Yes - it was amazing what the BBC (especially during the 1950s and into the early 1960s) would ban records for. I only discovered recently that composer Sir Arthur Bliss (who was also Master of the Queen's Musicke) was head of one particular BBC panel who regularly vetted records to be aired (or not!) on the BBC. There was also a Religious / moral panel as well.
Cougars - "Saturday Nite At The Duckpond" - a 'bastardisation of the wonderful music of Tchaikovsky'
Nero & The Gladiators - "Hall Of The Mountain King" - 'insulting and irreverent to the memory of Edvard Grieg'
Moontrekkers - "Night Of The Vampire" - 'Unsuitable for persons of a nervous disposition'
Link Wray - "Rumble" - 'wild, aggressive and likely to incite juvenile violence'
Ricky Valance - "Tell Laura..." - 'too vulgar for the British sensibility'
Oh I could go on. One of Cliff's early records was banned because it mentioned the word 'Cadillac'. Don Charles' "Walk With Me My Angel" was banned on grounds of sacrilege. John Leyton avoided a ban on "Johnny Remember Me" - by re - recording the line - "the girl I loved who died a year ago" as "the girl I loved and lost a year ago". Writer Spencer Leigh wrote a fascinating article on the subject and there is a series of CDs "Listen To The Banned" containing many examples of perfectly innocuous recordings which fell foul of the BBC censors. How times have changed!!
Rob
