> > Most stations, especially the ones
> > run by the big commercial stations, play nothing but the
> > "extra clean" mixes of tracks.
A corection to what I said ... Ok, maybe not "nothing but the extra clean mixes" but for the most part as clean as they can get it, and if not clean enough, I have heard them edit tracks even further than the so-called "clean release" the labels send out.
> Ummm....how do you clean up the Violence that is glamorized?
> I've never heard an "extra clean" version that took all the
> violence, and womanizing out. That would be like changing
> Ice T's Cop Killer, to "Cop Liker"...
>
> Just so you understand, it's not about Lyrical Content (or
> swearing)...it's about the content itself.
>
That's exactly what they do. There's been a bunch of tracks that have had more than one "clean version", for whatever reason they made a standard radio mix which mainly takes out the language, then there's the so called "extra clean version" that takes out all references to drugs (as many clean versions do already) or violence or anything they think anyone would be offended by, either by removing the words in the track leaving gaping holes where only the music is heard or by changing the lyrics to something less offensive.
I don't think they ever did that with Cop Killer, but that was nearly 20 years ago when the standards in Rap & Hip-Hop were far different than they are today. Back then you almost didn't have clean versions of records, I think it was Easy-E & NWA that started doing that (of course they were really the first to take foul and suggestive language into overkill) they were followed by the 2-Live Crew with the same LP released as "As dirty as they wanna be" & "As clean as they wanna be".
Most rap didn't bother with this as commercial airplay was lacking in those days and of course with the pressure put on the labels due to the desire to get airplay, controversey caused by the groups just mentioned with politics trying to get warning labels put on music, things changed toward the end of the 80's and into the early 90's and pretty much most of the rap & hip-hop heard on the radio today has more than one edit.
I'm not saying all the tracks are available in an "extra clean" mix, but most of the stuff you're hearing on those two stations is chopped and hacked to bits, especially in this day and age of extra heavy FCC scrutiny. Yes, they do try to slip things in or maybe something slips in by accident (like in a live mix set where the DJ has the wrong side of the record on the turntable and yes I've heard that happen on one of the two stations mentioned), but I'd say morning shows get away with much more than most of the music on those two stations.
> > run by the big commercial stations, play nothing but the
> > "extra clean" mixes of tracks.
A corection to what I said ... Ok, maybe not "nothing but the extra clean mixes" but for the most part as clean as they can get it, and if not clean enough, I have heard them edit tracks even further than the so-called "clean release" the labels send out.
> Ummm....how do you clean up the Violence that is glamorized?
> I've never heard an "extra clean" version that took all the
> violence, and womanizing out. That would be like changing
> Ice T's Cop Killer, to "Cop Liker"...
>
> Just so you understand, it's not about Lyrical Content (or
> swearing)...it's about the content itself.
>
That's exactly what they do. There's been a bunch of tracks that have had more than one "clean version", for whatever reason they made a standard radio mix which mainly takes out the language, then there's the so called "extra clean version" that takes out all references to drugs (as many clean versions do already) or violence or anything they think anyone would be offended by, either by removing the words in the track leaving gaping holes where only the music is heard or by changing the lyrics to something less offensive.
I don't think they ever did that with Cop Killer, but that was nearly 20 years ago when the standards in Rap & Hip-Hop were far different than they are today. Back then you almost didn't have clean versions of records, I think it was Easy-E & NWA that started doing that (of course they were really the first to take foul and suggestive language into overkill) they were followed by the 2-Live Crew with the same LP released as "As dirty as they wanna be" & "As clean as they wanna be".
Most rap didn't bother with this as commercial airplay was lacking in those days and of course with the pressure put on the labels due to the desire to get airplay, controversey caused by the groups just mentioned with politics trying to get warning labels put on music, things changed toward the end of the 80's and into the early 90's and pretty much most of the rap & hip-hop heard on the radio today has more than one edit.
I'm not saying all the tracks are available in an "extra clean" mix, but most of the stuff you're hearing on those two stations is chopped and hacked to bits, especially in this day and age of extra heavy FCC scrutiny. Yes, they do try to slip things in or maybe something slips in by accident (like in a live mix set where the DJ has the wrong side of the record on the turntable and yes I've heard that happen on one of the two stations mentioned), but I'd say morning shows get away with much more than most of the music on those two stations.
