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Parents Music Resource Center

The Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC) was an American committee formed in 1985[1] with the stated goal of increasing parental control over the access of children to music deemed to have violent, drug-related, or sexual themes via labeling albums with Parental Advisory stickers. The committee was founded by four women known as the "Washington Wives"—a reference to their husbands' connections with government in the Washington, D.C. area. The women who founded the PMRC are Tipper Gore, wife of Senator and later Vice President Al Gore; Susan Baker, wife of Treasury Secretary James Baker; Pam Howar, wife of Washington realtor Raymond Howar; and Sally Nevius, wife of former Washington City Council Chairman John Nevius. The PMRC eventually grew to include 22 participants before shutting down in the mid-to-late 1990s.

Tipper Gore, co-founder of the Parents Music Resource Center in 1985

Early history Edit

The Parents Music Resource Center was founded in 1985.[2] The group's formation was cemented with the financial help of Mike Love of the Beach Boys, and Joseph Coors, the owner of Coors beers. Both had actively supported Reagan's candidacy, and Coors offered offices to the PMRC.[3]

Actions Edit

As a method of combating this alleged problem, the PMRC suggested a voluntary move by the RIAA and the music industry to develop music labeling in the form of a rating system similar to the film rating system developed by the Motion Picture Association of America.[4] Additional suggestions from the PMRC that appeared in an article in The Washington Post included: printing warnings and lyrics on album covers, forcing record stores to put albums with explicit covers under the counters, pressuring television stations not to broadcast explicit songs or videos, "reassess[ing]" the contracts of musicians who performed violently or sexually in concert, and creating a panel to set industry standards.[5]

Filthy Fifteen Edit

One of the actions taken by the PMRC was compiling a list of fifteen songs in popular music, at the time, that they found the most objectionable. This list is known as the "Filthy Fifteen" and consists of the following songs along with the lyrical content category for which each song was considered objectionable:[6]

# Artist Song title Lyrical content
1 Prince "Darling Nikki" Sex/masturbation
2 Sheena Easton "Sugar Walls" Sex
3 Judas Priest "Eat Me Alive" Sex/violence
4 Vanity "Strap On 'Robbie Baby'" Sex
5 Mötley Crüe "Bastard" Violence/language
6 AC/DC "Let Me Put My Love Into You" Sex
7 Twisted Sister "We're Not Gonna Take It" Violence
8 Madonna "Dress You Up" Sex
9 W.A.S.P. "Animal (Fuck Like a Beast)" Sex/language/violence
10 Def Leppard "High 'n' Dry (Saturday Night)" Drug and alcohol use
11 Mercyful Fate "Into the Coven" Occult
12 Black Sabbath "Trashed" Drug and alcohol use
13 Mary Jane Girls "In My House" Sex
14 Venom "Possessed" Occult
15 Cyndi Lauper "She Bop" Sex/masturbation

Senate hearing Edit

In August 1985, 19 record companies agreed to put "Parental Guidance: Explicit Lyrics" labels on albums to warn consumers of explicit lyrical content. Before the labels could be put into place, the Senate agreed to hold a hearing on so-called "porn rock".[7] The hearing was held on September 19, 1985, when representatives from the PMRC, three musicians—Dee Snider, Frank Zappa, John Denver—and Senators Paula Hawkins, Al Gore, and others testified before the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee on "the subject of the content of certain sound recordings and suggestions that recording packages be labeled to provide a warning to prospective purchasers of sexually explicit or other potentially offensive content."[8]

Supporting witnesses Edit

Paula Hawkins presented three record covers (Pyromania by Def Leppard, W.O.W. by Wendy O. Williams, and W.A.S.P. by W.A.S.P.) and the music videos for "Hot for Teacher" by Van Halen, and "We're Not Gonna Take It" by Twisted Sister, commenting: "Much has changed since Elvis' seemingly innocent times. Subtleties, suggestions, and innuendo have given way to overt expressions and descriptions of often violent sexual acts, drug taking, and flirtations with the occult. The record album covers to me are self-explanatory."

Susan Baker testified that "There certainly are many causes for these ills in our society, but it is our contention that the pervasive messages aimed at children which promote and glorify suicide, rape, sadomasochism, and so on, have to be numbered among the contributing factors." Tipper Gore asked record companies to voluntarily "plac[e] a warning label on music products inappropriate for younger children due to explicit sexual or violent lyrics."

National PTA Vice President for Legislative Activity Millie Waterman related the PTA's role in the debate, and proposed printing the symbol "R" on the cover of recordings containing "explicit sexual language, violence, profanity, the occult and glorification of drugs and alcohol", and providing lyrics for "R"-labeled albums.

In addition, Dr. Joe Stuessy, a music professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio, spoke regarding the power of music to influence behavior. He argued that heavy metal was different from earlier forms of music such as jazz and rock and roll because it was "church music" and "had as one of its central elements the element of hatred." Dr. Paul King, a child and adolescent psychiatrist, testified on the deification of heavy metal musicians, and to the presentation of heavy metal as a religion. He also stated that "many" adolescents read deeply into song lyrics.

Opposing witnesses Edit

During his statement, musician and producer Frank Zappa asserted that "the PMRC proposal is an ill-conceived piece of nonsense which fails to deliver any real benefits to children, infringes the civil liberties of people who are not children, and promises to keep the courts busy for years dealing with the interpretational and enforcemental problems inherent in the proposal's design."[9] He went on to state his suspicion that the hearings were a front for H.R. 2911, a proposed blank tape tax: "The major record labels need to have H.R. 2911 whiz through a few committees before anybody smells a rat. One of them is chaired by Senator Thurmond. Is it a coincidence that Mrs. Thurmond is affiliated with the PMRC?" Zappa had earlier stated about the Senate's agreement to hold a hearing on the matter that "A couple of blowjobs here and there and Bingo!—you get a hearing."[10]

Folk rock musician John Denver referred to the proposed labels as censorship and stated he was "strongly opposed to censorship of any kind in our society or anywhere else in the world", and that in his experience censors often misinterpret music, as was the case with his song "Rocky Mountain High". He further compared the PMRC proposals to Nazi book burnings,[11] and expressed his belief that censorship is ultimately counterproductive: "That which is denied becomes that which is most desired, and that which is hidden becomes that which is most interesting. Consequently, a great deal of time and energy is spent trying to get at what is being kept from you." When Denver came up to give his speech, many expected him to side with the PMRC.[12][11]

Dee Snider, frontman and lead singer of the heavy metal band Twisted Sister, testified that he "[did] not support ... [RIAA president] Gortikov's unnecessary and unfortunate decision to agree to a so-called generic label on some selected records".[13] Like John Denver, Snider felt that his music had been misinterpreted. He defended the Twisted Sister songs "Under the Blade", which had been interpreted by the PMRC as referring to sadomasochism, bondage, and rape, and "We're Not Gonna Take It", which the PMRC accused of promoting violence. Snider told the panel that "Under the Blade" was inspired by a band member's surgery and was about the fear he imagined one would experience undergoing surgery, announcing that "the only sadomasochism, bondage, and rape in this song is in the mind of Ms. Gore." He further stated "Ms. Gore was looking for sadomasochism and bondage, and she found it. Someone looking for surgical references would have found it as well." Snider concluded that "The full responsibility for defending my children falls on the shoulders of my wife and I, because there is no one else capable of making these judgments for us."

Notable snippets of audio from the hearing found their way into Zappa's audiocollage "Porn Wars", released on the Frank Zappa Meets the Mothers of Prevention album. Senators Gore, Hollings, Gorton, Hawkins, and others appeared. The album cover featured a parody of the RIAA warning label. The LP included a note to listeners to send to Zappa's Barking Pumpkin Records for a free Z-PAC, a printed information package that included transcripts of the committee hearing, and a letter from Zappa encouraging young people to register to vote. Zappa's full testimonial was released on a posthumous 2010 compilation called Congress Shall Make No Law...

Parental Advisory sticker Edit

On November 1, 1985, before the hearing ended, the RIAA agreed to put "Parental Advisory" labels on selected releases at their own discretion. The labels were generic, unlike the original idea of a descriptive label categorizing the explicit lyrics. Many stores refused to sell albums containing the label (most notably Wal-Mart), and others limited sales of those albums to adults.

It is uncertain whether the "Tipper sticker" is effective in preventing children from being exposed to explicit content.[14] Some, citing the "forbidden-fruit effect", suggest that the sticker in fact increases record sales. Philip Bailey of Earth, Wind & Fire said that "for the most part [the sticker] might even sell more records in some areas - all you've got to do is tell somebody this is a no-no and then that's what they want to go see."[14] Ice-T's track "Freedom of Speech" contains the lyrics: "Hey, PMRC, you stupid fuckin' assholes/The sticker on the record is what makes 'em sell gold./Can't you see, you alcoholic idiots/The more you try to suppress us, the larger we get." While lyrics from the Furnaceface song "We Love You, Tipper Gore", from their 1991 album Just Buy It, suggest that the label "only whets my appetite ... only makes us want to hear it that much more".

Musician reaction Edit

Many musicians have criticized or parodied the PMRC and Tipper Gore:

  • "In a world with major pollution and guns ablaze," John Lydon marveled, "they have to pick on someone using foul language."[15]
  • Judas Priest's song "Parental Guidance" from 1986 album Turbo was allegedly written as a response to Tipper Gore's attack on the band, and heavy metal in general.
  • In the Megadeth cover version of the song Anarchy in the UK the altered lyrics referencing the PMRC as well as the U.S. government law enforcement, "Is this the PMRC? Is this the DEA or is this the CIA? I thought it was the U.S.A."
  • In 1987, the punk rock band NOFX released an EP titled The P.M.R.C. Can Suck on This.
  • Danzig's 1988 song "Mother" scored a top 50 hit as the most famous song about[16] the PMRC labeling and its inherent problems (Mother/Tell your children not to walk my way/Tell your children not to hear my words/What they mean, what they say, mother).
  • Some prints of Metallica's 1986 album Master of Puppets contained a parody warning, shaped like a stop sign, that read "THE ONLY TRACK YOU PROBABLY WON'T WANT TO PLAY IS "DAMAGE, INC." DUE TO MULTIPLE USE OF THE INFAMOUS "F" WORD. OTHERWISE, THERE AREN'T ANY "SHITS," "FUCKS," "PISSES," "CUNTS," "MOTHERFUCKERS" OR "COCKSUCKERS" ANYWHERE ON THIS RECORD." This also references George Carlin's "seven dirty words" routine by mentioning six of them.[17][18]
  • Flotsam and Jetsam's song "Hard on You" (from their 1988 album No Place for Disgrace) is a direct reference to the PMRC, with several lines such as "One that's young sees the circled 'R', does he buy it?", "Can't you see, you're ripping away our independence" and "If your committee is so damn right, why did we write this song?"
  • Todd Rundgren's 1991 non-album song "Jesse" featured a verse directed toward Tipper Gore, including the lyrics: "I wanna fuck you, Tipper, 'cause you showed me that Things are still the same, Everybody's parents turn out lame,I wanna say "fuck you," Tipper Gore" It was released only as a promotional cassette single, though Rundgren played it live for several years.
  • The Megadeth song "Hook In Mouth" from their 1988 album So Far, So Good... So What! is aimed at the PMRC, which is explicitly mentioned in the chorus.[19]
  • Alice Donut's 1988 debut album Donut Comes Alive ends with the song "Tipper Gore," which pretends to lionize Gore for her crusade against obscene lyrics in music, but in reality is loaded with double entendres.[citation needed]
  • The Aerosmith song "F.I.N.E." from their 1989 album Pump mentions Tipper Gore in the line "Even Tipper thinks I'm alright", the song being explicitly about sex.[20] When accepting a Grammy Award for that album's single Janie's Got a Gun, Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler sarcastically thanked both Tipper Gore and Senator Jesse Helms (who was not a member of the PMRC but publicly supported the organization) for helping ensure "that if an album has a few dirty words, it'll sell another million copies."
  • Ice-T's 1989 album The Iceberg/Freedom of Speech... Just Watch What You Say! contains many criticisms of the PMRC. One song in particular, "Freedom of Speech", is an extended attack on Tipper Gore:

Yo, Tip, what's the matter? You ain't gettin' no dick?
You're bitchin' about rock 'n' roll—that's censorship, dumb bitch
The Constitution says we all got a right to speak
Say what we want, Tip—your argument is weak

In his book The Ice Opinion, Ice-T wrote "Tipper Gore is the only woman I ever directly called a bitch on any of my records, and I meant that in the most negative sense of the word."[21] On "You Shoulda Killed Me Last Year", his spoken-word outro to his album O.G. Original Gangster, he curses the CIA, the LAPD, FBI, George H. W. Bush, and Tipper Gore.
  • One of the bonus tracks on Warrant's 1990 album Cherry Pie, titled "Ode to Tipper Gore", is a montage of short audio clips from various live performances by the band, featuring ample use of expletives and obscene language.
  • In 1990 Kid Rock released his debut album Grits Sandwiches for Breakfast with one song titled "Pimp of the Nation" where he states that "Tipper Gore is my highest paid whore" which most likely is a diss regarding the PMRC.[22]
  • The liner notes of Sonic Youth's 1990 album Goo include a cartoon with the caption "SMASH THE PMRC."[23]
  • The cover art for the 1990 PDQ Bach album Oedipus Tex and Other Choral Calamities features a "Pathetic Advisory: Inane Lyrics" warning label.
  • Cinderella referenced the PMRC in their song "Shelter Me" (from their Heartbreak Station album) with the lines "Tipper led the war against the record industry, she said she saw the devil on her MTV".
  • The 1990 Dead Milkmen song "Do the Brown Nose" includes the lyrics You, yes you, here's a dime, run out and call the PMRC.
  • In the 1992 video for "Hush", Tool perform naked, except for placards over their genitals, designed to resemble the Explicit Lyric warning stickers (but replacing "lyrics" with "parts").
  • On July 18, 1993, Rage Against the Machine protested against the PMRC at Lollapalooza III by standing naked onstage with duct tape covering their mouths and the letters PMRC on their chests. The band used up their 14-minute performance time without playing any songs. The only sound emitted was audio feedback from Tom Morello and Tim Commerford's guitars.[24] The band later played a free show for disappointed fans.[24]
  • W.A.S.P live album Live... in the Raw includes the song "Harder, Faster", which Blackie Lawless dedicates during the opening of the song to the PMRC.
  • KMFDM's irony-laden song "Sucks", from their 1993 album Angst, contains the lyrics:[25]

Our records have stickers with a warning from Tipper
'Cause they're no good for kids; if we'd get her, we'd strip her

  • New York-based thrash band Anthrax wrote and composed a song called "Startin' Up a Posse" for their 1991 release Attack of the Killer B's. This song ridicules the members of the PMRC.
  • Punk rock band Ramones recorded for their 1992 album Mondo Bizarro the song "Censorshit" about how rock and rap albums were being censored by the PMRC. It mentions Frank Zappa and Ozzy Osbourne, and is addressed to Tipper Gore.
  • The third verse of Sir Mix-A-Lot's 1994 single "Put 'Em on the Glass" begins "How many times will you play this/Before you ban this?/I heard Mrs. Gore can't stand this".
  • The 1997 Canadian punk band Reset's album No Worries features a track titled "Go Away", which is entirely about their disapproval of the PMRC and Tipper Gore, with one line directly naming Gore.

Tipper, won't you understand the message that I want to say
It's kind of rude but here it goes: it's "fuck you!"
I don't like what you do, and I don't like you.

  • On the 2001 Dead Kennedys live album Mutiny on the Bay (recorded in a 1986 concert), during their song "M.T.V. - Get off the Air", lead singer Jello Biafra tells the audience to "buy a homemade [record] instead, before the PMRC closes the stores down that sell 'em." Biafra had earlier been brought to trial on charges of "distributing harmful matter to minors" in an incident involving the 1985 Dead Kennedys's album Frankenchrist, which featured an insert of H. R. Giger's Penis Landscape and a parody sticker on the front cover reading:

WARNING: The inside fold out to this record cover is a work of art by H.R. Giger that some people may find shocking, repulsive or offensive. Life can sometimes be that way.[26]

To burn the {flag} and replace it with a Parental Advisory sticker/
To spit liquor in the faces of this democracy of hypocrisy/
Fuck you, Ms. Cheney; Fuck you, Tipper Gore.[27]

Eminem also included Lynne Cheney, owing to her heavy criticism of his previous album and its explicit lyrical content, The Marshall Mathers LP, at a United States Senate hearing.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Chastagner, Claude (1999). "The Parents' Music Resource Center: From Information to Censorship". Popular Music. 18 (2): 179–192. doi:10.1017/S026114300000903X. JSTOR 853600. S2CID 190680799. from the original on April 16, 2021. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  2. ^ Chastagner, Claude (1999). "The Parents' Music Resource Center: From Information to Censorship". Popular Music. 18 (2): 179–192. doi:10.1017/S026114300000903X. JSTOR 853600. S2CID 190680799. from the original on April 16, 2021. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  3. ^ Chastagner, Claude (1999). "The Parents' Music Resource Center: From Information to Censorship". Popular Music. 18 (2): 179–192. doi:10.1017/S026114300000903X. JSTOR 853600. S2CID 190680799. from the original on April 16, 2021. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  4. ^ Deflem, Mathieu. 2020. “Popular Culture and Social Control: The Moral Panic on Music Labeling.” December 18, 2021, at the Wayback Machine American Journal of Criminal Justice 45(1):2-24 (First online: July 24, 2019).
  5. ^ Harrington, Richard. 1985. "Discord on Record Warning" September 13, 2020, at the Wayback Machine Washington Post
  6. ^ Krochmalny, Elizabeth (January 2017). """We're Not Gonna Take It": An Examination of Congress and Controversial Music" (2017). Senior Honors Theses. 551". Senior Honors Theses and Projects. Eastern Michigan University. from the original on August 9, 2020. Retrieved April 1, 2020.
  7. ^ "RECORD LABELING". www.joesapt.net. from the original on August 24, 2019. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  8. ^ United States Senate (1985): Record Labeling: Hearing before the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation August 24, 2019, at the Wayback Machine. United States Senate, Ninety-ninth Congress, First Session on Contents of Music and the Lyrics of Records (September 19, 1985). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  9. ^ Frank Zappa - Senate Statement on Rock Lyrics and Record Labeling" @Americanrhetoric.com March 2, 2021, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 8, 2021.
  10. ^ Lyons, Steve; Batya Friedman (January–February 1987). . Option. Archived from the original on February 27, 2014. Retrieved July 12, 2014. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  11. ^ a b Grow, Kory (September 18, 2015). "Dee Snider on PMRC Hearing: 'I Was a Public Enemy'". Rolling Stone. from the original on February 23, 2020. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  12. ^ staff (February 13, 2019). "33 Years Ago: John Denver Left Congress Floored With A Stunning Testimony About Music Censorship". Society of Rock. from the original on October 2, 2020. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  13. ^ Snider's testimony is also available at VH1 February 8, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  14. ^ a b "Spotlight on explicit lyrics warning". BBC News. May 27, 2002. from the original on May 24, 2006. Retrieved May 21, 2010.
  15. ^ Neely, Kim (August 9, 1990). "Rockers sound off". Billboard. pp. 27–28.
  16. ^ Carnie, Dave (2000). "Danzig interview". Big Brother. Retrieved January 16, 2010.[permanent dead link]
  17. ^ "25 Things You Might Not Know About Metallica's 'Master of Puppets'". from the original on February 19, 2019. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  18. ^ raul (July 4, 2012). "Metallica "Master Of Puppets" Vulgar Warning Sticker". feelnumb.com. from the original on March 19, 2019. Retrieved March 10, 2019.
  19. ^ . www.MEGADETH.com. Archived from the original on November 2, 2004.
  20. ^ "Aerosmith – F.I.N.E. Lyrics | Genius Lyrics".
  21. ^ Ice-T: The Ice Opinion, p. 98.
  22. ^ "Pimp Of The Nation". from the original on January 26, 2022. Retrieved January 26, 2022.
  23. ^ http://www.sonicyouth.com/mustang/lp/lp08h.jpg July 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine[bare URL image file]
  24. ^ a b Micallef, Ken (March 1996), Rage Against The Machine's Brad Wilk May 3, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Modern Drummer. Retrieved February 17, 2007.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on October 27, 2016. Retrieved November 24, 2016.
  26. ^ Alternative Tentacles – Bands June 3, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  27. ^ "To burn the flag and replace it with a Parental Advisory sticker". from the original on October 10, 2023. Retrieved November 24, 2016.

Further reading Edit

  • Christe, Ian. 2004. Sound of the Beast: The Complete Headbanging History of Heavy Metal (ISBN 0-380-81127-8), specifically Chapter 7: "The PMRC's Antimetal Panic" (summary)
  • Deflem, Mathieu. 2020. "Popular Culture and Social Control: The Moral Panic on Music Labeling." American Journal of Criminal Justice 45(1): 2-24 (First published online July 24, 2019).

External links Edit

  • Sex, Drugs and Gore a short documentary by Retro Report looking back at the PMRC and its effect on culture today
  • History of the PMRC by Claude Chastagner
  • by Censor This
  • Timeline of music censorship
  • Tipper Gore on Porn Rock
  • : "An Overview of the Entertainment Media Industries and the Development of Their Rating and Labeling Systems"
  • A Frank Zappa appearance on "Crossfire" during the PMRC controversy

parents, music, resource, center, pmrc, american, committee, formed, 1985, with, stated, goal, increasing, parental, control, over, access, children, music, deemed, have, violent, drug, related, sexual, themes, labeling, albums, with, parental, advisory, stick. The Parents Music Resource Center PMRC was an American committee formed in 1985 1 with the stated goal of increasing parental control over the access of children to music deemed to have violent drug related or sexual themes via labeling albums with Parental Advisory stickers The committee was founded by four women known as the Washington Wives a reference to their husbands connections with government in the Washington D C area The women who founded the PMRC are Tipper Gore wife of Senator and later Vice President Al Gore Susan Baker wife of Treasury Secretary James Baker Pam Howar wife of Washington realtor Raymond Howar and Sally Nevius wife of former Washington City Council Chairman John Nevius The PMRC eventually grew to include 22 participants before shutting down in the mid to late 1990s Tipper Gore co founder of the Parents Music Resource Center in 1985 Contents 1 Early history 2 Actions 3 Filthy Fifteen 4 Senate hearing 4 1 Supporting witnesses 4 2 Opposing witnesses 5 Parental Advisory sticker 6 Musician reaction 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly history EditThe Parents Music Resource Center was founded in 1985 2 The group s formation was cemented with the financial help of Mike Love of the Beach Boys and Joseph Coors the owner of Coors beers Both had actively supported Reagan s candidacy and Coors offered offices to the PMRC 3 Actions EditAs a method of combating this alleged problem the PMRC suggested a voluntary move by the RIAA and the music industry to develop music labeling in the form of a rating system similar to the film rating system developed by the Motion Picture Association of America 4 Additional suggestions from the PMRC that appeared in an article in The Washington Post included printing warnings and lyrics on album covers forcing record stores to put albums with explicit covers under the counters pressuring television stations not to broadcast explicit songs or videos reassess ing the contracts of musicians who performed violently or sexually in concert and creating a panel to set industry standards 5 Filthy Fifteen EditOne of the actions taken by the PMRC was compiling a list of fifteen songs in popular music at the time that they found the most objectionable This list is known as the Filthy Fifteen and consists of the following songs along with the lyrical content category for which each song was considered objectionable 6 Artist Song title Lyrical content1 Prince Darling Nikki Sex masturbation2 Sheena Easton Sugar Walls Sex3 Judas Priest Eat Me Alive Sex violence4 Vanity Strap On Robbie Baby Sex5 Motley Crue Bastard Violence language6 AC DC Let Me Put My Love Into You Sex7 Twisted Sister We re Not Gonna Take It Violence8 Madonna Dress You Up Sex9 W A S P Animal Fuck Like a Beast Sex language violence10 Def Leppard High n Dry Saturday Night Drug and alcohol use11 Mercyful Fate Into the Coven Occult12 Black Sabbath Trashed Drug and alcohol use13 Mary Jane Girls In My House Sex14 Venom Possessed Occult15 Cyndi Lauper She Bop Sex masturbationSenate hearing EditIn August 1985 19 record companies agreed to put Parental Guidance Explicit Lyrics labels on albums to warn consumers of explicit lyrical content Before the labels could be put into place the Senate agreed to hold a hearing on so called porn rock 7 The hearing was held on September 19 1985 when representatives from the PMRC three musicians Dee Snider Frank Zappa John Denver and Senators Paula Hawkins Al Gore and others testified before the Senate Commerce Science and Transportation Committee on the subject of the content of certain sound recordings and suggestions that recording packages be labeled to provide a warning to prospective purchasers of sexually explicit or other potentially offensive content 8 Supporting witnesses Edit Paula Hawkins presented three record covers Pyromania by Def Leppard W O W by Wendy O Williams and W A S P by W A S P and the music videos for Hot for Teacher by Van Halen and We re Not Gonna Take It by Twisted Sister commenting Much has changed since Elvis seemingly innocent times Subtleties suggestions and innuendo have given way to overt expressions and descriptions of often violent sexual acts drug taking and flirtations with the occult The record album covers to me are self explanatory Susan Baker testified that There certainly are many causes for these ills in our society but it is our contention that the pervasive messages aimed at children which promote and glorify suicide rape sadomasochism and so on have to be numbered among the contributing factors Tipper Gore asked record companies to voluntarily plac e a warning label on music products inappropriate for younger children due to explicit sexual or violent lyrics National PTA Vice President for Legislative Activity Millie Waterman related the PTA s role in the debate and proposed printing the symbol R on the cover of recordings containing explicit sexual language violence profanity the occult and glorification of drugs and alcohol and providing lyrics for R labeled albums In addition Dr Joe Stuessy a music professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio spoke regarding the power of music to influence behavior He argued that heavy metal was different from earlier forms of music such as jazz and rock and roll because it was church music and had as one of its central elements the element of hatred Dr Paul King a child and adolescent psychiatrist testified on the deification of heavy metal musicians and to the presentation of heavy metal as a religion He also stated that many adolescents read deeply into song lyrics Opposing witnesses Edit During his statement musician and producer Frank Zappa asserted that the PMRC proposal is an ill conceived piece of nonsense which fails to deliver any real benefits to children infringes the civil liberties of people who are not children and promises to keep the courts busy for years dealing with the interpretational and enforcemental problems inherent in the proposal s design 9 He went on to state his suspicion that the hearings were a front for H R 2911 a proposed blank tape tax The major record labels need to have H R 2911 whiz through a few committees before anybody smells a rat One of them is chaired by Senator Thurmond Is it a coincidence that Mrs Thurmond is affiliated with the PMRC Zappa had earlier stated about the Senate s agreement to hold a hearing on the matter that A couple of blowjobs here and there and Bingo you get a hearing 10 Folk rock musician John Denver referred to the proposed labels as censorship and stated he was strongly opposed to censorship of any kind in our society or anywhere else in the world and that in his experience censors often misinterpret music as was the case with his song Rocky Mountain High He further compared the PMRC proposals to Nazi book burnings 11 and expressed his belief that censorship is ultimately counterproductive That which is denied becomes that which is most desired and that which is hidden becomes that which is most interesting Consequently a great deal of time and energy is spent trying to get at what is being kept from you When Denver came up to give his speech many expected him to side with the PMRC 12 11 Dee Snider frontman and lead singer of the heavy metal band Twisted Sister testified that he did not support RIAA president Gortikov s unnecessary and unfortunate decision to agree to a so called generic label on some selected records 13 Like John Denver Snider felt that his music had been misinterpreted He defended the Twisted Sister songs Under the Blade which had been interpreted by the PMRC as referring to sadomasochism bondage and rape and We re Not Gonna Take It which the PMRC accused of promoting violence Snider told the panel that Under the Blade was inspired by a band member s surgery and was about the fear he imagined one would experience undergoing surgery announcing that the only sadomasochism bondage and rape in this song is in the mind of Ms Gore He further stated Ms Gore was looking for sadomasochism and bondage and she found it Someone looking for surgical references would have found it as well Snider concluded that The full responsibility for defending my children falls on the shoulders of my wife and I because there is no one else capable of making these judgments for us Notable snippets of audio from the hearing found their way into Zappa s audiocollage Porn Wars released on the Frank Zappa Meets the Mothers of Prevention album Senators Gore Hollings Gorton Hawkins and others appeared The album cover featured a parody of the RIAA warning label The LP included a note to listeners to send to Zappa s Barking Pumpkin Records for a free Z PAC a printed information package that included transcripts of the committee hearing and a letter from Zappa encouraging young people to register to vote Zappa s full testimonial was released on a posthumous 2010 compilation called Congress Shall Make No Law Parental Advisory sticker EditOn November 1 1985 before the hearing ended the RIAA agreed to put Parental Advisory labels on selected releases at their own discretion The labels were generic unlike the original idea of a descriptive label categorizing the explicit lyrics Many stores refused to sell albums containing the label most notably Wal Mart and others limited sales of those albums to adults It is uncertain whether the Tipper sticker is effective in preventing children from being exposed to explicit content 14 Some citing the forbidden fruit effect suggest that the sticker in fact increases record sales Philip Bailey of Earth Wind amp Fire said that for the most part the sticker might even sell more records in some areas all you ve got to do is tell somebody this is a no no and then that s what they want to go see 14 Ice T s track Freedom of Speech contains the lyrics Hey PMRC you stupid fuckin assholes The sticker on the record is what makes em sell gold Can t you see you alcoholic idiots The more you try to suppress us the larger we get While lyrics from the Furnaceface song We Love You Tipper Gore from their 1991 album Just Buy It suggest that the label only whets my appetite only makes us want to hear it that much more Musician reaction EditMany musicians have criticized or parodied the PMRC and Tipper Gore In a world with major pollution and guns ablaze John Lydon marveled they have to pick on someone using foul language 15 Judas Priest s song Parental Guidance from 1986 album Turbo was allegedly written as a response to Tipper Gore s attack on the band and heavy metal in general In the Megadeth cover version of the song Anarchy in the UK the altered lyrics referencing the PMRC as well as the U S government law enforcement Is this the PMRC Is this the DEA or is this the CIA I thought it was the U S A In 1987 the punk rock band NOFX released an EP titled The P M R C Can Suck on This Danzig s 1988 song Mother scored a top 50 hit as the most famous song about 16 the PMRC labeling and its inherent problems Mother Tell your children not to walk my way Tell your children not to hear my words What they mean what they say mother Some prints of Metallica s 1986 album Master of Puppets contained a parody warning shaped like a stop sign that read THE ONLY TRACK YOU PROBABLY WON T WANT TO PLAY IS DAMAGE INC DUE TO MULTIPLE USE OF THE INFAMOUS F WORD OTHERWISE THERE AREN T ANY SHITS FUCKS PISSES CUNTS MOTHERFUCKERS OR COCKSUCKERS ANYWHERE ON THIS RECORD This also references George Carlin s seven dirty words routine by mentioning six of them 17 18 Flotsam and Jetsam s song Hard on You from their 1988 album No Place for Disgrace is a direct reference to the PMRC with several lines such as One that s young sees the circled R does he buy it Can t you see you re ripping away our independence and If your committee is so damn right why did we write this song Todd Rundgren s 1991 non album song Jesse featured a verse directed toward Tipper Gore including the lyrics I wanna fuck you Tipper cause you showed me that Things are still the same Everybody s parents turn out lame I wanna say fuck you Tipper Gore It was released only as a promotional cassette single though Rundgren played it live for several years The Megadeth song Hook In Mouth from their 1988 album So Far So Good So What is aimed at the PMRC which is explicitly mentioned in the chorus 19 Alice Donut s 1988 debut album Donut Comes Alive ends with the song Tipper Gore which pretends to lionize Gore for her crusade against obscene lyrics in music but in reality is loaded with double entendres citation needed The Aerosmith song F I N E from their 1989 album Pump mentions Tipper Gore in the line Even Tipper thinks I m alright the song being explicitly about sex 20 When accepting a Grammy Award for that album s single Janie s Got a Gun Aerosmith frontman Steven Tyler sarcastically thanked both Tipper Gore and Senator Jesse Helms who was not a member of the PMRC but publicly supported the organization for helping ensure that if an album has a few dirty words it ll sell another million copies Ice T s 1989 album The Iceberg Freedom of Speech Just Watch What You Say contains many criticisms of the PMRC One song in particular Freedom of Speech is an extended attack on Tipper Gore Yo Tip what s the matter You ain t gettin no dick You re bitchin about rock n roll that s censorship dumb bitch The Constitution says we all got a right to speak Say what we want Tip your argument is weak In his book The Ice Opinion Ice T wrote Tipper Gore is the only woman I ever directly called a bitch on any of my records and I meant that in the most negative sense of the word 21 On You Shoulda Killed Me Last Year his spoken word outro to his album O G Original Gangster he curses the CIA the LAPD FBI George H W Bush and Tipper Gore One of the bonus tracks on Warrant s 1990 album Cherry Pie titled Ode to Tipper Gore is a montage of short audio clips from various live performances by the band featuring ample use of expletives and obscene language In 1990 Kid Rock released his debut album Grits Sandwiches for Breakfast with one song titled Pimp of the Nation where he states that Tipper Gore is my highest paid whore which most likely is a diss regarding the PMRC 22 The liner notes of Sonic Youth s 1990 album Goo include a cartoon with the caption SMASH THE PMRC 23 The cover art for the 1990 PDQ Bach album Oedipus Tex and Other Choral Calamities features a Pathetic Advisory Inane Lyrics warning label Cinderella referenced the PMRC in their song Shelter Me from their Heartbreak Station album with the lines Tipper led the war against the record industry she said she saw the devil on her MTV The 1990 Dead Milkmen song Do the Brown Nose includes the lyrics You yes you here s a dime run out and call the PMRC In the 1992 video for Hush Tool perform naked except for placards over their genitals designed to resemble the Explicit Lyric warning stickers but replacing lyrics with parts On July 18 1993 Rage Against the Machine protested against the PMRC at Lollapalooza III by standing naked onstage with duct tape covering their mouths and the letters PMRC on their chests The band used up their 14 minute performance time without playing any songs The only sound emitted was audio feedback from Tom Morello and Tim Commerford s guitars 24 The band later played a free show for disappointed fans 24 W A S P live album Live in the Raw includes the song Harder Faster which Blackie Lawless dedicates during the opening of the song to the PMRC KMFDM s irony laden song Sucks from their 1993 album Angst contains the lyrics 25 Our records have stickers with a warning from Tipper Cause they re no good for kids if we d get her we d strip her New York based thrash band Anthrax wrote and composed a song called Startin Up a Posse for their 1991 release Attack of the Killer B s This song ridicules the members of the PMRC Punk rock band Ramones recorded for their 1992 album Mondo Bizarro the song Censorshit about how rock and rap albums were being censored by the PMRC It mentions Frank Zappa and Ozzy Osbourne and is addressed to Tipper Gore The third verse of Sir Mix A Lot s 1994 single Put Em on the Glass begins How many times will you play this Before you ban this I heard Mrs Gore can t stand this The 1997 Canadian punk band Reset s album No Worries features a track titled Go Away which is entirely about their disapproval of the PMRC and Tipper Gore with one line directly naming Gore Tipper won t you understand the message that I want to say It s kind of rude but here it goes it s fuck you I don t like what you do and I don t like you On the 2001 Dead Kennedys live album Mutiny on the Bay recorded in a 1986 concert during their song M T V Get off the Air lead singer Jello Biafra tells the audience to buy a homemade record instead before the PMRC closes the stores down that sell em Biafra had earlier been brought to trial on charges of distributing harmful matter to minors in an incident involving the 1985 Dead Kennedys s album Frankenchrist which featured an insert of H R Giger s Penis Landscape and a parody sticker on the front cover reading WARNING The inside fold out to this record cover is a work of art by H R Giger that some people may find shocking repulsive or offensive Life can sometimes be that way 26 Rapper Eminem directly referenced Tipper Gore and indirectly referenced the PMRC in White America the opening selection of his 2002 album The Eminem Show in it he referred to his mission as beingTo burn the flag and replace it with a Parental Advisory sticker To spit liquor in the faces of this democracy of hypocrisy Fuck you Ms Cheney Fuck you Tipper Gore 27 Eminem also included Lynne Cheney owing to her heavy criticism of his previous album and its explicit lyrical content The Marshall Mathers LP at a United States Senate hearing Suicidal Tendencies referenced Tipper Gore in their song Lovely from the album Lights Camera Revolution Tipper babe don t you remember me Now I m kinder gentler and so happy Harry and the Potters reference Tipper Gore and the PMRC in the title track of their album Voldemort Can t Stop the Rock with the line We won t let the Dark Lord ruin our party just like Tipper Gore tried with the PMRC See also EditWarning Parental Advisory Parents Television Council Terry RakoltaReferences Edit Chastagner Claude 1999 The Parents Music Resource Center From Information to Censorship Popular Music 18 2 179 192 doi 10 1017 S026114300000903X JSTOR 853600 S2CID 190680799 Archived from the original on April 16 2021 Retrieved March 6 2021 Chastagner Claude 1999 The Parents Music Resource Center From Information to Censorship Popular Music 18 2 179 192 doi 10 1017 S026114300000903X JSTOR 853600 S2CID 190680799 Archived from the original on April 16 2021 Retrieved March 6 2021 Chastagner Claude 1999 The Parents Music Resource Center From Information to Censorship Popular Music 18 2 179 192 doi 10 1017 S026114300000903X JSTOR 853600 S2CID 190680799 Archived from the original on April 16 2021 Retrieved March 6 2021 Deflem Mathieu 2020 Popular Culture and Social Control The Moral Panic on Music Labeling Archived December 18 2021 at the Wayback Machine American Journal of Criminal Justice 45 1 2 24 First online July 24 2019 Harrington Richard 1985 Discord on Record Warning Archived September 13 2020 at the Wayback Machine Washington Post Krochmalny Elizabeth January 2017 We re Not Gonna Take It An Examination of Congress and Controversial Music 2017 Senior Honors Theses 551 Senior Honors Theses and Projects Eastern Michigan University Archived from the original on August 9 2020 Retrieved April 1 2020 RECORD LABELING www joesapt net Archived from the original on August 24 2019 Retrieved March 10 2019 United States Senate 1985 Record Labeling Hearing before the Committee on Commerce Science and Transportation Archived August 24 2019 at the Wayback Machine United States Senate Ninety ninth Congress First Session on Contents of Music and the Lyrics of Records September 19 1985 Washington DC U S Government Printing Office Frank Zappa Senate Statement on Rock Lyrics and Record Labeling Americanrhetoric com Archived March 2 2021 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 8 2021 Lyons Steve Batya Friedman January February 1987 Winter in America Option Archived from the original on February 27 2014 Retrieved July 12 2014 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Grow Kory September 18 2015 Dee Snider on PMRC Hearing I Was a Public Enemy Rolling Stone Archived from the original on February 23 2020 Retrieved April 30 2020 staff February 13 2019 33 Years Ago John Denver Left Congress Floored With A Stunning Testimony About Music Censorship Society of Rock Archived from the original on October 2 2020 Retrieved April 30 2020 Snider s testimony is also available at VH1 Archived February 8 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b Spotlight on explicit lyrics warning BBC News May 27 2002 Archived from the original on May 24 2006 Retrieved May 21 2010 Neely Kim August 9 1990 Rockers sound off Billboard pp 27 28 Carnie Dave 2000 Danzig interview Big Brother Retrieved January 16 2010 permanent dead link 25 Things You Might Not Know About Metallica s Master of Puppets Archived from the original on February 19 2019 Retrieved February 18 2019 raul July 4 2012 Metallica Master Of Puppets Vulgar Warning Sticker feelnumb com Archived from the original on March 19 2019 Retrieved March 10 2019 Scorpion Archive www MEGADETH com Archived from the original on November 2 2004 Aerosmith F I N E Lyrics Genius Lyrics Ice T The Ice Opinion p 98 Pimp Of The Nation Archived from the original on January 26 2022 Retrieved January 26 2022 http www sonicyouth com mustang lp lp08h jpg Archived July 10 2007 at the Wayback Machine bare URL image file a b Micallef Ken March 1996 Rage Against The Machine s Brad Wilk Archived May 3 2007 at the Wayback Machine Modern Drummer Retrieved February 17 2007 Lyrics Sucks Archived from the original on October 27 2016 Retrieved November 24 2016 Alternative Tentacles Bands Archived June 3 2011 at the Wayback Machine To burn the flag and replace it with a Parental Advisory sticker Archived from the original on October 10 2023 Retrieved November 24 2016 Further reading EditChriste Ian 2004 Sound of the Beast The Complete Headbanging History of Heavy Metal ISBN 0 380 81127 8 specifically Chapter 7 The PMRC s Antimetal Panic summary Deflem Mathieu 2020 Popular Culture and Social Control The Moral Panic on Music Labeling American Journal of Criminal Justice 45 1 2 24 First published online July 24 2019 External links EditSex Drugs and Gore a short documentary by Retro Report looking back at the PMRC and its effect on culture today History of the PMRC by Claude Chastagner Short history of the PMRC by Censor This Timeline of music censorship Tipper Gore on Porn Rock FTC Report An Overview of the Entertainment Media Industries and the Development of Their Rating and Labeling Systems A Frank Zappa appearance on Crossfire during the PMRC controversy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parents Music Resource Center amp oldid 1179442378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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