2001 Clear Channel memorandum

On September 13, 2001, two days after the 9/11 attacks, the top brass at Clear Channel sent an email to over 1,000 US radio stations "an updated and expanded list of songs with 'questionable lyrics' that they should avoid playing."[2][3] Clear Channel denied the claim,[4] but it received considerable media coverage at the time.[5] Though many reports claimed that the list was meant to prohibit radio stations from playing songs listed on it, the list was circulated as guidance. Many stations, including some in the New York area, ignored the list.[6]

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Catharsis was exactly the opposite of what corporate radio was promoting. There was no room for songs of peace or hate, loss or exorcism, anger or despair. What we got was bland and mildly upbeat, the Chevy-commercial sentiments of Lee Greenwood's "God Bless the USA" and the cliched uplift of inspirational ballads like "Wind Beneath My Wings," surely one of the most annoying genres of music ever invented.
—Steven Wishnia[1]

Some of the songs making this list deal with fire or planes. In a perverse attempt to sterilize media in light of the terrorist attack, the memo recommends dropping songs like Fire and RainFile:Wikipedia's W.svg by James Taylor, Smokin'File:Wikipedia's W.svg by Boston, Burnin' for YouFile:Wikipedia's W.svg by Blue Öyster Cult, JumpFile:Wikipedia's W.svg by Van Halen, and Bennie and the JetsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg by Elton John from rotation, in case a listener might be triggered by the mere mention of a word.

The question was not that there would be kinds of music that would be inappropriate in the aftermath of the attacks, but the specific songs Clear Channel ultimately chose. It seemed more like an 1960s-style social conservative attack on popular rock music than an understandable suggestions list.

Many found the list baffling, and considered it a misguided attempt to ensure the nation's mental health. As such, it was roundly criticized as censorship and an ominous side effect of President George W. Bush's War on Terror.[7]

The list

…every single Rage Against the Machine song was notably poo-pooed by Clear Channel, as the Founding Fathers absolutely hated guitars that sound like turntables. Ditto goes for "I'm on Fire"… because nobody understands that the song was just Bruce Springsteen surreptitiously confessing that he's the Human Torch from the Fantastic Four.
—The 6 Most Hilarious Failures in Music Censorship History[8]
Artist Song Notes
3 Doors DownFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Duck and Run
311File:Wikipedia's W.svg Down
AC/DCFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap
AC/DCFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Hells Bells
AC/DCFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Highway to Hell
AC/DCFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Safe in New York City
AC/DCFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Shoot to Thrill
AC/DCFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Shot Down in Flames
AC/DCFile:Wikipedia's W.svg T.N.T.
The Ad LibsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg The Boy from New York City
Afro Celt Sound SystemFile:Wikipedia's W.svg When You're Falling
Alice in ChainsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Down in a Hole
Alice in ChainsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Rooster
Alice in ChainsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Sea of Sorrow
Alice in ChainsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Them Bones
Alien Ant FarmFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Smooth Criminal
The AnimalsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg We Gotta Get Out of This Place
Louis ArmstrongFile:Wikipedia's W.svg What a Wonderful WorldFile:Wikipedia's W.svg This wonderful song's inclusion on the list exposed the callousness and hypocrisy of media executives in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks.
The BanglesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Walk Like an Egyptian Only one of the perpetrators was Egyptian, ringleader Mohamed AttaFile:Wikipedia's W.svg
Barenaked LadiesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Falling for the First Time
Fontella BassFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Rescue Me
Beastie BoysFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Sabotage
Beastie BoysFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Sure Shot
The BeatlesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg A Day in the LifeFile:Wikipedia's W.svg A reflection on life, death, and war, inspired by LSD. Perhaps the reference to war, i.e., "The English Army had just won the war" triggered inclusion on the list? Who knows.
The BeatlesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Lucy in the Sky with DiamondsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Maybe they thought a mention of the sky would trigger someone?
The BeatlesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-DaFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Life goes on, and Clear Channel thought it would be too much for anyone to realize this.
The BeatlesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Ticket to RideFile:Wikipedia's W.svg
Pat BenatarFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Hit Me with Your Best Shot
Pat BenatarFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Love Is a Battlefield
Black SabbathFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
Black SabbathFile:Wikipedia's W.svg War Pigs
Blood, Sweat and TearsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg And When I Die
Blue Öyster CultFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Burnin' for You
BostonFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Smokin'
Los BravosFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Black Is Black
Jackson BrowneFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Doctor My Eyes
Buddy Holly and the CricketsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg That'll Be the Day
BushFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Speed Kills
The Chi-LitesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Have You Seen Her
Petula ClarkFile:Wikipedia's W.svg A Sign of the Times
The ClashFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Rock the Casbah
Phil CollinsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg In the Air Tonight
Sam CookeFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Wonderful World
The Crazy World of Arthur BrownFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Fire
Creedence Clearwater RevivalFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Travelin' Band
The CultFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Fire Woman
Bobby DarinFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Mack the Knife
The Dave Clark FiveFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Bits and Pieces
Skeeter DavisFile:Wikipedia's W.svg The End of the World
Neil DiamondFile:Wikipedia's W.svg America
DioFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Holy Diver
The DoorsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg The End
The DriftersFile:Wikipedia's W.svg On Broadway
Drowning PoolFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Bodies
Bob DylanFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Knockin' on Heaven's Door
EverclearFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Santa Monica
Shelley FabaresFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Johnny Angel
FilterFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Hey Man, Nice Shot Maybe too close to home, as the song is about the suicide of Budd DwyerFile:Wikipedia's W.svg
Foo FightersFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Learn to Fly
FuelFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Bad Day It's not the one Andy Bernard sang when he was firing Pete in "The Office".
The Gap BandFile:Wikipedia's W.svg You Dropped a Bomb on Me
GodsmackFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Bad Religion
Green DayFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Brain Stew But not Welcome to ParadiseFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, weirdly enough.
Norman GreenbaumFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Spirit in the Sky
Guns N' RosesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Knockin' on Heaven's Door
The HappeningsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg See You in September
The Jimi Hendrix ExperienceFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Hey Joe "Hey Joe, where you goin' with that gun in your hand?"
Herman's HermitsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Wonderful World
The HolliesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother
Jan and DeanFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Dead Man's Curve
Billy JoelFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Only the Good Die Young
Elton JohnFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Bennie and the Jets
Elton JohnFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Daniel "Daniel is traveling tonight on a plane…"
Elton JohnFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Rocket Man
Judas PriestFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Some Heads Are Gonna Roll
KansasFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Dust in the Wind
Carole KingFile:Wikipedia's W.svg I Feel the Earth Move
KornFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Falling Away from Me
Lenny KravitzFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Fly Away
Led ZeppelinFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Stairway to Heaven
John LennonFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Imagine
Jerry Lee LewisFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Great Balls of Fire
Limp BizkitFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Break Stuff
Local HFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Bound for the Floor
Lynyrd SkynyrdFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Tuesday's Gone
Johnny Maestro & the Brooklyn BridgeFile:Wikipedia's W.svg The Worst That Could Happen
Martha and the VandellasFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Dancing in the Street
Martha and the VandellasFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Nowhere to Run
Dave Matthews BandFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Crash into Me
Paul McCartney & WingsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Live and Let Die
Barry McGuireFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Eve of Destruction
Don McLeanFile:Wikipedia's W.svg American Pie Due to its references of "the day the music died", where Buddy Holly, Ritchie Vallens, and The Big Bopper died in a plane crash.
MegadethFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Dread and the Fugitive Mind
MegadethFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Sweating Bullets
John MellencampFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Crumblin' Down
John MellencampFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Paper in Fire
MetallicaFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Enter Sandman
MetallicaFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Fade to Black
MetallicaFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Harvester of Sorrow
MetallicaFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Seek & Destroy
Steve Miller BandFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Jet Airliner
Alanis MorissetteFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Ironic
MudvayneFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Death Blooms
Ricky NelsonFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Travelin' Man
NenaFile:Wikipedia's W.svg 99 Luftballons/99 Red Balloons Noted peace anthem about an accidental nuclear war
Nine Inch NailsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Head Like a Hole "God money's not one to choose. Head like a hole, black as your soul, I'd rather die than give you control!"
Oingo BoingoFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Dead Man's Party
Ozzy OsbourneFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Suicide Solution
Paper LaceFile:Wikipedia's W.svg The Night Chicago Died
John ParrFile:Wikipedia's W.svg St. Elmo's Fire (Man in Motion) "I can feel radio censorship burning in me"
Peter and GordonFile:Wikipedia's W.svg I Go to Pieces
Peter and GordonFile:Wikipedia's W.svg A World Without Love
Peter, Paul and MaryFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Blowin' in the Wind
Peter, Paul and MaryFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Leaving on a Jet Plane Written by John DenverFile:Wikipedia's W.svg who coincidentally died in a light aircraft accident in 1997
Tom PettyFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Free Fallin'
Pink FloydFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Mother "Mother, do you think they'll drop the bomb?"
Pink FloydFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Run Like Hell
P.O.D.File:Wikipedia's W.svg Boom
Elvis PresleyFile:Wikipedia's W.svg (You're the) Devil in Disguise
The PretendersFile:Wikipedia's W.svg My City Was Gone
QueenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Another One Bites the Dust
QueenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Killer Queen
Rage Against the MachineFile:Wikipedia's W.svg All songs "Lights out, Guerrilla Radio! Turn that sh*t off!"
Red Hot Chili PeppersFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Aeroplane
Red Hot Chili PeppersFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Under the Bridge
R.E.M.File:Wikipedia's W.svg It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)
The Rolling StonesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Ruby Tuesday "Goodbye, Ruby Tuesday"
Mitch Ryder & the Detroit WheelsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Devil with a Blue Dress On
SalivaFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Click Click Boom
SantanaFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Evil Ways
Savage GardenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Crash and Burn
Simon & GarfunkelFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Bridge over Troubled Water An odd choice: traditionally considered a very fitting song for sad times, and a perennial at funerals[9]
Frank SinatraFile:Wikipedia's W.svg New York, New York aka "Theme from New York, New York"; widely seen as a celebration of the city, and Liza Minnelli actually performed it at the first pro sports game in the New York metro after 9/11[10]
SlipknotFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Left Behind
SlipknotFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Wait and Bleed
The Smashing PumpkinsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Bullet with Butterfly Wings
SoundgardenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Black Hole Sun
SoundgardenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Blow Up the Outside World
SoundgardenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Fell on Black Days
Bruce SpringsteenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg I'm Goin' Down
Bruce SpringsteenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg I'm on Fire
Bruce SpringsteenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg War
Edwin StarrFile:Wikipedia's W.svg War
SteamFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye
Cat StevensFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Morning Has Broken
Cat StevensFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Peace Train It's unclear why 2 Stevens songs were only the list, aside from the fact that he's a Muslim and Clear Channel didn't want them on radio
Stone Temple PilotsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Big Bang Baby
Stone Temple PilotsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Dead and Bloated
Sugar RayFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Fly
The SurfarisFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Wipe Out
System of a DownFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Chop Suey!
Talking HeadsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Burning Down the House
James TaylorFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Fire and RainFile:Wikipedia's W.svg
Temple of the DogFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Say Hello 2 Heaven
Third Eye BlindFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Jumper
The Three DegreesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg When Will I See You Again
ToolFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Intolerance
The TrammpsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Disco Inferno
U2File:Wikipedia's W.svg Sunday Bloody Sunday The attack was on a Tuesday, although the song is peripherally about terrorism and primarily about the killing of innocent civilians by the British army[11]
Van HalenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Jump
Van HalenFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Dancing in the Street
J. Frank Wilson and the CavaliersFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Last Kiss
The YoungbloodsFile:Wikipedia's W.svg Get Together
Zager and EvansFile:Wikipedia's W.svg In the Year 2525File:Wikipedia's W.svg "In the year 2525, if man is still alive"
The ZombiesFile:Wikipedia's W.svg She's Not There Lyrically about an untrustworthy woman, not obviously connected with 9/11[12]
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gollark: It doesn't seem to be working properly when I run commands.
gollark: How do you even use this?
gollark: Wow, this produces SO MANY warnings when I compile it.
gollark: I... see.

References

  1. Steven Wishnia, Bad Transmission: Clear Channel's Hit List. Archived from the original at lipmagazine.org, 24 October 2001.
  2. It's the End of the World as Clear Channel Knows It. Slate, 17 September 2001.
  3. Thurston Hatcher, Radio stations retool playlists after attacks. CNN, 20 September 2001.
  4. Clear Channel says national "banned playlist" does not exist. Clear Channel Communications press release, archived from the original at content.clearchannel.com, 18 September 2001.
  5. Jeremy Dutton and William Puchert, Music industry responds to terrorism. Archived from the original at zephyr.unr.edu (University of Nevada, Reno), 10 October 2001.
  6. David Mikkelson, Clear Channel Banned Songs. Snopes, 15 April 2008.
  7. Neil Strauss, The Pop Life; After the Horror, Radio Stations Pull Some Songs. The New York Times, 19 September 2001.
  8. Mike Floorwalker. The 6 Most Hilarious Failures in Music Censorship History. Cracked, 20 January 2013.
  9. Songs Played at Funerals, Snopes, 15 May 2006
  10. See the Wikipedia article on Theme from New York, New York.
  11. See the Wikipedia article on Sunday Bloody Sunday.
  12. See the Wikipedia article on She's Not There.
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