They told me (this was back in the late 1980s) that 80% of all popular music was "bad". Not 80% of heavy metal, punk rock, or rap--popular music. Usually, because it had something that hinted at sexuality--which rendered a lot of innocent songs "bad" which caused me no problems whatsoever while I was in the world. Among them were Steal Away and Hot Rod Hearts, Angel of the Morning, More Love, Come Back, I've Never Been to Me, and even such obscurely "suggestive" songs like Upside Down by Diana Ross.
It was pretty obvious after the fact that they had the intention of using me as the example. When I pointed out that some of the "suggestiveness" was very wimpy or that it took a lot of imagination to find the "problem" (and I never saw the song that way), or that I had been listening to the song for years (and in some cases, more than 10 years) without a problem (including when I could have gotten myself a belly full of beer in college), they told me that I would stumble others if I had the music in the privacy of my home or on headphones--so I had to get rid of music that I had listened to without incident anyways.
And yes, I got it back on CDs. They didn't like my one Led Zeppelin album, so I got their whole boxed set (the famous 4-disc one). They didn't like Journey--so I got their boxed set, plus the likes of Judas Priest, Slayer, Megadeth, and Skid Row. No Van Halen--I got their material (including the ones that did worship the Devil--I found one Devil worship Van Halen song and bought it). They don't want me listening to Prince (the pre-witless Prince), so I not only got his CDs from his pre-witless era, but I got Eminem and 50 Cent as well (along with all the filthiest rap I could get my hands on). Culture Club is supposed to be on horse, so I got some rap that glorifies selling horse (Bonafide Hustler by Young Buck, to be specific). And I got all those CDs that they were speaking out against, just out of spite.
And as many Christmas songs as I could dig up.