks containing objectionable content to airplay during time periods deemed appropriate, such as late-night hours.[4] Joel Mullis, an Atlanta sound engineer who became well known in the industry for his work on radio edits, noted that his job was often complicated by differing standards between broadcasters (such as BET and MTV), requiring different edits to meet their individual needs. Mullis' edit of the Ying Yang Twins' "Wait (The Whisper Song)" was constructed by splicing in vocals from other Ying Yang Twins songs, but Mullis eventually had to bring the group back to his studio after facing demands for additional edits.[2]

In some cases, a record label may choose to withhold a release entirely if they believe that its subject matter would be too controversial; Ice-T and Paris both had gangsta rap albums withheld or indefinitely delayed by Warner Bros. Records over content concerns, with Ice-T's Home Invasion delayed due to the 1992 Los Angeles riots and controversy over "Cop Killer"—a song by Ice-T's metal band Body Count, and Paris's Sleeping with the Enemy over its songs "Bush Killa" and "Coffee, Doughnuts, & Death". Insane Clown Posse faced similar issues after they signed to Disney-owned Hollywood Records; despite compliance with the label's demands to censor specific songs and lyrics, The Great Milenko was recalled almost immediately after its release (but not before selling 18,000 copies out of 100,000 shipped). All three acts moved to different labels (including Priority Records and Island Records), which released their respective albums without objections.[6][7][8][9]

The ideas that make up censorship differ greatly from country to country. However, even if no pattern can be observed, it is normally set about through power.[10] Censorship as a whole terminates unwanted messages in hopes of keeping the targeted listener's vision and actions in check.[11] It is known for being dependent on three different conditions. The first being that the censored body or subject is not authorized. The second being that censorship takes place to avert the object of what is restricted. Finally, it is put in place to deny existence of the censored issues.[11]

The motivation behind music censorship is associated to the circulation of popular music through numerous mediums.[10] Reasons for why music may be censored include that music is deemed contentious, aggressive or disrespectful. Music censorship therefore aims to minimize the exposure to controversial topics such as sex, drugs and the challenging of social norms. Constituting to restrictions to one's freedom of speech with the goal of shielding society from detrimental expression.[12]

Music censorship was impacted by the religious influences on governments before the modern nation-state.[13] The Catholic Church’s Index Librorum Prohibitum is an early sign of censorship, later translating into the music censorship of the 21st century.[citation needed]

Notable examples edit

Multiple edits of CeeLo Green's song "Fuck You" exist, including one which changed the titular lyric to "Forget You", and one which muted "fuck" without replacing it. Green also performed a parody of the song about Fox News in an appearance on The Colbert Report.[14][15][16] The Black Eyed Peas re-wrote "Let's Get Retarded"—a song from their album Elephunk, as "Let's Get It Started" to serve as a promotional song for television coverage of the 2004 NBA Playoffs. "Let's Get It Started" was subsequently released as a standalone single, and peaked at #21 on the Billboard Hot 100.[17][18] When performing his song "Power" on Saturday Night Live, Kanye West similarly replaced a verse of the song containing profanities and criticism of the program itself ("Fuck SNL and the whole cast") with newly-written lyrics.[19]

Songs containing potentially objectionable double entendres or mondegreens have also been subject to censorship. For example, the title and chorus of Britney Spears' single "If U Seek Amy" was intended to be misheard as "F-U-C-K me"; her label issued a radio edit which changed the word "seek" to "see", in order to remove the wordplay.[20][21] Similar concerns were raised by radio stations over The Black Eyed Peas' "Don't Phunk With My Heart" upon its release, as the word "phunk" (a deliberate misspelling of "funk") could be misinterpreted by listeners as sounding like the word "fuck". This resulted in the label issuing an edit that changed the word to "mess".[22][21] Meghan Trainor recorded an alternate version of her debut single "All About That Bass" for Radio Disney and conservative adult contemporary stations, which removed the song's suggestive metaphors.[23][2]

Censorship of music is not limited to lyrical content; MTV edited the M.I.A. song "Paper Planes" to replace sounds of gunfire in its chorus with alternative sound effects, and remove a reference to cannabis. Similar sound edits occurred when M.I.A. performed the same song on Late Show with David Letterman (broadcast by corporate sibling CBS). M.I.A. subsequently criticized both MTV and Late Show for censoring her song.[1][24]

Criticism edit

Some listeners have expressed dissatisfaction over the editing of songs for radio airplay, arguing that it compromises the artistic integrity of the original song, and encourage listeners to seek out alternative platforms that are not subject to such censorship, such as digital streaming. At the same time, edits are considered a necessary concession to receive the radio airplay that can influence a song's overall performance.[2] N.W.A.'s debut album Straight Outta Compton (which had attracted controversy for its song "Fuck tha Police") includes the song "Express Yourself", which criticizes the censorship of music by radio stations, and hip-hop musicians who write inoffensive songs to target mainstream radio airplay. "Express Yourself" is the only song on the album to not contain profanities.[25]

Sensitivity edit

Some songs may be pulled or downplayed by broadcasters if they are considered to be inappropriate to play in the aftermath of specific events.[26] After the September 11 attacks, program directors of the radio conglomerate Clear Channel compiled an internal list of "lyrically questionable" songs, which included various songs with themes related to war, death, destruction, flight, or New York City, and all songs by Rage Against the Machine. Slate noted several unusual choices on the list, including "Walk Like an Egyptian", two Cat Stevens songs (Stevens had converted to the Islamic faith and changed his name to Yusuf Islam), and John Lennon's "explicitly pacifist anthem 'Imagine'".[27][28]

In the aftermath of the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster in February 2003, Mark Wills' "19 Somethin'" was temporarily pulled by some radio stations as it contains a lyric referencing the Challenger disaster.[29] Also that month, Madonna's then-upcoming music video for "American Life" generated controversy due to its politicized and "unpatriotic" imagery in the wake of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, such as a fashion show featuring women dressed in military gear, and a scene where the singer throws a grenade-shaped lighter to a George W. Bush lookalike to light his cigar. Due to the negative response, Madonna pulled the video in April 2003 prior to its planned premiere, as she did not want to "risk offending anyone who might misinterpret the meaning of this video".[30][31]

In 2006, after Gary Glitter was convicted of child sexual abuse in Vietnam, the National Football League banned the original recording of his song "Rock and Roll" (which was popularly played at U.S. sporting events)[32] from being played at its games. While the NFL still allowed a cover version of the song to be played, in 2012 the league instructed its teams to "avoid" playing the song entirely, following negative reception from British media over its continued use by the New England Patriots, and the possibility it could be played during Super Bowl XLVI.[33][34]

In 2009, after Chris Brown pleaded guilty to a felony assault of his then-girlfriend singer, Rihanna, various radio stations began to voluntarily pull Brown's music from their playlists as a condemnation of his actions.[35][36] In December 2013, after lead singer, Ian Watkins from Lostprophets, was convicted with thirteen sexual offences against children, HMV removed the entire catalogue of Lostprophets from its stores.[37]

In late-2018, Cleveland radio station WDOK pulled "Baby, It's Cold Outside"—a 1944 pop standard synonymous with the Christmas season—from its Christmas music playlist, citing that certain interpretations of the song's subject matter were too sensitive in the wake of the #MeToo movement against sexual harassment and assault. The move prompted other broadcasters (including two of Canada's major commercial radio groups, and the state-run CBC Radio) to follow suit. The decision was divisive among critics and the general public, with supporters arguing that the song's possible implications of date rape did not align with current societal norms, and others arguing that the decision was an appeal to political correctness.[38][39][40][41][42] The CBC later reversed its decision,[43] while a poll conducted by San Francisco radio station KOIT had only 23% of participants objecting to the song.[44]

In March 2019, some radio stations (particularly those of Cogeco in the Canadian province of Quebec, and Radio New Zealand), began to pull the music of Michael Jackson from rotation in response to the Channel 4/HBO documentary Leaving Neverland, which featured allegations by Wade Robson and Jimmy Safechuck that Jackson had sexually abused them as children. Cumulus Media stated that it had allowed its stations to make decisions on this matter on a case-by-case basis.[45][46] In late 2019, a number of New Zealand and Canadian radio stations reversed pulling Jackson's music from their playlists, stating "positive listener survey results"[47]

Legal issues edit

Songs and albums may, in some cases, be censored due to copyright problems (particularly related to sampling) or other legal issues. The JAMs album 1987 (What the Fuck Is Going On?) was withdrawn from distribution following complaints by ABBA, whose music was sampled on the album without permission.[48] The Notorious B.I.G.'s album Ready to Die was similarly pulled following a lawsuit by Bridgeport Music over unauthorized samples.[49][50]

By request of Atlantic Records, parody musician "Weird Al" Yankovic did not commercially release "You're Pitiful"—his parody of James Blunt's song "You're Beautiful", even though Blunt himself had approved of the satire. It was subsequently released as a free single online instead.[51]

By country edit

Afghanistan edit

 
A pair of Dairehs

During the initial five-year reign of the Taliban government in Afghanistan between 1996 and 2001, all Western technology and art, including music, was prohibited.[52][53][54][55] Instruments were demolished, celebrations were banned and all that was played on the radio were chants glorifying the Taliban. The one and only instrument to be exempt from this ban was the frame drum, also known as the Daireh or Daf.[56] While briefly lifted during the twenty-year tenure of the Islamic Republic, the ban was resumed upon the return of Taliban rule in 2021.[57]

Australia edit

The Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) and the Australian Music Retailers Association (AMRA) maintain a self-regulatory system known as the "Recorded Music Labelling Code of Practice", which utilizes a three-tier ratings system for objectionable content in music recordings. "Level 1" applies to content of a "moderate impact" (including "infrequent aggressive or strong coarse language; or moderate-impact references to drug use, violence, sexual activity or themes"), "Level 2" for "strong impact" ("frequent aggressive or strong coarse language", or strong references to drug use, violence, sexual activity or themes), and "Level 3" for "high impact" content (graphic and high-impact references to drug use, violence, sexual activity or themes). The Level 3 classification was introduced in March 2003, and requires purchasers to be over the age of 18. The code bans the distribution or sale of any recording with material that exceeds Level 3 classification, which includes content "which promote, incite, instruct or exploitatively or gratuitously depict drug abuse, cruelty, suicide, criminal or sexual violence, child abuse, incest, bestiality or any other revolting or abhorrent activity in a way that causes outrage or extreme disgust."[58][59]

Australian consumer law also bans the import of any product that "describe[s], depict[s], express[es] or otherwise deal[s] with matters of sex, drug misuse or addiction, crime, cruelty, violence or revolting or abhorrent phenomena in such a way that they offend against the standards of morality, decency and propriety generally accepted by reasonable adults".[60] In 2003, copies of an album by grindcore band Intense Hammer Rage were seized by the Australian Customs Service, and the three band members were each fined AUD$500 each for violating customs law. The violations centred upon the abhorrent subject matter of the album's artwork and printed lyrics; the albums had been manufactured in the United States by their record label, and imported into Australia for their distribution. The band criticized the seizure as being a dilution of freedom of speech.[61][62]

In May 1990, Nick Franklin, acting news director of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's radio station Triple J, was suspended by the ABC's management after having played a portion of N.W.A.'s song "Fuck tha Police". The song had received airplay on the station for several months, but ABC Radio head Malcom Long requested that the song be given a "rest"; in the offending segment, Franklin discussed the song's vulgar lyrics and subject matter. In protest of the suspension, Triple J staff engaged in an industrial action, and the station stunted by playing the N.W.A. song "Express Yourself" on a loop until the ABC reinstated Franklin. The song was played 82 times in a row.[25]

Austria edit

Austrian rapper Mr. Bond was arrested in January 2021 on the charges of "producing and broadcasting Nazi ideas" and "incitement to hatred".[63] He was later sentenced to ten years' imprisonment.[64]

Brazil edit

During the military dictatorship that ruled from 1964 to 1985, Institutional Act Number Five (AI-5) granted the authority to censor cultural works that were seen as subversive to moral or political values. It was estimated that at least 500 song lyrics were censored under AI-5.[65] The present-day Constitution of Brazil adopted in 1988 prohibits the censorship of "political, ideological and artistic natures".[66][67]

The genre of funk carioca has faced attention due to the often-provocative subject matter of such songs, and events featuring such music being associated with crime activity such as violence and the illegal drug trade. A bill proposing a ban of funk carioca was rejected by the Federal Senate of Brazil.[68][69][70]

Cambodia edit

During the dictatorship of the Khmer Rouge (1975 to 1979), all music in Cambodia was banned - the only exception being anything to do with party propaganda. Instruments and records were systematically destroyed by the regime, and as many as 90 percent of musicians and dancers were killed.[71][72]

Canada edit

 
The Dire Straits song "Money for Nothing" was the subject of a ruling by broadcast self-regulators in Canada.

In Canada, content broadcast by radio and television is self-regulated by the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council (CBSC) under the code of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters (CAB). The CBSC acts upon complaints that are submitted by the general public. The CAB Code prohibits radio broadcast of undue coarse language or sexually explicit material, nor content which glorifies violence.[73] The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) can intervene in more substantial cases.[74]

In 2011, the Atlantic panel of the CBSC, in response to a complaint against CHOZ-FM, ruled that a version of Dire Straits' 1985 single "Money for Nothing" containing the homophobic slur "faggot" violated the ethics code. The CRTC called upon the CBSC to review the decision with a national panel, as it "elicited a strong public reaction and created uncertainty for private radio stations across the country." In particular, the CRTC asked the CBSC to consider the overall context of the slur in relation to the rest of the song, as well as how the word was used at the time of the song's release.[74] The CBSC overturned the ruling; while panellists agreed that the slur was inappropriate, it was considered to be satirical and non-hateful in context. It was also noted that lead singer Mark Knopfler had substituted the word himself with alternatives (such as "queenie") during live performances, which was considered an admission that his original choice in words was in bad taste. The CBSC stated that it was up to individual stations whether or not they would play the unedited version.[75][76]

The ruling and controversy were ridiculed by critics; veteran Canadian radio personality Alan Cross commented that the controversy made Canada look "silly", remarking that "I talked to people from the U.S. and the U.K. and they were like, 'What's wrong with you people? Don't you get it? It's a joke. It's a satire. You didn't understand the context?'" National Post columnist Chris Selley described the CBSC's new ruling as a "comedy classic" and "colossal waste of time", explaining that "it's one thing for a censor to decide whether something is legitimately artistic; it's another for it to declare whether or not it enjoys the art, as if it somehow mattered."[75][76]

China edit

During the rule of Mao Zedong, "Yellow Music" became subject to criticism and censure, since the Chinese Communist Party saw Shanghai shidaiqu pop music[77] as indecent, and critics saw the sentiments of love songs as appealing only to the petite bourgeoisie. The genre was also criticized over its connections to American jazz music, due to anti-American sentiment from the Korean War. This resulted in many artists associated with shidaiqu, including Li Jinhui (who had been credited as a leading figure in the genre) and Chen Gexin, being branded as "rightists" and persecuted. Shanghai pop was displaced by revolutionary music that promoted Maoism and other ideologies of the Communist Party. Many Shanghai artists fled to Hong Kong, where the genre reached its height in the 1950s until the late 1960s, when it was superseded by Taiwanese pop (Mandarin adaptations of Japanese enka songs), and later by Cantopop. In 1966, Tian Han—writer of the Chinese national anthem "March of the Volunteers"—was imprisoned over his allegorical play Xie Yaohuan (which was critical of Mao's regime) in one of the opening salvos of the Cultural Revolution. His works were banned, leading to "The East is Red"—a song which glorified Mao's cult of personality, being used as the de facto national anthem at this time.[78][79][80][81] The Chinese Musicians Association, developed in July 1949, was established to recruit and train socialist musicians to strengthen the socialist ideology in the new generation.[82]

In contemporary times, musical works that criticize, or could be interpreted as criticism of the Chinese government, have also been subject to censure. Guns N' Roses' album Chinese Democracy was banned in the country, as its title track criticizes the Chinese government and contains references to the Falun Gong (a spiritual movement which is subject to persecution in China).[83][84][85] The song "Legacy" on Pet Shop Boys' 2009 album Yes was changed to an instrumental for its Chinese release, as it contains the lyric "governments fall".[86] In July 2017, it was reported that Justin Bieber had been banned from performing in the country, citing "a series of bad behaviours, both in his social life and during a previous performance in China, which caused discontent among the public."[87] In addition to criticism of the government, there is also censorship for drug use, over sexualising and misogynistic content.[88] Chinese artists, such as PG One, have faced scrutiny from various institutions for having lyrics that contain misogyny and drug-related activities, seen as promoting what the Chinese government sees as inappropriate behaviour.[88]

China has historically condemned or banned any musician who publicly supports Tibetan independence or otherwise interacts with the Dalai Lama; in 2008, Björk chanted "Tibet, Tibet" to the audience whilst performing "Declare Independence" during a concert in Shanghai. Zhou Heping stated that the song, which was not cleared by Chinese authorities, had caused "dissatisfaction among the broader Chinese audience". He described Björk's case as an isolated incident, and denied that the Ministry of Culture was wanting to further restrict performances by Western acts in the country in response to the incident, since China wanted international musicians to perform there for the Summer Olympics.[89] In 2013, German electronic music band Kraftwerk were denied entry visas over their intent to perform at a 1999 Free Tibet concert in Washington, D.C., which was cancelled due to inclement weather.[90] Maroon 5 had concerts cancelled in the country after bandmember Jesse Carmichael posted a Twitter message for the Dalai Lama's 80th birthday, and Oasis concerts in China were cancelled after lead singer Noel Gallagher performed at a Free Tibet concert in New York City. In 2016, the Publicity Department banned Lady Gaga after she posted a video of her meeting with the Dalai Lama prior to a conference in Indianapolis.[91][92]

In July 2016, a voluntary boycott of South Korean music and entertainment was practiced after the U.S. and South Korea announced the deployment of a THAAD missile defence system to protect against attacks by North Korea (which has diplomatic ties with China).[93] K-pop groups, as well as soprano Sumi Jo, had performances cancelled in the country due to the boycott. Share prices of S.M. Entertainment and YG Entertainment also fell, as South Korean entertainment companies had increasingly invested in China to take advantage of the Korean Wave.[94][95][96][97][98] In November 2017, following the settlement of the THAAD dispute, Chinese media outlets began to ease their censure of Korean music.[99]

"Do You Hear the People Sing?" from Les Misérables was removed from Chinese music streaming services in the wake of the 2019–20 Hong Kong protests, as the song has been considered a protest song in Hong Kong.[100]

Iran edit

 
Iranian singer Googoosh performing at Scotiabank Centre in Toronto, Canada

In July 1979 during the wake of the Iranian Revolution, supreme leader Ruhollah Khomeini banned all popular music, considering it corrupting to youth's minds. The ban prompted many Iranian musicians to move to the U.S. city of Los Angeles to pursue their careers and industry there instead. Female vocalists such as Googoosh were also targeted under the ban (although her works remained popular via the black market), and she subsequently refused to perform. The restrictions were relaxed in the years that followed, especially under reformist president Mohammad Khatami in the 1990s. Khatami also lifted bans on male pop groups (so they could perform in concerts marking the 20th anniversary of the Revolution), and began to authorize performances by female singers internationally, and to all-female audiences inside the country. In 2000, Googoosh was given authorization to embark on an international comeback tour.[101][102]

In 2005, president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad enacted a ban on western music from state-run broadcasters. The move came shortly after conductor Ali Rahbari had resigned from the Tehran Symphony Orchestra due to backlash over their performance of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 (the first time it had been performed in Iran since the Revolution).[103][104][105]

All music must be approved by the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance; typically, authorized releases are limited to traditional Iranian folk, classical, and pop music. As some have faced government action for writing, producing, and performing unapproved music, many Iranian musicians do so as emigrants outside of the country. However, there have been thriving underground scenes in genres such as hip-hop and rock.[106][107][108]

Israel edit

The German composers Richard Strauss and Richard Wagner have been considered controversial figures in Israel due to their associations with Nazi Germany, in addition to Wagner's displays of antisemitism towards the Jewish faith. Although the works of Strauss have since been performed in the country, and broadcasters have played the works of Wagner without controversy, there has historically been resistance to live performances of Wagner's music in Israel—with concerts intending to do so having been met with protests.[109][110][111][112]

Malaysia edit

In Malaysia, a Muslim-majority country, local law prohibits radio stations from playing songs that are "offensive to public feeling" or "violate good taste and decency". References to LGBT topics were censored from Lady Gaga's "Born This Way" by local radio stations because homosexual acts are illegal in the country,[113][114] while "Despacito" was pulled by Malaysia's state-owned radio stations following listener concerns over its "un-Islamic" lyrics.[115][116]

Concerts in Malaysia have also been subject to censorship to comply with the country's moral values; Avril Lavigne was instructed to not wear revealing clothing, jump, shout, or include any "negative elements" in a 2008 concert in Kuala Lumpur,[117] Muslim citizens were initially banned from attending a Black Eyed Peas concert in 2009 due to its Guinness sponsorship, as alcohol is banned under Sharia law (the ban was lifted after Guinness agreed to cease advertising its involvement nor sell its products at the event),[118] and Adam Lambert agreed to make changes to a 2010 concert due to concerns that he would promote "gay culture".[119]

Myanmar edit

In 1962, General Ne Win banned all Western music and dancing to preserve the culture of what was once known as Burma.[56] The emergence of rock music posed challenges for the Western music ban, as the new genre promoted the rejection of discipline and encouraged cultural freedom.

North Korea edit

Music of North Korea is typically limited to state-sanctioned performers and ensembles, whose propaganda music glorifies the Kim dynasty and Juche ideology. Foreign music, and older North Korean music that do not meet the government's standards, is generally banned.[120]

Under Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un, Western music has been selectively exhibited by the country, such as by the all-female Moranbong Band during their inaugural concert in 2012,[121][122][123] and a concert by Slovenian band Laibach in July 2015 featuring covers of traditional songs and selections from The Sound of Music (the latter being described as the first ever rock concert in the country).[124][125]

In July 2015, it was reported that Kim Jong-un had issued a directive calling for inspectors to destroy music CDs and cassettes containing prohibited content, as well as adding additional songs to the blacklist (such as the entire soundtrack of the historical drama Im Kkeok Jeong).[124][126]

Poland edit

In May 2020, Polish radio station Trójka (run by state broadcaster Polskie Radio) was accused of censoring "Twój ból jest lepszy niż mój" ("Your Pain is Better Than Mine"), a song by Kazik Staszewski that is critical of the ruling Law and Justice party. The song was inspired by a controversy involving party leader Jarosław Kaczyński, who had visited the graves of his mother and twin-brother Lech Kaczyński at a Warsaw cemetery, even though they were closed to the public due to COVID-19 pandemic restrictions.[127] The song does not reference the party or Kaczyński by name.[128][129]

When "Twój ból jest lepszy niż mój" charted at number one on Trójka's weekly countdown on 15 May, the station subsequently suppressed the chart and all references to the song from its website. Station director Tomasz Kowalczewski accused the programme's host Marek Niedźwiecki of having rigged the chart in favour of Kazik's song. Bartosz Gil — who also works on the chart show — alleged that Kaczyński's claim was false, and accused him of specifically targeting the song. The following Sunday, Niedźwiecki announced his immediate resignation from the station, and also threatened legal action against the broadcaster for false claims of fraud. On 16 May, Polskie Radio music head Piotr Metz revealed that, after the chart show aired, Kowalczewski had ordered him via text message to remove "Twój ból jest lepszy niż mój" from the station's music library. Metz resigned from the station. The station also faced threats of boycotts from members of the Polish music industry. Deputy Prime Minister Jadwiga Emilewicz argued that "artistic freedom should never be fettered in any way, even when the artist has a different opinion".[128][129]

South Africa edit

The South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) developed a record libraries, where all record companies were forced to submit their records to have their lyrics reviewed.[130] Records that had banned lyrics, including those that influenced public opinion, were destroyed. in 1980, the SABC banned Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in the Wall," as it contained the lyrics "we don't want your education," which were seen as influencing public opinion. The SABC also banned "Cry Freedom" written by George Fenton and Jonas Gwanwa due to its association with Nelson Mandela, and Roger Lucey's "Lungile Tabalaza" and "You Only Need Say Nothing."[131]

In 1985, a group known as Artists United Against Apartheid, composed of various artists in the west, formed to protest the apartheid in South Africa.[13] The group produced the album Sun City, expressing their support for the boycotting of Sun City luxury resort where artists performed frequently. In the song "(I Ain't Gonna' Play) Sun City" (1985), featuring artists such as Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen, the lyrics encouraged other artists not to perform at Sun City during the apartheid, calling for justice. The artists involved in the Sun City album partook in self-censorship, boycotting Sun City throughout the apartheid.

South Korea edit

Due to tense relations between Japan and South Korea following the end of Japanese rule, the Korean government imposed various restrictions (ostensibly meant to target Japan) on the importation of cultural works from other countries.[132] In September 1999, South Korea lifted its ban on live performances of Japanese music, but only in venues with a capacity smaller than 2000. In June 2000, it became legal to perform Japanese music in larger venues, and to sell music recordings originating from Japan. However, until January 2004, it remained illegal to sell recordings containing Japanese-language lyrics.[133][134][135] It remains illegal to broadcast Japanese music over terrestrial radio and television in South Korea.[136]

To appeal to the country's conservatism, television broadcasters have sometimes pulled music videos from airplay for containing content they deem to be inappropriate, such as violent or sexually suggestive content. While Korea's three largest television networks—KBS, MBC, and SBS—have all banned videos at some point, the public broadcaster KBS is known for having stricter standards and practices, and additionally bans songs that encourage inappropriate behaviour (especially among youth), or contain references to brand names or Japanese words. This results in some songs, such as Psy's "Gentleman" (which was banned by KBS for a scene in which the singer kicks over a traffic cone) being banned only by KBS, but still receiving airplay by other networks.[137][138][139][140][141][142]

In 2010, the Supreme Court of South Korea ruled that it was illegal under the National Security Act to possess music that praises North Korea, even if instrumental, as it constitutes an "enemy-benefiting expression".[143]

Ukraine edit

In June 2022, after the Russian invasion of Ukraine which was started on February 24, 2022, the Parliament of Ukraine voted to ban the distribution of Russian books and the playing or performance of Russian music by post-Soviet-era artists who support Russian aggression against Ukraine.[144][145][146] This ban does not apply to artists included in the list of musical performers who condemn the war against Ukraine.[147]

United Kingdom edit

 
The Sex Pistols' "God Save the Queen" was banned by radio stations, and allegedly suppressed from being the number-one song in the UK, due to its criticism of the British government and monarchy.[148][149][150]

The telecommunications regulator Ofcom has the power to reprimand broadcasters for playing songs and music videos that breach its guidelines on harmful or offensive content pre-watershed.[151][152] The British Phonographic Industry (BPI) adopted the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) Parental Advisory label program; in July 2011, the BPI published guidance for use of the logo on digital streaming platforms.[153]

The BBC was historically known for censoring various songs from being played on its radio and television stations; from the 1930s through the 1960s, the BBC had banned songs such as "Hold My Hand" for its religious references, pop arrangements of classical tunes (though barring "Sabre Dance" because it was "not a well-loved classic whose perversion we would be encouraging"), and during World War II, songs that were "slushy in sentiment", such as "I'll Be Home for Christmas", due to concerns that it would affect the morale of soldiers. "Mack the Knife" was also banned from airplay outside of The Threepenny Opera, as the BBC felt it would be offensive outside of the context of the play.[154] The Kinks' "Lola" was briefly banned under BBC rules prohibiting product placement, as its lyrics contain references to the brand name Coca-Cola. In the midst of an American tour, lead singer Ray Davies flew back to London to re-record the offending lyric as "cherry cola".[155][156]

The Sex Pistols' 1977 single "God Save the Queen" was controversial upon its release, as it was critical of the British government and monarchy (among other things, referring to the United Kingdom as a "fascist regime"), and was released during the year of Queen Elizabeth II's silver jubilee.[157] "God Save the Queen" was banned by the BBC and all independent local radio stations, but still peaked at #2 on the UK Singles Chart during the week of the official Jubilee celebration. It was alleged that the chart's rules were changed for that week only to exclude sales from record shops that sold their own records (in this case, Virgin), in a deliberate effort to prevent the controversial song from reaching the number-one spot and causing wider offence.[150][149][148]

The Frankie Goes to Hollywood song "Relax" generated controversy due to its suggestive lyrics; the chorus contained double entendres such as "when you want to suck to it" and "when you want to come", which were interpreted as being oblique references to oral sex and ejaculation respectively.[158] On 11 January 1984, Radio 1 morning DJ Mike Read stopped the song on-air during a chart rundown to point out its "obscene" lyrics, and announced that he would no longer play the song during his show. The BBC subsequently restricted the song to evening airplay. When the band made statements in a Daily Express interview confirming the possibility of sexual connotations in the lyrics, the BBC banned "Relax" entirely. The ban only increased interest in the single, causing it to become the number-one song in Britain only two weeks later.[159][4][158]

In December 2007, BBC Radio 1 began to play a version of The Pogues' popular Christmas song "Fairytale of New York" that censored the words "faggot" and "slut" from one of its verses. The BBC cited concerns over the homophobic slurs as reasoning, despite the song having historically been played without censorship. The word "arse" was also censored on MTV. The BBC reversed the decision after it was criticized by listeners, the band itself, and the mother of the song's featured vocalist Kirsty MacColl. Radio 1 controller Andy Parfitt argued that "While we would never condone prejudice of any kind, we know our audiences are smart enough to distinguish between maliciousness and creative freedom. In the context of this song, I do not feel that there is any negative intent behind the use of the words, hence the reversal of the decision."[160][161] Thirteen years later, in November 2020, it was announced Radio 1 would revert to playing the censored version again, although other stations such as Radio 2 played the original.[162]

As the song's subject matter was deemed too inappropriate for airplay pre-watershed, BBC Radio 1 played an edited version of Rihanna's song "S&M" during the daytime hours, and referred to the song using the alternate title "Come On". As Rihanna objected to the censorship of the song's title, the BBC later compromised by referring to the song as "S&M (Come On)".[163][164] For the same reasons, Ofcom deemed the song's music video to be unfit for broadcast pre-watershed.[152]

After the 2013 death of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, "Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead" from the film The Wizard of Oz reached No. 2 on the UK Singles Chart, as the result of a social media campaign celebrating the death of the controversial PM. BBC Radio 1 did not play the full song during The Official Chart programme, and instead played a short snippet accompanied by a Newsbeat report discussing the campaign. The action led to complaints that the BBC were deliberately censoring the song due to its negativity in this context, noting that Notsensibles' "I'm in Love with Margaret Thatcher" (which also charted, as part of an effort to counter the "Witch" campaign)[165] was played in full earlier in the show. The BBC Trust's Editorial Standards Committee upheld its decision not to play the song, due to its context as a celebration of Thatcher's death.[166][167]

"Liar Liar GE2017", a song released during the run-up to the 2017 general election that is critical of prime minister Theresa May, was not played by British radio stations due to broadcasting regulations in force during electoral campaigns, which forbid political advertising and require all broadcasters to practice impartial coverage.[168] Despite the suppression, the song still managed to reach #4 on the UK Singles Chart.[169]

United States edit

 
The Parental Advisory label was voluntarily adopted by the U.S. music industry to designate recordings that may contain objectionable content.

While music can be classified as a protected form of expression under the First Amendment,[170] there have still been instances of voluntary censorship within the music industry, particularly in regards to protecting children from being exposed to age-inappropriate subject matter, corporate objections to an artist's work, and by radio and television stations to remain in compliance with the regulations of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). The 1978 Supreme Court case FCC v. Pacifica Foundation established that the FCC had the power to regulate the broadcast of content considered "indecent" on terrestrial radio and television.[171][172][173]

In the 1970s, the Native American band XIT was targeted due to its radical support of the 1969 to 1971 Occupation of Alcatraz[174] and affiliation with the civil rights group American Indian Movement,[175] as well as its debut concept album Plight of the Redman —which denounced the historical treatment of Native Americans by the government. The FBI threatened to audit the band's label Motown if they did not cease promotion of the album.[176]

In 1985, the Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC), founded by Tipper Gore, published the "Filthy Fifteen"—a list of fifteen songs it deemed to be the most objectionable due to their references to drugs and alcohol, sexual acts, violence, or "occult" activities.[177][178] The group pushed for the adoption of a ratings system, and for lyrics to be printed on the back covers of albums so they could be previewed by parents.[177][178] The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) opposed these proposals; during a Senate hearing on the matter in September, musicians such as John Denver and Frank Zappa argued that such guidelines would inhibit free expression. Zappa, in particular, argued that the PMRC's proposal for a method to "assist baffled parents in the determination of the 'suitability' of records listened to by 'very young children'" would reduce American music to "the intellectual level of a Saturday morning cartoon".[177]

Following the hearings, the RIAA introduced a standard Parental Advisory label (which took its current form, reading "Parental Advisory — Explicit Content", in 1994 following subsequent hearings), which is designed to be applied to the cover art of songs and albums which contain "strong language or depictions of violence, sex, or substance abuse to such an extent as to merit parental notification." The Parental Advisory label is a voluntary scheme; some retailers—particularly Walmart—made it a corporate policy to not stock any music release that carries the label.[179][177]

Gangsta rap generated controversies due to its often-provocative subject matter. "Fuck tha Police", a song from N.W.A.'s debut album Straight Outta Compton, proved to be especially controversial; the song criticized police brutality and racial profiling, and contained lyrics condoning violence against police officers.[6][180] Civil rights activist C. Delores Tucker was also notable for her opposition to gangsta rap. She was known for distributing flyers outside record stores, as well as buying stock in media companies so she could protest the songs at shareholders' meetings. Tucker was notably dissed in other songs over her criticism of the genre, including Tupac's "How Do U Want It". Tucker sued Tupac's estate for emotional distress and slander over the song; the suit was later dismissed.[181][182][6][183]

In 1990, Floridan political activist Jack Thompson targeted the Miami-based 2 Live Crew and their album As Nasty as They Wanna Be—which featured songs such as "Me So Horny"—claiming that it was obscene.[184] In March 1990, the group filed a lawsuit in a U.S. district court to overturn a Broward County ruling that declared the album obscene, but it was upheld by Judge Jose Alejandro Gonzalez Jr.[184][185][186][187] In 1992, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the Gonzalez ruling, as the case presented insufficient evidence that the album passed the Miller test established by the Supreme Court to determine whether a work is obscene (which includes a lack of artistic merit).[188]

The television channel MTV was also known for censoring objectionable content from music videos, and restricting some particularly-controversial videos to late-night airplay—such as The Prodigy's "Smack My Bitch Up" due to its violent imagery and misogynistic lyrics, and Sir Mix-a-Lot's "Baby Got Back" for its suggestive subject matter.[189][190][191][192] Several Madonna videos have also been banned by the channel, including the sexually-explicit "Justify My Love" and "Erotica". Due to its violent content, MTV and sister channel VH1 only played "What It Feels Like for a Girl" once in late-night hours for its world premiere, and refused to add it to their regular rotation. Madonna's label subsequently sought other outlets for the video: the women's cable network Oxygen aired it during its music program Daily Remix, AOL streamed it online, and it was released on DVD.[193][194][195][196]

In the aftermath of the MTV-produced Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show (which was televised by its corporate sister CBS)—where Janet Jackson's breast was exposed by Justin Timberlake at the conclusion of the show, in an apparent "wardrobe malfunction"[197]—the FCC launched a major crackdown against indecent material broadcast on terrestrial radio and television stations. Some rock radio stations removed or censored certain songs so they would not run afoul of the stricter enforcement,[198] while MTV moved several videos with sexually suggestive imagery to late-night hours.[199] In addition, Jackson was blacklisted by CBS and MTV's parent company Viacom, resulting in her music being pulled from its television and radio outlets, and Jackson being removed from the CBS-televised 46th Grammy Awards (where she had been scheduled to introduce a tribute to Luther Vandross). CBS also aired the ceremony under a five-minute delay in order to ensure that no objectionable content was seen during the telecast.[200] The blacklisting caused Janet Jackson's subsequent album Damita Jo to underperform, due to reduced promotion and single airplay.[197]

Vietnam edit

During the era of the Vietnam War, popular music of South Vietnam, which was mainly associated with the Bolero genre, became colloquially known as yellow music, in opposition to red music endorsed by the Communist government of North Vietnam. After the Fall of Saigon in 1975, the music was banned altogether. Those caught listening to yellow music after North and South Vietnam were reunified would be punished, and their music would be confiscated and destroyed, due to the belief that it contained “ideas that were not good, not healthy, that required criticism.”. Many South Vietnamese artists migrated to the United States, and continued to sing in exile. In 1986, the ban was lightened and love songs could be written again, but by then the music industry had ceased to exist.[201]

The government of the unified Communist Vietnam also prohibited the sale of overseas Vietnamese music, including variety shows like Asia and Paris by Night. In recent years however, bolero had grown popular again, as more overseas singers performed in Vietnam. Additionally, singing competition television series like Boléro Idol have grown popular, with singers performing songs, including those formerly banned.[201]

Zimbabwe edit

 
Music group, "Freshlyground"

In Zimbabwe, 75% of the content that took place on television and radio airways were legislated due to the government.[202] The governments ownership of music impacted the control of broadcast and more.[202] In 2010, a South African music group by the name of Freshlyground generated a video mocking President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe. After the release of the music video titled Chicken for Change, the music group was banned from Zimbabwe for the following eight years.[202] The experience that the band underwent, connects to the concept of cross-border censorship.[202] This concept in turn is what prevented Freshlyground from performing in Zimbabwe for nearly a decade. In 2018, due to a change in presidency, the band was no longer prohibited from Zimbabwe and they finally returned to the country to perform.

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music, censorship, refers, practice, editing, musical, works, various, reasons, stemming, from, wide, variety, motivations, including, moral, political, religious, reasons, censorship, range, from, complete, government, enforced, legal, prohibition, musical, w. Music censorship refers to the practice of editing musical works for various reasons stemming from a wide variety of motivations including moral political or religious reasons Censorship can range from the complete government enforced legal prohibition of a musical work to private voluntary removal of content when a musical work appears in a certain context Contents 1 Motivations 1 1 Decency 1 1 1 Notable examples 1 1 2 Criticism 1 2 Sensitivity 1 3 Legal issues 2 By country 2 1 Afghanistan 2 2 Australia 2 3 Austria 2 4 Brazil 2 5 Cambodia 2 6 Canada 2 7 China 2 8 Iran 2 9 Israel 2 10 Malaysia 2 11 Myanmar 2 12 North Korea 2 13 Poland 2 14 South Africa 2 15 South Korea 2 16 Ukraine 2 17 United Kingdom 2 18 United States 2 19 Vietnam 2 20 Zimbabwe 3 ReferencesMotivations editDecency edit Songs are often edited for broadcast on radio and television to remove content that may be considered objectionable to an outlet s target audience such as profanity or references to subjects such as sex and drug usage This is typically done to comply with any relevant broadcast law or codes of conduct and to make the songs more marketable to a mainstream audience 1 2 Songs edited for content in this manner by are often referred to as a clean version or a radio edit the latter also referring to songs that may be edited for length on radio airplay a practice which dates back to the space limitations of 45 RPM vinyl records 3 4 Common editing techniques include distorting vocals to obscure offending words including muting bleeping and backmasking or replacing them with alternative lyrics 5 The amount of censorship required may vary between broadcasters depending on standards and practices and their target audience for example Radio Disney imposes stricter content guidelines than conventional U S radio stations as it primarily targets a youth audience and family listening 4 2 By contrast some radio stations may relegate unedited versions of tracks containing objectionable content to airplay during time periods deemed appropriate such as late night hours 4 Joel Mullis an Atlanta sound engineer who became well known in the industry for his work on radio edits noted that his job was often complicated by differing standards between broadcasters such as BET and MTV requiring different edits to meet their individual needs Mullis edit of the Ying Yang Twins Wait The Whisper Song was constructed by splicing in vocals from other Ying Yang Twins songs but Mullis eventually had to bring the group back to his studio after facing demands for additional edits 2 In some cases a record label may choose to withhold a release entirely if they believe that its subject matter would be too controversial Ice T and Paris both had gangsta rap albums withheld or indefinitely delayed by Warner Bros Records over content concerns with Ice T s Home Invasion delayed due to the 1992 Los Angeles riots and controversy over Cop Killer a song by Ice T s metal band Body Count and Paris s Sleeping with the Enemy over its songs Bush Killa and Coffee Doughnuts amp Death Insane Clown Posse faced similar issues after they signed to Disney owned Hollywood Records despite compliance with the label s demands to censor specific songs and lyrics The Great Milenko was recalled almost immediately after its release but not before selling 18 000 copies out of 100 000 shipped All three acts moved to different labels including Priority Records and Island Records which released their respective albums without objections 6 7 8 9 The ideas that make up censorship differ greatly from country to country However even if no pattern can be observed it is normally set about through power 10 Censorship as a whole terminates unwanted messages in hopes of keeping the targeted listener s vision and actions in check 11 It is known for being dependent on three different conditions The first being that the censored body or subject is not authorized The second being that censorship takes place to avert the object of what is restricted Finally it is put in place to deny existence of the censored issues 11 The motivation behind music censorship is associated to the circulation of popular music through numerous mediums 10 Reasons for why music may be censored include that music is deemed contentious aggressive or disrespectful Music censorship therefore aims to minimize the exposure to controversial topics such as sex drugs and the challenging of social norms Constituting to restrictions to one s freedom of speech with the goal of shielding society from detrimental expression 12 Music censorship was impacted by the religious influences on governments before the modern nation state 13 The Catholic Church s Index Librorum Prohibitum is an early sign of censorship later translating into the music censorship of the 21st century citation needed Notable examples edit Multiple edits of CeeLo Green s song Fuck You exist including one which changed the titular lyric to Forget You and one which muted fuck without replacing it Green also performed a parody of the song about Fox News in an appearance on The Colbert Report 14 15 16 The Black Eyed Peas re wrote Let s Get Retarded a song from their album Elephunk as Let s Get It Started to serve as a promotional song for television coverage of the 2004 NBA Playoffs Let s Get It Started was subsequently released as a standalone single and peaked at 21 on the Billboard Hot 100 17 18 When performing his song Power on Saturday Night Live Kanye West similarly replaced a verse of the song containing profanities and criticism of the program itself Fuck SNL and the whole cast with newly written lyrics 19 Songs containing potentially objectionable double entendres or mondegreens have also been subject to censorship For example the title and chorus of Britney Spears single If U Seek Amy was intended to be misheard as F U C K me her label issued a radio edit which changed the word seek to see in order to remove the wordplay 20 21 Similar concerns were raised by radio stations over The Black Eyed Peas Don t Phunk With My Heart upon its release as the word phunk a deliberate misspelling of funk could be misinterpreted by listeners as sounding like the word fuck This resulted in the label issuing an edit that changed the word to mess 22 21 Meghan Trainor recorded an alternate version of her debut single All About That Bass for Radio Disney and conservative adult contemporary stations which removed the song s suggestive metaphors 23 2 Censorship of music is not limited to lyrical content MTV edited the M I A song Paper Planes to replace sounds of gunfire in its chorus with alternative sound effects and remove a reference to cannabis Similar sound edits occurred when M I A performed the same song on Late Show with David Letterman broadcast by corporate sibling CBS M I A subsequently criticized both MTV and Late Show for censoring her song 1 24 Criticism edit Some listeners have expressed dissatisfaction over the editing of songs for radio airplay arguing that it compromises the artistic integrity of the original song and encourage listeners to seek out alternative platforms that are not subject to such censorship such as digital streaming At the same time edits are considered a necessary concession to receive the radio airplay that can influence a song s overall performance 2 N W A s debut album Straight Outta Compton which had attracted controversy for its song Fuck tha Police includes the song Express Yourself which criticizes the censorship of music by radio stations and hip hop musicians who write inoffensive songs to target mainstream radio airplay Express Yourself is the only song on the album to not contain profanities 25 Sensitivity edit Some songs may be pulled or downplayed by broadcasters if they are considered to be inappropriate to play in the aftermath of specific events 26 After the September 11 attacks program directors of the radio conglomerate Clear Channel compiled an internal list of lyrically questionable songs which included various songs with themes related to war death destruction flight or New York City and all songs by Rage Against the Machine Slate noted several unusual choices on the list including Walk Like an Egyptian two Cat Stevens songs Stevens had converted to the Islamic faith and changed his name to Yusuf Islam and John Lennon s explicitly pacifist anthem Imagine 27 28 In the aftermath of the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster in February 2003 Mark Wills 19 Somethin was temporarily pulled by some radio stations as it contains a lyric referencing the Challenger disaster 29 Also that month Madonna s then upcoming music video for American Life generated controversy due to its politicized and unpatriotic imagery in the wake of the U S led invasion of Iraq such as a fashion show featuring women dressed in military gear and a scene where the singer throws a grenade shaped lighter to a George W Bush lookalike to light his cigar Due to the negative response Madonna pulled the video in April 2003 prior to its planned premiere as she did not want to risk offending anyone who might misinterpret the meaning of this video 30 31 In 2006 after Gary Glitter was convicted of child sexual abuse in Vietnam the National Football League banned the original recording of his song Rock and Roll which was popularly played at U S sporting events 32 from being played at its games While the NFL still allowed a cover version of the song to be played in 2012 the league instructed its teams to avoid playing the song entirely following negative reception from British media over its continued use by the New England Patriots and the possibility it could be played during Super Bowl XLVI 33 34 In 2009 after Chris Brown pleaded guilty to a felony assault of his then girlfriend singer Rihanna various radio stations began to voluntarily pull Brown s music from their playlists as a condemnation of his actions 35 36 In December 2013 after lead singer Ian Watkins from Lostprophets was convicted with thirteen sexual offences against children HMV removed the entire catalogue of Lostprophets from its stores 37 In late 2018 Cleveland radio station WDOK pulled Baby It s Cold Outside a 1944 pop standard synonymous with the Christmas season from its Christmas music playlist citing that certain interpretations of the song s subject matter were too sensitive in the wake of the MeToo movement against sexual harassment and assault The move prompted other broadcasters including two of Canada s major commercial radio groups and the state run CBC Radio to follow suit The decision was divisive among critics and the general public with supporters arguing that the song s possible implications of date rape did not align with current societal norms and others arguing that the decision was an appeal to political correctness 38 39 40 41 42 The CBC later reversed its decision 43 while a poll conducted by San Francisco radio station KOIT had only 23 of participants objecting to the song 44 In March 2019 some radio stations particularly those of Cogeco in the Canadian province of Quebec and Radio New Zealand began to pull the music of Michael Jackson from rotation in response to the Channel 4 HBO documentary Leaving Neverland which featured allegations by Wade Robson and Jimmy Safechuck that Jackson had sexually abused them as children Cumulus Media stated that it had allowed its stations to make decisions on this matter on a case by case basis 45 46 In late 2019 a number of New Zealand and Canadian radio stations reversed pulling Jackson s music from their playlists stating positive listener survey results 47 Legal issues edit Songs and albums may in some cases be censored due to copyright problems particularly related to sampling or other legal issues The JAMs album 1987 What the Fuck Is Going On was withdrawn from distribution following complaints by ABBA whose music was sampled on the album without permission 48 The Notorious B I G s album Ready to Die was similarly pulled following a lawsuit by Bridgeport Music over unauthorized samples 49 50 By request of Atlantic Records parody musician Weird Al Yankovic did not commercially release You re Pitiful his parody of James Blunt s song You re Beautiful even though Blunt himself had approved of the satire It was subsequently released as a free single online instead 51 By country editAfghanistan edit nbsp A pair of DairehsDuring the initial five year reign of the Taliban government in Afghanistan between 1996 and 2001 all Western technology and art including music was prohibited 52 53 54 55 Instruments were demolished celebrations were banned and all that was played on the radio were chants glorifying the Taliban The one and only instrument to be exempt from this ban was the frame drum also known as the Daireh or Daf 56 While briefly lifted during the twenty year tenure of the Islamic Republic the ban was resumed upon the return of Taliban rule in 2021 57 Australia edit See also Censorship in Australia The Australian Recording Industry Association ARIA and the Australian Music Retailers Association AMRA maintain a self regulatory system known as the Recorded Music Labelling Code of Practice which utilizes a three tier ratings system for objectionable content in music recordings Level 1 applies to content of a moderate impact including infrequent aggressive or strong coarse language or moderate impact references to drug use violence sexual activity or themes Level 2 for strong impact frequent aggressive or strong coarse language or strong references to drug use violence sexual activity or themes and Level 3 for high impact content graphic and high impact references to drug use violence sexual activity or themes The Level 3 classification was introduced in March 2003 and requires purchasers to be over the age of 18 The code bans the distribution or sale of any recording with material that exceeds Level 3 classification which includes content which promote incite instruct or exploitatively or gratuitously depict drug abuse cruelty suicide criminal or sexual violence child abuse incest bestiality or any other revolting or abhorrent activity in a way that causes outrage or extreme disgust 58 59 Australian consumer law also bans the import of any product that describe s depict s express es or otherwise deal s with matters of sex drug misuse or addiction crime cruelty violence or revolting or abhorrent phenomena in such a way that they offend against the standards of morality decency and propriety generally accepted by reasonable adults 60 In 2003 copies of an album by grindcore band Intense Hammer Rage were seized by the Australian Customs Service and the three band members were each fined AUD 500 each for violating customs law The violations centred upon the abhorrent subject matter of the album s artwork and printed lyrics the albums had been manufactured in the United States by their record label and imported into Australia for their distribution The band criticized the seizure as being a dilution of freedom of speech 61 62 In May 1990 Nick Franklin acting news director of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation s radio station Triple J was suspended by the ABC s management after having played a portion of N W A s song Fuck tha Police The song had received airplay on the station for several months but ABC Radio head Malcom Long requested that the song be given a rest in the offending segment Franklin discussed the song s vulgar lyrics and subject matter In protest of the suspension Triple J staff engaged in an industrial action and the station stunted by playing the N W A song Express Yourself on a loop until the ABC reinstated Franklin The song was played 82 times in a row 25 Austria edit Austrian rapper Mr Bond was arrested in January 2021 on the charges of producing and broadcasting Nazi ideas and incitement to hatred 63 He was later sentenced to ten years imprisonment 64 Brazil edit See also Censorship in Brazil During the military dictatorship that ruled from 1964 to 1985 Institutional Act Number Five AI 5 granted the authority to censor cultural works that were seen as subversive to moral or political values It was estimated that at least 500 song lyrics were censored under AI 5 65 The present day Constitution of Brazil adopted in 1988 prohibits the censorship of political ideological and artistic natures 66 67 The genre of funk carioca has faced attention due to the often provocative subject matter of such songs and events featuring such music being associated with crime activity such as violence and the illegal drug trade A bill proposing a ban of funk carioca was rejected by the Federal Senate of Brazil 68 69 70 Cambodia edit See also Censorship in Cambodia During the dictatorship of the Khmer Rouge 1975 to 1979 all music in Cambodia was banned the only exception being anything to do with party propaganda Instruments and records were systematically destroyed by the regime and as many as 90 percent of musicians and dancers were killed 71 72 Canada edit See also Censorship in Canada nbsp The Dire Straits song Money for Nothing was the subject of a ruling by broadcast self regulators in Canada In Canada content broadcast by radio and television is self regulated by the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council CBSC under the code of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters CAB The CBSC acts upon complaints that are submitted by the general public The CAB Code prohibits radio broadcast of undue coarse language or sexually explicit material nor content which glorifies violence 73 The Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC can intervene in more substantial cases 74 In 2011 the Atlantic panel of the CBSC in response to a complaint against CHOZ FM ruled that a version of Dire Straits 1985 single Money for Nothing containing the homophobic slur faggot violated the ethics code The CRTC called upon the CBSC to review the decision with a national panel as it elicited a strong public reaction and created uncertainty for private radio stations across the country In particular the CRTC asked the CBSC to consider the overall context of the slur in relation to the rest of the song as well as how the word was used at the time of the song s release 74 The CBSC overturned the ruling while panellists agreed that the slur was inappropriate it was considered to be satirical and non hateful in context It was also noted that lead singer Mark Knopfler had substituted the word himself with alternatives such as queenie during live performances which was considered an admission that his original choice in words was in bad taste The CBSC stated that it was up to individual stations whether or not they would play the unedited version 75 76 The ruling and controversy were ridiculed by critics veteran Canadian radio personality Alan Cross commented that the controversy made Canada look silly remarking that I talked to people from the U S and the U K and they were like What s wrong with you people Don t you get it It s a joke It s a satire You didn t understand the context National Post columnist Chris Selley described the CBSC s new ruling as a comedy classic and colossal waste of time explaining that it s one thing for a censor to decide whether something is legitimately artistic it s another for it to declare whether or not it enjoys the art as if it somehow mattered 75 76 China edit See also Censorship in China During the rule of Mao Zedong Yellow Music became subject to criticism and censure since the Chinese Communist Party saw Shanghai shidaiqu pop music 77 as indecent and critics saw the sentiments of love songs as appealing only to the petite bourgeoisie The genre was also criticized over its connections to American jazz music due to anti American sentiment from the Korean War This resulted in many artists associated with shidaiqu including Li Jinhui who had been credited as a leading figure in the genre and Chen Gexin being branded as rightists and persecuted Shanghai pop was displaced by revolutionary music that promoted Maoism and other ideologies of the Communist Party Many Shanghai artists fled to Hong Kong where the genre reached its height in the 1950s until the late 1960s when it was superseded by Taiwanese pop Mandarin adaptations of Japanese enka songs and later by Cantopop In 1966 Tian Han writer of the Chinese national anthem March of the Volunteers was imprisoned over his allegorical play Xie Yaohuan which was critical of Mao s regime in one of the opening salvos of the Cultural Revolution His works were banned leading to The East is Red a song which glorified Mao s cult of personality being used as the de facto national anthem at this time 78 79 80 81 The Chinese Musicians Association developed in July 1949 was established to recruit and train socialist musicians to strengthen the socialist ideology in the new generation 82 In contemporary times musical works that criticize or could be interpreted as criticism of the Chinese government have also been subject to censure Guns N Roses album Chinese Democracy was banned in the country as its title track criticizes the Chinese government and contains references to the Falun Gong a spiritual movement which is subject to persecution in China 83 84 85 The song Legacy on Pet Shop Boys 2009 album Yes was changed to an instrumental for its Chinese release as it contains the lyric governments fall 86 In July 2017 it was reported that Justin Bieber had been banned from performing in the country citing a series of bad behaviours both in his social life and during a previous performance in China which caused discontent among the public 87 In addition to criticism of the government there is also censorship for drug use over sexualising and misogynistic content 88 Chinese artists such as PG One have faced scrutiny from various institutions for having lyrics that contain misogyny and drug related activities seen as promoting what the Chinese government sees as inappropriate behaviour 88 China has historically condemned or banned any musician who publicly supports Tibetan independence or otherwise interacts with the Dalai Lama in 2008 Bjork chanted Tibet Tibet to the audience whilst performing Declare Independence during a concert in Shanghai Zhou Heping stated that the song which was not cleared by Chinese authorities had caused dissatisfaction among the broader Chinese audience He described Bjork s case as an isolated incident and denied that the Ministry of Culture was wanting to further restrict performances by Western acts in the country in response to the incident since China wanted international musicians to perform there for the Summer Olympics 89 In 2013 German electronic music band Kraftwerk were denied entry visas over their intent to perform at a 1999 Free Tibet concert in Washington D C which was cancelled due to inclement weather 90 Maroon 5 had concerts cancelled in the country after bandmember Jesse Carmichael posted a Twitter message for the Dalai Lama s 80th birthday and Oasis concerts in China were cancelled after lead singer Noel Gallagher performed at a Free Tibet concert in New York City In 2016 the Publicity Department banned Lady Gaga after she posted a video of her meeting with the Dalai Lama prior to a conference in Indianapolis 91 92 In July 2016 a voluntary boycott of South Korean music and entertainment was practiced after the U S and South Korea announced the deployment of a THAAD missile defence system to protect against attacks by North Korea which has diplomatic ties with China 93 K pop groups as well as soprano Sumi Jo had performances cancelled in the country due to the boycott Share prices of S M Entertainment and YG Entertainment also fell as South Korean entertainment companies had increasingly invested in China to take advantage of the Korean Wave 94 95 96 97 98 In November 2017 following the settlement of the THAAD dispute Chinese media outlets began to ease their censure of Korean music 99 Do You Hear the People Sing from Les Miserables was removed from Chinese music streaming services in the wake of the 2019 20 Hong Kong protests as the song has been considered a protest song in Hong Kong 100 Iran edit Main article Censorship in Iran nbsp Iranian singer Googoosh performing at Scotiabank Centre in Toronto CanadaIn July 1979 during the wake of the Iranian Revolution supreme leader Ruhollah Khomeini banned all popular music considering it corrupting to youth s minds The ban prompted many Iranian musicians to move to the U S city of Los Angeles to pursue their careers and industry there instead Female vocalists such as Googoosh were also targeted under the ban although her works remained popular via the black market and she subsequently refused to perform The restrictions were relaxed in the years that followed especially under reformist president Mohammad Khatami in the 1990s Khatami also lifted bans on male pop groups so they could perform in concerts marking the 20th anniversary of the Revolution and began to authorize performances by female singers internationally and to all female audiences inside the country In 2000 Googoosh was given authorization to embark on an international comeback tour 101 102 In 2005 president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad enacted a ban on western music from state run broadcasters The move came shortly after conductor Ali Rahbari had resigned from the Tehran Symphony Orchestra due to backlash over their performance of Beethoven s Symphony No 9 the first time it had been performed in Iran since the Revolution 103 104 105 All music must be approved by the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance typically authorized releases are limited to traditional Iranian folk classical and pop music As some have faced government action for writing producing and performing unapproved music many Iranian musicians do so as emigrants outside of the country However there have been thriving underground scenes in genres such as hip hop and rock 106 107 108 Israel edit Main article Censorship in Israel The German composers Richard Strauss and Richard Wagner have been considered controversial figures in Israel due to their associations with Nazi Germany in addition to Wagner s displays of antisemitism towards the Jewish faith Although the works of Strauss have since been performed in the country and broadcasters have played the works of Wagner without controversy there has historically been resistance to live performances of Wagner s music in Israel with concerts intending to do so having been met with protests 109 110 111 112 Malaysia edit See also Censorship in Malaysia In Malaysia a Muslim majority country local law prohibits radio stations from playing songs that are offensive to public feeling or violate good taste and decency References to LGBT topics were censored from Lady Gaga s Born This Way by local radio stations because homosexual acts are illegal in the country 113 114 while Despacito was pulled by Malaysia s state owned radio stations following listener concerns over its un Islamic lyrics 115 116 Concerts in Malaysia have also been subject to censorship to comply with the country s moral values Avril Lavigne was instructed to not wear revealing clothing jump shout or include any negative elements in a 2008 concert in Kuala Lumpur 117 Muslim citizens were initially banned from attending a Black Eyed Peas concert in 2009 due to its Guinness sponsorship as alcohol is banned under Sharia law the ban was lifted after Guinness agreed to cease advertising its involvement nor sell its products at the event 118 and Adam Lambert agreed to make changes to a 2010 concert due to concerns that he would promote gay culture 119 Myanmar edit In 1962 General Ne Win banned all Western music and dancing to preserve the culture of what was once known as Burma 56 The emergence of rock music posed challenges for the Western music ban as the new genre promoted the rejection of discipline and encouraged cultural freedom North Korea edit See also Censorship in North Korea Music of North Korea is typically limited to state sanctioned performers and ensembles whose propaganda music glorifies the Kim dynasty and Juche ideology Foreign music and older North Korean music that do not meet the government s standards is generally banned 120 Under Supreme Leader Kim Jong un Western music has been selectively exhibited by the country such as by the all female Moranbong Band during their inaugural concert in 2012 121 122 123 and a concert by Slovenian band Laibach in July 2015 featuring covers of traditional songs and selections from The Sound of Music the latter being described as the first ever rock concert in the country 124 125 In July 2015 it was reported that Kim Jong un had issued a directive calling for inspectors to destroy music CDs and cassettes containing prohibited content as well as adding additional songs to the blacklist such as the entire soundtrack of the historical drama Im Kkeok Jeong 124 126 Poland edit In May 2020 Polish radio station Trojka run by state broadcaster Polskie Radio was accused of censoring Twoj bol jest lepszy niz moj Your Pain is Better Than Mine a song by Kazik Staszewski that is critical of the ruling Law and Justice party The song was inspired by a controversy involving party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski who had visited the graves of his mother and twin brother Lech Kaczynski at a Warsaw cemetery even though they were closed to the public due to COVID 19 pandemic restrictions 127 The song does not reference the party or Kaczynski by name 128 129 When Twoj bol jest lepszy niz moj charted at number one on Trojka s weekly countdown on 15 May the station subsequently suppressed the chart and all references to the song from its website Station director Tomasz Kowalczewski accused the programme s host Marek Niedzwiecki of having rigged the chart in favour of Kazik s song Bartosz Gil who also works on the chart show alleged that Kaczynski s claim was false and accused him of specifically targeting the song The following Sunday Niedzwiecki announced his immediate resignation from the station and also threatened legal action against the broadcaster for false claims of fraud On 16 May Polskie Radio music head Piotr Metz revealed that after the chart show aired Kowalczewski had ordered him via text message to remove Twoj bol jest lepszy niz moj from the station s music library Metz resigned from the station The station also faced threats of boycotts from members of the Polish music industry Deputy Prime Minister Jadwiga Emilewicz argued that artistic freedom should never be fettered in any way even when the artist has a different opinion 128 129 South Africa edit The South African Broadcasting Corporation SABC developed a record libraries where all record companies were forced to submit their records to have their lyrics reviewed 130 Records that had banned lyrics including those that influenced public opinion were destroyed in 1980 the SABC banned Pink Floyd s Another Brick in the Wall as it contained the lyrics we don t want your education which were seen as influencing public opinion The SABC also banned Cry Freedom written by George Fenton and Jonas Gwanwa due to its association with Nelson Mandela and Roger Lucey s Lungile Tabalaza and You Only Need Say Nothing 131 In 1985 a group known as Artists United Against Apartheid composed of various artists in the west formed to protest the apartheid in South Africa 13 The group produced the album Sun City expressing their support for the boycotting of Sun City luxury resort where artists performed frequently In the song I Ain t Gonna Play Sun City 1985 featuring artists such as Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen the lyrics encouraged other artists not to perform at Sun City during the apartheid calling for justice The artists involved in the Sun City album partook in self censorship boycotting Sun City throughout the apartheid South Korea edit See also Censorship in South Korea Due to tense relations between Japan and South Korea following the end of Japanese rule the Korean government imposed various restrictions ostensibly meant to target Japan on the importation of cultural works from other countries 132 In September 1999 South Korea lifted its ban on live performances of Japanese music but only in venues with a capacity smaller than 2000 In June 2000 it became legal to perform Japanese music in larger venues and to sell music recordings originating from Japan However until January 2004 it remained illegal to sell recordings containing Japanese language lyrics 133 134 135 It remains illegal to broadcast Japanese music over terrestrial radio and television in South Korea 136 To appeal to the country s conservatism television broadcasters have sometimes pulled music videos from airplay for containing content they deem to be inappropriate such as violent or sexually suggestive content While Korea s three largest television networks KBS MBC and SBS have all banned videos at some point the public broadcaster KBS is known for having stricter standards and practices and additionally bans songs that encourage inappropriate behaviour especially among youth or contain references to brand names or Japanese words This results in some songs such as Psy s Gentleman which was banned by KBS for a scene in which the singer kicks over a traffic cone being banned only by KBS but still receiving airplay by other networks 137 138 139 140 141 142 In 2010 the Supreme Court of South Korea ruled that it was illegal under the National Security Act to possess music that praises North Korea even if instrumental as it constitutes an enemy benefiting expression 143 Ukraine edit In June 2022 after the Russian invasion of Ukraine which was started on February 24 2022 the Parliament of Ukraine voted to ban the distribution of Russian books and the playing or performance of Russian music by post Soviet era artists who support Russian aggression against Ukraine 144 145 146 This ban does not apply to artists included in the list of musical performers who condemn the war against Ukraine 147 United Kingdom edit nbsp The Sex Pistols God Save the Queen was banned by radio stations and allegedly suppressed from being the number one song in the UK due to its criticism of the British government and monarchy 148 149 150 See also Censorship in the United Kingdom The telecommunications regulator Ofcom has the power to reprimand broadcasters for playing songs and music videos that breach its guidelines on harmful or offensive content pre watershed 151 152 The British Phonographic Industry BPI adopted the Recording Industry Association of America RIAA Parental Advisory label program in July 2011 the BPI published guidance for use of the logo on digital streaming platforms 153 The BBC was historically known for censoring various songs from being played on its radio and television stations from the 1930s through the 1960s the BBC had banned songs such as Hold My Hand for its religious references pop arrangements of classical tunes though barring Sabre Dance because it was not a well loved classic whose perversion we would be encouraging and during World War II songs that were slushy in sentiment such as I ll Be Home for Christmas due to concerns that it would affect the morale of soldiers Mack the Knife was also banned from airplay outside of The Threepenny Opera as the BBC felt it would be offensive outside of the context of the play 154 The Kinks Lola was briefly banned under BBC rules prohibiting product placement as its lyrics contain references to the brand name Coca Cola In the midst of an American tour lead singer Ray Davies flew back to London to re record the offending lyric as cherry cola 155 156 The Sex Pistols 1977 single God Save the Queen was controversial upon its release as it was critical of the British government and monarchy among other things referring to the United Kingdom as a fascist regime and was released during the year of Queen Elizabeth II s silver jubilee 157 God Save the Queen was banned by the BBC and all independent local radio stations but still peaked at 2 on the UK Singles Chart during the week of the official Jubilee celebration It was alleged that the chart s rules were changed for that week only to exclude sales from record shops that sold their own records in this case Virgin in a deliberate effort to prevent the controversial song from reaching the number one spot and causing wider offence 150 149 148 The Frankie Goes to Hollywood song Relax generated controversy due to its suggestive lyrics the chorus contained double entendres such as when you want to suck to it and when you want to come which were interpreted as being oblique references to oral sex and ejaculation respectively 158 On 11 January 1984 Radio 1 morning DJ Mike Read stopped the song on air during a chart rundown to point out its obscene lyrics and announced that he would no longer play the song during his show The BBC subsequently restricted the song to evening airplay When the band made statements in a Daily Express interview confirming the possibility of sexual connotations in the lyrics the BBC banned Relax entirely The ban only increased interest in the single causing it to become the number one song in Britain only two weeks later 159 4 158 In December 2007 BBC Radio 1 began to play a version of The Pogues popular Christmas song Fairytale of New York that censored the words faggot and slut from one of its verses The BBC cited concerns over the homophobic slurs as reasoning despite the song having historically been played without censorship The word arse was also censored on MTV The BBC reversed the decision after it was criticized by listeners the band itself and the mother of the song s featured vocalist Kirsty MacColl Radio 1 controller Andy Parfitt argued that While we would never condone prejudice of any kind we know our audiences are smart enough to distinguish between maliciousness and creative freedom In the context of this song I do not feel that there is any negative intent behind the use of the words hence the reversal of the decision 160 161 Thirteen years later in November 2020 it was announced Radio 1 would revert to playing the censored version again although other stations such as Radio 2 played the original 162 As the song s subject matter was deemed too inappropriate for airplay pre watershed BBC Radio 1 played an edited version of Rihanna s song S amp M during the daytime hours and referred to the song using the alternate title Come On As Rihanna objected to the censorship of the song s title the BBC later compromised by referring to the song as S amp M Come On 163 164 For the same reasons Ofcom deemed the song s music video to be unfit for broadcast pre watershed 152 After the 2013 death of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher Ding Dong The Witch Is Dead from the film The Wizard of Oz reached No 2 on the UK Singles Chart as the result of a social media campaign celebrating the death of the controversial PM BBC Radio 1 did not play the full song during The Official Chart programme and instead played a short snippet accompanied by a Newsbeat report discussing the campaign The action led to complaints that the BBC were deliberately censoring the song due to its negativity in this context noting that Notsensibles I m in Love with Margaret Thatcher which also charted as part of an effort to counter the Witch campaign 165 was played in full earlier in the show The BBC Trust s Editorial Standards Committee upheld its decision not to play the song due to its context as a celebration of Thatcher s death 166 167 Liar Liar GE2017 a song released during the run up to the 2017 general election that is critical of prime minister Theresa May was not played by British radio stations due to broadcasting regulations in force during electoral campaigns which forbid political advertising and require all broadcasters to practice impartial coverage 168 Despite the suppression the song still managed to reach 4 on the UK Singles Chart 169 United States edit nbsp The Parental Advisory label was voluntarily adopted by the U S music industry to designate recordings that may contain objectionable content See also Censorship in the United States While music can be classified as a protected form of expression under the First Amendment 170 there have still been instances of voluntary censorship within the music industry particularly in regards to protecting children from being exposed to age inappropriate subject matter corporate objections to an artist s work and by radio and television stations to remain in compliance with the regulations of the Federal Communications Commission FCC The 1978 Supreme Court case FCC v Pacifica Foundation established that the FCC had the power to regulate the broadcast of content considered indecent on terrestrial radio and television 171 172 173 In the 1970s the Native American band XIT was targeted due to its radical support of the 1969 to 1971 Occupation of Alcatraz 174 and affiliation with the civil rights group American Indian Movement 175 as well as its debut concept album Plight of the Redman which denounced the historical treatment of Native Americans by the government The FBI threatened to audit the band s label Motown if they did not cease promotion of the album 176 In 1985 the Parents Music Resource Center PMRC founded by Tipper Gore published the Filthy Fifteen a list of fifteen songs it deemed to be the most objectionable due to their references to drugs and alcohol sexual acts violence or occult activities 177 178 The group pushed for the adoption of a ratings system and for lyrics to be printed on the back covers of albums so they could be previewed by parents 177 178 The Recording Industry Association of America RIAA opposed these proposals during a Senate hearing on the matter in September musicians such as John Denver and Frank Zappa argued that such guidelines would inhibit free expression Zappa in particular argued that the PMRC s proposal for a method to assist baffled parents in the determination of the suitability of records listened to by very young children would reduce American music to the intellectual level of a Saturday morning cartoon 177 Following the hearings the RIAA introduced a standard Parental Advisory label which took its current form reading Parental Advisory Explicit Content in 1994 following subsequent hearings which is designed to be applied to the cover art of songs and albums which contain strong language or depictions of violence sex or substance abuse to such an extent as to merit parental notification The Parental Advisory label is a voluntary scheme some retailers particularly Walmart made it a corporate policy to not stock any music release that carries the label 179 177 Gangsta rap generated controversies due to its often provocative subject matter Fuck tha Police a song from N W A s debut album Straight Outta Compton proved to be especially controversial the song criticized police brutality and racial profiling and contained lyrics condoning violence against police officers 6 180 Civil rights activist C Delores Tucker was also notable for her opposition to gangsta rap She was known for distributing flyers outside record stores as well as buying stock in media companies so she could protest the songs at shareholders meetings Tucker was notably dissed in other songs over her criticism of the genre including Tupac s How Do U Want It Tucker sued Tupac s estate for emotional distress and slander over the song the suit was later dismissed 181 182 6 183 In 1990 Floridan political activist Jack Thompson targeted the Miami based 2 Live Crew and their album As Nasty as They Wanna Be which featured songs such as Me So Horny claiming that it was obscene 184 In March 1990 the group filed a lawsuit in a U S district court to overturn a Broward County ruling that declared the album obscene but it was upheld by Judge Jose Alejandro Gonzalez Jr 184 185 186 187 In 1992 the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the Gonzalez ruling as the case presented insufficient evidence that the album passed the Miller test established by the Supreme Court to determine whether a work is obscene which includes a lack of artistic merit 188 The television channel MTV was also known for censoring objectionable content from music videos and restricting some particularly controversial videos to late night airplay such as The Prodigy s Smack My Bitch Up due to its violent imagery and misogynistic lyrics and Sir Mix a Lot s Baby Got Back for its suggestive subject matter 189 190 191 192 Several Madonna videos have also been banned by the channel including the sexually explicit Justify My Love and Erotica Due to its violent content MTV and sister channel VH1 only played What It Feels Like for a Girl once in late night hours for its world premiere and refused to add it to their regular rotation Madonna s label subsequently sought other outlets for the video the women s cable network Oxygen aired it during its music program Daily Remix AOL streamed it online and it was released on DVD 193 194 195 196 In the aftermath of the MTV produced Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show which was televised by its corporate sister CBS where Janet Jackson s breast was exposed by Justin Timberlake at the conclusion of the show in an apparent wardrobe malfunction 197 the FCC launched a major crackdown against indecent material broadcast on terrestrial radio and television stations Some rock radio stations removed or censored certain songs so they would not run afoul of the stricter enforcement 198 while MTV moved several videos with sexually suggestive imagery to late night hours 199 In addition Jackson was blacklisted by CBS and MTV s parent company Viacom resulting in her music being pulled from its television and radio outlets and Jackson being removed from the CBS televised 46th Grammy Awards where she had been scheduled to introduce a tribute to Luther Vandross CBS also aired the ceremony under a five minute delay in order to ensure that no objectionable content was seen during the telecast 200 The blacklisting caused Janet Jackson s subsequent album Damita Jo to underperform due to reduced promotion and single airplay 197 Vietnam edit During the era of the Vietnam War popular music of South Vietnam which was mainly associated with the Bolero genre became colloquially known as yellow music in opposition to red music endorsed by the Communist government of North Vietnam After the Fall of Saigon in 1975 the music was banned altogether Those caught listening to yellow music after North and South Vietnam were reunified would be punished and their music would be confiscated and destroyed due to the belief that it contained ideas that were not good not healthy that required criticism Many South Vietnamese artists migrated to the United States and continued to sing in exile In 1986 the ban was lightened and love songs could be written again but by then the music industry had ceased to exist 201 The government of the unified Communist Vietnam also prohibited the sale of overseas Vietnamese music including variety shows like Asia and Paris by Night In recent years however bolero had grown popular again as more overseas singers performed in Vietnam Additionally singing competition television series like Bolero Idol have grown popular with singers performing songs including those formerly banned 201 Zimbabwe edit nbsp Music group Freshlyground In Zimbabwe 75 of the content that took place on television and radio airways were legislated due to the government 202 The governments ownership of music impacted the control of broadcast and more 202 In 2010 a South African music group by the name of Freshlyground generated a video mocking President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe After the release of the music video titled Chicken for Change the music group was banned from Zimbabwe for the following eight years 202 The experience that the band underwent connects to the concept of cross border censorship 202 This concept in turn is what prevented Freshlyground from performing in Zimbabwe for nearly a decade In 2018 due to a change in presidency the band was no longer prohibited from Zimbabwe and they finally returned to the country to perform References edit a b Breihan Tom December 18 2007 M I A and the Double Standard of MTV Censorship The Village Voice Archived from the original on February 19 2008 Retrieved October 25 2008 a b c d e The Art Of The Clean Version All Things Considered NPR Retrieved December 16 2017 QuickHitz offers radio hit parade edited for short attention spans Canadian Press Retrieved August 20 2014 a b c d Banned on the run BBC News January 14 2004 Retrieved June 30 2017 Ewing Tom How pop is provoking the censors again The Guardian Retrieved July 23 2011 a b c A Decade in Rap Censorship 1990 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2006 Popular Music Censorship in Africa Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0 7546 5291 5 Cee Lo Green swaps Fox News for F k You on Colbert Entertainment Weekly November 10 2010 Retrieved August 26 2017 Cee Lo s Viral Hit Blunt and Sweet All Things Considered NPR August 26 2010 Retrieved August 27 2010 Brown Damon August 30 2010 Cee Lo s YouTube hit you won t hear on radio CNN Retrieved August 30 2010 Black Eyed Peas To Make Their Own Walk This Way With The Darkness MTV May 14 2004 Retrieved December 11 2012 10 Hits You Didn t Know Were Jingles Billboard February 2 2013 Retrieved January 25 2016 Kanye uses Power to change lyrics on SNL New York Daily News Retrieved June 30 2017 Guy Adams January 21 2009 Britney forced to rerecord sexually offensive song The New Zealand Herald APN News amp Media Retrieved December 5 2009 a b Gil Kaufman February 12 2009 Britney Spears If U Seek Amy Poses Censorship Problems For Radio MTV com MTV Networks Retrieved December 16 2009 Ask Billboard You Can t Say That On Radio Billboard February 4 2011 Retrieved April 1 2019 AC Radio Disney Are All About That Edited Bass Billboard Retrieved December 16 2017 Gillian Reagen December 17 2007 Tube Surfing M I A s Paper Planes The New York Observer Retrieved August 29 2008 a b Casimir Paul Chamberlin and Jon September 2 2015 Express yourself The day Triple J played the same N W A song 82 times in a row The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved March 22 2018 Strauss Neil November 19 2001 The Pop Life After the Horror Radio Stations Pull Some Songs The New York Times Retrieved August 4 2008 Truitt Eliza September 17 2001 It s the End of the World as Clear Channel Knows It Slate Archived from the original on October 15 2007 Retrieved September 17 2017 Bertin Michael November 30 2001 Imagine The music business in a post 911 world The Austin Chronicle Retrieved April 17 2011 Singles minded Billboard March 2003 p 55 Madonna pulls controversial American Life video EW com April 1 2003 Retrieved September 28 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Diplomat The Diplomat Retrieved October 30 2017 a b c d Maedza Pedzisai August 6 2019 Third Time Lucky Freshlyground and Cross border Censorship in Zimbabwe Popular Music and Society 43 5 550 568 doi 10 1080 03007766 2019 1651561 ISSN 0300 7766 S2CID 201490624 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Music censorship amp oldid 1206810249, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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