Censorship in Music
Censorship in music has been a major problem plaguing America since the early nineteen forties. It came to a head during the nineteen sixties with the Vietnam War and the hippie movement. During the nineteen seventies and eighties heavy metal and hard rock were getting the taste of the censorship heat. Now in the nineteen nineties the major focus of censorship is rap; primarily gangster rap. Some of the main factors of music in general that cause legal ramifications are sexual content, suggestive violence and obscene language. Censorship is an attack against our first amendment right guaranteeing the freedom of speech. However if a song or album is deemed obscene the first amendment does not protect this. The mass media has been involved in the many, so-called problems that music causes in society today. The attempted censorship of music is not just because people need a cause to fight. In today's society there are many problems that experts feel are directly related to music. Some of these problems are suicide, murder and sexual assault. Many people argue that music is not the sole purpose for entertainment purposes. Many parents and experts argue that rappers and musicians use vulgar, profane, sexually explicit lyrics to ta
The FBI also has files on Elvis Presley and Jim Morisson of The Doors (Winfield p. Rapper Ice T ended up pulling a song "Cop Killer" of his album body count because his record officials were receiving death threats for releasing it (Winfield p. During the Vietnam War many songs blasted the government. Going back to Voluntary labeling of records, with songs like ICE T's "Cop Killer" there was a call for mandatory labeling (Winfield p. This came after a congressional hearing before the Senate commerce, science and transportation committee. It was seen as a step forward in attempting to control the one mass media aimed directly at teenagers. It began with the Recording Industry Association of America agreeing to voluntarily place-warning labels on albums that were deemed obscene. founder of the Parent's Music Resource Center a "Cultural Terrorist. Mumia recorded several bits documenting prison life that were played on national radio stations until Senate majority leader Bob Dole and the FOP pressured national radio stations into not playing them. com) Rage themselves have been boycotted by police on several occasions. "You can always escape hell by not believing in it, but you cannot escape death and escape prison.
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