vchimpanzee said:These songs are fine as long as the one word by Hank is bleeped.Jason Roberts said:buttonpusher812 said:I think that there are several songs that should not be played because of lyrics, at least if a station positions it self as being for the whole family.
As with a lot of things, society isn't shocked by much any more and we are much more tolerant of questionable lyrics. Top 40 has already gone through this. Most anything goes and I feel that Country is headed down that same road.
That said, I guess that half of the country format could be called "non-family friendly" due to content and subject matter.
But V...my point is most of those words you say are alright are the ones who, most often, come up in today's country songs...and of the few others that might raise a bit of controversy...they bother few of the 18-49 year old country fans, who really are the tight target of the format today.
Times are, apparently, for better or worse, changing again...
With all due respects - where have you folks been for about 30 to 40 years?
1977 - #1 record - Johnny Paycheck - I'm The Only Hell (My Mama Ever Raised)
1960 - Original Version - Big Bad John - Jimmy Dean ("at the bottom of this mine lives one hell of a man...Big John.) Yes, few stations played it...but it was there.
1980's - Mac Davis..,"she's one hell of a woman".
1980's - Hank Williams, Junior - If you don't like Hank Williams, you can kiss my (you know the word).
Understand, I'm not saying that most country songs need profanities...my point is that these songs have come along from time to time for decades. Country music is about real life. So, in a sense, it can never be truly "family friendly". Because real life sometimes isn't.
Dial Global America's Best Music does play "Margaritaville". That's got a couple of words in it.
Thanks Alan. Don't know why, but I drew a blank trying to remember the singer's name. Our station manager/ owner auditioned "Truckin' Luck" in the production room. It was all the rest of us could do to keep from laughing out loud in the studio, watching his expression through the studio window, as he shamelessly smashed that piece of errant 45 RPM vinyl into smitherenes (did I spell that right?). As cool as the wind blowing behind a passing high plains thunderstorm, ol' Smokey just grabbed the next newly arrived 45 and spun it with equal aplomb. I think that one was Gay Ben. Can't remember that performer's name either. Maybe you can research Gay Ben. The target of this lampoon was painfully obvious, as was it's twisting play of words on a prominent over-the-counter pain relief ointment. Anyway, Gay met with the same fate, a collision with the hard pinewood table of a primitive, memorable, old school, small town radio station production room. I miss those days.Alan McCall said:"That's Just My Truckin' Luck" was a single released by Hank Thompson in 1975. It only reached #70 on the country chart that year.
One of our local stations (can't remember which one) played a version that went "I done tole you once you son of a" [1-second pause][crowd going "awwwwww"] because there was some community complaints (letters to the editor, that kind of thing) about stations playing the "SOB" version.charles hobbs said:In Los Angeles, back when the song was popular, all the stations played the "son of a gun" version except XETRA-690 during its pop/rock years. There you heard the other version. XETRA was a Mexican station so it could supposedly get away with cussing...(at least in English).firepoint525 said:During its heyday as a hit, I almost always heard the "son of a gun" version of "Devil Went Down to Georgia" by the CDB. Since then, I have almost exclusively heard the "son of a bitch" version, presumably because that is the version which went on to most albums and CDs containing the song. The only place (that I know of) where the "son of a gun" version can (still?) be found on CD is on Billboard's Top 10 hits of 1979 CD. They put the single version (the "son of a gun" version) on that one.
Rodney Carrington nothing-- you oughta hear the salty offerings I've heard on Sundays at cowboy church.sdh483 said:You want country with profanity, listen to Rodney Carrington. ;D
The late TV News icon Peter Jennings also found it distasteful. Still, The Angry American inspired many to raise their beer mugs in a moving gesture of patriotic solidarity. But more importanly, I am grateful for your service to our great country.CrankyYankee said:I've been holding off on commenting about this topic to see if anyone else had some misgivings about Toby Keith's "Courtesy of the Red, White, & Blue (The Angry American)." As an Army vet, I feel I'm in a vast minority who found this song more objectionable than patriotic. With the "boot in the a**" line, it just gave me a wrong vibe.
Wouldn't it have been easier (and a lot less obvious!) to just go ahead and play the "son of a gun" version?quadraphonic said:One of our local stations (can't remember which one) played a version that went "I done tole you once you son of a" [1-second pause][crowd going "awwwwww"] because there was some community complaints (letters to the editor, that kind of thing) about stations playing the "SOB" version.
So I don't think country's ever been "family friendly" around here either...![]()
I was the origional inquiring poster, re Boy Named Sue & Gay Ben. Thanks for those informative replies.johnbasalla said:The edited-out words to "A Boy Named Sue" is "Son of a B*tch", I believe...
I think the "Gay Ben" song referred to in a previous post is actually "The Ballad of Ben Gay" by Ben Gay and The Silly Savages (Elm Records, 1973). Elm Records was an independent label out of Westminister California... Who can forget "Harper Valley P.T.A." by Jeannie C. Riley?
Puhleeeze! Just leave the vulgarity where it belongs, in rap songs.James Otto Sweet Heart said:What I definitely don't go for are the finger flipping references that are now in country music.![]()
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1.) "He flipped me the bird and then he was gone."-Blake Shelton's "Some Beach"
2.) "There was one of her flipping the bird..."-Clay Walker's "Before She Was Mama"
3.) "I'm giving you the one in the middle."-Sarah Johns "The One In The Middle"
God bless you always!!!![]()
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