• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Olivia Newton-John, John Denver and Glen Campbell are the Devil's music

Well I play some of the great Gospel songs of Mr. Glen Campbell. I see nothing wrong with his music myself. Was raised on him to begin with. Still hear some of his classic Country tunes on the radio. I think I have a Gospel tune from those other two singers and intend to add them in the near future to my mix.

Dan <><​
 
The article also said rock records have Satanic messages when played backwards. This statement was made by a young female DJ who was "saved".
 
I remember reading a very similar origin story for WMTA in Central City, Kentucky. The minister who bought it in the 1990s did so because there were too many songs about drinking and adultery on that station when he was young.

I'm sure these aren't the only ones, given that popular music was felt to be unholy by certain religious groups as long as we've had recorded music.
 
There are some preachers, station owners, and other individuals who think anything that isn't old hymns or Southern Gospel are from the devil.

The article also said rock records have Satanic messages when played backwards. This statement was made by a young female DJ who was "saved".
Backward masking was a big issue in some churches in the 80's and 90's. Most of it was blown out of proportion and didn't really exist to the extreme they claimed, but some groups started putting it in their albums since they were being accused of it. But even with that a lot of it was a joke.

My favorite Christian rock group Petra did a backward message at the beginning of their song Judas' Kiss and here it is :cool::
 
Last edited:
BTW the DVD of this concert, which is made out of Unobtanium, is one of my all time favorite DVD's

It is effn amazing.

Try to buy a copy for under $200 dollars...

 
So was this a CCM station or at least they played it at times? I doubt if a traditional gospel station would play Dylan, even at that time when he was doing Christian music.
Sounds like a station, that is not worth the time to listen to or even talk about! Or as Peter Noone would say, “A Must to Avoid!”.
 
The article also said rock records have Satanic messages when played backwards. This statement was made by a young female DJ who was "saved".
It is amazing how urban legend becomes "gospel" in the minds of people who are not smart or educated enough to actually verify things before repeating them.

There is a Spanish saying, "ignorance is daring". People do and say stupid things because the don't know any better.
 
I have a coworker who makes that premise his entire lifestyle...
 
So was this a CCM station or at least they played it at times? I doubt if a traditional gospel station would play Dylan, even at that time when he was doing Christian music.
The only "Christian" album in Dylan's catalog that got any notoriety was "Slow Train Runnin'" that spawned the single "Gotta Serve Somebody", which reached #24 on the Hot 100 and it was his last Hot 100 appearance. (it even has a now-dated reference to Bill Saluga, who performed as "Raymond J. Johnson Jr." (Wikipedia)
 
Last edited:
I play Mr. Bob Dylan's Saved CD, along with some of the other Christian singers that did covers of his tunes. Matter of fact, I play Mr. Dylan on my SG program, as well, because the CD itself sounds like something a SG musician would put out.

Dan <><​
 
It is amazing how urban legend becomes "gospel" in the minds of people who are not smart or educated enough to actually verify things before repeating them.

There is a Spanish saying, "ignorance is daring". People do and say stupid things because the don't know any better.
This guy named Bob Larson made that his entire radio brand "the evils of rock and roll which all has backward masking". Why do the turntables that run backward always reside at preachers' houses?
 
What crap. First, remember that, in 1983, the year referenced in the OP above, the world was a much smaller place, internet access for the masses didn't exist and it was a lot easier to spoon feed people a bunch of crap like this, make it believable enough, present "evidence" and they'd buy into it. Think of all the TV specials from David Copperfield that aired back then (supposedly making the Statue of Liberty vanish or him flying through the air supposedly unaided by wires), highly publicized debunks that were done by The Amazing Randy, and shows like That's Incredible. Even stuff like pyramid schemes and chain letters were somewhat popular back then. Much of that almost seems novel by today's standards. Unfortunately there are still people who are ignorant and gullible enough to buy into this kinda stuff (as evidenced by certain Facebook memes that somehow go viral, etc.) but hopefully the masses have wised up and there's enough information on the web at one's fingertips that society as a whole is smarter and wiser than they were back then.

Regarding the subject of this thread, I remember in high school we were shown a video by one of our teachers who was a crazy bible thumper, and even as "kids" we knew the guy was out there. The video he showed made arguments about KISS and their makeup and antics and how they must be satanic, they took comments by one particular rock musician where he said some former, dead musician occupied and took over his body and soul when he was performing and tried to use that to frighten us away from his music, they took comments from John Denver who said "Thank you for allowing me to share Est with you through my music" to mean that Est (Erhard Seminars Training - look it up) was some type of cult that we needed to be wary of, and John Denver was poisoning our minds through messages in his music. They then showed us how the cola companies used subliminal messages hidden in movies shown at cinemas to sell product, and how easily we could be manipulated, and yes, they also aired an entire section about backmasking records. First, I doubt any serious musicians and bands would write lyrics and melodies specifically with the idea that if someone played them backwards at just the right speed, they'd speak a satanic message to them. Second, to me it was a very big stretch and a hard sell. Kind of like when someone tries to convince you that their dog has learned to talk and they tell you the phrase that the dog is saying and if you listen to its bark you can kind of maybe hear a little of what the owner has led you to believe is being said. Again even as kids this video we were shown had no effect on us and we all laughed it off, then went home and told our families and they had an even bigger laugh and head shake. Play that same video in schools now, and I'm sure a few parents would show up to speak with the school board.
 
Last edited:
Don't forget the 1989 Christian "documentary" film "Hell's Bells: The Dangers of Rock 'N' Roll":

I can't find the whole thing on YouTube (which is probably for the best), but the Oddity Archive channel covered it:

 
The only "Christian" album in Dylan's catalog that got any notoriety was "Slow Train Runnin'" that spawned the single "Gotta Serve Somebody", which reached #24 on the Hot 100 and it was his last Hot 100 appearance. (it even has a now-dated reference to Bill Saluga, who performed as "Raymond J. Johnson Jr." (Wikipedia)
Nevertheless, quoting the article, "Lowman spins Southern gospel and contemporary gospel records, such as songs made by born-again Christian Bob Dylan."
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom