"Wives & Lovers" and you're absolutely right!And staying on topic, adult standards radio plays "Friends and Lovers" by Jack Jones but feminists would be horrified.
Please stay on topic. Thanks.
Stevens, or Yusuf Islam (sp?) as he is known now, was one of those who supported the Ayatollah Khomeini's (sp?) "death sentence" against Salman Rushdie for writing The Satanic Verses. Don't know if he still supports such a death penalty, or even if one is still in effect.
"Religion of peace" my eye!
The AM/FM combo in the town where I grew up did some of that back in the '80s.Which raises a point that's very pertinent to this discussion. We've talked about specific songs that shouldn't be played any more because they aren't politically correct for one reason or another. What about refusing to play anything from an artist's catalog of work if that artist is no longer "politically correct"? It's not just Cat Stevens. Several artists, producers, or writers have committed terribly anti-social acts. Should Phil Spector's catalog be left off of the radio because he's a convicted murderer? Should Gary Glitter's songs be left off because he's a convicted sex offender?
No, I did not. I was not going to play songs with, even then, questionable lyrics about "indians" in a country that had over 50% indigenous population.
Interestingly, the Spanish language cover of "Please Mr. Custer" was written from the exact opposite point of view.. it was "Please, Mr Apache" ("Señor Apache").
One dj wouldn't play Laura Branigan because she supposedly played South Africa while apartheid was still in effect. (I heard him mention this more than once.))
The AM/FM combo in the town where I grew up did some of that back in the '80s.
One dj wouldn't play Laura Branigan because she supposedly played South Africa while apartheid was still in effect. (I heard him mention this more than once.)
The GM of the station supposedly wouldn't play Beastie Boys, because they supposedly went to an orphanage and made fun of the children there. (My sister (RIP), not me, heard him say that, but I was never able to verify whether or not such a visit ever took place.)
At least two djs at that station (including the one who would not play Branigan) also said that they would not play Cat Stevens because of his support for the death sentence against Salman Rushdie.
The AM station played oldies, and the FM was top 40, so that should give you some idea of who would have been played where, and when. Stevens was years removed from his last hit, so a ban from FM airplay would have had almost no effect. Likewise, the Beasties weren't getting any AM play. The AM was still sort of AC at the time, and had not gone full-fledged "oldies" yet, so there was still the possibility of playing Branigan there, as well. ('80s music now gets played on that AM station (whenever I listen online) so Branigan is probably (back) there now.)
Stevens, or Yusuf Islam (sp?) as he is known now, was one of those who supported the Ayatollah Khomeini's (sp?) "death sentence" against Salman Rushdie for writing The Satanic Verses. Don't know if he still supports such a death penalty, or even if one is still in effect.
Good example why DJs shouldn't make music decisions.
But that wasn't a music decision, it was a political decision.
If there had been a universal "never let the DJ make any music decisions" attitude back in the '50s, the cultural landscape would have, I suspect, developed quite differently.
But that wasn't a music decision, it was a political decision.
A musical decision would have been to decide not to play Laura Branigan because, in the DJ's opinion, all her stuff stunk on ice. Or didn't fit the format. Or both.
If there had been a universal "never let the DJ make any music decisions" attitude back in the '50s, the cultural landscape would have, I suspect, developed quite differently.
I suspect the real difference was that back in the 1950's, radio was still in the transition from programs to programming. When scripted programs and personality programs like Arthur Godfrey dominated, disc jockey programs were treated as discrete shows where the DJ had the same responsibility for picking music as a host like Godfrey had for picking guests. It wasn't until the 60's that radio completely adopted the principle that stations ran programming 24/7 and DJs were just the voices hired to work certain time segments.
In his show, Freed was DJ, producer and PD. So he called the shots on the songs.
I knew it was wives. Why did I say friends?"Wives & Lovers" and you're absolutely right!
I knew it was wives. Why did I say friends?
I like the song mainly because it sounds good.
Freed also brought the sponsor, a local record store. So my understanding was his was more of a brokered arrangement than an actual paid employee.
Of course, everyone with a lick of sense understands that the transition from "programs" to "programming" was a process and not an event. Like every similar process involving many, many participants, it starts with some "early adopters" making the change early in the process, and others following suit later. Pointing out one or two of the earliest stations to jump on the new bandwagon doesn't change the fact that many others didn't follow suit until much, much later.