Surprising Reasons These Popular Songs Were Banned

Published on 10/30/2024
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“I Want Your Sex” by George Michael

The title of George Michael’s 1987 song was enough to warrant a ban, and not because it was excessively provocative. It is quite evident. In fact, “I Want Your Sex” was the first pop song to have the word “sex” in the title. The song from the former Wham! Superstar is from “Faith,” his debut solo album. It was prohibited during the daytime on radio stations in the United Kingdom and the United States. The single became platinum. Despite Michael’s emphasis on monogamy in the song video, MTV prohibited it during daylight hours to avoid propagating problematic subjects. It ranked third on MTV’s 2002 list of the Most Controversial Videos Ever Aired.

I Want Your Sex By George Michael

I Want Your Sex By George Michael

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“Glad to Be Gay” by Tom Robinson Band

Tom Robinson composed “Glad to Be Gay” for a 1976 gay pride parade in London. In 1967, homosexuality was decriminalized in the United Kingdom, although society took little attention. The song, sung by the punk/new wave Tom Robinson Band, critiques attitudes in Margaret Thatcher’s England, particularly those of the British police, who raid gay pubs for no cause other than prejudice. It was published in 1978 on the band’s live “Rising Free” EP. Radio stations found it too sensitive to play. BBC Radio 1 refused to carry it on its Top 40 Chart, but John Peel, the evening DJ, disobeyed the prohibition and played it. Today, the protest song inspired by the Sex Pistols has become an LGBT anthem in the United Kingdom.

Glad To Be Gay By Tom Robinson Band

Glad To Be Gay By Tom Robinson Band

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