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Kluv and The Eagles "Life in the fast lane"

I asked Charlie Daniels about that very edit last week when he was here for a concert. Charlie said 2 versions of the song were recorded. This was to maximize airplay. Edgy stations could play theirs and others could play it safe. By the way, this was a business decision that worked. It was Charlie's most successful ever!
 
Maybe KRRV, but for some reason KDSX sticks in my mind.

To this day I can't imagine they played the song. We are talking small market Texas radio in the late 60s.
 
The beauty of small market radio used to be it's unpredictability -- stations in small markets would end up playing a song for no discernible reason, and sometimes the results could be rather interesting.

It's one more thing that I miss as a result of the consolidation and homogenization of radio.
 
dfwupallnight said:
My personal favorite is the editing of "The Devil Went Down To Georgia" from "you son of a bitch" to "you son of a gun"

If you can't call the devil a son of a bitch, who can you?

I remember when it was actually big enough to make the news that a station was playing the "unedited" version.

I'm assuming it was a slow news day.
 
TexasTom said:
The beauty of small market radio used to be it's unpredictability -- stations in small markets would end up playing a song for no discernible reason, and sometimes the results could be rather interesting.

It's one more thing that I miss as a result of the consolidation and homogenization of radio.

I miss those days too. Too many small town stations are running satellite programming with no local personality.

I worked at several small town stations in the eighties where if the staff liked a record, we give it a few spins (sometimes a lot) and didn't care if it was on a big label or if the big city stations were playing it.
 
Lemmiwinks said:
dfwupallnight said:
My personal favorite is the editing of "The Devil Went Down To Georgia" from "you son of a bitch" to "you son of a gun"

If you can't call the devil a son of a bitch, who can you?

I remember when it was actually big enough to make the news that a station was playing the "unedited" version.

I'm assuming it was a slow news day.

Charlie Daniels already had experience with editing lyrics. He had a hit with "Uneasy Rider" back in 1973 where they had to edit or beep out the offending word in the line "Like their heads was on fire and their asses was catchin' " for radio. It was around a 5 minute song and I think promo copies also had a 3 minute radio version that cut the whole section out. I dont have the store 45 so I dont know if it had the edited version.

Also I remember hearing an radio edit of "Kodachrome" where "crap" was replaced by "girls" which was edited in from a later line in the song.
 
billyg said:
Lemmiwinks said:
dfwupallnight said:
My personal favorite is the editing of "The Devil Went Down To Georgia" from "you son of a bitch" to "you son of a gun"

If you can't call the devil a son of a bitch, who can you?

I remember when it was actually big enough to make the news that a station was playing the "unedited" version.

I'm assuming it was a slow news day.

Charlie Daniels already had experience with editing lyrics. He had a hit with "Uneasy Rider" back in 1973 where they had to edit or beep out the offending word in the line "Like their heads was on fire and their asses was catchin' " for radio. It was around a 5 minute song and I think promo copies also had a 3 minute radio version that cut the whole section out. I dont have the store 45 so I dont know if it had the edited version.

Also I remember hearing an radio edit of "Kodachrome" where "crap" was replaced by "girls" which was edited in from a later line in the song.

In the song "Jet Airliner" what is Steve Miller saying, "Funky Shit" or "Funky Kicks"?
 
charles123 said:
In the song "Jet Airliner" what is Steve Miller saying, "Funky Shit" or "Funky Kicks"?

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He recorded both. First version was the original, second was for radio airplay.

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Can't help but think you might have been listening to KDSX/950 am (aka "NewsRadio 95".) It and KRRV at 910 were both playing Top 40 at night. I was news director at KDSX in 1970-71. The station was then owned by B.V. Hammond and Lofton Hendrix, both long-dead. BOTH leaned so far to the "right", they could walk normal in a hurricane. They made Atilla-the-Hun seem like a bloody-nosed liberal. Those edits were just the tip of the iceberg! EVERY song played had to be personally approved by Hammond, who just could NOT understand musical artistic license! Very strange times in radio...much like some of the goofy management we still see today. They were just ahead of their time!
 
FlyOnWall said:
Can't help but think you might have been listening to KDSX/950 am (aka "NewsRadio 95".) It and KRRV at 910 were both playing Top 40 at night. I was news director at KDSX in 1970-71. The station was then owned by B.V. Hammond and Lofton Hendrix, both long-dead. BOTH leaned so far to the "right", they could walk normal in a hurricane. They made Atilla-the-Hun seem like a bloody-nosed liberal. Those edits were just the tip of the iceberg! EVERY song played had to be personally approved by Hammond, who just could NOT understand musical artistic license! Very strange times in radio...much like some of the goofy management we still see today. They were just ahead of their time!


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The original poster said he was in Denton when he heard it. Did KDSX get to Denton at night? I know the 500W daytime signal didn't get to Dallas. I also knew quite a few folks in Dallas who had KRRV/KIKM on 910 as the middle button of the five pre sets on the AM radio in their car. At 1000W, 910 always had a good signal coming south.
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Sgt. Hans G. Schultz said:
billy, were you in Tulsa?

Pretty close. I spent my teenage years in Bartlesville Ok from 1974-86, growing up on Tulsa's KELi, KAKC, KMOD and KKUL-KTFX "Superfox 103" in the seventies.

It might have been KELi that played that edit. They played a edit of Hall & Oates "Rich Girl" where the line "It's a b--tch girl" was replaced with "You're a Rich Girl". Made it sound as repetitive as any KC & The Sunshine Band 45.
 
Sgt. Hans G. Schultz said:
charles123 said:
In the song "Jet Airliner" what is Steve Miller saying, "Funky Shit" or "Funky Kicks"?

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

He recorded both. First version was the original, second was for radio airplay.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

thanks
 
lfede9 said:
I was listening to KLUV the other day when "Life in the Fast Lane" came on. I stopped what I was doing to listen to the song. To my astonishment when it came to the line "we've been up and down this highway haven't seen a goddamn thing",
the word Goddamn was replaced by silence. I love this song and have never heard it censored on ANY radio station before now.
I contacted KLUV and their program director Peter Z informed me that the Eagles released a censored version of the song in the 70's so that the song could be played on the air. since KLUV follows the format of playing the songs the way they were originally broadcast in the 70's that is the version the station plays.
Did the Eagles really release a censored version of "Life in the Fast Lane"?
I am dubious about the authenticity of this statement and wondered if perhaps it was an urban legend.

I am glad KLUV edited the song. The unedited version is offensive to Christians, and Christians comprise a very large percentage of their listeners. When somebody starts up with the gd's, I am offended and politely remind them that they are being insensitive to the Christian faith. Most people do not realize they are being offensive and politely stop. In fact, most profanity is offensive, and the same couple of dozen words or so are over used. The English language has close to a million words, if somebody is unintelligent enough they have to resort to the same two dozen or so to express strong emotion, I feel sorry for them.
 
Sometimes I wonder if artists put bad words into songs just to be edgy sometimes...help sell records. Life In the Fast Lane doesn't need the words in question to get across the point of the song. And a lot of other songs by other artists I think are that way. But if it causes a little controversy, like the old saying goes...any publicity is good publicity, right?
 
billyg said:
Also I remember hearing an radio edit of "Kodachrome" where "crap" was replaced by "girls" which was edited in from a later line in the song.

Wow, that would certainly produce a nonsensical result: "When I think back on all the girls I learned in high school, it's a wonder I can think at all" just doesn't say as much as "When I think back on all the crap I learned in high school, it's a wonder I can think at all".
 
Basketballfan said:
Sometimes I wonder if artists put bad words into songs just to be edgy sometimes...help sell records. Life In the Fast Lane doesn't need the words in question to get across the point of the song. And a lot of other songs by other artists I think are that way. But if it causes a little controversy, like the old saying goes...any publicity is good publicity, right?

It used to be Rappers and some metal and alternative bands were just swearing on the albums, but now you have pop stars like Justin Timberlake swearing to show their audience they're "hard".

Cee Lo Green got a lot of "buzz" on the internet for the YouTube video of "F-- You" before the clean version "Forget You" was released to radio.

And I remember the controversy Zak Brown got on country radio for "Toes" for just singing "@$$ in the Sand", but it got peoples attention and got him his first hit.
 
Basketballfan said:
Sometimes I wonder if artists put bad words into songs just to be edgy sometimes... help sell records...

"Will Smith don't have to cuss in his rap to sell records
Well, I do
So [bleep] you, and [bleep] him, too"

- Eminem
 
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