I can remember coming into the organization. At the time, they wanted me to get rid of any music that didn't fit. Of course, that meant the heavy metal that was common at that time. Obviously satanic or debasing music was forbidden.
However, they also wanted me to get rid of a lot of other, not as obviously debasing music. This included a lot of soft rock. The songs Hot Rod Hearts and Steal Away by Robbie DuPree were forbidden because they hinted at getting away for the purpose of performing illicit sex acts. The song Somebody's Knocking was blacklisted because it had the line "Lord It's the Devil". It was referring to deliberation about yielding to temptation. The song The Winner Takes it All by Abba was blacklisted for the line "the gods may throw the dice". Fire Lake by Bob Seger had the line "Who wants to take that longshot gambler?" in it. Angel of the Morning had the line "And if morning's echo says we've sinned". And so on.
What this did was totally destroy the integrity of my music. Many of those songs were familiar with my transition from living at home to living at college. What they really wanted to do was to thin the 1980 and 1981 area so I could not have a sense of continuity in that area. That way, they would have made it impossible to pinpoint where in life I started having major trouble attracting the opposite sex (they wanted, and still want, that to be solid and permanent so I can get into the tangle of the MTS and fixing the whole congregation, mission impossible, using methods that are tried and failed).
Of course, it also affected other time frames. Many songs in 1973 were "bad". Loves Me Like a Rock (false religion reference), Kodachrome (has the word "crap" and they do not like that word), Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting (hints at drunken brawls), and Live and Let Die (hints at living for one's self instead of Jehovah) were all condemned. Again, most of them were associated with an active trip year including a trip to Palace Playland (that was what I associated Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting with, not getting drunk and fighting). Again, they wanted to disrupt any memories I had in that area of my life.
And 1983-84. So many songs in that area were "bad". Not just Prince and Madonna, either. Legs by ZZ Top, Van Halen, Ratt's Round and Round, all Michael Jackson including the venerable Say Say Say, Night Ranger's When You Close Your Eyes, Scandal's The Warrior, and too many others to mention were declared bad. That also disrupted the continuity of my music collection at the time when I was in college. Note that all were mainstream pop songs. But, my study conductor wanted me to throw them all away. He didn't give a fxxx about the value those songs and many others had. All they were interested in was loyalty to the organization instead of putting puzzle pieces of my past together. And, they got rid of the biggest hit of the 1980s: USA For Africa's We Are the World.
All that, for nothing. Call Me (Blondie) was cited for the reference of "we can share the wine" for encouraging drunkenness and was blackballed. What they don't say is that the song was #1 when I went to Montreal. I knew that there would be alcohol there, and some pressure to drink, once I got there. I played the song anyway, and did not get drunk. The song Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting was out in 1973, in heavy rotation then. I wore out a Christmas gift of a record with that song in 1974, within 6 months. I bought it again just before going to college (when beer was everywhere). It went into heavy rotation again. And no drunken brawls. They just don't get it. I have listened to those songs safely for all those years, and now all of a sudden I am going to get into drunken brawls listening to them.
This time, it is not just drunkenness. I have much music that glorifies shooting police and babies. There are gunshots on the music. I also have songs that glorify smoking weed, snorting coke, and even taking horse. I have a song that glorifies the guy having sex with a gerbil (he sticks it up his butt and it gets stuck there). And this time, I am not getting rid of it. I have been listening to it safely (no weed, coke, horse, sex with gerbils, shooting cops, etc) this long, and I intend to continue enjoying that kind of music.
Any retro rock anyone? Saturday Night's Alright For Fighting, Steal Away, Angel in the Morning, Passion (Rod Stewart), Legs (ZZ Top), Van Halen, Journey, Simon and Garfunkel, Blue Oyster Cult, AC/DC, or their favorites to bash--LED ZEPPELIN! Better than that Kingdumb Sxxx.