ronald54321 said:
The trouble with music after the midsixties is that obscenity was legalized. Thus, most music from then on advocates free sex, adultery, and drugs. While 95% of the public is in favor of this, there should be something for the other 5%.
Okay, let's take this a piece at a time.
We've already established that obscenity has never been legalized.
But has most music from the mid-sixties on advocated free sex, adultery and drugs? And is 95% of the public in favor of this?
If that's true, then those should be some of the most popular songs out there...so let's look at every song to hit #1 in 1970 on the Billboard Hot 100. A year after Woodstock...the year of Kent State...this should be filthy and disgusting.
Ready?
B.J. Thomas: Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head
The Jackson 5: I Want You Back
Shocking Blue: Venus
Sly & The Family Stone: Thank You (Falletin Me Be Mice Elf Agin)
Simon & Garfunkel: Bridge Over Troubled Water
The Beatles: Let It Be
The Jackson 5: ABC
Guess Who: American Woman
Ray Stevens: Everything Is Beautiful
Beatles: The Long and Winding Road
The Jackson 5: The Love You Save
Three Dog Night: Mama Told Me Not To Come
Carpenters: (They Long To Be) Close To You
Bread: Make It With You
Edwin Starr: War
Diana Ross: Ain't No Mountain High Enough
Neil Diamond: Cracklin' Rosie
The Jackson 5: I'll Be There
The Partridge Family: I Think I Love You
Smokey Robinson & The Miracles: Tears Of A Clown
George Harrison: My Sweet Lord
Free sex? "Make It With You" if you take the slang term "Make It" and apply it in spite of the lyrics:
No, you don't know me well,
'N' ev'ry little thing only time will tell,
But you believe the things that I do.
And we'll see it through.
Life can be short or long,
Love can be right or wrong,
And if I chose the one
I'd like to help me through,
I'd like to make it with you
So....no advocation of free sex.
And...no advocation of adultery (check the country charts, though...way back before the midsixties, even)
That leaves us with advocation of drugs.
Sly may have been on drugs when he wrote "Thank You (Falletin Me Be Mice Elf Agin), but it doesn't actually advocate using them.
"Mama Told Me (Not To Come)" certainly suggests drug use, but the protagonist is scared, digsusted and wants to leave.
And that leaves "Cracklin Rosie", but only if we expand drugs to include alcohol (see earlier comment about the country charts). I suppose the line "gonna have me a time with a poor man's lady" could be construed as adultery if you're not paying attention, but Neil's using poetic license to note that sparkling rose' was not a drink of choice for the wealthy.