Rock and Rolls War Against God
Rock and Rolls War Against God
Rock and Rolls War Against God
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Table of Contents
Introduction ...........................................................................1
What Christians Should Know about Rock Music ...........5
What Rock Did For Me ......................................................38
The History of Rock Music ................................................49
How Rock & Roll Took over Western Society...............123
1950s Rock .........................................................................140
1960s Rock: Continuing the Revolution ........................193
The Character of Rock & Roll .........................................347
The Rhythm of Rock Music .............................................381
Rock Musicians as Mediums ...........................................387
Rock Music and Voodoo ..................................................394
Rock Music and Insanity..................................................407
Rock Music and Suicide ...................................................429
Rock Music and Violence ................................................441
Rock Music and Drug Abuse...........................................477
Rock Music, Blasphemy, and Antichrist ........................525
Rock Music and Pagan Religion......................................548
Death Metal .......................................................................565
Marilyn Manson ................................................................577
Rapper Confusion .............................................................588
How Christian Homes Produce Rock Rebels ................600
What Is Wrong with Soft Rock? ......................................614
Bibliography on Rock Music ...........................................621
About Way of Lifes eBooks..............................................635
Powerful Publications for These Times ..........................636
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Love not the world, neither the things that are in the
world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father
is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the
flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not
of the Father, but is of the world. And the world passeth
away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of
God abideth for ever (1 John 2:15-17).
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Introduction
I wrote my first book on rock music* in 1974, less than a
year after I was saved. The title was Mom and Dad Sleep
While the Children Rock in Satans Cradle. It went through
three or four editions, but it is long out of print.
Much has changed since then. Rock has grown more
wicked, and Western culture has become permeated with the
spirit of heathenism, demonism, and moral debauchery. The
foundations of biblical Christianity within Western society
have been washed away within the last few decades; and rock
music has been both a reflection of this change and an
instigator of it.
Rock music has doubtless been a major influence in the
dramatic increase in violence, free sex, no fault divorce,
unisexuality, homosexuality, abortion, drug abuse, Satanism,
idolatry, and socialism.
In its Christian incarnation, rock plays a major role in
the building of the one-world church.
The hour is late and dark. Many Bible prophecies are being
fulfilled before our eyes.
Yet the chorus of voices once lifted against rock has faded
dramatically; only a few isolated voices remain and not many
are listening.
What is wrong with Bible-believing Christians today? How
can this evil be allowed to dwell so comfortably within our
ranks? This book is an eort to awaken those who are
slumbering and to help homes and churches have victory
against a powerful enemy.
Rock music cannot be sanctified for the Lords use because
it is fleshly and cannot therefore minister to the spirit. I am
not speaking merely of the words. Rock music fits the bar, the
dance hall, the night club, the gambling den, the house of
prostitution. Rock music fits the devils house, but it does not
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Love not the world, neither the things that are in the
world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father
is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the
flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not
of the Father, but is of the world. And the world passeth
away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of
God abideth for ever (1 John 2:15-17).
I realize that the world has been taken over by rock music
and that most people accept it unquestioningly, but the
standard for Christian living is not that which pleases men
but that which pleases God.
The Bible warns that that which is highly esteemed among
men is abomination in the sight of God (Luke 16:15).
Society changes, but Gods call to separation from
unholiness and the sensual spirit of the world does not
change. The Bible says that Gods people are dierent from
the world.
And we know that we are of God, and the whole world
lieth in wickedness (1 John 5:19).
... the only rules you should live by [are] rules made
up by you (Pennywise, Rules, 1991).
So what we get drunk/ So what we smoke weed
Living young and wild and free (Young, Wild and
Free, Snoop Dog and Wiz Khalifa, 2011).
We can do what we want; we can live as we
choose (Paul McCartney, New, 2013).
The whole Beatles idea was to do what you
want (John Lennon, cited by David She, The Playboy
Interviews with John Lennon and Yoko Ono, p. 61).
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That being the case, the Bible has a lot to say about rock
music!
The following are some of the Scriptures that God used to
show me when I was a young Christian that rock is not His
will. I am more convinced of that today than ever:
And that ye may put dierence between holy and
unholy, and between unclean and clean (Leviticus
10:10).
Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of
the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor
sitteth in the seat of the scornful (Psalm 1:1).
I have not sat with vain persons, neither will I go in
with dissemblers. I have hated the congregation of evil
doers; and will not sit with the wicked. I will wash mine
hands in innocency: so will I compass thine altar, O
LORD (Psalm 26:4-6).
I will set no wicked thing before mine eyes: I hate the
work of them that turn aside; it shall not cleave to
me (Psalm 101:3).
Therefore I esteem all thy precepts concerning all things
to be right; and I hate every false way (Psalm 119:128).
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Enter not into the path of the wicked, and go not in the
way of evil men. Avoid it, pass not by it, turn from it,
and pass away (Proverbs 4:14-15).
Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the
issues of life. Put away from thee a froward mouth, and
perverse lips put far from thee. Let thine eyes look right
on, and let thine eyelids look straight before thee.
Ponder the path of thy feet, and let all thy ways be
established. Turn not to the right hand nor to the left:
remove thy foot from evil (Proverbs 4:23-27).
The fear of the LORD is to hate evil: pride, and
arrogancy, and the evil way, and the froward mouth, do
I hate (Proverbs 8:13).
Forsake the foolish, and live; and go in the way of
understanding (Proverbs 9:6).
He that walketh with wise men shall be wise: but a
companion of fools shall be destroyed (Proverbs 13:20).
Depart ye, depart ye, go ye out from thence, touch no
unclean thing; go ye out of the midst of her; be ye clean,
that bear the vessels of the LORD (Isaiah 52:11).
And be not conformed to this world: but be ye
transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may
prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will
of God (Romans 12:2).
Let love be without dissimulation. Abhor that which is
evil; cleave to that which is good (Romans 12:9).
Now these things were our examples, to the intent we
should not lust after evil things, as they also lusted (1
Corinthians 10:6).
Wherefore, my dearly beloved, flee from idolatry (1
Corinthians 10:14).
Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of
devils: ye cannot be partakers of the Lord's table, and of
the table of devils (1 Corinthians 10:21).
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away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of
God abideth for ever (1 John 2:15-17).
Little children, keep yourselves from idols (1 John
5:21).
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is a problem today in gospel music--a MAJOR CONCERN-and everybody knows it (Church Boy, pp. 49, 50). Marsha
Stevens, author of the popular song For Those Tears I Died
(Come to the Water) and co-founder of Children of the Day,
one of the first Contemporary Christian Music groups, left
her husband in 1979 because she had fallen in love with a
woman. She started her own label called BALM (Born Again
Lesbian Music) and performs between 150 and 200 concerts
a year. She has a program called upBeat through which she
produces a praise and worship album annually with a variety
of singers and songwriters. Stevens lesbian praise music
ministry is recommended by Mark Allen Powell, Professor of
New Testament at Trinity Lutheran Seminary and the author
of An Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music.
In 2002, Marsha Stevens attended a Bill Gaither
Homecoming concert with her lesbian lover, and Gaither
made a point of telling the crowd that she was there and
singing her song Come to the Water. After the concert,
Gaither and Mark Lowry had their photo taken with Marsha
and her lesbian lover. Lowry told Stevens that he was proud
of her and that he wished the fundamentalist would find
Jesus. Theyre going to have a lot to answer for, leaving out
people that Jesus died for (Marsha Stevens, New Years Eve
2002 with Bill Gaither, www.christiangays.com). Thus it
appears that Lowrys christ is a non-judgmental christ who
does not require repentance from sin.
Other CCM artists who have come out as homosexual
include Ray Boltz, Anthony Williams, Kirk Talley, Clay
Aiken, Doug Pinnock, Amy Ray and Emily Saliers of Indigo
Girls, Vicky Beeching, and Jennifer Knapp. In June 2013,
Sandi Patty performed with the homosexual Turtle Creek
Chorale. In April 2014, Dan Haseltine of the popular CCM
band Jars of Clay announced his support for gay marriage.
In an interview in October 2014, Brian Houston, pastor of
Hillsong Church in Sydney, Australia, which birthed Hillsong
worship music, refused to give a definitive answer when
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For the time will come when they will not endure
sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap
to themselves teachers, having itching ears; and they
shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be
turned unto fables (2 Timothy 4:3-4).
This is a Christianity that turns away its ears from the old
Bible paths.
It is a Christianity that loves fables (such as Mary
veneration, the mass, charismatic gibberish tongues, and
music is amoral).
It is a Christianity that lives according to its own lusts.
It is a Christianity that itches for new things.
This is the Christianity we see everywhere today!
Those who use CCM, build bridges to this world of endtime apostasy, and nothing could be more dangerous for a
Bible-believing individual, home, or church.
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that rhythm and power. I got stoned just feeling it, like
IT WAS THE BEST DOPE IN THE WORLD. It was
SO SENSUAL... (Joel Dreyfuss, Janis Joplin Followed
the Script, Wichita Eagle, Oct. 6, 1970, p. 7A).
Modern music is as dangerous as cocaine (Pietro
Mascagni, Italian composer, (Slonimskys Book of
Musical Anecdotes).
To the children of the Spiritual Sixties nothing was
more singularly important than addiction to
music (David Di Sabatino, The Jesus People Movement).
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In reply, we say, first, that the nuggets arent real gold. Even
the most conservative contemporary song is tainted with the
worldliness and the ecumenicism of its associations.
Second, the manure is very dirty. The world of
contemporary Christian music is the world of the one-world
church, of worldliness, of non-judgmentalism, of charismatic
heresies, of aliation with Rome, of homosexual Christianity.
We have documented this in The Foreign Spirit of
Contemporary Worship Music, available as a free eVideo at
www.wayoflife.org.
Third, the manure is sticky! Most people who mess around
with CCM will be influenced by it, especially young people.
Pastors and music people are responsible for their young
people, and must protect them.
What is the motive for trying to find gold in a manure pile?
There are countless songs and hymns that have no spiritual
danger associated with them. The Living Hymns songbook
has about 900 spiritual songs and hymns, and that is only one
hymnal. The field of unquestionably sacred songs and hymns
is vast.
WAKE UP PASTORS! Have you educated yourself about
contemporary music? Do you have an ongoing plan to
educate your people in this important matter? Are you
careful about all of the music that is used in your church? Are
you providing leadership and a good example?
WAKE UP PARENTS! Have you educated yourself about
contemporary music? Have you educated your children? Are
you careful about all of the music that is used in your home?
Do you know what your children listen to? Are you providing
leadership and a good example?
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This was written many years ago but the statements are
even truer today. A major milestone was passed in the
November 2012 election, when Colorado and Washington
became the first states in America to legalize the possession
and sale of marijuana. In conjunction with that election, a
USA Today poll found that 70% of Americans age 30 and
older oppose enforcement of existing federal laws against
marijuana use.
There can be no doubt that rock & roll has played a major
role in this social development.
The following report describes the prevalence of marijuana
use in public schools in California:
Here in California, marijuana is now treated as a
minimal vice, with legalization inevitable and
decriminalization for possession amounting to a tap on
the hand. Medical marijuana cards are so easy to obtain,
theyre the butts of endless popular jokes. On the famed
Venice Beach boardwalk, booths tout on-the-spot
evaluations and customers walk out the door with
newly minted photo ID cards in under an hour. High
schools across the country celebrate April 20th as 420
Day, a fact I know because my daughters high school,
San Rafael High, is nationally famous (or infamous,
depending on your perspective) as the birthplace of the
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Conversion
I met this Christian man while traveling. By then I had
become intrigued with westernized Hinduism, particularly
the Self-Realization Fellowship Society.
While hitchhiking from California to Florida I got a ride
by some young people from India, and through their
testimonies and literature I became convinced that
reincarnation was true.
After devouring several books they had given me,
including The Autobiography of a Yogi by guru Paramahansa
Yogananda, founder of the Self-Realization Fellowship
Society, I made a pilgrimage from Florida to Los Angeles to
visit the headquarters of that organization On the way I won
roughly $70 in a slot machine in Los Vegas and I thought it
was an answer to my prayers so I could learn to sing songs
such as George Harrisons My Sweet Lord!
After a brief stay in California, I was back in southern
Florida. After working a short while as a tow motor operator
in a lumber yard, I quit and decided to drive to my
hometown in central Florida and then drift around some
more.
It was a weekend when I pulled onto the highway near
Hollywood, Florida. A few miles down the road, I saw a man
on a touring bicycle riding along the highway, and though I
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A Spiritual Battle
Giving up rock music was not a simple matter. It was a real
struggle, because I absolutely loved it and had listened to it
practically every waking moment for many years. I didnt
even think about giving it up at first.
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was corrupt before God, and the earth was filled with
violence (Gen. 6:5, 11).
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and kids across the land were dancing to rhythm & blues, as
well as country and pop selections. Billboard inaugurated its
Juke Box Chart in 1945 to tabulate how often records were
played on jukeboxes.
The radio was also very eective in bringing black dance
music to a young white population. In the early 1950s, disc
jockeys such as Alan Freed in Cleveland, Ohio, and Dewey
Phillips in Memphis, Tennessee, were making money hand
over fist playing risqu rhythm & blues for a white radio
audience.
Dewey Phillips program, Red, Hot and Blue, ran from 9
p.m. to midnight. Phillips had grown up in Adamsville,
Tennessee, and loved to listen to black music as a boy, in spite
of the warning by his church-going elders that it was of the
devil. At age ten he made a trip to Memphis to sing in a
Baptist church choir, and he and another boy slipped o to
visit forbidden Beale Street. After he was discharged from the
military, he returned to Memphis and eventually turned the
Red, Hot and Blue radio program into a sensation.
Many white teenagers like Elvis Presley, who had moved to
Memphis with his family when he was 13, couldnt get
enough of the blues. They even adopted Daddy-O Phillips
hip phrases into their teenage slang. Presley, in turn, took the
black blues sound and turned it into white rock & roll. It was
Dewey Daddy-O Phillips himself, in fact, in July 1954, who
became the first disc jockey to play an Elvis Presley record on
the air.
By the time Elvis Presley had checked into the
Heartbreak Hotel, in the early fifties, radio had already
become tremendously important as a conveyor of rock
and rolls message. Suddenly, 17 million teenagers were
virtually putty in the hands of the countrys 1,700
deejays. Albert Goldman, Presleys biographer, noted:
As these kids got up in the morning, or came home
from school, as they rode in cars or lay on the beach
with their portables, as they did their homework in the
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In one sense, rock & roll is simply another term for rhythm
& blues.
Rock and roll may be the first music to be defined, not
by its sound, but by who listenedand dancedto it.
Depending on who was playing it and who was listening
to it, the same record, the same sound, could be either
rock and roll or rhythm and blues. In terms of music or
performance style, the R & B and jump blues of men like
Wynonie Harris, Big Joe Turner, and Louis Jordan was
virtually indistinguishable from what later would be
called rock and roll. The dierence was that those mens
audiences were primarily adult blacks. Dewey played
those same records for white teenagers who, then as
now, were always in the market for something new to
dance to, especially if that something also annoyed their
parents (Larry Nager, Memphis Beat, pp. 130, 31).
In 1951, disc jockey Alan Freed applied the term rock &
roll to the music (largely rhythm & blues) he was playing for
teenagers in Cleveland, Ohio, on radio station WJW. He even
tried unsuccessfully to copyright the term. Freed had a latenight classical music show when he saw the commercial
potential for beat music. From his friend Lee Mintz, who
owned a record store in Cleveland, Freed learned that young
white kids were eagerly buying black rhythm and blues
records. Mintz told Freed that the reason for the popularity of
the music was the beat and that anyone could dance to it
(David Halberstam, The Fifties, p. 465).
Freed inaugurated a new nightly program, The Moondog
House Party, on a 50,000-watt clear channel station so
powerful that it reached a vast area of the Midwest. It was
described as a rock and roll session with rhythm and blues
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Western Boogie
A parallel, called western swing and hillbilly boogie,
developed in country music in the 1940s. This music was
very similar to 50s rock and roll.
Some of the song titles were:
Boogie Woogie by Johnny Barfield, 1939
Guitar Boogie by Arthur Smith, 1945
House of Blue Lights by Freddie Slack and Ella Mae
Morse, 1946
Freight Train Boogie by the Delmore Brothers, 1946
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Muddy Waters said, The blues had a baby, and they called
it rock n roll.
Little Richard, in describing rock music, says, Its black
music; its black!
B.B. King said: The roots of rock n roll went back to my
roots, the Mississippi Delta. It was born of the blues (Blues
All Around Me, p. 184).
Dave Bartholomew, producer of Fats Dominos hits, said:
We had rhythm and blues for many, many a year, and here
come in a couple of white people and they call it rock and
roll, and it was rhythm and blues all the time (Rock & Roll
an Unruly History, p. 7).
Ike Turner said: Fats Waller, Cab Callowayif you just
take the color o of it, man, these guys rocked and rolled way
back then (Rock & Roll an Unruly History, p. 7).
David Bowie says: In our music, rock and roll, the blues is
our mentor, our godfather, everything. Well never lose that,
however diversified and modernistic and clich-ridden with
synthesizers it becomes. Well never, ever be able to renounce
the initial heritage (cited by Timothy White, Rock Lives, p.
402).
Eric Clapton agrees: Rock is like a battery that must
always go back to the blues to get recharged (A Time to Rock,
p. 202).
Following are some other statements of this truth:
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What many histories about rock & roll do not plainly state
is that the blues, speaking generally, represented the ungodly
side, the red light district, of black music and culture. Blacks
in America in the first half of the twentieth century were
notably religious and more often than not were churchgoers.
They were divided into two distinct categories, though: Pious
and impious; those who lived a sincere Christian life and
those who maintained merely a veneer of Christianity. Pious
blacks who took Jesus Christ and the Bible seriously and who
were faithful to biblical churches, condemned immorality
and drunkenness and violence as well as the blues and
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You never met the Reefer Man?/ Oh no? You never met
the Reefer Man?/ And yet you say you swam to China/
And you wanted to sell me South Carolina/ I believe you
know the Reefer Man (The Reefer Man, 1932). [A
reefer is a marijuana cigarette.]
Dreamed about a reefer five foot long/ The mighty
mezz, but not too strong (If Youre a Viper, 1938).
Light up, I know how you feel/ You find what I mean in
any old field/ Now get your gig going/ Ill say thats the
thing/ Dont let that man getcha/ Just pu on your cig
and blow those smoke rings (Light Up, 1938).
toll (The Big Book of Blues). Carr had spent a year in prison
for bootlegging.
SONNY BLAIR played harmonica and sang with the
Kings of Rhythm, who recorded what many have called the
first rock & roll record. That was Rocket 88, recorded by
Sun Records in Memphis in 1951. The alcoholic Blair died of
delirium tremens in 1966 at age 34.
LUCILLE BOGAN (also known as Bessie Jackson) wrote
Shave Em Dry, one of the dirtiest of all the dirty blues
songs. She often dealt with immoral themes such as adultery,
prostitution, lesbianism. The bawdy blues singer died in 1948
at age 51.
JAMES BOOKER, an influential blues pianist who
recorded for Chess and Ace, died in 1983 at age 43 of a heart
attack from longstanding drug abuse. He claimed his drug
addiction began at age 10. He was arrested in 1970 for drug
possession and spent time in Angola State Prison. Before his
death, his behavior had become psychotic.
WALTER BOYD (1885-1949), known as LEADBELLY,
had gained a reputation for sexual prowess as a teenager
hanging around whorehouses and juke joints in the red light
district of Shreveport, Louisiana. There he learned to play
boogie-woogie on the guitar. He was an immoral and violent
man who bore scars on his neck and body from attacks
challenging his claims on women (Paul Oliver, The Story of
the Blues, p. 40). He had his throat cut in a Texas juke joint
and survived, but with an ugly scar that ran almost from ear
to ear (Deep Blues, p. 86). He spent a year on a county chain
gang for assaulting a woman. In 1917, Leadbelly was charged
with murder for shooting and killing another musician and
was sent to prison on a 30-year sentence. He escaped prison
and traveled and performed with Blind Lemon Jeerson,
another famous bluesman. Leadbelly described the eect
their blues music had on the licentious women who visited
the junk joints: Cause when you get out there the women get
to drinkin that thing fall over them, and that make us feel
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good and we tear those guitars all to pieces (Oliver, The Story
of the Blues, p. 41).
JACKIE BRENSTON (1930-1979) was best known for the
1951 hit Rocket 88, which Sam Phillips of Sun Records and
others called the first rock & roll record. Some of the lyrics
said, Goin round the corner and get a fifth/ Everybody in
my cars gonna take a little nip. Brenston died in 1979 at age
52 of a heart attack, having taking far too many nips in his
short lifetime.
WALTER BROWN was a blues shouter who wrote two
big hits, Confessin the Blues and Hootie Blues. He died in
1956 at age 38 of a drug addiction-related cause.
WILLIE LEE BROWN (1900-1952) was an influential
black delta bluesman. He lived the typical blues lifestyle,
fornicating, drinking, spending his time in the junk joints
and blues dives of the day. His drinking had had its eect
and he was hospitalized in 1952 in Memphis and died there
of heart and liver failure at age 52.
BIG BOY CRUDUP recorded three blues songs that were
covered by Elvis Presley in the 1950s. Presleys first Sun
Records hit in 1954 was Crudups Thats All Right Mama.
Crudup loved liquor, and one of the jobs of the sessions men
who backed up Crudup on his recordings for Bluebird
Records was to make sure that Crudup got from the train
station to the studio without stopping at a bar or liquor
store (When Was the First Rock n Roll Record Made?, p. 19).
KING CURTIS was stabbed to death in 1971 at age 37
during an argument. His song Soul Twist was a hit in 1962.
He played the distinctive saxophone part for the No. 1 1958
hit Yakety Yak (Dont Talk Back). This song glorified
teenage rebellion against parental restraint.
BLIND BOY FULLER (born Fulton Allen), one of the
most popular bluesmen of the 1930s, died in 1941 at age 32 of
blood poisoning resulting from a kidney ailment. He wrote
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B.B. KING (born Riley B.) (b. 1925), called the King of the
Blues, started his music career singing in church groups. In
his biography, he admits that his early love for church had to
do with sensual experiences. Church was the highlight of the
week. Church was not only a warm spiritual experience, it
was exciting entertainment, it was where I could sit next to a
pretty girl, and mostly it was where the music got all over my
body and made me wanna jump (Blues All Around Me, p.
16). The gospel music played at the church B.B. King attended
with his mother was extremely jazzy. Memphis music
historian Larry Nager admits that by the 1950s black gospel
music was sounding a lot like secular R & B (Memphis Beat,
p. 179).
By his own admission, Kings first loves are jazzy music and
immoral sex, and he understands that the two go together
like a hand and glove. As a teenager he would sneak out to
juke joints such as the Jones Night Spot to hear blues and
boogie-woogie and to excite himself by watching the women
dance. He noticed even then that the boogie-woogie rhythms
aected women sexually.
In his early 20s, he went to Memphis to live with his
cousin, bluesman Bukka White, to seek his fortune playing
the blues in clubs on Beale Street. He testified that going to
Beale Street was a little like going to heaven (Blues All
Around Me, p. 103). In reality, Beale Street was a wicked place
that was infamous for its prostitutes and drinking/gambling
establishments. Music producer Jim Dickinson called it the
center of all evil in the known universe (James Dickerson,
Goin Back to Memphis, p. 27).
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fact, he says that he is not certain about life after death (Blues
All Around Me, pp. 198, 294) and he believes Christianity,
Islam, and Judaism all might lead to God (p. 292).
FREDDIE KING, a pioneering blues guitarist and a major
influence on rock guitarists, died in 1976 at age 42 of
bleeding ulcers and heart failure.
BABY FACE LEROY (born Leroy Foster), whose work
with Muddy Waters and others contributed to the birth of the
modern Chicago blues sound, died in 1958 of a massive heart
attack, due, most likely, to his excessive drinking and racy
lifestyle.
WILLIE LOVE, Delta blues pianist, was best known for
his work with Sonny Boy Williamson. His excessive drinking
led to pneumonia, which killed him in 1953 when he was 46
years old.
SAM MAGIC (born Sam Maghett), influential Chicago
electric blues guitarist and vocalist who helped originate the
West Side guitar style that in turn influenced rock music,
died in 1969 at age 32 of a heart attack.
Famous blueswoman MEMPHIS MINNIE (real name was
Lizzie Douglas), was the top blueswoman of the 1940s and
50s. She grew up on a farm near Memphis, Tennessee, but
hated the work and often ran away from home to explore the
immoral fares of Beale Street. As a teen she learned to play
the guitar; she also learned to exploit her sexuality. An
attractive woman with a petite build, she learned at an early
age that Beale Street had what she wanted: money and
recognition (Goin Back to Memphis, p. 48).
Her music matched her lewd lifestyle. Some of the songs,
such as Hustlin Woman Blues and You Cant Give It
Away, were about prostitution. She was also violent. When
angered, she would reach for whatever was handyher
guitar, a pistol, a knifeand she was not timid about using
violence to get her way (Ibid., p. 45). She began her blues
career in Memphis then moved to Chicago with her second
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husband, Joe Son McCoy, in the early 1930s. She left McCoy
in 1935 and married Ernest Son Lawlar. In the late 1950s,
she moved back to Memphis, but she had a stroke soon
thereafter that left her wheelchair bound and unable to speak
for the rest of her life. Lawlar died in 1961. Minnie died in
1973 and was buried in an unmarked grave. In the final
years of her life, she spent her days in a wheelchair, weeping,
a voiceless, pitiful creature, alone, without sex or
music (Goin Back to Memphis, p. 50).
MILTON MEZZ MEZZROW (1899-1972), famous jazz/
bluesman, was born into a respectable middle-class Jewish
family in Chicago; but he was a juvenile delinquent, hanging
around poolrooms, stealing, fighting. At age 16, he was sent
to a reformatory for stealing a car. There he fell in love with
jazz/blues music, and after his release he learned to play the
saxophone. Liquor and marijuana (also called muggles, muta,
gage, tea, reefer, grifa, Mary Warner, Mary Jane, rosa maria,
weed, grass) were a big part of the jazz world, and Mezzrow
became a drug dealer. it was widely felt among the jazz
community that marijuana helped the creation of jazz by
removing inhibitions and providing stimulation and
confidence (Waiting for the Man, p. 32). When he moved
from Chicago to New York, Mezzrow brought high quality
Mexican marijuana into the Harlem jazz community. In New
York, Mezzrow began to use opium and from 1931 to 1935
spent a large part of his time in a cleaned-out six-foot-square
coal bin which served as an opium pad (Waiting for the Man,
p. 37). In 1940, he was arrested for dealing marijuana and was
imprisoned for three years.
AMOS MILBURN (1927-1980), popular rhythm & blues
pianist, singer, and bandleader, had a stroke at age 40 that left
him partially paralyzed. He suered other strokes and the
amputation of a leg before he died 12 years later in 1980 at
age 52. Many of his songs dealt with liquor consumption,
including Bad Bad Whiskey, Thinking and Drinking,
One Scotch, One Bourbon, One Beer, Let Me Go Home
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young Elvis Presley during the early days of his music career.
Phineas could not overcome his drug and alcohol addictions
and was occasionally committed to mental hospitals during
the 60s and 70s. He died in 1989 at age 57 from drug- and
alcohol-induced heart illness.
CHARLIE PARKER, jazz/blues saxophonist, died in 1955
at age 34 of a hemorrhage. He had long been addicted to
drugs, and had been institutionalized in 1946. Prior to a gig,
he might consume two three-course dinners or two dozen
hamburgers, washed down with torrents of whiskey and
followed by a gargantuan whack of heroin. After the gig, the
women who had taken his fancy that night would follow him
to bed (Waiting for the Man, p. 69). Richard Freeman, a
psychiatrist who treated Parker, said that except for his music,
Parker was just another potential mental patient dumped in a
hospital (Waiting for the Man, p. 69). The star trumpet player
in Charlie Parkers quintet, Red Rodney, was sentenced to five
years in prison for heroin possession in 1953. He was released
on parole in 1955 but was back on heroin within two weeks
and returned to burglary as a means of obtaining money for
drugs.
JUNIOR PARKER (1932-1971) was an influential
Memphis bluesman and a member of the original Howlin
Wolf band. His song Mystery Train was made popular when
Elvis Presley recorded it during his sessions with Sun
Records. Parker died in 1971 at age 39 of a brain tumor.
CHARLIE PATTON (1890-1934) was a popular black
blues player who was born on the same plantation on which
Son House and Willie Brown were born. He recorded songs
for Paramount and Vocalion and had an influence on other
well-known bluesmen. Pattons performances were like rock
& roll. It was not uncommon for him to play the guitar
between his knees or behind his back. He also played the
instrument loud and rough. Patton jumped around and used
the back of his guitar like a drum. He was a showman who
made histrionics a part of the music (The Big Book of Blues).
90
Charlies father was an elder in a Baptist church and a parttime preacher, and like most bluesmen Charlie began his
music career by singing church songs. When Charlie started
playing the blues, his father looked upon it as a sin. To a
man of God, guitar picking was a sin, and playing reels and
other sinful tunes at parties and picnics where gambling and
fornication were rampant was tantamount to selling ones
soul to the Devil. So when Bill [Charlie Pattons father]
caught his son making [worldly] music, he considered it his
Christian duty to deliver stern warnings and, as the warnings
continued to go unheeded, increasingly severe corporal
punishment (Deep Blues, p. 51).
Charlie ignored his father and the Bible and chose to waste
his life on liquor and loose women. Though he would
periodically attempt to reform his life, he always returned to
his immoral ways. Patton had many wives and girlfriends,
and his songs often contained dirty lyrics. Cocky and often
belligerent, he drank heavily and frequently fought with his
wives and girlfriends and with men at the jukes. Sometimes
he even beat his women with his guitar (Deep Blues, p. 57).
He had a large scar across his neck from a knifing that almost
took his life. He also was injured in a shooting in a nightclub.
Perpetually drunk and abusive he took considerable
pleasure in beating his eight common-law wives (Rock Lives,
p. 7).
Like most blues players, he spent his time providing
entertainment in immoral juke joints and at the crappers,
which were places where blacks would congregate secretly to
play illegal crap games [gambling with dice] and to drink
illegal whiskey. Patton died in 1934 at age 44 of a heart attack
after years of abusing alcohol.
LITTLE ESTHER PHILLIPS (born Esther Mae Jones),
one of the most popular female rhythm & blues vocalists,
died in 1984 at age 48 of substance abuse related kidney and
liver failure. She learned to sing in church but devoted her
talents to the service of the world and the flesh.
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96
99
101
104
106
108
ancestral to all gospel, rock, and soul (Rock & Roll an Unruly
History, p. 67). In the ring shout the church members
danced in a circle around the building, responding in a calland-response manner to the song leader. Alan Lomax, who
recorded ring shouts at rural southern churches in the 1930s,
described them as follows:
True to an age-old West African pattern, the dancers
shue round and round single file, moving in a
counterclockwise direction, clapping out the beat in
complex counter-rhythms. The floor of the church
furnished the drumhead. The lines of the song are partly
religious and partly satirical, using as material the
groaning delivery of the Negro minister and the shrill
screams of the sisters in the throes of religious hysteria.
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116
117
122
45 RPM Records
Another significant change which happened between
1954 and 1956 concerns the 45 rpm record. In the total
sales of single records, 45s first surpassed 78s in these
years, and this shift was directly related to the growing
popularity of rock music. Forty-five rpm records had
been introduced by RCA in 1949 but the 45 medium
was not accepted immediately. In 1954, several of the
major record companies announced that they would
send 45s instead of 78s to disk jockeys. the 45
constituted a speeding-up process.
The lightness, ease of handling, and physical resilience
of the 45 sharply distinguished it from the cumbersome
78. The lightness of 45s, coupled with their doughnut
shape and the large spindle of 45 players, also produced
faster, easier listening. The search for the small hole in
the center of the 78 was eliminated, and a listener could
quickly skim through a large group of records, playing
or rejecting them at a moments notice. The process of
playing records therefore became more casual, and there
was a more immediate relationship between listener and
record than had been possible with the heavy and
breakable 78s. In the 1950s, 45s became the medium
for youth and for their music (Carl Belz, The Story of
Rock, pp. 53-55).
the 45 with the growth of R&B music and later rock n roll, it
became the record they called their own (What Was the First
Rock n Roll Record?, p. 20).
Radio
The portable transistor radio was invented at the Bell
Laboratory in New Jersey in 1947 and reached the general
public in 1953. Radios also began appearing in automobiles
in the 1950s and by 1963 there were radios in more than 50
million cars.
Alan Freed, Dewey Daddy-O Phillips, and many other
rock disc jockeys used the radio to help create a new teenage
culture with its own music, language, clothing styles, and
moral code.
In this new subculture of rock and roll THE
IMPORTANT FIGURES OF AUTHORITY WERE NO
LONGER MAYORS AND SELECTMEN OR PARENTS;
THEY WERE DISC JOCKEYS, WHO REAFFIRMED
THE RIGHT TO YOUTHFUL INDEPENDENCE AND
GUIDED TEENAGERS TO THEIR NEW ROCK
HEROES. The young formed their own community. For
the first time in American life they were becoming a
separate, defined part of the culture. As they had money,
they were a market, and as they were a market they were
listened to and catered to. Elvis was the first beneficiary.
In eect, he was entering millions of American homes
on the sly; if the parents had had their way, he would
most assuredly have been barred (The Fifties, p. 474).
By the time Elvis Presley had checked into the
Heartbreak Hotel, in the early fifties, radio had already
become tremendously important as a conveyor of rock
and rolls message. SUDDENLY, 17 MILLION
TEENAGERS WERE VIRTUALLY PUTTY IN THE
HANDS OF THE COUNTRYS 1,700 DEEJAYS. Albert
Goldman, Presleys biographer, noted: As these kids got
up in the morning, or came home from school, as they
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Television
Though television was developed in the 1920s and
televised images were oered to the public in the 1930s, it did
not move into common circulation until after World War II.
In 1948 there were only 500,000 television sets in America,
but by 1956 there were 37 million sets served by 620
television stations.
This new visual electronic medium had a very powerful
influence in the spread of rock and roll. Elvis Presley leaped
to national prominence when he appeared on the Dorsey
Brothers Stage Show, the Milton Berle Show, the Steven Allen
Show, and the Ed Sullivan Show. The 1956 appearance on Ed
Sullivan attracted 54 million viewers, which was a whopping
83% of the television audience.
Dick Clarks American Bandstand was inaugurated in 1956
and was watched by millions of teens. Every day nationwide,
teenagers rushed home from school to watch their favorite
singers, and learn new rock & roll dance steps. Before long,
Bandstand dancers became folk heroes in their own right.
As viewers watched them day after day, they got to know the
dancers names; they copied their clothing and hairstyles;
they mimicked their cool behavior; and they kept track of
who was dancing with whom (That Old Time Rock & Roll, p.
10).
Dick Clark broadened the base of rock music by cleaning
up its image. He even had a dress code for the dancers,
requiring the girls to wear skirts and dresses and the boys,
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coats and ties. This was a ploy to make rock more acceptable
to parents.
The Beatles received a massive increase in publicity when
they appeared on Val Parnells Sunday Night at the London
Palladium in the fall of 1963. The fifteen million people who
watched the program formed the largest audience in British
television history at the time. The Beatles appearance on the
Ed Sullivan Show in December 1963 was seen by more than
73 million people, which was more than 60% of all television
viewers. Within nine days of that show, Americans had
bought more than two million Beatles records and more than
$2.5 million worth of Beatles merchandise.
Dave Clark, testifying of Ed Sullivans role in the
promotion of rock & roll, said: The power of the man and
his show was unbelievable. Not only did Sullivan promote
Elvis Presley and the Beatles, but also Buddy Holly and the
Crickets, the Rolling Stones, Gerry and the Pacemakers, the
Searchers, the Dave Clark Five, and many others.
The influence of television on the promotion of rock did
not stop with the 1960s. MTV (Music Television) was
launched in August 1981 by Warner and American Express.
During the 1980s, MTV packaged and delivered rock and
roll to the TV generation (A Time to Rock, p. 295). Initially
broadcast to 2.5 million households, by 1983, MTV reached
17 million homes, and by 1991, the global audience was
estimated to be 52 million. MTV expanded to Europe in 1987
and to Asia in 1991. Before the Internet, teens watched MTV
an average of an hour a day. MTV reached 43% of all
teenagers weekly (Creem, Vol. 17, #8, p. 6). A companion
network, VH-1, focusing on adult-oriented rock, was
inaugurated in 1987.
U.S. News & World Report warned, Day and night,
Americas youth are enticed by electronic visions of a world
so violent, sensual and narcotic that childhood itself appears
to be under siege (Oct. 28, 1985, p. 46).
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Movies
If anything, movies have been even more influential than
television in promoting rock music. The key to unleashing
the full social power of this new music was through
films (Bill Haley, p. 57).
The Wild One, starring Marlon Brando, appeared in 1954
and portrayed a pack of young motorcycle thugs taking over
a town.
In 1955, two powerful movies appeared to promote rock
music and to alienate youth from their elders. Blackboard
Jungle, which featured the music of Bill Haley and the
Comets, depicted education as repressive and traditional
responsibilities as boring.
The opening shot shows a group of kids in a
schoolyard; the chain link fence surrounding the yard
fills the foreground of the frame, symbolically placing
these school kids in a jail. But at the same time Rock
around the Clock is blaring o the soundtrack in a
clarion call to break out of that jail and celebrate. . . .
Early in the film Glenn Ford, who plays the dedicated
teacher, tries to win over his class of juvenile delinquents
by playing his collection of valuable jazz 78s in class.
The kids respond by mocking him for listening to
square music and proceed to smash the precious
records (Bill Haley, p. 57).
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New Evangelicalism
New Evangelicalism weakened churches and helped
prepare the way for rock & roll.
New Evangelicalism helped create a spiritual climate in
North America that was receptive to rock music. When
churches are strong, they reject the things of the world; but
when they are weak and compromised, the separation from
the world breaks down.
A large majority of people in America in the 1950s claimed
to be Christians, and without a wholesale weakening of the
churches, rock music could not have gained such wide
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139
1950s Rock
Rock & roll music has never been morally innocent and
wholesome when examined biblically. From its inception in
the 1950s, rock music has promoted rebellion against the
God of the Bible, not always expressly, but rebellion just the
same. Defiance of God-ordained authority and rejection of
biblical morality is rebellion against God. The Bible says, For
rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is as
iniquity and idolatry (1 Samuel 15:23).
1950s rock literally changed the character of Western
society and laid the groundwork for the more dramatic
spiritual and moral revolution that has followed in
succeeding decades. This is recognized by cultural historians.
David Townsend, who calls the 1950s a watershed
moment in modern history, says,
Rock 'n' roll has never been just a music. ... Rock 'n' roll
is a movement, a lifestyle, a culture ... It is a tradition, in
some ways a folklore, in many ways a belief system. And
all that rock 'n' roll is today it owes to a brief window of
history: two years, no more than three, when the fabric
of American popular culture was torn apart and
rewoven, and a new era explosively began. ... This was
no small moment in history, for the eects of these two
years echoes continue to spread, to other nations, to
new generations, to the thrones of power and the seats
of wealth, as well as to the dispossessed and restless
youth of a new era (David Townsend, Changing the
World: Rock & Roll Culture and Ideology, chapter 2).
Indeed, rock roared onto the scene in the 1950s with the
power of a cultural tsunami. David Townsend describes 30 of
the top hits of the 1950s and shows how that they fell from
the sky almost simultaneously, how that it was a relentless
deluge. Its not dicult for a Bible believer to see the hand of
the god of this world in this momentous event (2 Cor. 4:4).
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Townsend says,
Try to imagine waking up every morning with the
increasing realization that a revolution was occurring all
around you, that the next wave was likely to hit at any
moment, that you were a part of this accelerating
phenomenon day in and day out, and all your friends
were caught up in it too. About once a week, someone
would arrive at school or at the soda shop to announce,
Youve got to hear this great new record! And indeed it
was great, and the excitement just grew and grew, until
it was bigger than anything before: it was a way of life, a
burning passion wanting more and more and
proclaiming with religious fervor that it would never die
or diminish, but would grow to engulf the world with its
message of euphoria and the wonders of life and love
and youth (Townsend, Changing the World).
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Self-Centered Rebellion
If you think rockabilly is just music, youre wrong.
Rockabillys always been an attitude (Billy Poore,
RockABilly: A Forty-Year Journey, p. 113).
Rock n roll marked the beginning of the revolution.
Weve combined youth, music, sex, drugs, and rebellion
with treason, and thats a combination hard to
beat (Jerry Rubin, Do It!, 1970, pp. 19, 249).
Rock music has always held seeds of the forbidden.
Rock and Roll has long been an adversary to many of
the basic tenets of Christianity (Michael Moynihan,
Lords of Chaos, p. x).
What made rockabilly [Elvis Presley, Bill Haley, etc.]
such a drastically new music was its spirit, a thing that
bordered on mania. Elviss Good Rockin Tonight was
not merely a party song, but an invitation to a
holocaust (Nick Tosches, Country: The Twisted Roots of
Rock n Roll, p. 58).
FIFTIES ROCK WAS REVOLUTIONARY. IT
URGED PEOPLE TO DO WHATEVER THEY
WANTED TO DO, EVEN IF IT MEANT BREAKING
THE RULES. From Buddy [Holly] the burgeoning
youth culture received rocks message of freedom, which
presaged the dawn of a decade of seismic change and
liberation. Buddy Holly left the United States for the
first time in 1958, carrying rock n rollthe music as
well as its highly subversive message of freedomto the
world at large. LAYING THE GROUNDWORK FOR
THE SOCIAL AND POLITICAL UPHEAVALS ROCK
N ROLL WAS INSTRUMENTAL IN FOMENTING IN
THE FOLLOWING DECADE (Ellis Amburn, Buddy
Holly: A Biography, pp. 4, 6, 131).
Elvis Presley was one of the few people in our lifetime
who changed things. You hear Mantovani in every
elevator, but so what? Elvis changed our hairstyles, dress
styles, our attitudes toward sex, all the musical
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Immorality
1950s rock is mild compared with the rock music that
came later, but 1950s rock was not innocent by biblical
standards. In fact, it was morally filthy.
ROCKABILLY WAS THE FACE OF DIONYSUS, full
of febrile sexuality and senselessness; it flushed the skin
of new housewives and made pink teenage boys reinvent
themselves as flaming creatures (Nick Tosches,
Country: The Twisted Roots of Rock n Roll, p. 58).
But now, Good Rockin Tonight, you know what that
means. I had my mind on this girl in the bedroom. Im
not going to lie to you. Listen, man, I wrote them kind
of songs. I was a dirty cat (Roy Brown, composer of
Good Rockin Tonight, 1948, cited by Robert Palmer,
Rock & Roll an Unruly History, p. 15).
Chuck Berrys first rock & roll hit was the dirty
Maybellene in 1955, and he stirred up frenzy in young
people with his carnal music and performances. Many of his
songs, which have been described as slyly vulgar, have
glorified sexual lust outside of marriage. Even his 1987
autobiography is sexually explicit (Rock Lives, p. 23).
Jerry Lewiss 1957 hits were a crude, brutish, in-your-face
call to free sex.
Little Richards 1955 hit Tutti Frutti was a vulgar song
that was so filthy the lyrics had to be toned down for public
consumption.
Elviss hit Hound Dog was a vulgar blues song that had
been published by Big Mama Thornton in 1953.
The Big Boppers 1958 hit was Chantilly Lace, in which a
lecherous lover enumerates the unmentionable acts his
girlfriend is willing to perform (Ellis Amburn, Buddy Holly,
p. 250).
Buddy Hollys 1958 hit Oh Boy was about fornication.
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Jan and Deans 1958 hit Jennie Lee was about a local
stripper.
The 1954 hit Shake, Rattle, and Roll was an immoral
blues song which Bill Haley toned down.
Sixty-Minute Man by the Dominoes, which was the
biggest R&B hit of 1951 and which became a pop hit as well,
was very filthy.
The above represents only a tiny part of the immorality
that characterized early rock music.
Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry (b. 1926) has been called the single most
important name in the history of rock. He was one of the
first inductees into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in
Cleveland, Ohio, in 1986. He melded the blues, country, and
a witty, defiant teen outlook into songs that have influenced
virtually every rock musician in his wake (Rolling Stone
Encyclopedia of Rock, p. 71). Berry has led the rock & roll
choir in a salute to immorality and defiance to authority.
Though he started singing at age six in the choir of Antioch
Baptist Church of Elleadsville, a suburb of St. Louis, he chose
the world, the flesh, and the devil when he reached teen
years. He spent 1944 to 1947 in reform school for attempted
robbery, and has continued to have run-ins with the law
throughout his life.
In 1959, Berry was charged with statutory rape of a 14year-old Spanish-speaking Apache girl he had brought from
Texas to St. Louis. Berry was eventually convicted and spent
two years in federal prison. In 1979, he spent 100 days in
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Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke (1931-1964) (he added the e to his last name
when he entered show business) grew up in the home of a
holiness Baptist pastor, and began his music career as a small
boy singing in the choir. By age nine, he joined one of his
brothers and two of his sisters to form the Singing Children.
He was baptized at age 11 at his fathers Christ Temple
Church in Bronzeville, Illinois. His father began traveling as
an evangelist soon thereafter, and the Singing Children
accompanied him. In high school, Sam sang with a gospel
group called the Highway QCs. By 1951, at age 20, Sam
joined the professional gospel quartet the Soul Stirrers, a
group that was extremely popular but did not have a good
moral testimony. During the late 1940s, quartets had
become exceptionally popular and moral laxity had
subsequently infected the circuiteven to the extent of
female groupies following the male groups around for casual
aairs (Viv Broughton, Black Gospel).
Cooke thrived in this atmosphere and was extremely
popular with young church women. He toured the country
for six years with the Soul Stirrers, shaping up as a sort of
holy heartthrob, milking more than just spiritual fervor from
his audience (Stairway to Heaven, p. 79). Historian Tony
Heilbut called Cooke the greatest sex symbol in gospel
history.
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Alan Freed
See History of Rock Music.
Bill Haley
Bill Haleys (1925-1981) 1950s hits with the Comets
defined early rock music. His mother played piano in a
Baptist church, but he demonstrated his love for the world at
an early age. He released his first record in 1948 with a group
called the Four Aces of Western Swing. The next year the
groups name was changed to the Saddlemen. By 1951, Haley
and his group were starting o their music shows with Rock
the Joint, and later that year he recorded his first rock song, a
cover of the blues song Rocket 88. Haley later said that his
early rock songs were recorded after watching pornography
and live sex orgies to get the band worked up but
frustrated enough to play frenzied rock & roll
rhythms (John Swenson, Bill Haley: The Daddy of Rock and
Roll, pp. 34, 35).
The groups name was changed to the Comets and in 1953
they came out with Crazy, Man, Crazy. In 1954, came Rock
Around the Clock, which encouraged all-night wild
partying. It was basically a re-write of an old filthy blues song
called My Daddy Rocks Me with a Steady Roll. Rock
Around the Clock became the national anthem of rock &
roll and the largest selling hit, having run through some
thirty million copies by more than 100 dierent groups
(Swenson, p. 48). In 1954, Bill Haley and the Comets also
recorded Joe Turners Shake, Rattle and Roll, which
encouraged lewd behavior. A lot of people liked it because it
resembled a number of R&B tunes about all-night
sex (Swenson, p. 45). It was wildly popular, becoming the
first rock record to sell a million copies.
There was much violence at early Haleys concerts. A
concert at the National Guard Armory in Washington, D.C.
in 1956, for example, resulted in stabbings and a brain
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Buddy Holly
Buddy Holly (1936-1959) was one of the founders of rock
& roll, and his influence is vast. Paul McCartney of the
Beatles, Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones, Eric Clapton,
and Elton John are just a few of the rockers who credit Buddy
Holly as one of their greatest inspirations.
His name at birth was Charles Hardin Buddy Holley, and
he dropped the e from his last name when he began his
music career.
During his high school years in the early 1950s, he formed
a country-swing group called Western and Bop Band. One of
his favorite songs was Work with Me, Annie, a lewd tune
that was banned from most white pop stations (Remembering
Buddy, p. 19).
After hearing Elvis Presley, Holly turned his musical genius
to rock & roll, and in early 1957, he formed the Crickets.
Their first recording, Thatll Be the Day, became a No. 1 hit
that year. Other hits, such as Peggy Sue and Oh, Boy,
quickly followed and have become some of the best-known
songs in rock music. More than 40 years later, they still
receive regular airplay on many stations across the land.
While on a rock tour in the mid-west in February 1959,
Buddy Holly and two other rockers, the Big Bopper and
Ritchie Valens, were killed in a charter plane crash in a severe
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snow storm near Mason City, Iowa. Buddy Holly was 22 years
old when he died.
Holly was born in Lubbock, Texas, and grew up in the
Tabernacle Baptist Church, a fundamental Baptist
congregation. His father and older brothers served in various
capacities at Tabernacle. Buddy made a public profession of
faith in Christ and was baptized at age 14, but his life did not
exhibit good evidence of regeneration. While salvation is a
free gift of Gods grace in Jesus Christ, the Bible says there are
things that accompany salvation (Heb. 6:9). If a person is
born again, there will be evidence of this in his life.
Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature:
old things are passed away; behold, all things are
become new (2 Cor. 5:17).
And hereby we do know that we know him, if we keep
his commandments. He that saith, I know him, and
keepeth not his commandments, is a liar, and the truth
is not in him (1 John 2:3, 4).
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The Buddy Holly hit Peggy Sue was about Peggy Sue
Gerron, the girlfriend of Cricket band member Jerry Allison.
The two disobeyed her parents (who were trying to keep
them apart) and eloped in July 1958. The marriage was not
happy and they divorced in the 1960s. Peggy Sue
subsequently married Lynn Rackham but they, too, were
divorced in 1993.
observes that if you took the words away, there were more
than a few Pentecostal hymns that would not sound foreign
coming from the nickel machine in the wildest juke
joint (Hellfire, p. 57).
At age 22, Jerry Lee vaulted to fame with his 1957 hit,
Whole Lotta Shakin Going On. He became immensely
popular with his frenzied rock & roll shows. His skyrocketing
career was cut down, though, when the press learned that he
had married his 13-year-old cousin before he divorced his
second wife. That was in the 1950s, and he did not have any
more hit records until the late 1960s.
Jerry Lee Lewis has been a drug and alcohol abusing,
profane, immoral party animal, and, predictably, his life has
been marred by violence, tragedies, and repeated run-ins
with the law.
At last count he had been married seven times. In
February 1952, at age 16 he married a girl named Dorothy, a
preachers daughter, but he would not stay home with her,
and she left him in early 1953. That summer he met 17-yearold Jane Mitcham, and she was soon pregnant with his child
out of wedlock. Her irate father and brothers forced him to
marry her, and the marriage was registered on September 10,
1953. The 17-year-old Jerry Lee was a bigamist, because he
was still legally married to Dorothy, the divorce not being
finalized until a month after his second marriage. The boy
that Jane bore was named Jerry Lee, Jr. When a second child
arrived in March 1955 (a boy named Ronny Guy), Jerry Lee
refused to call it his own and left Jane.
In 1957, while still married to Jane, Lewis began an aair
with his 13-year-old cousin Myra Gale. He was still legally
married to Jane, in fact, when he married Myra in December
1957. The divorce was not granted until May 1958. Thus by
age 25, Jerry Lee Lewis was a bigamist twice over. Myras
father played bass in Jerrys band. In February 1959, Myra
bore Lewis a second son, Steve Allen Lewis. In 1962, the
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Little Richard
Richard Wayne Penniman (b. 1935), better known by his
rock & roll name Little Richard, was among the first ten
inductees into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986, and
every major figure of any prominence in the realm of rock &
roll credits Little Richard as their main
inspiration (Heartbeat of the Dragon, p. 27).
A list of those who desired to walk in his flamboyant
footsteps reads like a list of Whos Who in the history of rock
& roll. These include Elvis Presley, Mick Jagger, John Lennon,
Paul McCartney, Elton John, Jimi Hendrix, David Bowie,
Sam Cooke, Bo Diddley, Janis Joplin, Screaming Lord Sutch,
Gene Vincent, Buddy Holly, Chuck Berry, James Brown,
Smokey Robinson, Pat Boone, and Otis Redding.
There would have been no Deep Purple if there had been
no Little Richard (Jon Lord of Deep Purple).
When I was in high school I wanted to be like Little
Richard (Paul Simon of Simon and Garfunkel).
Little Richard was the God. I grew up on Little Richard in
the rockin fifties (Marty Balin of the Jeerson Airplane).
If it hadnt been for Little Richard I would not be here. I
entered the music business because of Richardhe is my
inspiration (Otis Redding).
Elvis was bigger than religion in my life. Then this boy at
school said hed got this record by somebody called Little
Richard who was better than ElvisI didnt want to leave
Elvis, but this was so much better (John Lennon).
Little Richard is the beginning of rock & roll (Smokey
Robinson).
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165
that. I can never see myself going back to Rock n Roll (The
Life and Times of Little Richard, p. 202).
In 1984, though, Little Richard launched another
comeback in the rock world and ever since he has attempted
to reconcile his role as a rock and roll star and his role as a
preacher. In January 1993, he and Chuck Berry performed at
President Bill Clintons private inauguration party.
Little Richard has testified that rock music is demonic:
My true belief about Rock n Rolland there have
been a lot of phrases attributed to me over the yearsis
this: I believe this kind of music is demonic. ... A lot of
the beats in music today are taken from voodoo, from
the voodoo drums. If you study music in rhythms, like I
have, youll see that is true. I believe that kind of music
is driving people from Christ. It is contagious (Little
Richard, The Life and Times of Little Richard, p. 197).
I was directed and commanded by another power. The
power of darkness ... The power that a lot of people dont
believe exists. The power of the Devil. Satan (Little
Richard, The Life and Times of Little Richard, pp.
205,206).
Frankie Lymon
Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers had the 1956 No. 1 hit,
Why Do Fools Fall in Love? Lymon was only 13 years old.
The song sold two million copies, and Lymon suddenly
became a rich teenager and pursued a debauched lifestyle,
using heroin and sleeping with older women. None of his
other songs were successful, and within three years Lymons
music career was over. He went through a drug rehabilitation
program in 1961, but in 1964 he was convicted on a heroin
charge. In January 1967, he claimed in an interview with
Ebony magazine that he was born again, but his conversion
was short lived. In February 1968, at age 25, Lymon
overdosed on heroin in the bathroom of his grandmothers
apartment.
Roy Orbison
Roy Orbison (1936-1988) was raised in Wink, Texas. His
mother was a former nurse and his father was an auto
mechanic. They attended a Church of Christ congregation.
Orbison testified of the conflict that he faced: They were
against dancing at my church, and I was trying to play at
dances. I wasnt old enough to figure out anything for myself.
So I just didnt go to church. I didnt want to attend and feel
uncomfortable. I went and played the dances (Hungry for
Heaven, p. 22).
Orbison became a popular rockabilly/country/pop singer.
During high school, he formed a country-pop group called
the Wink Westerners. In college, he was influenced by his
friend Pat Boone to experiment with rock; he then formed
the rockabilly Teen Kings. He signed with Sun Records and
had a hit in 1956 titled Ooby Dooby. By 1960, he had
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Carl Perkins
Carl Perkins (1932-1998), of Blues Suede Shoes fame,
was one of the rockers recorded by Sam Phillips of Sun
Records in Memphis. Carl started playing in a band in the
early 1950s with his brothers James Jay B. Buck (1930-1958)
and Lloyd Clayton (1935-1974). The Perkins boys mother,
Louise, was a Christian who attended church and read the
Bible to them, but their father, Buck, was a drinking man who
frequented vile honky tonks on the weekends. Buck became
aggravatin, as Louise put it, when he started drinking. This
mood expressed itself in loud, argumentative discourse and
cursing jags (Carl Perkins, Go, Cat, Go, p. 18). Sadly, the
boys followed in their fathers footsteps. In their teenage
years, they began to play in honky tonks and to drink and
carouse.
Carl Perkins 1956 hit Blue Suede Shoes is one of the
most famous of the early rock songs. That same year, though,
tragedy struck and his skyrocketing career was never the
same. On the way to appear on the Perry Como television
program in New York City, the driver of their car fell asleep
and hit the back of a truck. The car plunged into water. The
driver of Perkins car was killed, as was the driver of the truck,
a 44-year-old farmer. Jay Perkins broke his neck and never
fully recovered; he died two years later of a brain tumor at age
28. Mean-spirited Clayton later committed suicide in 1974 at
age 39 with a 22 caliber pistol. He had become basically a
drunkard and a hobo before he died.
Carl turned heavily to liquor and became a drunkard for a
number of years, and though he recorded some minor
rockabilly hits and continued to perform and record into the
1990s, he never regained the star success of 1956.
In 1963, he severely injured his hand in the blades of a
rotary fan. A year or so later his left foot was nearly severed
by a blast from a shotgun in a hunting accident. In the early
1990s, after many years of drinking and smoking, Perkins
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Dewey Phillips
Like Alan Freed, Dewey Phillips exercised a powerful
influence in the early days of rock & roll through his duties as
a disc jockey. Phillips moved to Memphis, Tennessee, in 1942
and developed a taste for the blues by sneaking down to the
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Elvis Presley
Elvis Presley (1935-1977) is called the King of Rock &
Roll. Alice Cooper said, There will never be anybody cooler
than Elvis Presley (100 Greatest Artists of Rock & Roll,
VH1). Presley produced 94 gold singles, 43 gold albums; and
his movies grossed over $180 million. Further millions were
made through the sale of merchandise. In 1956 alone, he
earned over $50 million.
173
Greenwood, The Boy Who Would Be King, pp. 30, 32). When
they moved to Memphis, Elvis told his cousin Earl that
Jesses hand was guidin us (Greenwood, p. 78).
Elvis was a mammas boy to the extreme, and to her death,
she was jealous of any other woman in his life. She and Elvis
formed a team that usually excluded the father. His mother
wanted to be everything to Elvis and wanted more from him
than what was right or healthy to expect (Greenwood, p.
116).
Elvis was a rebel. Even as a 13-year-old, when the other
boys wore crewcuts, Elvis boasted long, flowing blonde hair
that fell almost to his shoulders (The Boy Who Would Be
King, p. 70). (Later he died his hair black.) Though he wanted
to play football in high school, he refused to cut his hair in
order to try out for the team. He cursed and blasphemed God
behind his mothers back, told dirty stories, and ran around
to places he knew he should not visit. By the time he
graduated from high school, he was spending much of his
time in honky tonks and was living in immorality. This is the
boy who soon became the King of Rock & Roll.
HOW ELVIS BECAME A ROCK STAR. There is a saying,
The blues had a baby and named it rock & roll. Elvis Presley
was an important figure in the birth of that baby. Elvis spent
much of his spare time hanging around the black section of
town, especially on Beale Street, where bluesmen like Furry
Lewis and B.B. King performed (Rolling Stone Encyclopedia
of Rock, p. 783). Beale Street was infamous for its prostitutes
and drinking/gambling establishments. Music producer Jim
Dickinson called it the center of all evil in the known
universe (James Dickerson, Goin Back to Memphis, p. 27).
Elviss cousin Earl, who palled around with Elvis for many
years before and after his success, said that he adopted Beale
Street as his own, even though he was one of the few white
people to hang out there regularly (The Boy Who Would Be
King, p. 121). B.B. King said: I knew Elvis before he was
popular. He used to come around and be around us a lot.
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things are passed away; behold, all things are become new (2
Cor. 5:17).
Elvis liked gospel music but he did not like Bible
preaching. He refused to allow anyone, including God, to tell
him how to live his life. That is evidence of an unregenerate
heart.
We agree with the following sad, but honest, assessment of
Elviss life:
Elvis Presley never stood for anything. He made no
sacrifices, fought no battles, suered no martyrdom,
never raised a finger to struggle on behalf of what he
believed or claimed to believe. Even gospel, the music he
cherished above all, he travestied and commercialized
and soft-soaped to the point where it became
nauseating. ... Essentially, Elvis was a phony. ... He
feigned piety, but his spirituals sound insincere or
histrionic (Goldman, Elvis: The Last 24 Hours, pp. 187,
188).
fend for themselves as best they could. Elvis never gave his
old friends automobiles or anything of significant value.
Reminiscing on those days, Scotty Moore says, He promised
us that the more he made the more we would make, but it
hasnt worked out that way. The thing that got me, the thing
that wasnt right about it, was the fact that Elvis didnt keep
his word. ... We were supposed to be the Kings men. In
reality, we were the court jesters (Moore, Thats Alright, Elvis,
pp. 146, 155). Elvis turned them out to pasture like brokendown mules, without a penny.
Elvis kept up this pattern all his life. He would fire his
friends and workers at the snap of a finger, and he was not
one to give his buddies a second change (The Boy Who
Would Be King, p. 197). Bobby West served his cousin Elvis
faithfully for 20 years, and was rewarded in 1976 by being
fired with three days notice and one weeks pay. Delbert West
(another cousin) and Dave Hebler were similarly treated.
ELVISS RAGE. Elvis often exhibited a violent, even
murderous, rage. He was notorious for making terrible
threats. He cooked up murder plots against a number of
people, including the man his ex-wife ran o with and three
former bodyguards who wrote a tell-all book about him. He
threw things at people and even dragged one woman through
several rooms by her hair. He viciously threw a pool ball at
one female fan, hitting her in the chest and injuring her
severely. One of his sleep-over girlfriends almost died of a
drug overdose he had given her, and she remained in
intensive care for several days near death. He never once
went to see her or call, and he had no further contact with
her.
According to his cousin Earl, he never apologized for
anything. He drew and fired his guns many times when he
could not get his way, firing into ceilings, shooting out
television sets. When his last girlfriend, Ginger Alden,
attempted to leave Graceland against his wishes, he fired over
her head to force her to stay.
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Elvis hit Priscilla, his wife, at least once, giving her a black
eye. He also threw chairs and other things at her. Once he
tore up her expensive clothes and threw them and her out
into the driveway. He even mocked and flaunted her with his
aairs. When his father remarried, Elvis treated him and his
wife very badly. When he first learned of it, he threw a
tantrum of frightening proportions, destroying furniture and
punching holes in the walls with his fists. On one occasion he
stormed around the dinner table and threw the plates full of
food at the wall, cursing his father and stepmother and
blaspheming God (The Boy Who Would Be King).
ELVISS IMMORALITY. Elvis was a fornicator and
adulterer. He had a roving eye. His list of one-night stands
would fill volumes (Jim Curtin, Elvis, p. 119). He began
sleeping with multiple girls per week when he was only one
year out of high school. His cousin Earl notes that the sleazy
music clubs Elvis was visiting satisfied more than his thirst
for musicthey unleashed Elviss sexuality (The Boy Who
Would Be King, p. 122). He slept with many girls before his
marriage to Priscilla Beaulieu, and had multiple aairs after
the marriage.
Priscilla was only a 14-year-old ninth grader when Elvis
began dating her in 1959 during his army tour in Germany.
At the time he met Priscilla, he had an even younger girl
living in his house (Moore, Thats Alright, Elvis, p. 162). Elvis
corrupted the shy, teenaged Priscilla. He gave her liquor and
got her drunk. He got her hooked on pills. He taught her to
dress in a licentious manner. He encouraged her to lie to her
parents. He led her into immorality and pornography. He
taught her to gamble. He used hallucinogenic drugs with her.
(These are facts published in Priscillas autobiography.) In
1962, the 15-year-old Priscilla moved in with Elvis at his
Graceland mansion in Memphis (after Elvis lied to her
parents about the living arrangement) and they lived together
for five years before they married in May 1967. (The marriage
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early concerts. Hed start out, You aint nothin but a Hound
Dog, and theyd just go to pieces. Theyd always react the
same way. Thered be a riot every time (Scotty Moore, Thats
Alright, Elvis, p. 175). Girls literally threw themselves at him.
In DeLeon, Texas, in July 1955, fans shredded Presleys pink
shirta trademark by nowand tore the shoes from his
feet. Before a 1956 concert in Jacksonville, Florida, Juvenile
Court Judge Marion Gooding warned Elvis that if he did his
hip-gyrating movements and created a riot, he would be
arrested and sent to jail. Elvis performed flatfooted and
stayed out of trouble. Colonel Parker played up Elviss
sensuality. He taught him to play up his sexuality and make
both the men and women in the audience want him (The
Boy Who Would Be King, p. 164).
TRAGEDY FOLLOWS THE ROCK MUSIC LIFESTYLE.
Elviss first band was composed of three members, Elvis, lead
guitarist Scotty Moore, and bass guitarist Bill Black. The lives
of all three men were marked by confusion and tragedy. Elvis
died young and miserable. When asked about his severe
narcotic usage in the years before his death, Elvis replied, Its
better to be unconscious than miserable (Goldman, p. 3).
Bill Black, who formed the Bill Black Combo after his years
with Elvis, died in 1965 at age 29 of a brain tumor. Scotty
Moore was divorced multiple times. He also had multiple
extra-marital aairs. When he had been married only three
months to his first wife, he fathered a child by another
woman, a nightclub singer he met on the road. The little girl
was born the night Elvis, Moore, and Black recorded their
first hit at Sun Records. During his second marriage, Moore
fathered another out-of-wedlock child. In 1992, at age 61,
Moore filed for bankruptcy.
ELVISS STRANGE RELIGION. Elvis did not believe the
Bible in any traditional sense. His christ was a false one. Elvis
constructed a personalised religion out of what hed read of
Hinduism, Judaism, numerology, theosophy, mind control,
positive thinking and Christianity (Hungry for Heaven, p.
186
143). The night he died, he was reading the book Sex and
Psychic Energy (Goldman, Elvis: The Last 24 Hours, p. 140).
Elvis loved material by guru Paramahansa Yogananda, the
Hindu founder of the Self-Realization Fellowship. (I studied
Yoganandas writings and belonged to his Fellowship before I
was saved in 1973.)
In considering a marriage to Ginger Alden (which never
came to pass) prior to his death, Elvis wanted the ceremony
to be held in a pyramid-shaped arena in order to focus the
spiritual energies upon him and Ginger (Goldman, Elvis:
The Last 24 Hours, p. 125).
Elvis traveled with a portable bookcase containing over
200 volumes of his favorite books. The books most
commonly associated with him were books promoting pagan
religion, such as The Prophet by Kahilil Gibran;
Autobiography of a Yogi by Yogananda; The Mystical Christ by
Manley Palmer; The Life and Teachings of the Master of the
Far East by Baird Spalding; The Inner Life by Leadbetter; The
First and Last Freedom by Krishnamurti; The Urantia Book;
The Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception; The Book of Numbers by
Cheiro; and Esoteric Healing by Alice Bailey.
Elvis was a great fan of occultist Madame Blavatsky. He
was so taken with Blavatskys book The Voice of Silence, which
contains the supposed translation of ancient occultic Tibetan
incantations, that he sometimes read from it onstage and
was inspired by it to name his own gospel group,
Voice (Goldman, Elvis, p. 436). Another of Elviss favorite
books was The Impersonal Life, which supposedly contains
words recorded directly from God by Joseph Benner. Albert
Goldman says Elvis gave away hundreds of copies of this
book over the last 13 years of his life.
Elvis was sometimes called the evangelist by those who
hung around him, and he called them his disciples; but the
message he preached contained strange permutations of
Christian dogma (Steve Taylor, Stairway to Heaven, p. 56).
Elvis believed, for example, that Jesus slept with his female
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Gene Vincent
Gene Vincent (1935-1971) was another one of the early
influential American rock & rollers. His 1956 hit, Be-Bop-ALula, was one of the 50s rock anthems.
He grew up in church in Virginia, but he quit school at age
16 and lied about his age in order to join the military. He
188
Hank Williams
Hiram Hank Williams (1923-1953) hillbilly boogie
music, such as Rootie Tootie and Hey, Good Lookin, had
a great influence on early rock & roll. Large numbers of
rockers point to Hank Williams as one of their inspirations.
He also lived the rock & roll lifestyle and died young.
He was born in a log house in September 1923 to a poor
family in rural Alabama. His mother, Jessie Lillybelle (called
Lillie), played the organ at Baptist churches during the early
part of Hanks childhood, though she apparently was not a
meek and quiet-spirited woman. Tenants at a boardinghouse
she ran described her as mean and violent with a short fuse.
She cussed at Hank at times. Hanks father, Elonzo, who was
called Lon, was a hard drinker who did not live with the
family after Hank was six years old. Stemming from his
experiences in World War I, Lon spent many years in
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192
For the time will come when they will not endure
sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap
to themselves teachers, having itching ears; And they
shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be
turned unto fables (2 Timothy 4:3-4).
The Animals
The Animals were formed in England in 1962 and had
many hits in the 1960s. The group was composed of Eric
Burdon, John Steel, Chas Chandler, Alan Price, and Hilton
Valentine. Eventually Price was replaced by Dave Rowberry
and Steel, by Barry Jenkins.
During his days with the Animals, Eric Burdon took to
drinking, womanizing, and shooting his mouth o,
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196
The Beatles
The Beatles are the most popular and influential rock band
of all time. Rolling Stone magazine ranked them number one
in its list of 100 Greatest Artists. They have sold over one
billion records internationally. This is in spite of the fact that
none of the Beatles could read a note of music.
Paul McCartney said, We felt like gods (Bob Spitz, The
Beatles, p. 425).
They have been called a revolution and a cultural
earthquake.
More than 8,000 books have been written about them. The
Queen of England bestowed upon them the Most Excellent
Order of the British Empire in 1965 and knighted Paul
McCartney in 1997. In 2009, Liverpool Hope University
200
tried to frighten old people and made fun of those who were
crippled or deformed.
The new music called rock & roll fit his licentious lifestyle.
Later Lennon described himself as a weird, psychotic kid
covering up my insecurity with a macho faade (Giuliano,
Lennon in America, p. 2).
The other Beatles were also juvenile rowdies, if not
outright delinquents. Even as a young teenager, Paul
McCartney became about the most sexually precocious boy
of his year. Paul stole things and drew dirty pictures. They
rebelled against their fathers and other authority figures.
Ringos first job was as a bartender on a ferryboat. He was
also a thief and a truant during his youth. Even George
Harrison, the only one whose family background was
normal and undramatic, rebelled against the way his father
wanted him to act and dress. He later testified: Going in for
flash clothes, or at least trying to be a bit dierent was part
of the rebelling. I never cared for authority (Hunter Davies,
The Beatles, p. 39). Harrison was in frequent trouble at
school. When they began playing together in bands in their
teenage years, they played in wicked places such as strip
joints. They testified that they got drunk a lot and had a lot
of girls (Hunter Davies, The Beatles, p. 77).
The Beatles were a product of 1950s American rock & roll.
They listened to Radio Luxembourgs weekend broadcasts of
rockabilly and blues hits by Bill Haley, Fats Domino. Carl
Perkins, and other fathers of rock music.
Lennon called Elvis Presley the guru wed been waiting
for and the Messiah (Bob Spitz, The Beatles, p. 41). Lennon
said that nothing really aected me until Elvis. McCartney
said: [Elvis] was the biggest kick. Every time I felt low I just
put on an Elvis and Id feel great, beautiful. Ringo said, Elvis
changed my life.
They formed a rock band called the Quarrymen in the
mid-1950s. By late 1957, the band included Lennon,
Harrison, and McCartney, plus other young men on bass and
204
drums. They combed their hair and dressed like Elvis and
played rhythm & blues and Chuck Berry/Little Richard/Elvis
type music. The group changed its name to the Silver Beetles
in 1960, then simply to the Beatles, referring to the beat of
their music. John Lennon changed the name to Beatles to
accent the drive of their music, the BEAT (H.T. Spence,
Confronting Contemporary Christian Music, p. 78).
Drummer Ringo Starr joined the group in 1962 just before
they recorded their first single.
By 1963, Beatlemania was raging in England, and by
1964, the Beatles had leaped to international fame when I
Want to Hold Your Hand skyrocketed to the top of the
charts in the United States and they appeared on the Ed
Sullivan Show. By April of that year the Beatles had the top
five best-selling singles in America.
The Beatles set the tone for rock music and for the hippie
youth culture in the 1960s until the band broke up in 1969.
They led a generation of rebellious youth from marijuana to
acid to free sex to eastern religion to revolution and liberal
political/social activism. David Noebel observes: The Beatles
set trends, and their fans followed their lead. They were the
vanguard of an entire generation who grew long hair, smoked
grass, snorted coke, dropped acid, and lived for rock n roll.
They were the cool generation (The Legacy of John Lennon,
p. 43).
205
book called The Lost Spear of Destiny, which was about the
spear used to pierce the side of Jesus Christ when He was on
the cross. Lennon fantasized about finding the spear. When
asked what he would do with it if he found it, Lennon replied
that he could do anything in the universe (Giuliano, p. 81).
Lennon and Yoko participated in sances, and Yoko
believed that she was a reincarnation of a 3,000-year-old
Persian mummy that she had purchased in Switzerland
(Giuliano, p. 157). She collected Egyptian artifacts, believing
they possessed magical powers.
Yoko Ono believed the Hindu myth that a son born on his
fathers birthday inherits his soul when the father dies. Thus,
they arranged to have their son, Sean, delivered by cesarean
on Lennons 35th birthday, October 9, 1975 (Gary Patterson,
Hellhounds on Their Trail: Tales from the Rock n Roll
Graveyard, p. 183). Yoko was convinced the baby would be a
messiah who would one day change the world (Giuliano, p.
101).
Lennon and Yokos prognosticators frequently gave false
predictions. When Yoko was pregnant, I Ching predicted the
baby was a girl; but it was actually a boy (Giuliano, p. 88). In
1976, Yokos psychic advisers suggested that Lennon should
not resume his musical career until 1982, but he died two
years before that (Giuliano, p. 108). A psychic Yoko consulted
in 1977 in Rome predicted that Lennon would become
musically productive again in 1980 and that this phase would
last two years, but Lennon died in 1980 (Giuliano, p. 144). In
1979, only a year before Lennons death, Yokos advisers
forecast that she and John would have two more children
(Giuliano, p. 192).
The Beatles were immensely influential in promoting oneworld, New Age thought. In 1967, for example, their song All
You Need Is Love (referring not to the love of God through
Jesus Christ or to love defined biblically, but to a vague
humanistic love) was broadcast to more than 150 million
people via a television program called Our World.
221
After his wife Lindas death, Paul McCartney told the press
that he was committed to fate. He said: The Beatles had an
expression: something will happen. Thats about as far as I get
with philosophy. Theres no point mapping out next year. Fate
is much more magical (Paul McCartney, USA Today, Oct.
15, 1999, p. 8E).
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Lennons Self-Centeredness
The man who sang about love (all you need is love) and
peace (give peace a chance) was actually noncompassionate, self-centered, and violent. His biographers
speak of the infamous Lennon temper. He frequently flew
into rages, screaming, smashing things, hitting people. He
admitted, I was a hitter. I couldnt express myself and I hit. I
fought men and I beat women (Giuliano, Lennon in
America, p. 20).
On one adulterous weekend fling with his secretary, May
Pang, Lennon accused her of cheating on him, and flew into
a r a g e , t r a s h i n g t h e r o o m a n d t r a mp l i n g h e r
eyeglasses (Giuliano, p. 16). Lennon admitted: I was a very
jealous, possessive guy. A very insecure male. A guy who
wants to put his woman in a little box and only bring her out
when he feels like playing with her (Giuliano, p. 16).
When the owner of a nightclub said something that upset
Lennon, he beat the poor man mercilessly (Giuliano, p. 8).
At a party in California in 1973, Lennon went berserk,
hurling a chair out the window, smashing mirrors, heaving a
TV against the wall, and screaming nonsense about film
director Roman Polanski being to blame (Giuliano, p. 57).
223
224
from the sky. In the song God, Lennon boldly said, I don't
believe in magic. I don't believe in Bible. I don't believe in
tarot. I don't believe in Jesus. I just believe in me. Yoko and
me. Thats reality.
George Harrison financed Monty Pythons vile and
blasphemous Life of Brian, which even Newsweek magazine
described as irreverent. Time magazine called it an intense
assault on religion (Sept. 17, 1979, p. 101).
Paul McCartney described himself and the other Beatles as
four iconoclastic, brass-hard, post-Christian, pragmatic
realists (Time, Sept. 5, 1968, p. 60).
The anti-christ occultist Aliester Crowleys photo appeared
on the Beatles Sargent Peppers album cover, and the Beatles
testified that the characters on the album were their heroes.
John Lennon explained to Playboy magazine that the whole
Beatles idea was to do what you want do what thou wilst,
as long as it doesnt hurt somebody (Lennon, cited by David
She, The Playboy Interviews with John Lennon and Yoko
Ono, p. 61). This was precisely what Crowley taught.
Lennon claimed that the Beatles knew exactly what they
wanted to do. We know what we are because we know what
were doing. There were very few things that happened to
the Beatles that werent really well thought out by us whether
to do it or not (Rolling Stone, Feb. 12, 1976, p. 92).
Lennons Death
Lennon was shot to death in December 1980 outside his
apartment building in New York City. He was 40 years old. In
an interview with Gannett News Service, Lennons murderer,
Mark David Chapman, testified of how he prepared for the
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232
Bee Gees
The Bee Gees, formed in 1958, was composed of three
brothers, Maurice, Barry, and Robin Gibb. (Their family had
moved from England to Australia that year.) They became
one of the wealthiest groups in rock history with a string of
Top Ten hits in the 1960s and 70s.
Describing their youth, Barry Gibb said, We broke the law
about as much as you can. Robin Gibb had a hobby of
making pornographic drawings. In 1973, the Bee Gees said,
We do smoke marijuana now and again (Circus, Aug. 3,
1973, p. 38). In fact, they did more than that. They were
heavy drinkers and got into pillsDexedrine (Rock Lives, p.
493).
Barry believes in reincarnation, and Maurice and Robin
believe they have psychic ESP powers (Larsons Book of Rock,
p. 145). The Bee Gees album Spirits Having Flown contains
many references to reincarnation.
Andy Gibb, youngest of the Bee Gees brothers, died in
1988 at age 30 of a cardiac infection. He had long been
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Black Sabbath
Black Sabbath, a British group formed in 1967, became the
heavy-metal king of the Seventies. The original members
were lead singer Ozzy Osbourne, bassist Terry Geezer
Butler, guitarist Tony Iommi, and drummer Bill Ward.
Osbourne was a juvenile delinquent who spent three months
in prison for shoplifting before helping form Black Sabbath.
The band sold over eight million albums before Osbourne left
in 1979. The band has had several other lead singers since
then, including Ian Gillan, Tony Iommi, and Ronnie James
Dio. After a steady stream of personnel changes the group
continues to perform today, though only guitarist Tony
Iommi remains of the original members.
The band began playing the blues in rough bars and dance
clubs in Birmingham, England. We all came from a pretty
depressing area, and I think it came out in the music when
we started rehearsing. I mean, it was very rough when we first
started, always in fights, and God knows what. It was sort of
old style blues, really (Tony Iommi, cited by Mike Stark,
Black Sabbath, p. 4). They called themselves Pooka Tulk, then
Earth, then Black Sabbath. The term Black Sabbath refers to
an occultic holiday. Ozzy Osbourne claims the name came
from an old Boris Karlo horror film they saw on television,
but the Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll says, The
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Black Sabbath album covers and music lyrics are filled with
occultic symbolism. The album cover to Sabbath, Bloody
Sabbath depicted weird demons attacking sleeping humans
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and a nude satanic ritual with the number 666 at the top.
They had inverted crosses on the platform during concerts.
(Witchcraft uses inverted crosses to symbolize blasphemy
against Christ and a rejection of His atonement.) They
dressed in occultic fashions. Early publicity stunts included
holding black masses with nude women on altars sprinkled
with chicken blood. The Black Sabbath song N.I.B. seems to
be a love song from Satan: Now I have you with me under
my power/ Our love grows stronger now with every hour/
Look into my eyes, youll see who I am/ My name is Lucifer,
please take my hand... The album Born Again depicted a
demonic baby with satanic horns, fangs, and claws on its
fingers. Their 1990 album, Tyr, was about the idolatrous
pagan gods of the Vikings. Their 1989 album and 1990 tour
were titled the Headless Cross, which is blasphemy against
Jesus Christ. Of that album, Black Sabbath lead singer Tony
Martin said, With Headless Cross I went as far to the dark
side as I could possibly get away with... (Mike Stark, Black
Sabbath, p. 84). Their 1981 Mob Rules album contained a
song about Voodoo and a song entitled E5150, which
Ronnie James Dio says means evil (Mike Stark, Black
Sabbath, p. 63). The album depicts Lucifer etched in blood.
The original title for their War Pigs song was supposed to
be War Piggies, which is a night when all the black
magicians have a party. At a concert in Ontario, Canada,
Black Sabbath gave an altar call to Lucifer, inviting the
audience to commit their lives to Satan (H.T. Spence,
Confronting Contemporary Christian Music, p. 99). One of
their albums was titled We Sold Our Soul to Rock n Roll.
The song Master of Reality presented Satan as lord of the
rock & roller.
Your soul is ill, but you will not find a cure/ Your world
was made for you by someone above/ But you chose evil
ways instead of love/ You made me master of the world
where you exist/ The soul I took from you was not even
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Ronnie James Dio, who was the lead singer for Black
Sabbath from 1979 to 1982, admits that he has studied the
occult and attempted to contact the spirit world via sances
(Birmingham News, Sept. 26, 1985; Hit Parader, Feb. 1985, p.
17; Faces, Feb, 1985, p. 17). After he left Black Sabbath and
pursued a solo career, he continued his occultism and
blasphemy. He blasphemously named himself Dio (his real
name is Padavana), which means God. On his albums, he
spells Dio upside down, referring to the devil (Creem, Oct.
1985, p. 8). In his song Last In Line, he talks about going o
to see a witch, declaring, We may never come
home (Larsons Book of Rock, p. 154). The stage for his Sacred
Heart album tour featured a leering, red-eyed creature
symbolizing Satan. The cover to his Holy Diver album depicts
a priest or a preacher in chains being thrust into the sea,
depicting the lie that the devil has power over Christianity.
(Of course, none of these rockers make a distinction between
true and false Christianity.) Dios song Hungry for Heaven
says Youre hungry for heaven, but you need a little hell.
Black Sabbath has spewed forth a constant stream of abuse
and hatred toward Bible-believing Christians. Their 1980
Heaven and Hell album contained a song that viciously
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Graham Bond
Graham Bond (1937-1974) was one of the pioneers of jazzrock in Britain. In 1963, he formed the Graham Bond
Organisation with Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker. Bruce and
Baker left in 1964 to form Cream with Eric Clapton.
Bond was addicted to drugs and alcohol and was heavily
involved in the occult. He was often abusive, cruel, and selfdestructive (Unknown Legends of Rock n Roll, p. 28). He
claimed to be the son of Satanist Aleister Crowley. Together
with his first wife, Diane Stewart, he formed a band called
Holy Magick, named after Crowleys sorcery. Both the band
and the marriage failed. In 1973 he formed another band,
called Magus, the name given to a high level sorcerer. He
was incarcerated in a mental hospital that year, but he was
released.
A biography by Harry Shapiro, The Mighty Shadow, depicts
Bond at that point in his life as characterized by wild mood
swings and obsessed with the occult. He sexually abused his
stepdaughter.
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David Bowie
David Bowie (b. 1947), born David Robert Jones, has
performed music since he was 13 years old. He played in mod
bands in the early 1960s and changed his name to David
Bowie in 1966. That year he spent some weeks in a monastery
studying Buddhism. He has been called a musical chameleon
because of his continual changes in style and persona. He is a
trend setter and is one of rocks most influential musicians.
He had his first major hit single, Space Oddity, in 1969.
In an interview in 1972, Bowie claimed he was
homosexual. TV Guide called him the leader of the genderbenders. He was once named the number one male singer
and the number three female singer in the same poll in
Britain. Bowies ex-wife, Angela Barnett, was kicked out of a
Connecticut college because of lesbianism. The two allegedly
met while involved with the same man. On Thursday nights,
during their marriage, David visited gay bars while Angela
visited lesbian clubs, and they brought home people they
found (Time, July 18, 1983, p. 58).
Bowie blasphemously said, Jesus Christ was a strange boy
himself (Hit Parader, June 19, 1975).
In the early 1970s, Bowie dyed his hair orange and wore
womens clothing, calling himself Ziggy Stardust. During
performances, the Ziggy Stardust character blasphemously
oered himself as a rock & roll suicide in mockery of the
martyrdom of Jesus Christ (Flowers in the Dustbin, p. 300).
Bowie appeared on the cover of his 1970 album, The Man
Who Sold the World, wearing a silk dress. On the 1971 album,
Hunky Dory, he dressed as Greta Garbo.
In 1976, he portrayed himself as the Thin White Duke,
reflecting his cocaine-fueled paranoia. He admitted that he
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James Brown
James Brown (1933- 2006) was the best known and most
successful black artist of the Sixties and early Seventies. His
polyrhythmic funk vamps virtually reshaped dance music.
He was called The Godfather of Soul.
By age 16, he was convicted of armed robbery and
sentenced to eight to sixteen years in prison. While behind
bars, the young Brown was befriended by Bobby Byrd, who
had a family gospel group. Byrd helped obtain Browns release
after he had served about three years of his sentence, and
Brown began to sing with gospel groups out of Mt. Zion
Baptist Church, Toccoa, Georgia. Byrd and Brown had also
caught the rock & roll/rhythm and blues/doo-wop fever.
Brown was powerfully influenced by Little Richard. They
gave up gospel music and formed The Flames (which later
became the Famous Flames), and by 1956 they had their first
hit, Please, Please, Please, which sold a million copies.
Brown found extreme commercial success from then until
the 70s. In the late 60s, he purchased three radio stations,
opened a restaurant (which he planned to be the first of 150
franchises in all 50 states), and a private jet.
In 1969, Browns wife of 16 years, Velma, filed for divorce.
They had four children. A year later, Brown married his
second wife, Deirdre Yvonne Jenkins. In June 1973, Browns
oldest son (by his first wife), 19-year-old Teddy, died in a car
crash. In 1975, the IRS charged Brown with $4.5 million in
back taxes. Within the next few years, he was forced to sell
his radio stations and the jet. His second wife left him in 1983
and took their two daughters. In 1984, Brown took a third
wife, Adrianne Modell Rodriquez. That marriage was not
smooth sailing, either. At one point she set fire to all his
clothes, and he threw her fur coats on the lawn and blasted
them with a shotgun (Moser, Rock Stars, p. 33). In 1988,
Brown was arrested and charged with assault with intent to
murder Adrienne. She later withdrew the assault charge and
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The Byrds
Roger McGuinn and Keith Jarrett of the Byrds were
followers of Gurdjie, who taught that man achieves truth
through the process of the Golden Ladder. A man must
ascend seven rungs of an evolutionary ladder. The ladder is
ascended not by logical knowledge, but by psychological
wisdomthrough self-study, self-awareness, selfremembering, and the discovery of the essential unchanging
I (Muncy, The Role of Rock, p. 171).
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Though the Byrds tried to deny that the song Eight Miles
High was about drugs, David Crosby later admitted that this
was a lie. Did I think Eight Miles High was a drug song?
No, I knew it was. We denied it, of course. But we had a
strong feeling about drugs, or rather, psychedelics and
marijuana. We thought they would help us blast our
generation loose from the Fifties. Personally, I dont regret my
psychedelic experiences. I took psychedelics as a sort of
sacrament (Crosby, cited by Rock an Unruly History, p. 166).
Gram Parsons (born Cecil Connors), singer/songwriter,
pioneer of country-rock and member of The Byrds and the
Flying Burrito Brothers, died in September 1973 at age 26 of
an overdose of alcohol and morphine. Cocaine and
amphetamines were also found in his system. He had been a
heroin user for years. He had just filed for divorce from his
second wife. His road manager, Phil Kaufman, stole Parkers
body and con and burned it at the Joshua Tree National
Monument, claiming that Parker had desired to be cremated
there. Not long before he died, Parsons had befriended and
performed with Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones, and had
become fascinated by dope and black magic (Sanchez, Up
and Down with the Rolling Stones, p. 286). His short life was
full of Southern madness, backstabbing, cheating, suicide,
liquor, lawsuits, more drugs than should be allowed, too
much family money, and too little love (Rock Bottom, p.
226).
Clarence White, guitarist for The Byrds and inductee into
the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, died in 1973 at age 29. He was
struck by an automobile while loading equipment into a van.
Gene Clark, who played tambourine and guitar for The
Byrds, died in 1991 at age 47 of a heart attack after long years
of drug and alcohol abuse.
Michael Clark, who played drums for The Byrds, died in
1993 at age 47 of liver failure resulting from alcohol abuse.
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Canned Heat
Canned Heat was named after the song Canned Heat
Blues by Delta bluesman Tommy Johnson. The song was a
haunting, autobiographical account of his alcohol
addiction (The Big Book of Blues). When alcohol was not
available, Johnson would drink Sterno or canned heat.
Johnson, who claimed to have acquired his blues talent by
selling his soul to the devil, died in 1956 of alcohol-related
cause at roughly age 58.
Canned Heat was composed of Bob Hite, Al Wilson, Frank
Cook, and Stuart Brotman. Among those who joined the
band later were Henry Vestine, Mark Andes, and Larry
Taylor.
Tommy Johnson died in 1956 at roughly age 58 of alcoholrelated cause, and some of the members of Canned Heat have
followed in his footsteps.
Alan Blind Owl Wilson died in 1970 at age 27 of a drug
overdose.
Bob Hite died in 1981 at age 36 of heart failure due to drug
abuse.
Henry Vestine was an alcoholic and died from cancer in
October 1997 at age 52.
Ray Charles
Ray Charles (b. 1930) is one of the most popular and
successful rock-blues singers.
Blind from birth, he learned to read Braille and to play
various musical instruments at an early age. His father left the
family when Ray was an infant and died when Ray was 10
years old. His mother died when he was 12. He left school in
his early teens and played with various bands.
His first hit song, I Got a Woman, appeared in 1955, and
his music has achieved massive commercial success since
then.
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Eric Clapton
British rock star Eric Clapton (born Eric Patrick Clapp) (b.
1945) is considered the worlds premiere rock guitarist.
His 16-year-old mother was not married, and his
grandparents brought him up. His father, whom he never
knew, was a married Canadian soldier stationed in Britain.
Claptons mother eventually married another Canadian
soldier and went to live abroad.
He admits that he was a nasty kid. He learned to play the
music of black blues guitarists note for note on the guitar that
his grandparents gave him when he was 14. By age 16, he was
playing with local rhythm & blues bands. In 1963, he joined
the Yardbirds and played with them until March 1965. He
then played for John Mayalls Bluesbreakers and recorded one
album. His guitar playing genius earned him the rock & roll
nickname of God, and the blasphemous slogan Clapton Is
God became a popular grato in London. From 1966 to
1968, Clapton played with the Cream and was vaulted to
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Lori Del Santo, gave birth out of wedlock to his only child,
Conor. (Clapton was legally still married to Pattie; they did
not get a divorce until 1989.) In 1991, Conor died by falling
through a window in his mothers apartment over 50 stories
to his death. He was four and a half years old. Claptons
former girlfriend, Alice Ormsby-Gore, died from a drug
overdose.
Clapton played the part of the preacher in the
blasphemous rock opera Tommy. Movie reviewer Anthony
Hilder called the opera the most blatantly anti-Christian
movie malignancy ever made, at any time, anywhere, by any
one. Everything is done to desecrate Christianity with all
the lauding language of Lucifer (Hilder, cited by David
Noebel, The Legacy of John Lennon, p. 45). Tommy was
directed by Ken Russell. It also starred The Who and Elton
John. The opera featured the worship of licentious movie
actress Marilyn Monroe.
Claptons 1970 group Derek and the Dominos produced
many rock casualties. Guitarist Duane Allman (who played
on the Derek and the Dominos album Layla), died in a
motorcycle crash in 1971. Bassist Carl Radle died of
alcoholism in 1980 at age 38. Drummer Jim Gordon (one of
the most famous rock session drummers) murdered his 72year-old mother in June 1983 by hitting her with a hammer
and then stabbing her. He was heavily addicted to heroin,
cocaine, and alcohol, and had heard voices for years. He
claimed that the voice of his mother tormented him day and
night, and he had threatened to kill her previously. He had
checked into psychiatric hospitals 14 times. He claims that
voices told him to silence his mothers voice in his head by
killing her. In 1984, he was found guilty of second-degree
murder and sentenced to 16 years to life in prison, where he
continued to play drums. In 1990, Claptons agent and two
members of his road crew were killed in a helicopter crash.
In 1998, leaders of two major agencies (Women Fighting
Back and the Domestic Abuse Awareness Foundation) that
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David Crosby
David Crosby (b. 1941) of the Byrds and Crosby, Stills,
Nash and Young, almost died several times of drug abuse
before he was out of his 40s. He said, I was stoned for every
bit of music Ive ever played. Every record, every performance
I was stoned halfway out of my gourd (The Rock Yearbook,
1984, p. 208).
Though the Byrds tried to deny that the song Eight Miles
High was about drugs, David Crosby later admitted that this
was a lie. Did I think Eight Miles High was a drug song?
No, I knew it was. We denied it, of course. But we had a
strong feeling about drugs, or rather, psychedelics and
marijuana. We thought they would help us blast our
generation loose from the fifties. Personally, I dont regret my
psychedelic experiences. I took psychedelics as a sort of
sacrament (Crosby, cited from Rock & Roll an Unruly
History, p. 166).
In 1982, Crosby was arrested for possession of drugs,
driving under the influence of cocaine, and carrying a
concealed pistol. Two weeks later he was arrested again for
possession of cocaine and a concealed weapon. In 1985, he
was arrested again, and he tried to escape from the law on his
boat, but it was not sea worthy. After turning himself in, he
spent nine months in jail and said that this probably saved his
life, because it forced him to face his drug addiction. He had
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Deep Purple
The British rock band Deep Purple was formed in 1968
and continues to perform after a number of regroupings. It
was listed as the loudest rock band by Guinness Book of World
Records. The original band members were Rod Evans, Nick
Simper, Jon Lord, Ritchie Blackmore, and Ian Paice.
Guitarist Ritchie Blackmore (who went on to play in
Rainbow) was involved in the occult. He has held sances
(Circus, April 30, 1981, p. 46) and has claimed to practice
astral projection (out of body experiences) during his
concerts. He records in a 17th-century castle that is allegedly
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John Denver
The late rock singer John Denver (1943-1997), real name
Henry John Deutschendorf Jr., was one of the top five
recording artists in the sales history of the pop music
industry.
A New Age pantheist, in 1976 he established the Windstar
Foundation for environmental education and other eorts
toward a sustainable future for the world. He said:
Im a global citizen. Ive created that for myself, and I
dont want to step away from it. I want to work in
whatever I domy music, my writing, my performing,
my commitments, my home and personal lifein a way
that is directed towards a world in balance, a world that
creates a better quality of life for all people (John
Denver biography, imusic, http://imusic.com/showcase/
country/johndenver.html).
Neil Diamond
Neil Diamond (b. 1941) had many Top 10 hits in the late
60s, 70s, and early 80s.
In 1968, Diamond created an organization called
Performers Against Drugs, but in 1976 he was arrested for
possession of marijuana.
In 1969, he divorced his first wife, Jayen Posner, after eight
years of marriage; nine days later he married his production
assistant, Marcia Kay Murphey. The cover to Neil Diamonds
album Jonathan Livingston Seagull depicts pagan religious
books such as the Bhagavid-gita, The Sermon on the Mount
according to Vedanta, KRSNA Supreme Personality of
Godhead, and The Aquarian Gospel of Jesus the Christ.
The Doors
Jim Morrison (1944-1971), lead singer for The Doors, was
a drug-soaked rebel who was fascinated with the occult. He
said, Ive always been attracted to ideas that were about
revolt against authoritywhen you make your peace with
authority you become an authority. I like ideas about the
breaking away or overthrowing of established orderI am
interested in anything about revolt, disorder, chaos, especially
activity that seems to have no meaning (Doors press kit). He
sang, We want the world and we want it NOW! At his
concerts he would shout, There are no rules; there are no
limits.
The name of this rock group was an allusion to extrasensory perception, knowledge of hidden things,
supernatural experiences which open up channels of
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Bob Dylan
From my hippie days, I well remember the heyday of
rock legend Bob Dylan (birth name Robert Zimmerman).
His hit song The Times They Are A-Changin appeared in
1964. I had started listening to rock music in the early 1960s
and was consumed with it until I was saved in 1973.
Dylan, who was included on Time magazines list 100 most
important people of the twentieth century, helped to
popularize the merging of folk and rock music. He was one of
the chief poets of the 60s generation. His songs posed many
questions, but he had no answers. In Blowing in the Wind,
he asked such things as, How many roads must a man walk
down before he is called a man? What is the answer? The
answer, my friends, is blowing in the wind... This means that
he doesnt know the answer and he is not sure anyone knows
the answer. Sadly, that is the philosophy of most of Dylans
fans because they have rejected the Bible as the Word of God.
Dylans vast influence has been anything but godly. He
lived out-of-wedlock with folk singer Joan Baez and
introduced the Beatles to marijuana (Peter Brown, The Love
You Make: An Insiders Story of the Beatles). Dylan went
through some profound drug experiences during 1964-5,
taking up Baudelairs formula for immortality: A poet makes
himself a seer by a long prodigious and rational disordering
of the senses. He tried just about everything he could to
open his head as biographer Tony Scaduto puts it (Henry
Shapiro, Waiting for the Man, p. 144). Many of Dylans songs
were about drugs, including Lay Down Your Weary Tune,
Subterranean Homesick Blues, and Mr. Tambourine Man.
Dylans backup group, known simply as the Band, was
formerly called Ronnie Hawkins and the Hawks. They had a
reputation for pill popping, whoring, and brawling that was
second to none (Robert Palmer, Rock & Roll an Unruly
History, p. 3).
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them. If you ever went to a Billy Graham rally back then, you
were changed forever. Theres never been a preacher like him.
He could fill football stadiums before anybody. ... Long before
Mick Jagger sang his first note or Bruce strapped on his first
guitar--thats some of the part of rock n roll that I retained. I
had to. I saw Billy Graham in the flesh and heard him loud
and clear (Looking Deeper into Dylan, AARP the
magazine, Feb.-Mar. 2015).
This is a strange statement. Dylan was changed forever in
the 1950s and 1960s by Grahams preaching? Dylan, the drug
user who taught the 1960s generation that there are no
answers to lifes mysteries (e.g., Blowin in the Wind), who
included Tarot cards and Buddhas on his album covers, who
made a profession of faith in Christ in the 1980s only to
repudiate it?
Actually, Bob Dylan represents a large percentage of Billy
Grahams converts. Multitudes of people professed faith in
Christ, but biblical evidence of the new birth was rare.
Graham helped Christianize America, but it was a house built
on sand.
A Bargain with the Devil?
In an interview with Ed Bradley, aired on 60 Minutes, June
26, 2005, the 63-year-old rock singer said that his early songs
were almost magically written kind of a penetrating
magic. He also said that he made a bargain with the devil.
Question: Why do you still do it? Why are you still out
here?
Dylan: It goes back to that destiny thing. I made a bargain
with it a long time ago, and Im holding up my end.
Q: What was your bargain?
Dylan: To get where I am now.
Q: Should I ask whom you made the bargain with?
Dylan: With the chief commander.
Q: On this earth?
Dylan: (laughing) On this earth and the world we cant see.
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Faces
The British rock band Faces was called the Small Faces
(because the band members were all short) when it was
formed in 1965 and was composed of Steve Marriott, Jimmy
Winston, Ronnie Plonk Lane, and Kenney Jones. In 1969,
the name of the group was shortened to Faces with some
lineup changes. Singer Rod Stewart and guitarist Ronnie
Wood joined the band, and Marriott left to form Humble Pie.
The band broke up in 1974. Ronnie Wood then joined the
Rolling Stones, and Kenney Jones eventually replaced
deceased drummer Keith Moon in The Who.
Notorious for their hard-partying, boozy tours, and
ragged concerts, the Faces lived the rock n roll lifestyle to the
extreme (All Music Guide to Rock, p. 324).
Three members of the Faces have died young. Guitarist
Jimmy McCulloch, who played with the Faces in the 1970s
and later played with Paul McCartneys group Wings, died in
September 1979 at age 46, apparently from the eects of
drugs (Waiting for the Man, p. 226). Steve Marriott died in
1991 at age 44 in a fire at his cottage. Ronnie Lane died of
multiple sclerosis in 1997 at age 51.
Rod Stewart (b. 1945) is well known for his immoral
lifestyle. Many of his songs describe fornication in a plain
manner. His way of letting o steam is drinking, taking
drugs, and picking up groupies (Rolling Stone, March
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Fleetwood Mac
Fleetwood Mac was formed by Mick Fleetwood in 1967
and was very popular in the 1960s and 70s. Their song Black
Magic Woman was a hit in 1968 and again in 1973. By the
early 1980s, the band members pursued solo music careers.
Fleetwood Macs singer, Stevie Nicks, was deeply involved
in witchcraft. Rolling Stone called her Fleetwood Macs blond
priestess of the occult (Sept. 17, 1981, p. 57). She has dressed
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Marvin Gaye
Marvin Gaye (1939-1984) (he added the e to his last
name when he entered show business) was raised in a strict
but grossly inconsistent Pentecostal home. His father was a
preacher in a Washington, D.C. church called the House of
God, the Holy Church of the Living God, the Pillar and
Ground of the Truth, the House of Prayer for All People. The
small denomination is described as a long-winded
Pentecostal sect with a strong Orthodox Jewish
overlay (Stairway to Heaven, p. 98). They maintained strict
Jewish dietary laws and celebrated only Old Testament
religious festivals. Their services were characterized by
Pentecostal confusion: tongues, ecstatic outbursts, repetitive
praise chants. The elder Gay was a very strange preacher. He
rarely worked, drank heavily, and even wore his wifes silk
blouses, panties, and nylons on occasion. He was mean to his
sons, beating them unreasonably. Marvin described his
childhood as living with a very peculiar, changeable, cruel,
and all-powerful king (Rock Bottom, p. 104).
Marvin rebelled against this hypocrisy and created his own
type of insanity, attempting to combine sex with Jesus in an
extremely irreverent manner. He said, I cant see anything
wrong with sex between consenting adults. Have your sex;
it can be very exciting if youre lucky. I hope the music that I
present here makes you lucky (album cover, Lets Get It On,
1973). This album was called by critic Don Waller The most
seductive, sensual record in all popular music. His ideal
state was one in which unbridled lust could coexist with deep
religious conviction. In his personal life he would slip from
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Grateful Dead
Originally called the Warlocks, the Grateful Dead was
formed in 1965 and became one of the most influential rock
bands of all time. For a couple of years, they lived
communally in the Haight-Ashbury section of San Francisco,
which was made famous during the hippie era. The band, led
by Jerry Garcia, was originally composed of Bob Weir, Ron
Pigpen McKernan, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzmann, and Mickey
Hart. Keith Godchaux joined the group in 1971. Brent
Mydland joined in 1979. There have been many personnel
changes since then.
The Grateful Dead embody not only the cultic
potentials historically inherent in rock n roll, but the
entire submerged linkage between rock and religion.
the Deads legendary live concerts bear uncanny
resemblance to religious festivals (Stairway to
Heaven, p. 196).
Tim Hardin
Tim Hardin, rock singer and songwriter, whose songs such
as If I Were a Carpenter and Reason to Believe were
covered by many rockers, died of a heroin overdose in
December 1980, only six days after his 39th birthday. Hardin
had long abused alcohol, drugs, and women. He took
everything to the limitsthen stretched them. He ate in
binges, drank to excess, smoked constantly, doped himself up
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Jimi Hendrix
Jimi Hendrix (1942-1970) was one of the most famous of
all rock guitarists.
He attended church some in his youth, later testifying: I
used to go to Sunday School but the only thing I believe in
now is music (Hendrix, cited by Curtis Knight, Jimi).
As a teenager growing up in Seattle, Washington, he began
imitating the playing styles of black rhythm and blues
guitarists such as Robert Johnson, Muddy Waters, and B.B.
King. The late rock guitar virtuoso Mike Bloomfield observed
that Hendrix was the blackest guitarist Ive ever heard. His
music is deeply rooted in pre-blues ... Jimi especially loved
the real old black musical forms, and they pour out in his
playing (David Henderson, Scuse Me While I Kiss the Sky, p.
192). In the beginning of his rock & roll career, Hendrix
toured with Little Richard and did session work with various
groups. In the spring of 1964, Hendrix joined the Isley
Brothers, and by the end of that year, he was playing for
Curtis Knight and the Squares.
In 1965, he launched a solo career and by the following
year, he had formed his own band, the Jimi Hendrix
Experience. Their first album, the drug-influenced Are You
Experienced, appeared the following year. Following his
performance at the June 1967 Monterey Pop Festival,
Hendrix became an international rock superstar. In 1969, the
Jimi Hendrix Experience was disbanded and a new group was
formed called the Band of Gypsies.
The British rock session drummer, Rocki (Kwasi
Dzidzornu), who has recorded with many famous bands such
as the Rolling Stones, Spooky Tooth, and Ginger Baker,
understood that the music of Jimi Hendrix was akin to
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Many defenders of rock & roll mock the idea that there
might be a direct connection between rock music and
voodoo and African tribal occultic paganism. There are
proponents of Christian rock music who label such an idea
racist. In Hendrixs biography, though, we see that the nonChristian son of an actual voodoo priest observed a direct
connection between the music of rock star Jimi Hendrix and
idolatrous voodoo. Is the black African rock drummer Rocki
a racist for making such an observation? His remarks on this
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setting his guitar on fire. This would send the young concertgoers into a frenzy.
Hendrix abused drugs and alcohol. He took acid, smoked
marijuana, used heroin and amphetamines, drank liquor.
Noel Redding testified: Whether it was true or not, we felt
we had to be stoned to play properly. Good dope equaled
good music (A Time to Rock, p. 200).
Hendrix was deeply involved in occultism and mysticism
and these themes permeated his music. His song Voodoo
Chile glorified voodoo practices such as out of body
experiences.
Well Im a voodoo child/ Lord Im a voodoo child/ The
night I was born/ Lord, I swear the moon turned a fire
red/ My poor mother cried out now the gypsy was
right/ And I seen her fell down right dead/ Cause Im
a voodoo child/ Lord knows, Im a voodoo child
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Jeerson Airplane
Jeerson Airplane was formed in 1965 and was one of the
influential psychedelic rock bands of San Francisco. The
name was changed to Jeerson Starship, then simply to
Starship.
Jeerson Airplanes original singer, Grace Slick, was one of
rocks many bad girls. She was immoral and sacrilegious. At
times she stripped o her clothes on stage. She
blasphemously named her illegitimate child god (The Rock
Report, p. 85). Slick told the nurse, Were naming her god
with a small g; we want her to be humble (Moser, Rock Stars,
p. 111). Before the birth certificate was recorded, though, the
childs name was changed to China Wing Kantner. The
Jeerson Airplane song The Son of Jesus from the Long
John Silver album is filled with blasphemy against Jesus
Christ. The song claims that Christs miracles go only so far,
that he learned his secret wisdom in Egypt, that he had
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Jethro Tull
Jethro Tull, formed in 1967 in England, was originally
composed of Ian Anderson, Mick Abrahams, Glenn Cornick,
and Clive Bunker, though there have been constant personnel
changes since then. Jethro Tull has been one of the most
commercially successful and eccentric progressive-rock
bands (Rolling Stone Encyclopedia, p. 505). The group
continued to perform and record in the 1990s.
Jethro Tulls Ian Anderson is known for his manic,
sexually explicit stage antics, which often utilized both his
flute and the sound system. The concerts were often bizarre
and loaded with sexuality and vulgarities (Why Knock
Rock?, p. 187).
Jethro Tull was openly blasphemous on its 1971 Aqualung
album. The back cover contained the following message: In
the beginning man created God, and in the image of man
created he him. And he gave him a multitude of names, that
he might be Lord over all the earth when it suited man. And
on the seven millionth day man rested and did lean heavily
on his God and saw that it was good The song Hymn 43
stated: If Jesus saves well he better save himself from the
gory glory seekers who use his name in death. I saw him in
the city and on the mountains of the moon, his cross was
rather bloody, He could hardly roll his stone.
In 1976, one hundred and eighty-eight people were
arrested for drug possession at a Jethro Tull concert in Los
Angeles.
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Elton John
Elton John (birth name Reginald Kenneth Dwight) (b.
1947) is one of the most popular rockers of all time. He has
had more than 36 top 40 hits, was the hottest act in rock
during the mid-70s, and continues to record and perform
and influence rock. He has sold more than 300 million
records. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame in 1994. His mother wanted a girl; his father spent
much time away from the family; and he says he was very
depressed in his childhood. He spent much of his time alone
in his room playing the piano. He won a piano scholarship to
the Royal Academy of Music at age 11, but he left it two
weeks before finals six years later, to begin a career in rock
music. He eventually changed his legal name to Elton
Hercules John. Elton and John were the first names of two
men in his first band. Hercules was a childhood nickname.
The lyrics to the majority of Elton Johns hits were written by
Bernie Taupin (b. 1950).
In 1976, John admitted to Rolling Stone magazine that he
was bisexual, claiming to have had his first homosexual
encounter at age 23. He said, Theres nothing wrong with
going to bed with somebody of your own sex. I just think
people should be very free with sexthey should draw the
line at goats (Rolling Stone, July 15, 1976, p. 30). John admits
that he keeps a large collection of photos of naked men and of
himself dressed as a woman (Much Music, Pop Up Video,
Nikita). He formed the Elton John AIDS Foundation in
1992 and donates royalties from the sale of some of his music.
He was married to Renate Blauel from 1984 to 1988. In
2005, Elton John married his male partner in a civil
ceremony. They have two sons through surrogates.
Johns temper tantrums, known as Reggies Little
Moments, are legendary (Moser, Rock Stars, p. 118). He has
often been involved in fights and violent encounters,
including with people who work with him. He has been
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Janis Joplin
Janis Joplin (1943-1970) was one of the most famous
female rock singers. Her lascivious lifestyle is described as
follows:
All I can remember was Janis picking up a bottle of
Southern Comfort (liquor), drinking the last few
mouthfuls and saying, Yeah, Im a juicer [a
drunkard] ... One of the boys didnt show up and
everyone went home except Janis who retired to the bar
next door, the R.O.K. bar on Second Avenue, then she
got me drunk, it was her habit. ... She was out of Port
Arthur, Texas, an unkempt, vulgar, obscene girl ... The
four-letter words spewed so indiscriminately as to lose
all impact, the wild mane of hair, the garish clothes,
looking like they had been grabbed blindly at some
rummage sale, the bottle of Southern Comfort she
swilled down publicly and privately, the slovenliness that
today so often passes for style, the savagery of her
singing. Even the name Janis Joplin had a kind of
frontier lawlessness. Indeed, everything about her
implemented an image of anti-establishment ... Janiss
creedone that excited her audience with its simplicity
was to get high on drugs or booze and to have sex ...
and to take it all today because there may be no
tomorrow (Somma, No One Waved Goodbye, pp. 19,
39, 44, 45, 105, 108).
Judas Priest
The heavy metal British band Judas Priest was formed in
1969. The groups leader, Rob Halford, previously had a band
named Lord Lucifer. Their wicked songs include Sin after
Sin, The Devils Child, and the mocking Defenders of the
Faith. They told the press: Heavy metal isnt just music to us.
Its a philosophy and a way of life (Hit Parader, July 1984).
Their album Sin after Sin encourages young people to think
about getting saved later and to enjoy sin today. The
rebellion promoted by Judas Priest is evident in the song We
Dont Need No Parental Guidance:
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Carole King
Carole King (born Carole Klein) (b. 1940) was one of the
most prolific songwriter/singers of the 1960s. Many of the
lyrics were written by her first husband, Gerry Gon. They
co-wrote over 100 hits. Her second husband, Charles Larkey,
was the bass player in the rock band Myddle Class. In 1976,
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Kinks
The Kinks was a British band formed in 1963 and
composed of brothers Ray and Dave Davies, Mick Avory, and
Pete Quaife. The group had many hits in the 1960s and 1970s
and continued to perform and record until 1996. Ray Davies
has had two drug overdoses. In 1973, he left his wife and
children and remarried. In 1981, he divorced his second wife
and began an aair with singer Chrissie Hynde. They had a
baby, but Hynde left him in 1984 for Jim Kerr of the band
Simple Minds.
Timothy Leary
Timothy Leary (1920-1996) was a Harvard University
professor of psychotherapy who became the LSD high priest
of the rock & roll movement.
Learys father was an alcoholic who abandoned the family
when Timothy was 13. His Roman Catholic mother tried to
get her son to go in an upstanding path in life, at least from a
human perspective. He was a disappointment, though. He
had to leave West Point because of drunkenness and lying.
When his mother wrote to him in 1941 and said she was
praying for him and pleaded with him not to cause a scandal
with his life, he replied in a brash manner, telling her, I
would rather starve in the gutter than be a 100% good
fellow (Timothy Leary: The Man Who Turned on
America, The Biography Channel). The next year Leary was
kicked out of another school when he was found in the girls
dormitory.
In the mid-1950s Leary worked as director of
Psychological Research at the Kaiser Foundation and taught
at Berkeley University. There he and his wife were involved in
heavy drinking and adulterous wife swapping. In early 1960,
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married his research secretary. The union was short lived. His
next marriage, to Nena von Schelbrugge in late 1964, was also
short-lived. He was 44; she was 24. In the summer of 1965,
Leary developed a romance with Rosemary Woodru and
they were married in late 1967. They were arrested in early
1966 for marijuana possession and Leary was sentenced to 30
years. While free on bond awaiting appeal of the conviction,
Leary was again arrested for marijuana possession in
December 1968 and sentenced to another 10 years. At the
end of the trial in January 1970, the judge ordered the 49year-old Leary to prison immediately with no bond.
With the help of the radical Weathermen underground
movement, Leary escaped prison in September of that year
and fled to Algeria to join Eldridge Cleaver and the Black
Panthers. He then went to Switzerland, finally to Afghanistan,
where he was captured by U.S. agents and brought back to the
States to complete his prison term. In 1994 it was reported
that Leary met with FBI agents and agreed to inform on the
Black Panthers in exchange for leniency in his sentencing
(Karen Gullo, 1960s guru was FBI informant, Associated
Press, July 1, 1999).
After being released from prison in 1976, Leary told the
press, I am glad to be descended from Eve, who told Jehovah
God to jump back in his squad car and go back to
headquarters.
In 1978, Leary married his fourth wife, Barbara Chase;
they divorced 15 years later. Learys son, Jack, stopped talking
to him in 1975 (Night Beat, p. 414). His daughter, Susan Leary
Martino, shot and killed her boyfriend in 1990, then hanged
herself in her jail cell.
Timothy Leary died of prostate cancer on May 31, 1996.
His long-time friend, beatnik poet Allen Ginsberg, was
scheduled to visit him in July, but Leary died a few weeks
before. But in the hours preceding his death, Ginsbergs
Buddhist teacher, Gelek Rinpoche, managed to reach Leary,
uttering a final prayer for his passage into death (Mikal
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Led Zeppelin
The British heavy metal group Led Zeppelin is one of the
most influential rock bands of all time. It was formed in 1968
and existed until the early 1980s, when surviving band
members pursued solo careers.
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Robert Plant and Jimmy Page both claim that they dont
know who wrote this song. Plant testified: Pagey had written
the chords and played them for me. I was holding the paper
and pencil, and for some reason, I was in a very bad mood.
Then all of a sudden my hand was writing out words. I just
sat there and looked at the words and then I almost leaped
out of my seat (Davin Seay, Stairway to Heaven, p. 249).
Led Zeppelin conducted a mock Black Mass during a
record release party, holding the event in the underground
caves which formerly housed similar rites perpetrated by Sir
Francis Dashwood and his debauched Hellfire Club two
centuries earlier (Moyhihan, Lords of Chaos, p. 4). Led
Zeppelins song Houses of the Holy is sung to Satan. Let
the music be your master/ Will you heed the masters call/
Oh, Satan... The inside cover of Led Zeppelin IV pictures a
satanic high priest with a lantern and a hexagram in his hand.
Jimmy Page said their 1976 album, Presence, was named to
describe the force or power behind the groups musical
genius.
The Led Zeppelin song In My Time of Dying mocks
salvation in the Lord Jesus Christ. Meet me Jesus meet me/
Meet me in the middle of the air/ If my wings should fail me
Lord/ Please meet me with another pair/ You can deliver me
Lord/ I only wanted to have some fun.
Many of Led Zeppelins songs are so filthy that neither the
titles nor the lyrics can be printed.
In 1982, Jimmy Page was arrested and charged with
possessing 198 milligrams of cocaine. In August 1975, Robert
Plant and his family were seriously injured in an automobile
crash on the Greek island of Rhodes. His wife, Maureen, was
driving. In 1976, just as the group embarked on a U.S. tour to
promote their mysterious occultic album titled Presence,
Plants six-year-old son, Karac, died suddenly of a strange and
extremely rare viral infection.
John Bonham, drummer for Led Zeppelin, died in
September 1980 at age 32 after drinking more than 40 shots
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This song is a lie. For those who die without Christ there is
no more opportunity to change the road they are on.
Love
Love was a 60s rock band that continues to play in various
incarnations. The leader is Arthur Lee. Original band
members included Bryan McLean, John Echols, Johnny
Fleckenstein, Ken Forssi, and Don Conka.
The original band was broken up by drug abuse. After
MacLean nearly overdosed on heroin in 1970, he dropped
out of the band to concentrate upon Christian music.
Forssi and Echols were convicted of armed robbery.
In 1995, Arthur Lee had an altercation with his neighbor
during which he brandished a gun and fired shots in the air.
The next year he was given a multi-year sentence for illegal
possession of a firearm. Harry Shapiro, author of a history of
drug abuse in popular music, says Lee is a victim of LSD
(Waiting for the Man, p. 143).
At least four members of the rock group Love are dead.
Don Conka died in the 1970s at roughly 30 years old
(Whatever Happened to..., p. 116). George Suranovich died in
1990 at age 44 of heart failure. Ken Forssi died in 1997 at age
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MC5
The British band MC5 was formed in 1965, and original
members included Rob Tyner (real name Robert Derminer),
Fred Sonic Smith, Wayne Kramer, Michael Davis, and
Dennis Thompson.
MC5 was known for screaming revolutionary slogans
laced with profanities. The group disbanded in 1972.
Kramer spent two years in prison for selling cocaine. Fred
Sonic Smith died in 1994 at age 47 of a heart attack after
many years of the rock & roll lifestyle. Rob Tyner died in
1991 at age 46 of a heart attack.
Joni Mitchell
Canadian folk-rock musician/song writer Joni Mitchell
(born Roberta Joan Anderson) (b. 1943) was very popular in
the late 1960s and 1970s, and she continues to perform and
record today. The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia calls her one of
the most respected singer/songwriters in rock. She had a
baby out of wedlock during the early years of her folk music
career and gave it up for adoption (Whatever Happened to...,
p. 128). She married Chuck Mitchell in 1965, but they
separated a year or so later and soon divorced. She lived with
Graham Nash of Crosby, Stills & Nash before marrying her
second husband, bass player Larry Klein (Ibid.). They
separated in 1994.
In 1974, Mitchell told the press of a male spirit who helps
her write music. Joni Mitchell credits her creative powers to
a male muse she identifies as Art. He has taken so much
control of not only her music, but her life, that she feels
married to him, and often roams naked with him on her 40acre estate. His hold over her is so strong that she will excuse
herself from parties and forsake lovers whenever he
calls (Why Knock Rock?, p. 112, citing Time magazine, Dec.
16, 1974, p. 39).
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Moby Grape
Moby Grape was one of the bands formed in San Francisco
in the 1960s. The original members were guitarist Skip
Spence (who had played drums for the Jeerson Airplane),
Peter Lewis, Jerry Miller, Bob Mosley, and Don Stevenson.
The group continues to record and perform in various
incarnations.
Skip Spence, original guitarist of Moby Grape, went insane.
After a bad acid trip in New York City, he went to the Albert
Hotel with an axe in search of drummer Don Stevenson,
claiming that voices told him Stevenson was possessed by the
devil. He was incarcerated in the infamous New York mental
institution, Bellevue Hospital, for six months. In 1969, Spence
disappeared into the bowels of the California state mental
health system (Unknown Legends of Rock n Roll, p. 149). In
1994, Spence was living in a care facility, diagnosed paranoid
schizophrenic taking anti-psychotic drugs, given to hearing
voices and talking to himself (Ibid., p. 153).
Former Moby Grape guitarist Bob Mosley was discovered
by Peter Lewis in the early 1990s living homeless by the side
of a San Diego freeway (Unknown Legends, p. 154).
Monkees
Mickey Dolenz of the Monkees lived the rock & roll
lifestyle to the fullest, committed adultery, eventually
divorcing his wife and the mother of his daughter.
Davie Jones divorced his wife.
Peter Tork claimed that his religion is based on the
Eastern Taoist thinking (The Role of Rock, p. 170). He was
arrested in 1972 for possession of hashish and sentenced to
three months in a prison in Oklahoma. He had abandoned
the mother of his two children (they were never married).
Tommy Boyce, one of the top rock songwriters of the 60s
who co-wrote the Monkees theme song as well as their hit
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Moody Blues
The Moody Blues was formed in the 1960s and have sold
more than 70 million albums.
The 1970 album, In Search of the Lost Chord, has a song
titled OM, which is a Hindu mantra used in meditation.
The album cover stated:
To anyone who has practiced meditation or Yoga, the
word MANTRA is familiar as a word of power
concentrated upon in meditation. The most important
word of power in the Hindu scriptures is the word OM,
which pronounced AUM, means God, All, Being, The
Answer. Thought or intentness on its meaning will
cause the exclusion of all other thoughts, ultimately
bringing about the state of mind to which the meditator
aspires.
Van Morrison
The Irish rock musician Van Morrison (b. 1945) started
with the rock group Them in the mid-1960s. He wrote the
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Wilson Pickett
Soul music legend Wilson Pickett (1941-2006) formed a
gospel singing group, the Violinaires, when he was only 14,
but four years later he began pursuing a rhythm & blues
career. In the mid-1960s he had the hit In the Midnight
Hour with Booker T. and the MGs. This became the first in
a long series of successful recordings, including Land of
1,000 Dances, Im a Midnight Mover, and Call My Name,
Ill Be There.
Pickett has had many problems with the law. In 1974, he
was arrested for pulling a gun during an argument and was
sentenced to jail for this oence. In 1991 he was arrested for
yelling death threats and in 1992 for assaulting his girlfriend.
In 1993, he struck and killed a pedestrian while driving
drunk. He pleaded guilty to drunken driving charges and was
sentenced to a year in jail and five years probation. He was
released from jail in 1996 but was then arrested for drug
oenses.
He died of a heart attack in January 2006 at age 64. Little
Richard preached at Picketts funeral.
Pink Floyd
The British acid rock band Pink Floyd was formed by Syd
Barrett in 1965, but commercial success did not come until
the 1973 album The Dark Side of the Moon. The themes were
unremittingly bleakalienation, paranoia, schizophrenia
and the music was at once sterile and doomy (Rolling Stones
Encyclopedia of Rock, p. 768). The album stayed on the
Billboard pop chart for 725 weeks. Their 1990 album, The
Wall, earned $20 million in one year. The Wall lyrics
explored psychic powers (Nobody Home), sex (Young Lust
I need a dirty woman), and educational anarchism. Song
titles included such unhealthy themes as Goodbye Cruel
World, Empty Spaces, and Comfortably Numb. Rolling
Stone magazine described this popular rock album as a
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Airplane. The guru led the 5,000 hippies in the Hare Krishna
chant for an hour.
Dino Valenti, of Quicksilver Messenger Service died in
1994 at age 51. Valenti was arrested in 1965 shortly after the
band was formed and was jailed for drug possession.
John Cipollina died in 1989 at age 45 of chronic asthma
aggravated by heavy smoking.
is only rock & roll if its not safe. Violence and energy
and thats really what rock & rolls all about (Mick Jagger, as
told to Mikal Gilmore, Night Beat, p. 87).
In their 1965 song Im Free they sang, Im free to do
what I want any old time ... Im free to choose what I please
any old time. This has been the theme of rock & roll since
the 1950s.
The Rolling Stones album Dirty Work in 1986 contained a
vicious song with the following lyrics: Gonna pulp you to a
mess of bruises/ Cause thats what youre lookin for/ Theres a
hole where your nose used to be/ Gonna kick you out my
door/ Gonna blow you to a million pieces/ blow you sky
high/ Splatter matter on the bloody ceiling
ROLLING STONES AND DRUGS. In 1967, Brian Jones,
Mick Jagger, and Keith Richards were arrested for drug
possession. Richards was found guilty of allowing his home
to be used for drug use and was sentenced to one year in jail
and fined 500 pounds. During his trial, Richards told the
judge: We are not old men. We are not worried about petty
morals. Jagger was found guilty of illegal possession of pep
pills and was sentenced to three months in jail and fined 300
pounds. Brian Jones was convicted for possession of
marijuana in 1968. Jagger was arrested in 1969 for possession
of marijuana. His girlfriend, Marianne Faithfull, nearly died
of an overdose of barbiturates that year and entered a hospital
for treatment of heroin addiction. In July 1969, Brian Jones
drowned at age 26 after abusing barbiturates and alcohol. At
the funeral service, Canon Hugh Evans Hopkins admitted
that Jones was a rebel and that he had little patience with
authority, convention and tradition (Hellhounds on Their
Trail, p. 199). Only two members of the Rolling Stones turned
up for Brians funeral.
In 1970, Keith Richards and his live-in girlfriend, Anita
Pallenberg, moved to France to dodge British taxes, and he
had heroin shipped to him concealed inside his sons toys
(Rock Lives, p. 183). The two children of Richards and
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The idea for Sympathy for the Devil came from Satanist
Kenneth Anger, and the concept was based on The Master
and Margarita, a book which deals with satanic
fantasy (Hellhounds on Their Trail, p. 69). Mick Jagger was
deeply involved in the occult at that time. He purchased
many materials on occult/pagan themes, including the
Tibetan Book of the Dead and the Taoist Secret of the Golden
Flower. At the end of The Rolling Stones Rock n Roll Circus
tour, Jagger ripped o his shirt to reveal a tattoo of the devil
on his chest. Brian Jones was dressed as the devil at that
concert, which was to be his last. The concert ended with
Sympathy for the Devil.
Jagger dressed up as the devil for his 1969 tour, which
included the fateful concert near San Francisco in which at
least four died and hundreds were injured. Brian Jones spent
time in Morocco recording the trance music of Moroccan
dervish brotherhoods, who were reported to heal sickness
and soothe troubled minds with their hypnotic drumming,
singsong drone, and bluesy lute playing (Turner, Stairway to
Heaven, p. 178).
Jones trekked into the Rif foothills south of Tangier to
capture the ancient music, oered to the goat deity Pan, and
for the next several months lost himself in producing what
would eventually become the posthumously released Brian
Jones Presents the Pipes of Pan at Jajouka (Ibid.).
In late July 2008, Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood entered
drug rehab for the second time in a month.
Keith Richards and his girlfriend, Anita Pallenberg,
practiced magic rituals in their bedroom. When a 17-year-old
boy killed himself playing Russian roulette with a .38 special
Smith and Wesson revolver in Richards home in New York,
investigating police found animals that had been
ritualistically killed (Time, Dec. 26, 1983, p. 54).
Mick Jagger wrote part of the music score for the film
Invocation of My Demon Brother by Satanist Kenneth
Anger, who is dedicated to promoting the evil philosophy of
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Santana
The 1960s rock band Santana rocketed to fame at the 1969
Woodstock Festival.
Carlos Santana was a disciple of the Hindu guru Sri
Chinmoy until 1983. In 1973, Carlos changed his name to
Devadip, meaning the Lamp of the Light of the Supreme.
In 1977, Santana told Rolling Stone magazine that
Chinmoy is Divine Being (April 7, 1977, p. 23).
Santana was led into his relationship with Chinmoy by
John McLaughlin. He recorded an album with McLaughlin
and went on tour to promote Chinmoy. McLaughlin said,
One night we were playing, and suddenly the spirit entered
into me, and I was playing, but it was no longer me
playing (Circus, April 1972, p. 38). McLaughlin said his role
as a musician is to make everyone aware of his own
divinity (Newsweek, March 27, 1972, p. 77).
Santanas Oneness album contained quotes from Chinmoy
and encouraged the fans to write to him.
Santana broke with his Chinmoy when he said that
homosexuality is wrong (Rolling Stone, March 16, 2000, p.
86).
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it morally right, will God like it? (Rolling Stone, March 16,
2000, pp. 87, 88).
Santana claims that he was taken over by a spirit while
playing at Woodstock in 1969 and that his guitar turned into
a serpent. Instead of a guitar neck, I was playing with an
electric snake (Rolling Stone, March 16, 2000).
Santanas 1999 album, Supernatural, sold 25 million copies.
His 2002 album was titled Shaman.
In 2002, Santana said, Two things will never go out of
style: spirituality and sex. Theyre the same thing (Spirit of
Santana, USA Today, Oct. 16, 2002, p. D1).
In 2003, Santana announced that he was donating the
proceeds of his U.S. Shaman tour to help fight AIDS in
Africa. At a press conference attended by liberal Archbishop
Desmond Tutu of South Africa, Santana said, We invite you
to join us in spreading a spiritual virus. ... When you get to
the other side, they will not ask you whether youre a
Christian or a Mexican or Buddhist or Muslim. They will ask
you, What did you do with the energy and life that we gave
you? (The Straits Times, Singapore, June 7, 2003).
Santana told Rolling Stone magazine that his first spiritual
awakening occurred when he took LSD in the 1960s (Rolling
Stone, March 16, 2000).
The Santana album Abraxas was named after a demon in
occultism. The occultic term abracadabra is derived from
this name. The cover to their Festival album depicts an occult
Hindu idol with serpents on either side of it. Other Santana
songs include Black Magic Woman and Evil Ways.
Santana divorced his first wife in 2007 and married rock
drummer Cindy Blackman in 2010.
In an interview with Rolling Stone following his divorce,
Santana said his God is a God of unconditional love that has
no legal standards. Santana is one of many rock musicians
who have tried to combine sexuality with spirituality.
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I'm not sick of what I do, but I find that God gave me
the gift of communication even without my guitar and
with the ability to get people unstuck with certain
sections of the Bible having to do with guilt, shame,
judgment and fear. The God of that stu is retarded,
demented and not real. The real God is beauty, grace,
dignity and unconditional love. And I'm the kind of
motivator who can motivate people to believe that what
I'm saying is good for them. Its like my manager Bill
Graham once said to me: Carlos, you have to accept
that your music is very sensual and stop apologizing for
it. People want to have sex to your music, and that's just
the way that it is. And once I accepted that, I wasn't so
much in conflict with my Catholic upbringing and
thinking it was dirty or against God to have an
erection (Rolling Stone, Oct. 16, 2008).
Del Shannon
As a teenager, Del Shannon (born Charles Westover)
(1939-1990) idolized Hank Williams and desired to perform
rockabilly music. Against his fathers wishes he practiced the
guitar and began playing in school shows. He changed his
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Dustie Springfield
Dustie Springfield (1939-1999) was born Mary OBrien in
London and began her career with the Lana Sisters. In 1960,
she and her brother Dion joined the Springfields, a pop/folk
trio. She changed her name to Dustie Springfield and he, to
Tom Springfield. The group had some hits but disbanded in
1963, and Dustie pursued a solo career. She had 19 hit singles
between 1963 and 1979.
She said she lost nearly all the 1970s in a haze of booze
and pills and admitted sleeping with both men and women
(Whatever Happened to..., p. 180).
She lived in a domestic partnership with Norma Tanega.
In September 1970, Springfield said, ... many other people
say Im bent, and Ive heard it so many times that I've almost
learned to accept it... I know I'm perfectly as capable of being
swayed by a girl as by a boy. More and more people feel that
way and I don't see why I shouldn't (Ray Connolly, Dusty
Springfield, Evening Standard, Sept. 1970).
She died in 1999 of breast cancer.
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Steppenwolf
Steppenwolf was most famous for its 1968 mega-hit Born
to Be Wild, which was featured in the biker film Easy Rider
and was one of the theme songs of the hippie movement. The
All Music Guide to Rock calls Born to Be Wild a call to
arms to the counterculture movement. The songs reference
to heavy metal thunder was adopted as the name for metal
rock.
On a recent television special about 70s rock, young
people were asked what they felt when they heard Born to
Be Wild. Summarizing the essence of all the comments, one
young lady said: When you hear Born to Be Wild you just
want to party. This is the essence of rock & roll.
Four members of Steppenwolf died young.
Rushton Moreve, bass guitarist, died in 1981 at age 32 in a
motorcycle accident. He had been fired from the band in
1968 when he refused to fly to California, believing a
prophecy by Animal Huxley, Aldous Huxleys granddaughter,
that the state was going to be destroyed by an earthquake
(Between Rushton and Nick, GoldyMcJohn.com).
Andy Chapin, keyboardist, died in 1985 in a plane crash.
He was in his 30s.
Jerry Edmonton, drummer, died in 1995 at age 45 in an
automobile wreck.
I dont have the details of the fourth death.
Sly Stone
Sly & the Family Stone was formed in 1967 by Sylvester
Stewart, who calls himself Sly Stone (b. 1944). Other
members were Freddie Stone (real name Freddie Stewart),
Larry Graham, Cynthia Robinson, Greg Errico, Rosie Stone,
and Jerry Martini. They fused black rhythms and a
psychedelic sensibility into a new pop/soul/rock hybrid and
along with James Brown, virtually invented Seventies
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James Taylor
James Taylor (b. 1948) began writing songs as a teenager
when he was self committed to a psychiatric hospital for
several months and treated with Thorazine. He had
contemplated suicide. During the Vietnam War, he received a
psychological rejection from U.S. militarys Selective Service
System.
He moved to England in 1968 and recorded his debut
album.
He was addicted to heroin for many years. His song Paint
it, Black is about his drug experience. He also used acid, and
of his alcohol consumption, he said, I dont have much
moderation in my drinking. If I get intoxicated, I lose
control (cited by Timothy White, Rock Lives, p. 414).
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Tornadoes
The British rock band The Tornadoes were formed in 1962
by producer/songwriter Joe Meek (1929-1967), founder of
Triumph Records. The band was composed of George
Bellamy, Heinz Burt, Alan Caddy, Clem Cattini, and Roger
Lavern. Meeks 1962 composition Telstar became a massive
hit for the group, eventually selling over five million copies.
Joe Meek, called by The All Music Guide to Rock an
inimitable figure of early British rock n roll, shot his
landlady to death before turning the shotgun on himself in
February 1966 at age 37. The murder-suicide occurred after
police questioned Meek about the dismembered body of a
homosexual acquaintance that had been found packed in two
suitcases in a hedgerow. Meek was a homosexual who had
been arrested for lewd acts in a public toilet. His mother had
wanted a girl, gave him dolls to play with and dresses to
wear (Penguin Encyclopedia of Popular Music).
Meeks tantrums were the stu of legendDangerfield
remembers him throwing telephones at musicians with
whom he was displeased, and Lawrence recalls how hed go
into fits and lock the doors to his studio for a week or
so (Unknown Legends of Rock n Roll, p. 148).
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T. Rex
The British band T. Rex (shortened from Tyrannosaurus
Rex) was formed in 1967 and became extremely popular in
England, though less so in the States. Much of the music
focused on myth, fantasy, and magic. Their second album
was titled Prophets, Seers and Sages, the Angels of the Ages and
was inspired by Kahlil Gibrans The Prophet.
Marc Bolan (born Mark Feld), vocalist for T. Rex, in an
interview with Rolling Stone not long before his death
testified that he was living in a twilight world of drugs,
booze and kinky sex. He said that he lived for two years with
a magician in Paris, France, where he practiced black magic;
and he said that magic was responsible for his popularity
and musical success (Heartbeat of the Dragon, p. 99).
Whether it happened in real life or in his head, the
encounter with the wizard had a potent impact on Mark,
because he became even more dreamywriting stacks of
cosmic prose about dragons and young gods (De Barres,
Rock Bottom, p. 26).
Bolans first solo record in 1965 was titled The Wizard. A
friend from his early days in London claims that he was
bisexual (De Barres, p. 25).
Bolan died in 1977 at age 29 in a car wreck which occurred
while he was driving home with his girlfriend, Gloria Jones,
at about 5 a.m. after partying all night in London nightclubs.
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Jones was driving and she hit a tree. Bolan had left his wife in
1975 and had been living with Jones.
Steve Peregrine Took, original drummer for T. Rex, died
in 1980 at age 31 from choking on a cherry pit after his throat
had become numbed with morphine (Rock Bottom, p. 33). He
was involved in Eastern religion and mysticism. His
uncontrolled drug use had caused his expulsion from the
band. After leaving, he joined drummer Dave Bidwell to form
a band called Shagrat.
Bidwell also died of a drug overdose (Waiting for the Man,
p. 248). Bidwells wife died the same way.
T. Rex bass player Steve Currie died in 1981 when he
swerved his car o the road at midnight (Rock Bottom, p. 33).
He was about 33 years old.
Troggs
The British rock band the Troggs was formed in 1964 as
the Troglodytes but the name was shortened in 1966. Their
song Wild Thing became a massive hit. Original members
were Reg Presley (real name Reginald Ball), Chris Britton,
Peter Staples, and Ronnie Bond (real name Ronald Bullis).
The group split up in 1969 but was reformed in 1972 and
continues to perform.
Their music focused on immoral themes. A bootleg of
their studio s essions contained much foul
language (Penguin Encyclopedia of Popular Music).
Ronnie Bond, original drummer for the Troggs, died in
1992 at age 50 of an undisclosed illness.
Velvet Underground
The Velvet Underground was named after the title of a
porno book documenting sexual corruption. The group was
morally vile, using drugs, flaunting fornication,
homosexuality, and other forms of deviant sex, promoting a
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nihilistic view of life. John Cale said their goal was to go out
there and annoy people (Heylin, From the Velvets to the
Voidoids, p. 22).
One of the Undergrounds songs was titled Heroin. The
song Venus in Furs was about sado-masochism. In spite of
the groups utter moral depravity, or perhaps because of it, the
Velvet Underground were one of the most influential white
rock forces of the 1960s. David Bowie, Mott the Hoople, the
New York Dolls, Elliott Murphy, Roxy Music, Brian Eno, Patti
Smith, the Sex Pistols, Television, Joy Division, Jim Carroll,
R.E.M., and countless others would borrow from and extend
the Velvet Undergrounds sound and vision (Night Beat, p.
105).
Velvet Undergrounds Lou Reed, the God-father of Punk
rock, is a bisexual who has glorified the use of heroin. Even
in high school, he was subject to mood swings so severe that
his parents committed him to psychiatric therapy, including
electroshock. He got out of his ROTC commitment at college
by pointing an unloaded gun at the head of his commanding
ocer (Night Beat, p. 105). He was kicked out of Syracuse
University for operating a drug operation. Lou Reed is the
guy that gave dignity and poetry and rock n roll to smack,
speed, homosexuality, sadomasochism, murder, misogyny,
stumblebum passivity, and suicide (Lester Bangs, Screem).
Reeds popular song Walk on the Wild Side is a paean to
sexual perversion and drug abuse. His album Lou Reed Rock
n Roll Animal, features drug-related songs such as Sweet
Jane, Heroin, and White Light/White Heat. The song
Sister Ray is about amphetamine abuse. The song Waiting
for the Man describes the love aair between a heroin addict
and his drug. Heroin/ will be the death of me/ its my wife/
and its my life. He has been married three times.
When he married the second time in 1980, the decision
flabbergasted many of the people whod pegged him as a
middle-aged, intractable gay (Night Beat, p. 113). His song
Pale Blue Eyes justifies sex outside of marriage: It was good
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The Who
The British rock band The Who, formed in 1964, was one
of the most influential bands of the 60s and 70s. The band
originally was composed of Peter Townshend, Roger Daltrey,
John Entwistle, and Keith Moon. In the early to mid-70s, the
band members began pursuing solo careers, though they also
have continued to perform and record together in the 1980s
and 90s.
The band was characterized by violence and rebellion. On
tour they smashed guitars and blew up drum sets. They also
destroyed hotel rooms. Keith Moon told Rolling Stone
magazine how he mangled a room with a hatchet, chopping
all of the furniture to pieces. The destruction of that
particular Holiday Inn room cost them $30,000 in damages.
Eventually a five-thousand-dollar security deposit was
demanded before The Who could check in to any hotel in
America (Rock Bottom, p. 183). In Montreal, the band even
ripped up the floor of a hotel room. The members of The
Who and others who were involved were jailed.
At a Who concert Cincinnati, Ohio, in December 1979,
eleven people were killed in the dope-induced, hysterical
rush to get into the concert.
Many of The Who songs were about rebellion and drugs.
The song Anyway, Anyhow, Anywhere stated: Nothing gets
in my way, not even locked doors. The song Here Comes
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Jackie Wilson
Rhythm and Blues star Jackie Wilsons (1934-1984)
performances were sensual and frantic. Anyone who ever
saw him, either live or on television, will never forget the
image of Wilson, snazzy sharkskin pants rubbing against the
floor, his shirt open to his waist, his processed hair flying
about his head, and the crowds roaring with the frenzy of a
ritual sacrifice (The Death of Rhythm & Blues, p. 78). The
fans sometimes ripped his clothes to shreds.
Jackies son was killed in 1970 during a burglary. His
daughter Sandra died in 1977 of a heart attack, and daughter
Jacqueline was shot to death during a drug-related drive-by
shooting. Jackie Wilson died in 1984 at age 49. Eight years
earlier, he suered a heart attack during a concert and struck
his head, leaving him hospitalized in a comatose state.
Stevie Wonder
The blind rock star Stevie Wonder (b. 1950) began
producing hits in 1963 and remains very popular.
He married in 1971, but it lasted only a year. He then had
three children by two women outside of wedlock.
In 1985, he won an Oscar, which he dedicated to Nelson
Mandela, head of the brutally violent African National
Congress (ANC). The ANC was responsible for the horrible
necklacing of hundreds of black South Africans. Necklacing
was the practice of binding the hands and feet of an enemy,
putting a petrol-soaked tire around his or her neck, lighting it
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Woodstock
The original three-day Woodstock rock festival was held in
1969 on Max Yasgurs farm in New York State. It drew 50,000
people, but millions more experienced it through the
popular movie that quickly appeared in late 1969 or early
1970.
The director of the Woodstock film, Martin Scorsese, also
directed the blasphemous movie The Last Temptation of
Christ. Woodstock helped popularize the hippie movement of
the sixties and had a powerful influence upon American
soldiers in Vietnam. I first saw it in early 1970 while on my
first duty station in the U.S. Army. I had been in the military
about seven months and was working as a generals driver at
the U.S. Army Record Center in St. Louis, Missouri. I saw the
movie just before I got my orders to go to Vietnam.
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Frank Zappa
Frank Zappa, founder of the Mothers of Invention, was a
filthy-mouthed, blasphemous rocker who despised the
moralizing of the religious right and testified before a
congressional hearing against the eorts of some to police the
filthy rock music industry. He once said, If you are opposed
to this music, you are like a sick dog that needs to be shot and
put out of its misery. The ACLU called Zappa an American
hero.
The album Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Prevention
mocked the attempt by parents to force record companies to
label violent and immoral songs. The label on the album
stated: The language and concepts contained herein are
guaranteed not to cause eternal torment in the place where
the guy with the horns and pointed stick conducts his
business. This guarantee is as real as the threats of the video
fundamentalists who use attacks on rock music in their
attempt to transform America into a nation of check-mailing
nincompoops (in the name of Jesus Christ). If there is a hell,
its fires wait for them, not us.
In a 1986 debate with Evangelist Eric Barger (who spent 20
years in the rock music field before he was saved), Zappa
said, There is no sound a human could make with the
mouth that would send him to broil in the lake of fire. Barger
replied, You are right. It is silence, not words, that send
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... the only rules you should live by [are] rules made up by
you (Pennywise, Rules, 1991).
So what we get drunk/ So what we dont sleep (smoke
weed)/ were just having fun/ We dont care who sees/ So
what we go out/ Thats how its supposed to be/ Living young
and wild and free (Young, Wild and Free by Snoop Dog
and Wiz Khalifa, 2011).
We can do what we want; we can live as we choose. See
theres no guarantee; weve got nothing to lose (Paul
McCartney, New, 2013).
The whole Beatles idea was to do what you want do
what thou wilst, as long as it doesnt hurt somebody (John
Lennon, cited by David She, The Playboy Interviews with
John Lennon and Yoko Ono, p. 61).
... the whole idea of rock 'n' roll is to oend your
parents (Rock drummer King Coey, The Truth about Rock,
p. 30).
rock n roll is more than just music--it is the energy
center of a new culture and youth revolution (advertisement
for Rolling Stone magazine).
In a sense all rock is revolutionary. By its very beat and
sound it has always implicitly rejected restraints and has
celebrated freedom and sexuality (Time magazine, Jan. 3,
1969).
Rock 'n' roll is a beast. Well-intentioned people thought
you could pick it up and cuddle it. They forgot it had claws of
the bands--The Slits, The Damned, Bad Manners, The
Vibrators, The Stranglers and Meat Loaf. ... I know, because I
was one of them. Behind every sweet doowop and bebop is
an unfettered sexuality and sympathy for the devil: a violently
anarchic--in the face of all harmony, peace and progress.
People could see that when it first happened and it hasnt
changed. Anybody with a pennorthy of grey matter could see
it was trouble (Ray Gosling, BBC Radio 4 program
Crooning Buoons, The Listener, Feb. 11, 1982).
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Janis Joplin, who died young from the rock & roll lifestyle,
describes her first big concert in these words: I couldnt
believe it, all that rhythm and power. I got stoned just feeling
it, like IT WAS THE BEST DOPE IN THE WORLD. It was
SO SENSUAL, so vibrant, loud, crazy (Joel Dreyfuss, Janis
Joplin Followed the Script, Wichita Eagle, Oct. 6, 1970, p.
7A).
Rock & roll (in its broadest sense, which encompasses all
forms of secular pop music featuring the back beat) is one of
the chief gods and idols of the modern world. To think that
God would be pleased with the Christianizing of rock & roll
is to think that He would be pleased with the Christianizing
of Hindu idols.
Little children, keep yourselves from idols (1 John
5:21).
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their bosses. Thats who the real devil is (Niki Sixx from
Motley Crue, Heavy Metal Heroes, Summer 1987, cited by
John Muncy, The Role of Rock, p. 29).
Madonna promotes rebellion against parents. I think your
parents give you false expectations of life. All of us grow up
completely misguided (Madonna, Spin, February 1988, p.
48). Her song Papa Dont Preach is about a pregnant
unmarried girl who tells her father not to preach at her.
Michael Diamond of the Beastie Boys summed up their
attitude toward authority when he said: Were probably a
parents worst nightmare (People, Feb. 9, 1987, p. 93). The
Beastie Boys smash hit Fight for Your Right, in which they
talk about parents forcing their kids to go to school when
they dont wanna go, and then the teachers treating them
like some kind of jerk, then that hypocrite dad gets upset
cause the kid is smoking, and living at home is such a drag
cause mom threw away the kids best porno mag, then the
song goes on to tell about how the parents are upset over the
clothes they are wearing, and the long hair, and of course how
they complain about that noise theyre listening to. The
video version makes the parents and the other kids look like a
bunch of nerds and the Beastie Boys are a real cool group of
guys who are just fighting for their right to party! (John
Muncy, The Role of Rock, pp. 30, 31). Their first album,
Licensed to Ill, was advertised as an album guaranteed to bug
your parents (or someone you love). Even so, the album was
the fastest-selling album in the history of Columbia Records,
quickly selling more than three million copies.
Anarchy is the title of one punk group and the theme of
hundreds of other punk groups just like them. Anarchy even
has their own symbol a circled capital A. Youll see it on
their posters and albums declaring that they publicly support
anarchy, which the dictionary defines as the absence of
government, a state of lawlessness; rebellion against
authority (John Muncy, The Role of Rock, pp. 31, 32).
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In her song Control, Janet Jackson sings the rock & roll
philosophy: This is a story about control. My control.
Control of what, I say? Control of what I do, and this time Im
gonna do it my way. got my own mind. I want to make my
own decision; when it has to do with my life, I want to be the
one in control
[Our music is intended] to change one set of values to
another free minds free dope free bodies free
music (Paul Kantner of the Jeerson Airplane, Ben FongTorres, Grace Slick with Paul Kantner, The Rolling Stone
Interviews, 1971, p. 447). The Jeerson Airplanes profane
album Volunteers glorified revolution and called upon young
people to become outlaws in America and to tear down the
walls.
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bikes, getting kicked out of school, all the good things in life.
Dumb stu. Nobody wants to listen to Mom and Dad, me
included. So you want a song to go with that, something you
can play really loud on your stereo so Mom and Dad can hear
it! Its not just the music. Half of it is being an individual. A
rebel. This is what I choose to be a rockabilly
rebel (Seventeen magazine, April 1973, pp. 167,193).
Big Blacks blistering anthems like The Ugly American
and Texas were packed with a sonic and lyrical aggression
that spit rage at everything and anyone in shouting
distance (The Secret History of Rock, p. 195). Black Flag has a
vicious song titled Revenge dedicated to the Los Angeles
Police Department: Revenge!/ Ill watch you bleed/
Revenge!/ Thats all I read.
The punk rock band Pennywise has produced several
albums that are described as pep talks for sullen
adolescents (Trouser Press Guide to 90s Rock). The song
Rules has rebellious lyrics such as these: the only rules you
should live by rules made up by you.
Michael Hutchence of the Australian group INXS, who
committed suicide by hanging, admitted that his love for rock
music stemmed from rebellion: [Rock] music was for me,
like, I never wanted my dad to like it (Rocked to Death, E
network, Dec. 9, 1999).
[My long hair] is a flag. Its Tarzan. Ill always be antiestablishment (David Lee Roth of Van Halen, cited by John
Makujina, Measuring the Music, p. 73).
Public Enemys song Fight the Power epitomizes the
defiance and rebellion of rock and roll.
Judas Priests song Breaking the Law encourages and
glorifies rebellion.
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from Afro and Cuban music, it repeats simple lyric lines like
voodoo chants (Newsweek, April 2, 1979, pp. 58,59).
Well-known rock artist Peter Gabriel has no doubt that
there is a direct African connection to rock & roll:
THERE ARE THINGS LIKE THE BO DIDDLEY
RHYTHM THAT IVE HEARD BEAT-FOR-BEAT IN
CONGOLESE PATTERNS. Part of what we consider
our fundamental rock and roll heritage originated in
Africa. Period (Peter Gabriel, interview with Timothy
White, 1986, Rock Lives, p. 720).
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Rock music has always been associated with the carnal and
demonic. It has no legitimate place in Christian life and
ministry.
Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord, and the cup of
devils: ye cannot be partakers of the Lord's table, and of
the table of devils. Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy?
are we stronger than he? (1 Corinthians 10:21-22).
For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit
against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the
other: so that ye cannot do the things that ye
would (Galatians 5:17).
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into the public (they rode a train) that when they arrived
back at their home in New York he erupted violently,
reducing the apartment to a shambles. The man who is
acclaimed as the towering genius behind the Beatles had all
but lost his creative drive and confessed hed sunk so low he
had even become terrified of composing (Giuliano, p. 130).
Rock pioneer JERRY LEE LEWIS has exhibited a near
insane lifestyle throughout his long career. In February 1952,
when he was only 16, he married a girl named Dorothy, a
preachers daughter, but he would not stay home with her and
she left him in early 1953. That summer he met 17-year-old
Jane Mitcham and she was soon pregnant with his child out
of wedlock. He was forced to marry her by her irate father
and brothers, and the marriage was registered on September
10, 1953. The 17-year-old Jerry Lee was a bigamist, because
he was still legally married to Dorothy. The divorce was not
finalized until a month after his second marriage. In 1957,
while still married to Jane, Lewis began an aair with his 13year-old cousin Myra Gale. He was still legally married to
Jane, in fact, when he married Myra Gale in December 1957.
The divorce was not granted until May 1958. Thus by age 25,
Jerry Lee Lewis had been a bigamist two times over. In 1971,
he married his fourth wife, a 29-year-old Memphis woman
named Jaren Elizabeth Gunn Pate. They separated after only
two weeks and spent more time apart than together during
their stormy marriage. Jaren filed for divorce at least three
times, charging him with cruel and inhuman treatment,
adultery, habitual drunkenness, and habitual use of drugs.
Shortly before the divorce settlement in 1982, she drowned in
a swimming pool under mysterious circumstances. Jerrys
sister Linda Gail says Jaren took an overdose of drugs. Lewiss
drummer, Robert Tarp Tarrant, had a nervous breakdown
when he was only 22 because of his heavy drinking and drug
abuse. In 1973, Lewis jabbed the editor of Country Music
magazine in the neck with a broken bottle when he took
oense at one of the interviewers questions (Nick Tosches,
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something to gratify, can you help me? Oh, wont you blow
my brains?
Two other songs by Black Sabbath, Killing Yourself to
Live and Die Young, promote dark suicidal thoughts.
In 1987, two young men in Sparks, Nevada, killed
themselves with a shotgun while sitting in a car in a church
parking lot. After listening to the Judas Priest Stained Glass
album for hours they had made a suicide pact. Eighteen-yearold Raymond Belknap died instantly, while 19-year-old James
Vance was permanently disfigured with part of his face blown
away. The parents sued Judas Priest, claiming that the lyrics
of the album combined with the grinding, vicious, depressing
heavy metal music mesmerized the youth, convincing them
that the answer to life was death (Gannett News Service,
Aug. 4, 1987). The parents lawyer, Kenneth McKenna, stated:
The suggestive lyrics combined with the continuous beat
and rhythmic non-changing intonation of the music
combined to induce, encourage, aid, abet and otherwise
mesmerize the plainti into believing the answer to life is
death.
That is a reasonable assumption, but the case was lost on
the grounds that the vile music is protected under the First
Amendment.
A teenager in Wisconsin committed suicide by hanging
himself in 1986 in his dormitory room at St. Johns Military
Academy. His death was clearly marked as a ritualistic
suicide. Next to the body were a human skull and a burning
candle. Tape-recorded rock music played continuously. What
was the taped music? It was a morbid album by Pink Floyd
entitled The Wall. The very lyrics produced great depression
and promoted suicide. The medical examiner stated, My
personal feeling is that this type of music is going to add to
the depression. If theyre depressed, this music is going to
send them deeper. And if he wanted to change his mind
sometime during this, the music wouldnt help. What were
the titles of the songs on the albums? A few were Is There
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them their No. 1 fan has left. Tell them Ive flown to the
rainbow (The Raleigh Times, Raleigh, North Carolina, Feb.
13, 1986).
Elton Johns song Somebody Saved My Life Tonight is
about a boy who tries to kill himself at 4 a.m. in the morning.
Jerry Johnston, an expert in the area of suicide, documented
a case in which 17-year-old Alan Stubbs killed himself by
running a hose from the exhaust into the family car. Alan
died at approximately 4 a.m. while listening to Somebody
Saved My Life Tonight (John Muncy, The Role of Rock, p.
293).
Elton Johns song Think Im Gonna Kill Myself is about a
teenager who contemplates suicide. The lyrics say:
Im getting bored being part of mankind/ Theres not a
lot to do no more, this race is a waste of time/ People
rushing everywhere, swarming around like flies/ Think
Ill buy a forty-four and give em all a surprise/ Yeah,
think Im gonna kill myself, cause a little suicide/ Stick
around for a couple of days, what a scandal if I died. Yea,
Im gonna kill myself, get a little headline news/ Id like
to see what the papers say on the state of teenage blues/
A rift in my family, I cant use the car/ I gotta be in by
ten oclock, who do they think they are?
involved in the occult. He was often abusive, cruel, and selfdestructive (Unknown Legends of Rock n Roll, p. 28). In May
1974, he committed suicide by throwing himself under the
wheels of a London underground train at the Finsbury Park
Station. He was 37 years old. Badfinger guitarist Tony Evans
hanged himself at age 36.
Two members of the Bay City Rollers, Eric Faulkner and
Alan Longmuir, attempted suicide.
Peter Bellamy, founding member of Young Tradition,
committed suicide in 1991 at age 47.
Bobby Bloom, who sang the 1970 hit Montego Bay, died
in 1974 at age 28 of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the
head.
Tommy Boyce, one of the top rock songwriters of the 60s
who co-wrote the Monkees theme song as well as their hit
Last Train to Clarksville, shot himself to death in 1997 at
age 52.
Bruce Cloud of Billy Ward and the Dominoes committed
suicide in 1968 at age 36.
Kurt Cobain, leader of Nirvana, blasted himself in the head
with a shotgun in a room above his garage in April 1994, at
age 27. His body was not found until three days later.
Cobains first band was called Fecal Matter (Pamela Des
Barres, Rock Bottom, pp. 54-55). He decorated his first
apartment with blood-splattered baby dolls hanging by their
necks and spray-painted his neighborhood with the words
ABORT CHRIST, GOD IS GAY, and HOMO SEX
RULES. There was garbage and rotting food all over his
Seattle house. When the Cobains tried to hire some help, the
maid walked into their house, then ran out screaming, Satan
lives here! (Moser, Rock Stars, p. 43).
Vincent Crane committed suicide in February 1989 at age
45 by overdosing on sleeping pills.
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Gary Glitter (real name Paul Gadd), who had many hits in
the 1970s, selling 18 million records at the height of his
career, tried to commit suicide two times.
Dickie Goodman, who recorded on more than 30 labels,
committed suicide in 1989 at age 55 by shooting himself at
his sons home.
Donny Hathaway, singer, songwriter and keyboardist, died
in 1979 at age 33 after falling from his 15th storey hotel room.
Hathaway had been given to depression and some strange
behavior and the coroner ruled the death a suicide.
Michael Holliday (born Michael Miller), who had several
hits, including Stairway of Love, committed suicide in 1963
at age 34 by a drug overdose.
Doug Hopkins of the group Gin Blossoms shot himself to
death in December 1993 at age 32.
Yogi Hortin, session drummer for the Rolling Stones, John
Lennon, and others, killed himself in 1987 at age 37 by
jumping to his death from the 17th floor window of a hotel in
New York City.
Johnny Will Hunter of the Hombres, who had the 1967 hit
Let It Out (Let It All Hang Out), shot himself to death in
1976 at age 34.
The group Hsker D disbanded after their manager,
David Savoy, killed himself in 1987 at roughly age 27.
Michael Hutchence, lead singer for INXS, committed
suicide by hanging in 1997.
Phyllis Hyman committed suicide in 1995 at age 45 by a
drug overdose.
Hubert Johnson of The Contours shot himself to death in
1981 at age 40.
Guitarist Billy Jones of The Outlaws committed suicide in
1995 at age 44.
Kesier of the heavy metal band Krokus committed suicide
in 1986 at roughly age 31.
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439
440
General Statements
The best rock & roll music encapsulates a certain high
energyAN ANGRINESSwhether on record or onstage.
That is, rock & roll is only rock & roll if its not safe.
Violence and energyand thats really what rock & rolls all
about (Mick Jagger, as told to Mikal Gilmore, Night Beat, p.
87).
Now in our popular music, at least, we seem to be
reverting to savagery and youngsters who listen constantly
to this sort of sound are thrust into turmoil. They are no
longer relaxed, normal kids (Dimitri Tiomkin, Los Angeles
Herald-Examiner, Aug. 8, 1965; Dr. Tiomkin is a famous
composer and conductor).
[Rock music is providing] ceaseless, incessant, pounding
propaganda in the ears and eyes of the young, promoting
fornication, mysticism, marijuana, and violent revolution,
and we are at the point where young women seek roles as
urban guerrillas and others feel pregnant with
murder (McCandlish Phillips, former News York Times
writer, The Bible, the Supernatural and the Jews, 1970, p. 272).
Rock and roll has dominated the United States and
England more than any other two nations in the civilized
world ... by the same token these two nations have the highest
juvenile delinquency rate of any other nation in the
world (Jack Staulcap, Today's Teenager and Dance Music,
Illinois: Metropolis Printing Service, 1964, pp. 6, 7; Staulcup,
president of American Federation of Musicians Local No.
441
200, researched the eects of rock & roll over its first decade
of existence.
Blue Oyster Cult band member Allen Lanier said: Rock
and roll has a real violent catharsis to it. It brings out violent
emotions. Theres a lot of violence, a lot of aggression in the
music (Super Rock magazine, June 1978).
Mick Jagger of the Rolling Stones said: I get a strange
feeling on stage. I feel all the energy coming from the
audience. I feel quite violent sometimes. I quite often want to
smash up the microphone or something (Sanchez, Up and
Down with the Rolling Stones, p. 152).
By 1980, 70% of violent crimes were committed by youths
under the age of 17 (Why Knock Rock?, p. 140).
I think rock n roll in its highest form is a death cult. The
gods of rock n roll are all dead Sid Vicious, Janis Joplin,
Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison. The best thing you can do in
rock n roll is die (Sting, lead singer for the group Police, The
Rock Yearbook, 1984, p. 203).
The intense sadistic and sexual violence of a large number
of rock music videos is overwhelming. Its shocking to see
this subculture of hatred and violence becoming a fastgrowing part of rock music (Dr. Thomas Radecki, head of
the National Coalition on Television Violence, cited by
Muncy, The Role of Rock, p. 189).
MTV reaches 43% of all teenagers weekly (Creem, Vol. 17,
#8, p. 6). The National Coalition on Television Violence
reported that 46% of over 900 videos studied contain or
suggest violence, and 13% contain violence related to sadism,
showing attackers obviously deriving pleasure while
committing violent acts (Talk Back Report, Nov. 1985). They
show 18 acts of violence in each hour of programming. U.S.
News & World Report warned, Day and night, Americas
youth are enticed by electronic visions of a world so violent,
sensual and narcotic that childhood itself appears to be under
siege (U.S. News & World Report, Oct. 28, 1985, p. 46). The
442
446
447
453
lucky to even get close to the stage. It was the best day of my
life (Boy Wonders, People magazine, Sept. 14, 1998).
Also in August 1998, police ocers in the Detroit,
Michigan, area urged local politicians to ban rap concerts at
city venues, following a series of fights and confrontations
with police associated with performances by rap acts Scarface
and Master P.
In December 1998, a guard was stabbed and another man
was injured at a Black Crowes concert in Tucson, Arizona.
The singer was also hit by thrown bottles.
At least 5,711 people were injured at rock concerts in 1998
(U.S. News & World Report, Sept. 6, 1999).
On Sunday, May 30, 1999, a post-concert stampede in the
Belarus capital of Minsk left 53 people dead and more than
150 others injured. The tragedy occurred when hundreds of
fans rushed for a subway station to escape a hailstorm. As
young girls wearing heels began to fall in the front of the
crowd, those behind ran over them. There was a complete
lack of compassion. Then they started screaming but no one
in the back paid any attention. Festival ads had promised
free beer, and witnesses said that many involved in the
stampede appeared drunk (Live Daily, June 1, 1999).
On June 29, 1999, eight people were stabbed in a brawl at
an R. Kelly concert in Miami, Florida. The brawl involved 40
to 50 people (Live Daily, July 1, 1999).
At a July 1999 Limp Bizkit concert, a female fan was
allegedly gang raped in the mosh pit, and police investigated
three other rapes. During the song Break Stu, fans ripped
wood from walls and a security fence and built bonfires (10
Rock Concerts which Results in Bloodshed, Neatorama.com,
Oct. 24, 2012).
There was violence and moral degeneracy at Woodstock
99 in Rome, New York. Nakedness and open fornication was
rampant. More than 100 people posed naked for a photo by
photographer Spencer Tunick. Hundreds were treated for
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460
Now were both alone/ But killing you helped me keep you
home
Motley Crue sold two million copies of their song South
of the Devil. The lyrics said, Out go the lights; in goes my
knife; pull out his life. . . . make it quick/ blow o his head.
The original cover to the Beatles album Yesterdayand
Today depicted John Lennon and the other Beatles in butcher
outfits holding dismembered babies and pieces of raw meat.
(Outrage by disk jockeys, reviewers, and store owners forced
a hasty recall, and the album cover was replaced with a more
benign photo, though the original photo was reissued in the
1980s in the album The Beatles Rarities.)
John Lennons 1972 Sometime in New York City album
contained many songs calling for violence. The song Sisters
O Sisters instructed women that we must learn to fight in
order to build a new world. The song Bloody Sunday
called British police Anglo pigs. The song Attica State
proclaimed that nows the time for revolution. In Angela,
violent revolutionary Angela Davis was glorified as a political
prisoner.
The Rolling Stones have produced some of the most
vicious music that has ever been recorded. Six of the ten
songs on the Beggars Banquet album were blatantly
revolutionary and violent. Street Fighting Man said, The
time is right for violent revolution. Their Let It Bleed album
sported some of the most deliberate and gleeful incitements
to destruction and rapine (Stairway to Heaven, p. 183).
Music critic Davin Seay admits that the Stones music of that
era was diamond-hard and dangerous as a barbed wire fist.
Rock critic Jon Landau described the Rolling Stones in
concert in these terms: Violence. The Rolling Stones are
violence. Their music penetrates the raw nerve endings of
their listeners and finds its way into the groove marked
release of frustration. Their violence has always been a
surrogate for the larger violence their audience is so capable
of (cited by Mikal Gilmore, Night Beat, p. 74).
468
469
possessing spirit has a love for the one he possesses. The devil
and his demons do not love anyone or anything. They hate
people and have only one goal in their relationships with
people, and that is to destroy them. They are also wrong in
saying that it is someones destiny to be consumed by evil
spirits. God oers eternal salvation and forgiveness to all
people who repent of their sin and trust Jesus Christ as their
Savior.
For God so loved the world, that he gave his only
begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should
not perish, but have everlasting life. For God sent not
his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that
the world through him might be saved. He that
believeth on him is not condemned: but he that
believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not
believed in the name of the only begotten Son of
God (John 3:16-18).
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476
477
1950s
Heroin abuse claimed (directly or indirectly) the following
jazzmen (among others) in the 1950s Billie Holiday, Fats
Havarro, Sonny Berman (Woody Hermans trumpet player),
pianist Carl Perkins, Wardell Gray, Tadd Dameron, Shadow
Wilson, Charlie Christian, Jimmy Blanton, Phil Seaman, and
Tubby Hayes (Waiting for the Man, pp. 80, 81).
Musicians arrested on drug charges in the 1950s and early
60s included Gerry Mulligan, Stan Getz, Tadd Dameron,
Anita ODay, Billie Holiday, Art Pepper, Lester Young, Red
479
1960
In 1960, Freddy Fender, writer of Wasted Days and
Wasted Nights, began his three-year prison term for a drugrelated conviction (John Muncy, The Role of Rock).
Lord Buckley (born Richard Myrle Buckley), blasphemous
jazz/swing humorist who founded the Church of the Living
Swing, died in 1960 at age 54 of drug and alcohol abuse. A
voracious appetite for artificial stimulants eventually took its
toll, and despite rumours that the cause of his death was a
beating by Black Muslims, Lord Buckleys death in 1960 is
recorded as the result of prolonged drug and alcohol
abuse (Virgin Encyclopedia of Fifties Music, p. 53).
1961
Ray Charles was arrested two times in 1961 for possession
of drugs and drug paraphernalia.
482
1962
In 1962, Harvard University professor Dr. Timothy Leary
took his first trip on LSD and became the guru of acid. A
religious fervour had gripped him; religious imagery
informed all he felt about LSD. He was a priest of the God
Acid (Waiting for the Man, p. 131). In 1963, Leary founded
the International Federation for Internal Freedom. Harvard
fired him that year amid rumors of campus orgies. In 1964,
Leary and others founded the Castalia Foundation in upstate
New York. His message to young people was Turn On, Tune
In, Drop Out. Learys 1964 book, The Psychedelic Experience,
was intended to assist novices to take LSD as a tool of
spiritual enlightenment. The introduction urged: Whenever
in doubt, turn o your mind, relax, float downstream. Leary
said rock musicians are the philosopher-poets of the new
religion. He called the Beatles the four Evangelists and
rock stars become holy men, and their Sergeant Pepper
album the sermon from Liverpool. The rock & roll crowd
went crazy for LSD in the 1960s. It was estimated that
chemist Augustus Stanley III alone produced and distributed
15 million LSD hits, many of which were distributed freely
at rock concerts. Leary appeared on stage with the Grateful
Dead, Jeerson Airplane, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and
others. John Lennon read Timothy Learys book The
Psychedelic Experience in 1966 and wrote the songs Come
Together and Give Peace a Chance for Leary. The Moody
Blues song Legend of a Mind is about Leary. The Who song
Seeker is about him. Jimi Hendrix sought Learys help in
interpreting dreams. Pink Floyds founder, Syd Barrett,
attributed Leary with part of his inspiration (Rock Bottom, p.
3), though his LSD experiences eventually left him in a
vegetative condition.
483
1963
Dinah Washington, the most popular rhythm & blues
female singer of the 1950s, died in 1963 at age 37 of an
overdose of pills and alcohol, probably accidental.
Michael Holliday (born Michael Miller), who had several
hits, including Stairway of Love, committed suicide in 1963
at age 34 by a drug overdose.
1964
Bob Dylan went through some profound drug
experiences during 1964-5, taking up Baudelairs formula for
immortality: A poet makes himself a seer by a long
prodigious and rational disordering of the senses. He tried
just about everything he could to open his head as
biographer Tony Scaduto puts it (Waiting for the Man, p.
144). Many of Dylans songs were about drugs, including Lay
Down Your Weary Tune, Subterranean Homesick Blues,
and Mr. Tambourine Man. It was Dylan who introduced the
Beatles to marijuana (Peter Brown, The Love You Make: An
Insiders Story of the Beatles).
In 1964, Ray Charles was arrested in Boston for heroin and
marijuana possession. After this third drug charge, he
decided to give up his 17-year heroin habit (Muncy, The Role
of Rock).
John Lennon admitted that he began taking LSD in 1964
and that it went on for years. I must have had a thousand
trips a thousand. I used to just eat it all the time (Rolling
Stone, Jan. 7, 1971, p. 39; cited by Jann Wenner, Lennon
Remembers, p. 76). Lennon wrote Tomorrow Never Knows
after taking LSD. He admitted to the Rolling Stone interviewer
that there were a lot of obvious LSD things in the music.
Lennon said, God isnt in a pill, but LSD explained the
mystery of life. It was a religious experience.
484
1965
According to Lennon, it was in 1965 that the Beatles began
using marijuana. He said they smoked it for breakfast and
nobody could communicate with them because they were
just all glazed eyes (Playboy, Jan. 1981, p. 112, cited by The
Legacy of John Lennon, p. 58).
Eric Burdon of the Animals admits that he took many acid
(LSD) trips. He participated in these hallucinogenic drug
experiences with Brian Epstein (the Beatles manager), Andy
Summers (who played with the Animals and later was with
the rock group Police), and many others. Burdon claims that
LSD opened him up to Hinduism.
The Grateful Dead glorified drug abuse from its inception
in 1965 as the house band for Ken Keseys Acid Test, a series
of public LSD parties. LSD chemist Owsley Stanley III
bankrolled the rock group for a while. Garcia testified that
Stanleys mind was completely shot. The Grateful Dead
arrived stoned, played stoned and their fiercely loyal fans,
Deadheads, were stoned along with them (Waiting for the
Man, p. 142).
The Eagles said that most of their songs were written under
the influence of the hallucinogenic drug peyote (Time, Aug.
15, 1975, p. 4).
Jet Harris, one of the top British bass guitarists, was
arrested in the mid-1960s for driving under the influence of
alcohol and for possession of marijuana and LSD.
485
1966
It was in 1966 that LSD finally became illegal in California
where most of the early Acid Rock groups gathered.
Bill Graham, considered the most important rock
promoter ever, helped Ken Kesey stage a three-day Trip
Festival, a sort of extended LSD test (Muncy, The Role of
Rock).
Donovan was fined 250 English pounds for possession of
marijuana. He had at least two hit songs about drugs.
Mellow Yellow was about marijuana, and Sunshine
Superman was about LSD (Waiting for the Man, p. 159).
Bobby Fuller died in July 1966 at age 22 under mysterious
circumstances. Friends and band members later testified that
he was involved with drugs.
Timothy Leary and his third wife were arrested in early
1966 for marijuana possession and Leary was sentenced to 10
years. While free on bond awaiting appeal of the conviction,
Leary was again arrested for marijuana possession in
December 1968 and sentenced to another 10 years.
1967
In January 1967, Augustus Owsley Stanley III, called the
King of LSD, parachuted into the Be-In rock festival at
Golden Gate Park in San Francisco to give away 100,000 hits
of LSD.
Jazzman Art Blakeys 1967 Japan tour was canceled
because of the arrests of Elvin Jones and Tony Williams on
drug charges.
In June 1967, the Beatles Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club
Band album heralded the drug revolution. Songs included
486
1968
The student newspaper for the University of Wisconsin
noted that the Beatles have proselytized the use of drugs so
subtly that words and conceptions once only common to
drug users are found in sentences of teeny-boppers and
statesmen alike (Daily Cardinal, Dec. 3, 1968, p. 5, cited by
David Noebel, The Legacy of John Lennon, p. 63).
488
1969
The music reviewer for Holiday magazine warned: In
songs meant for children of twelve and even younger, they
proclaim that it is wise, hip, and inside to dissolve your
responsibilities and problems of a dicult world into the
mists of marijuana, LSD, or heroin (The Legacy of John
Lennon, p. 61).
Time magazine observed, Rock musicians use drugs
frequently and openly, and their compositions are riddled
with references to drugs, from the Beatles I Get High with a
Little Help from My Friends to the Jeerson Airplanes
White Rabbit (Sept. 26, 1969, p. 69).
Etta James, the 50s R&B singer, tried to kick her heroin
habit with the aid of methadone, but it turned out to be the
most horrible thing Ive ever experienced. It sets up a
blockage against heroin, but creates a stomach habit. Then
490
491
1970
Jazz critic Gene Lees warned: About three years ago,
having caught the reference to drugsindeed, the
exhortation of their useburied in a lot of rock and folk-rock
lyrics, I wrote an article, suggesting that if this continued,
THE COUNTRY WAS IN FOR A WAVE OF DRUG USE
THAT COULD SHAKE ITS FOUNDATION (Gene Lees,
Rock, Violence, and Spiro T. Agnew, High Fidelity, Feb.
1970, pp. 108, 110).
Revolutionary Jerry Rubin noted: Rock n roll marked the
beginning of the revolution. Weve combined youth,
music, sex, drugs, and rebellion with treason, and thats a
combination hard to beat (Rubin, Do It!, pp. 19, 249).
Steve Stills of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young was arrested
in his motel for possession of cocaine and barbiturates.
Though the Byrds tried to deny that the song Eight Miles
High was about drugs, David Crosby later admitted that this
was a lie. Did I think Eight Miles High was a drug song?
No, I knew it was. We denied it, of course. But we had a
strong feeling about drugs, or rather, psychedelics and
marijuana. We thought they would help us blast our
generation loose from the fifties. Personally, I dont regret my
psychedelic experiences. I took psychedelics as a sort of
sacrament (Crosby, cited by Rock an Unruly History, p. 166).
Bobby Charles, who wrote some of the best-known fifties
rock songs, including See You Later, Alligator, got into
trouble with the law in the 1970s because of drug abuse
(Colin Escott, Tattooed on Their Tongues, p. 16).
In May 1970, Marty Balin of the Jeerson Airplane was
arrested for marijuana possession, along with two members
of the road crew, backstage after a concert in Minneapolis.
Four weeks later, Jeerson Airplanes Paul Kantner was
arrested in Honolulu on a marijuana charge. When he was
convicted, he brazenly said: I only want to say the verdict
493
and this court is one of the main reasons people have no faith
in the government any more.
Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones and his live-in
girlfriend Anita Pallenberg moved to France to dodge British
taxes, and he had heroin shipped to him concealed inside his
sons toys (Rock Lives, p. 183). He also began shooting heroin
into his veins. The two children of Richards and Pallenberg
were both delivered while their mother was addicted to
heroin.
Chubby Checker and three others were arrested at Niagara
Falls after marijuana, hashish, and unidentified drug capsules
were found in his car (Muncy, The Role of Rock).
Jimi Hendrix died that year in London at age 27. The
ocial cause of death was barbiturate intoxication and
inhalation of vomit. Hendrix had abused drugs and alcohol
for many years. He took acid, smoked marijuana, used heroin
and amphetamines, and drank liquor. Noel Redding testified:
Whether it was true or not, we felt we had to be stoned to
play properly. Good dope equalled good music (A Time to
Rock, p. 200).
Janis Joplin died in 1970 at age 27 of alcohol abuse and a
heroin overdose. She had previously been revived at least a
half dozen times after overdosing on heroin. Time magazine
quoted her a year before saying, I wanted to smoke dope,
take dope, lick dope, anything I could get my hands on I
wanted to do (Time, Aug. 9, 1969, p. 76).
Alan Blind Owl Wilson of Canned Heat died in 1970 at
age 27 of a drug overdose.
Iggy Pop retired for over a year to kick a heroin addiction.
By 1973, he was addicted again.
1971
In 1971, John Lennon admitted he and Yoko Ono had
taken heroin and LSD (Muncy, The Role of Rock).
494
1972
Johnny Winter had a heroin addiction problem and had
suicidal depression in the early 1970s.
In March 1972, Washington journalist Jack Anderson
broke the drugola scandal story. Record company
employees came forward with tales of drug saloons held by
promotion sta, where cocaine, marijuana and assorted pills
were handed out to DJs, station managers and performers.
Unknown artists took it upon themselves to supply drugs to
DJs hoping to secure airplay for records that otherwise would
have sunk without trace. Paid anything up to $15,000 a
week for their services, [independent promoters] used every
means at their disposal to get records played on Top Forty
radiocash, women, holidays, threats of violence, but most
usually cocaine (Waiting for the Man, pp. 204,205).
Drug abuse and alcoholism nearly destroyed some of the
members of Black Sabbath. Their 1972 Volume 4 album was
supposed to be titled Snowblind, but their record company
forced them to change it. Snowblind referred to cocaine
abuse. In interviews with the press, the band members
495
1973
Jerry Garcia of The Grateful Dead was arrested for
possession of marijuana, cocaine and LSD. Referring to their
style of music, Garcia once said, Acid rock is music you
listen to when you are high on acid [LSD] (Rolling Stone,
Feb. 3, 1972, p. 30).
Paul McCartney was convicted of growing marijuana
plants at his Scottish farm.
The Bee Gees said, We do smoke marijuana now and
again (Circus, Aug. 3, 1973, p. 38). In fact, they did more
than that. They were heavy drinkers and got into pills
Dexedrine (Rock Lives, p. 493).
Buddy Rich was busted for possession of marijuana while
touring Australia, the second bust for the 56-year-old
drummer (Muncy, The Role of Rock).
Tom Johnston of The Doobie Brothers (so named for a
marijuana joint) was arrested on charges of marijuana
possession.
In June, Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones was arrested
in London when police found guns, heroin, and Mandrax
tablets during a raid of his home.
Gram Parsons of The Byrds and the Flying Burrito
Brothers died in September 1973 at age 26 of an overdose of
alcohol and morphine. Cocaine and amphetamines were also
found in his system. He had just filed for divorce from his
second wife. He had been a heroin user for years.
The rock band Journey helped fund the organization
N.O.R.M.L. toward the legalization of marijuana.
497
1974
Vinnie Taylor, guitarist for Sha Na Na, died in 1974 at age
25 of a heroin overdose.
Pamela Morrison, girlfriend of Jim Morrison, died from an
overdose of heroin.
Nick Drake, singer/songwriter, died from an overdose of
pills.
Robbie McIntosh, drummer for Average White Band, died
from an overdose of heroin.
Graham Bond committed suicide by throwing himself
under the wheels of a London underground train at the
Finsbury Park Station, in May 1974. He was 37 years old.
Bond, one of the pioneers of jazz-rock in Britain, was
addicted to drugs and alcohol.
By 1974, Marvin Gaye was deeply addicted to drugs. Gayes
biographer David Ritz said that Marvin Gayes every decision
was made high on drugs (Waiting for the Man, p. 230). Gaye
was addicted to marijuana, cocaine, and freebase heroin.
1975
Chuck Negron, lead singer of Three Dog Night, was busted
in Louisville, Kentucky, after police found two grams of
heroin and a gram of cocaine in his hotel room (Muncy, The
Role of Rock).
Chad Mitchell, leader of the folk trio named after him, was
sentenced to five years in prison for possession of over 400
pounds of marijuana (Muncy, The Role of Rock).
Paul McCartneys wife, Linda, was arrested in Los Angeles
in 1975 for possession of eight ounces of marijuana.
Mitch Ryder, who had a comeback in the 1970s, is called a
notable acid victim by Harry Shapiro in his history of drug
abuse in popular music (Waiting for the Man, p. 143).
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1976
Black Sabbath drummer Bill Ward had a heart attack in
1976 and had to take a break from the band. Ward was
heavily addicted to alcohol and illegal chemicals. Of his early
days with the band he said: At that time, my cocaine
addiction had accelerated tremendously. It had become, like,
real bad. Real bad. And I was getting sicker. ... I was a full-on
junkie, still am a full-on junkie, except that I dont use
junk (Bill Ward, cited by Mike Stark, Black Sabbath, p. 21).
Knowing that cocaine was killing him, he gave it up but
turned to other drugs and to alcohol. By the early 1980s,
Ward was nearly dead from alcoholic binges.
Eric Faulkner, singer for Bay City Rollers, nearly died after
swallowing Seconal and Valium tablets.
One hundred and eighty-eight people were arrested for
drug possession at a Jethro Tull concert in Los Angeles.
Alman Brother Band roadie Scotter Herring was sentenced
to 75 years in prison for distributing cocaine and other drugs
to Gregg Allman. Gregg was granted immunity in exchange
for his testimony.
Jerry Lee Lewis has abused drugs and alcohol like a wild
man and has undergone treatment for addiction to
painkillers. He claims to have spent $500,000 on the drug
Demerol alone. In March 1976, federal narcotics agents
confiscated a substantial amount of drugs from Jerry Lees
private plane.
Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones was arrested again in
1976, when police discovered a silver cylinder containing
cocaine in his car after he lost control at the wheel and
slammed into a center highway divider.
David Bowie and Iggy Pop were arrested in their hotel
room in Rochester, New York, and charged with possession
of marijuana. That year Bowie had portrayed himself as the
Thin White Duke, reflecting his cocaine-fueled paranoia.
He admitted that he used drugs to enhance his creativity
500
(Rolling Stone, Jan. 12, 1978, p. 83). His life at that time was
described in the following terms: Friends who visited Bowie
in Los Angeles reported that he was living in a room with the
curtains permanently drawn, a bowl of cocaine prominently
displayed on the coee table (Turner, Hungry for Heaven, p.
93).
The popular Canadian rock band Rush was named for the
euphoric feeling produced by drugs. One of the songs on
the1976 album entitled 2112, A Passage to Bangkok,
describes the alleged glories of powerful drugs from various
parts of the world, including Acapulco, Morocco,
Kathmandu, and Afghanistan.
Neil Diamond was arrested in his home for possession of
marijuana.
Paul Kosso, guitarist for the rock group Free, died in 1976
at age 25 of a heroin-induced heart attack on an airplane en
route to New York. A year earlier his drug abuse had resulted
in a heart/lung stoppage, but doctors managed to revive him.
Tommy Bolin, guitarist/song writer for Deep Purple and
other groups, died in 1976 on his 26th birthday from an
overdose of morphine, cocaine, Lidocaine and alcohol in a
hotel room.
Scott Quick, guitarist for Sammy Hagar Band, died from
an overdose of drugs.
Gary Thain, bassist for Uriah Heep, died from an overdose
of heroin.
Motorheads bass guitarist, Ian Lemmy Kilminster, was a
self-confessed devotee of amphetamine sulphate (Waiting
for the Man, p. 122).
Bette Midler bailed out seven members of her entourage
following their arrest for possession of cocaine and
marijuana.
Drugs were involved when Mel Evans, former Beatles road
manager, was shot to death by police in 1976 during an
argument involving a rifle. His girlfriend had called the
501
police and told them that Mal had taken Valium and was
totally messed up, and when he allegedly made threatening
gestures with the gun, they shot him. The rifle was not
loaded.
Florence Ballard, vocalist with The Supremes, died
virtually penniless in 1976 at age 27 of a heart attack that was
probably alcohol and drug related (Shapiro, Waiting for the
Man, p. 226).
1977
Rick Scully, manager for The Grateful Dead, was jailed for
four months for conspiracy to smuggle marijuana.
Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones, was arrested and
fined $1,300 for possession of heroin, 130 grams of cocaine
and other narcotic paraphernalia (Muncy, The Role of Rock).
Elvis Presley died on August 16, 1977, at age 42 in his
bathroom at Graceland, of a shutdown of his central nervous
system caused by polypharmacy, or the combined eect of
multiple drugs. Fourteen drugs were found in his body
during the autopsy, including toxic or near toxic levels of
four. Dr. Norman Weissman, director of operations at BioSciences Laboratories, where the toxicity tests were
performed, testified that he had never seen so many drugs in
one specimen. Elviss doctor, George Nichopolous, had
prescribed 19,000 pills and vials for Elvis in the last 31.5
months of his life. Elvis required 5,110 pills per year just for
his sleeping routine. Elvis obtained drugs from many other
sources, both legal and illegal. It was estimated that he spent
at least $1 million per year on drugs and drug prescribing
doctors (Goldman, Elvis: The Last 24 Hours, p. 56). Elvis
began using amphetamines and Benzedrine to give him a lift
when he began his rock & roll career in the first half of the
1950s. It is possible that they were first given to him by
Memphis disc jockey Dewey Phillips, who helped popularize
Elviss music by playing his songs repeatedly (Goldman, p. 9).
502
1978
Rich Evers, Carol Kings songwriter and third husband,
died from a heroin overdose.
TV Guide noted that the average rock musician likes to
perform [in an environment] of stomping, cheering crowds,
typically well-dosed with alcohol and marijuana (July 29,
1978, p. 21).
Greg Herbert, saxophonist for Blood, Sweat, and Tears,
died from an overdose of drugs (Muncy, The Role of Rock).
Pete Meaden, manager for The Who, died from an
overdose of barbiturates.
Keith Moon, drummer for The Who, died from an
overdose of drugs in 1978 at age 32.
1979
Philip Hale, a photographer friend of rock star Jimmy
Page, died in Pages home from an overdose of morphine,
cocaine and alcohol (Muncy, The Role of Rock).
Congressman Lester Wol (D-NY), chairman of the House
Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control, warned:
DRUG ABUSE AMONG OUR CHILDREN HAS RISEN, IN
THE PAST TWO YEARS, FROM EPIDEMIC TO
PANDEMIC PROPORTIONS. It has grown so large that
503
1980
Paul McCartney was arrested at Tokyo International
Airport when nearly a half-pound of marijuana was
discovered in his suitcase. He was kicked out of Japan after
505
1981
Tracy Pew of the group Birthday Party was arrested and
imprisoned for drinking and driving oenses and drug
charges.
Bob Marley (leader of the Wailers) died in 1981 at age 36
of lung and brain cancer. He had crusaded for the legalization
of marijuana.
Robert Kimball, lead singer for Toto, was arrested for
selling four ounces of cocaine to an undercover ocer.
Guy Stevens, who produced Spooky Tooth, Trac, and
others, died in 1981 at age 42 of a heart attack. He had spent
time in jail for drug oenses.
Michael Bloomfield, who played electric guitar on Bob
Dylans hit Like a Rolling Stone, died in 1981 at age 36 from
a drug overdose (cocaine/amthamphetamine poisoning). His
life had deteriorated because of heroin addiction and he had
become increasingly irresponsible. He had stated: Ive got a
friend named Greenspan that says, I need a little cocaine to
give me energy. I need a little liquor to give me courage. And
I need a little pot to give me inspiration. I believe this to be
508
1982
In 1982, rock researcher David Noebel observed: While
millions of families desperately try to rescue their children
from the unspeakably evil clutches of the drug culturea
culture largely created and promoted by the rock n roll
industrythe industry entices these same children right back
into it (The Legacy of John Lennon, p. 67).
David Crosby was arrested for possession of Quaaludes
and drug paraphernalia, driving under the influence of
cocaine, and for carrying a concealed .45 caliber pistol. Two
weeks later he was arrested again for possession of cocaine
and a concealed weapon. He said, I was stoned for every bit
509
1983
Dennis Wilson of the Beach Boys drowned twenty-four
days after his 39th birthday. His blood alcohol level was .26
percent, nearly three times the legal driving limit in
California. Traces of cocaine and Valium were also found in
his system (Helter Skelter, p. 697). In 1965, he said: They say
I live a fast life. Maybe I just like a fast life. I wouldnt give it
up for anything in the world. Before his death he was
drinking a fifth of vodka a day plus using cocaine.
James Booker, an influential blues pianist who recorded for
Chess and Ace, died in 1983 at age 43 of a heart attack from
longstanding drug abuse. He claimed his drug addiction
began at age 10. He had been arrested in 1970 for drug
possession and spent time in Angola State Prison.
510
511
1984
Paul McCartney and his wife, Linda, were arrested in
Barbados for possession of marijuana. A few days later, Linda
was again arrested, this time for importing marijuana into
Heathrow Airport.
Wells Kelly, organist and vocalist for Orleans and Meat
Loaf, died in 1984 in his mid 30s. He choked on his own
vomit after overdosing on drugs and alcohol.
Little Esther Phillips, one of the most popular female
rhythm & blues vocalists, died in 1984 at age 48 of substanceabuse-related kidney and liver failure.
Paul Gardiner, bass player with Gary Numans band The
Tubeway Army, died in 1984 at age 30 of a heroin overdose.
Candy Givens of Zephyr died in 1984 at age 36 of a drug
and alcohol overdose.
512
1985
Ike Turner, ex-husband of Tina Turner, was arrested along
with three others for conspiracy to sell $16,000 worth of
cocaine.
Ace Frehley, former lead guitarist for Kiss, was arrested
and charged for trying to buy drugs with a forged
prescription.
David Byron, founding member of Uriah Heep, died in
1985 at age 38 of a heart attack brought on by long-term drug
and alcohol abuse.
The Grateful Deads Jerry Garcia was arrested and charged
with possession of narcotics. He entered a drug treatment
program, but a year later he collapsed into a near-fatal coma
caused by drug abuse.
Robbin Crosby of Ratt was arrested at a concert in Boise,
Idaho, in 1985, when he leaped into the crowd and began
smoking marijuana with the fans.
Gary Holton, vocalist for Heavy Metal Kids, died in 1985
at age 32 of a heroin overdose.
Vince Neil of Motley Crew was convicted of vehicular
manslaughter after he killed one person and seriously injured
two others in a drug- and alcohol-related car crash. The band
had been on an alcohol-drug orgy for three days before the
accident. The morning of the third day, Neil decided to drive
four blocks to purchase more liquor. The drummer for rock
group Hanoi Rocks, Nicholas Dingley, went along for the ride
and was killed when Neil lost control of his car and spun into
the path of an oncoming Volkswagen.
When Ricky Nelson, one of the pioneers of rock music,
died in 1985 at age 45 in a private airplane crash, traces of
cocaine and alcohol were found in his body and in the bodies
of those who died with him in the crash.
513
1986
NBCs Nightly News reporter Brian Ross broadcast a report
on drugs used as payola in the music industry. Miami disc
jockey Don Cox testified that it was common to be oered
cocaine for promoting a record (Waiting for the Man, p.
206).
Howard Hewett, former lead singer for Shalamar, along
with his wife, was arrested for selling a kilo of cocaine to an
undercover ocer.
Boy George of Culture Club was arrested and charged with
possession of heroin. His brother claimed Boy George had a
$1,200 a day heroin habit. Later the same year, Boy George
and his friend Mark Golding were arrested for possession of
marijuana. Golding died the next day of an overdose of
heroin and methadone. Another of Georges friends,
keyboardist Michael Rudetsky, who had played on the album
From Luxury to Heartache and who was helping Boy George
produce another album, also died of heroin overdose in 1986.
In the 1980s, Smokey Robinson was addicted to drugs and
almost lost his marriage.
Francis Rossi of Status Quo was fined 600 pounds for
possession of cocaine.
In September 1986, after experiencing severe internal
bleeding from the substance abuse, Stevie Ray Vaughn
entered treatment in the Alcoholics Anonymous program.
His rock musician brother, Jimmy, was also deeply abusive of
alcohol and drugs.
Hollywood Fats, of The John Harmon Band and The
Blasters, died in 1986 at age 33 of a drug-induced heart
attack.
By 1986, Daniel Johnson, who is something of a cult figure
in rock circles, followed in the footsteps of his heroes, the
Beatles, and began using the powerful hallucinogenic drug
LSD. He suered a complete mental breakdown.
514
1987
Aerosmiths guitarist, Joe Perry, acknowledged that drugs
nearly killed him and vocalist Steven Tyler. The two were
nicknamed the Toxic Twins for their heroin use. Perry said:
I spent so many years sedated. We were all addicted, some
more than others. Everyone in the band has been through an
up and down thing whether its alcohol or cocaine, I guess
Steven and I have been the worst as far as that goes. Weve
been junkies, heroin addicts, and we thought it worked really
well in the early years (OM, Oct. 1987, p. 33, cited by John
Muncy, The Role of Rock, p. 135).
Newsweek magazine described the Beastie Boys in these
terms: Among other things, the Boys lustily exclaim the
joys . . . getting higha frosty brew and angel dust are the
drugs of choice in their lyrics (Feb. 2, 1987, p. 70).
Mick Jagger said: It still seems absurd to me now that
anybody can actually be put in jail for smoking marijuana or
even selling it. Its absurd (Rolling Stone, Nov. 5 - Dec. 10,
1987, p. 32).
Doc McGhee (manager for Motley Crue and Bon Jovi) was
convicted of helping to smuggle 20 tons of marijuana into the
United States.
Ed Williams of Lil Ed & the Blues Imperials developed a
drug and alcohol dependency that forced him to break up
his band and take a hiatus in order to get cleaned up and shed
515
1988
Andy Gibb of the Bee Gees, who died in 1988 at age 30 of a
cardiac infection, had long been addicted to cocaine and
three years earlier had undergone treatment at the Betty Ford
Clinic.
516
1989
Vincent Crane of Atomic Rooster committed suicide in
February 1989 at age 45 by overdosing on sleeping pills.
Ozzy Osbournes outrageous drug abuse did not stop in the
1970s. In 1989, he was charged with threatening to kill his
wife during a drug rage. He has come close to dying
numerous times because of his alcohol and drug abuse.
Today, by his own admission, he maintains something of an
even keel by means of Prozac.
Mike Dirnt of Green Day said, I think drinking and doing
drugs are very important. To me, everybody should drop
acid at least once. Tre Cool added, People bring weed
[marijuana] to our shows; thats wonderful. Billie Joe
Armstrong admitted that he had an alcohol problem but
claimed that their main drug of choice is speed.
By 1989, three members of the Guns n Roses were
addicted to heroin. Drummer Steve Adler was forced to leave
the group because of his addiction.
517
1990
In the early 1990s Steve Earle entered a drug detoxification
program.
By 1990, Elton John, near self-destruction through years of
drug abuse and debauched living, checked himself into a
treatment center to overcome his addictions.
Ike Turner was convicted in 1990 on several charges,
including possessing and transporting cocaine, and
sentenced to 18 months in jail. He was in prison when he
and Tina were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
in January 1991 (Rolling Stone Encyclopedia).
Dave Mustaine of Megadeth was arrested in early 1990
when police found him driving under the influence of heroin,
cocaine, speed, and liquor.
Pearl Jam was named after a psychedelic confection made
by one of the band members half-Native American greatgrandmother (Rolling Stone Encyclopedia).
Around 1990, Sean Ryder of Happy Mondays announced
that he was a heroin addict and was undergoing
detoxification treatment.
B.J. Wilson of Procol Harum died in 1990 at age 43 from
the eects of a drug overdose. He had been in a drug-induced
coma since 1987.
Rob Graves of punk rock bands 45 Graves and Thelonius
Monster died in 1990 at age 30 of a heroin overdose.
518
1991
Gene Clark, who played tambourine and guitar for The
Byrds, died in 1991 at age 47 of a heart attack after long years
of drug and alcohol abuse.
Johnny Thunders died in 1991 at age 38 of an overdose of
methadone. Thunders had often been through detox
programs and had made light of heroin addiction in his solo
album titled Too Much Junkie Business.
Martin Hannett, famous British rock producer, died in
April 1991 at age 43 of a heart attack brought about by years
of alcohol and drug abuse.
1992
Eddie Hazel, guitarist for Parliament and Funkadelic, died
in 1992 at age 42 of complications from liver failure. He was
convicted and jailed for drug possession in 1974.
Drummer Je Porcaro, who played for Toto and Steely
Dan, died in 1992 at age 38 of cocaine abuse-related heart
attack.
Ollie Halsall of the British group Patto, who died in 1992 at
age 43 of a heart attack, had abused drugs.
Stefanie Sargant, guitarist for the grunge band Seven Year
Bitch, died in June 1992 of a heroin overdose at age 24.
Jerry Nolan of the Heartbreakers and the New York Dolls
died in 1992 at age 40 of a drug-related stroke. The
Heartbreakers had songs such as Chinese Rocks and Too
Much Junkie Business which glorified the heroin-junkie
lifestyle.
519
1993
Depeche Mode almost fell apart in 1993 because of Dave
Gahans heroin habit.
Patrick Waite, bassist for Musical Youth, died in 1993 at
age 25 of a mystery virus while awaiting trial on charges of
marijuana possession.
In 1993, David Lee Roth, formerly of Van Halen, was
arrested while purchasing marijuana in Washington Square
Park.
G.G. Allin died in June 1993 at age 36 of a heroin overdose.
British rocker Rob Jones died in 1993 at age 29 of an
accidental heroin overdose.
Toy Caldwell, co-founder of the Marshall Tucker Band,
died in 1993 at age 44 of cocaine-related respiratory failure.
1994
Kristen Pfa, bass guitarist for Hole, died in 1994 at age 27
of an overdose of heroin.
Fred Sonic Smith of MC5 died in 1994 at age 47 of a
heart attack after many years of drug/alcohol abuse.
Ken Dimwit Montgomery, who played with D.O.A. (dead
on arrival), Subhumans, Pointed Sticks, and others,
overdosed on heroin in September 1994 at age 36.
Kurt Cobain, leader of Nirvana, blasted himself in the head
with a shotgun in a room above his garage in April 1994, at
age 27. He was addicted to heroin and other drugs and had
attempted suicide several times before.
Punk rocker Billy Idol overdosed on drugs in 1994 and
1996. He said, Drugs dont really alter your perception or
anything that much. I mean they do, but I think if you feel
pretty much in control of who you are, then drugs arent
really a problem (Song Hits, May 1984, p. 15).
Brian Warner (Marilyn Manson), began using drugs at an
early age. He says: I tend not to advocate drugs to anybody.
520
Use them how you want. Its your own discretion. We all use
drugs in our own ways (Kurt Reighley, Marilyn Manson, p.
41). At that time he used cocaine, crystal methamphetamine,
and Valium. Marilyn Manson band members Madonna and
Daisy smoked pot from the minute they wake up until the
minute they go to sleep (Reighley, p. 105).
1995
Shannon Hoon, screaming lead singer for Blind Melon,
died in 1995 at age 28 of a cocaine overdose.
Bob Stinson, guitarist for The Replacements, died in 1995
at age 35 of a drug overdose.
Bassist Frank OKeefe of the Outlaws died in 1995 at age 45
of a drug overdose.
Phyllis Hyman, who had the hit jazz album Living All
Alone in 1977, committed suicide in 1995 at age 45 by a drug
overdose.
Dwayne Goettel, of the Canadian punk rock group Skinny
Puppy, died in 1995 at age 31 from a heroin overdose. He had
became erratic and self-destructive, sometimes cutting
himself up with strings of barbed wire and going on drug
binges (Alan Cross, Over the Edge, p. 158).
1996
Dave Gahan of Depeche Mode was arrested in 1996 for
possession of cocaine. He had overdosed and gone into full
cardiac arrest in his hotel room.
Jerey Lee Pierce, leader of the Gun Club, was a drunkard
and drug abuser who died in 1996 at age 37 of a cerebral
hemorrhage.
Wilson Pickett was arrested for drug oenses in 1996.
Brad Nowell, lead singer for Sublime, died on May 25, 1996
of a heroin overdose. He was 28 years old and had been
addicted to heroin and cocaine for many years.
521
1997
Billy MacKenzie, vocalist for the rock group Associates,
died in January 1997 at age 39 by suicide from an overdose of
drugs.
Keith Ferguson of The Fabulous Thunderbirds died in 1997
at age 49 of liver failure caused by long-term heroin use.
Glen Buxton, original guitarist and keyboardist for Alice
Cooper, died in 1997 at age 49 of long-term drug abuserelated problems.
Nick Traina of the punk group Link 80 committed suicide
with an overdose of morphine in 1997 at age 18.
1998
In January 1998, James Brown was in a hospital under
treatment for addiction to painkillers (Whatever Happened
to..., p. 38). He was arrested again in July for marijuana
possession and unlawful use of a firearm (Rolling Stone, Dec.
24, 1998, p. 72).
Rob Pilatus of Milli Vanilli died in 1998 at age 32 of an
overdose of alcohol and pills. He had been ordered to enter
drug rehabilitation for the tenth time a short while earlier.
522
1999
John Baker Saunders of Mad Season died at age 44 of a
drug overdose.
2000
Matthew Roberts of Blaggers I.T.A. died in February 2000
at age 36 of drug related causes.
2002
Layne Staley, lead singer and guitarist for the grunge band
Alice in Chains, was found dead in his apartment in April
2002. Police suggested his death was drug related. He was 34.
In a 1996 interview with Rolling Stone magazine, Staley said,
I wrote about drugs, and I didnt think I was being unsafe or
careless by writing about them.
Dee Dee Ramone, of the pioneer punk band the Ramones,
died of a possible drug overdose in June 2002 at age 49. Drug
paraphernalia were found nearby. The Ramones best-known
songs included I Wanna Be Sedated and Now I Wanna
Sni Some Glue. Dee Dee Ramone was the co-author of the
song Chinese Rock, which is about heroin abuse.
523
John Entwistle, bass player for The Who, died June 27,
2002, at age 57 of an apparent heart attack. He was found
dead in his hotel room in Las Vegas, where the band was
preparing to start an American tour. A large amount of
cocaine was in his system at the time of death.
2009
Eminem admitted that he had a drug addiction for many
years. He said he consumed from 40-60 Valium and 30
Vicodin tablets a day (Eminem Bounces Back, Tiany
McGee, May 4, 2009). He overdosed on methadone in 2007.
Doctors said he had taken the equivalent of four bags of
heroin.
524
chief curator of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Museum called
Tommy one of The Whos greatest works (Tommy: The
Amazing Journey, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, Mar. 12,
2006). It has been made into a movie, a Broadway musical, an
opera, a ballet, and a television special. The album has sold 20
million copies.
Marilyn Manson (real name Brian Warner) was nominated
a reverend in Anton LeVeys Church of Satan (National
Liberty Journal, June 1999). Warners message is that each
person is his own god and can make his own rules.
The cover for the Marilyn Manson album HolyWood
depicted a rotting crucified man on the cover, which is a
mockery of Christs crucifixion and a denial of His
resurrection.
The bands second album was blasphemously titled
Antichrist Superstar. Warner claims that a lot of it was culled
from dreams that Ive been having. He says: For me, the
idea of Antichrist is an unspoken knowledge that every
person has, and its just the denial of God and the acceptance
of yourself as a powerful entity that can make their own
decisions (Reighley, Marilyn Manson, p. 138).
The Marilyn Manson song The Reflecting God
blasphemously states: I went to god just to see/ and I was
looking at me/ saw heaven and hell were lies/ when Im god
everybody dies/ can you feel my power?
Warner has ripped up Bibles, burned Bibles, and spit on
pictures of Jesus. It is said that he has worn a bracelet with the
letters WWJD, saying that it stands for We Want Jesus
Dead.
He says: Hopefully, Ill be remembered as the one who
brought an end to Christianity. Each age must have at least
one brave individual that tries to bring an end to
Christianity. ... No one has managed to succeed yet; maybe
through music we can finally do it (Spin, August 1996, p.
527
538
of the law, and then turn around and scream Hail Satan! at
the cross and altar. At that point, the road crew member
would get down o the cross, invert it into the Satanic
symbol, and go o the stage dancing. Covens first album was
titled Blessed Is the Black. The cover contained a vile
depiction of Satan overcoming Jesus. The title song on the
album states:
Taught from birth youll burn in hell/ For all eternity/
If you dont pledge your soul to Christ/ And serve Him
faithfully/ Searching deep within yourself/ The evil
answer lies/ You know your heart is black as hell/ And
death is in your eyes/ Preachers of the holy gospel/
Evangelists of lies/ Blessed are the men in black/ Who
see through their disguise (Blessed Is the Black,
Coven).
the dark side of the moon, the night-time. But in our music it
seems to me that were seeking, striving, trying to break
through to some clearer, freer realm. Morrison was a student
of the occult and performed blood drinking rituals and
Wiccan ceremonies. The Doors song Soft Parade
blasphemously proclaimed that You CANNOT petition the
Lord with prayer!
The members of the Grateful Dead were fascinated by the
occult. They devoured all the information they could find on
ancient mysteries. They raided occult bookstores in London
and Paris and brought back folio editions to California. They
even managed to get a readers ticket to Londons Warburg
Institute, where the most complete collection of magical
books in the English language is housed along with many of
Aleister Crowleys manuscripts (Steve Turner, Hungry for
Heaven, p. 119).
Tori Amos sings about Father Lucifer (1996). Her stage
shows are laced with blasphemous imagery and convey a
ferocious hatred of Christianity (Steve Bonta, Is It Only
Rock n Roll? WorldNetDaily, April 8, 2002).
Homosexual rocker Elton John sang, If theres a God in
heaven/ Whats he waiting for/ If He cant hear the children/
Then he must see the war/ But it seems to me/ That he leads
his lambs/ To the slaughter house/ And not the promised
land (If Theres a God in Heaven, 1976).
Shakiras 2005 song How Do You Do is a wicked,
doubting, blasphemy. It charges God with not caring about
mans trouble and with making mistakes. Youve made
mistakes/ Well that's OK cause we all have/ But if I forgive
yours/ Will you forgive mine?/ How do you do? How does it
feel to be so high?
In the song Judas, Lady Gaga plays Mary Magdalene and
pretends that she is in a love triangle with Jesus Christ and
Judas and ultimately chooses Judas. The filthy video depicts
Mary, Judas, and Jesus together in a hot tub.
544
546
547
Hinduism
In the summer of 1967, the Beatles and other rock stars,
including Brian Jones and Mike Jagger of the Rolling Stones,
visited Guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi during his trip to North
Wales and listened to the teachings that he called the
Spiritual Regeneration Movement. This false teacher
claimed to have a path of regeneration other than that of
being born again through faith in Jesus Christ. Later the
Beatles, along with Donovan, Mia Farrow, Beach Boy Mike
Love, and others, visited the Maharishis ashram on the banks
of the River Ganges in India to study Transcendental
Meditation. The Beatles soon split with the Maharishi. One
reason was his suggestion that they turn over 25 percent of
their income to his work. Another reason was that they
caught the Guru eating meat, which was not allowed to his
disciples, and engaging in acts of immorality with female
disciples. John Lennon later composed a song about the
Maharishi titled Sexy Sadie.
The Beatles had a central role in popularizing the Hare
Krishna movement in the West. In December 1966, Hindu
Swami Bhaktivedanta recorded an album of chanting entitled
Krishna Consciousness. George Harrison was in New York at
the time and had been joining in with Hare Krishna chanting
sessions in Tompkins Square Park. He took the album back to
548
England and the Beatles ordered 100 copies. Soon after that,
Harrison and Lennon sang the Hare Krishna chant for days
during a sailing trip through the Greek islands. Harrison
reminisced, Like six hours we sang, because we couldnt stop
once we got going.
In September 1969, at the invitation of the Beatles, the
Swami moved to England and set up shop at Tittenhurst
Park, an 80-acre estate owned by John Lennon. Three or four
times a week he gave public lectures in a building at the north
end of the property, about 100 yards from the main house, in
which John and his second wife, Yoko, lived. A Hindu altar
was set up and eventually the building was called the
Temple.
The Swami, who took the impressive but blasphemous title
of His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada,
founded the Hare Krishna movement. In June of 1969, Hare
Krishna followers sang in Montreal, Canada, with John and
Yoko on the recording of Give Peace a Chance, a song that
would become extremely influential. John and Yoko chanted
Hare Krishna on that song. The Hare Krishna devotees had
been visiting with the Lennons for several days, discussing
world peace and self-realization (Krishna web site, http://
introduction.Krishna.org/Articles/2000/08/00066.html), and
the Lennons recorded the song to promote the Hindu
concept of world peace.
That same summer, George Harrison produced a hit single,
The Hare Krishna Mantra, which featured Hindus from the
London Radha-Krishna Temple. It rose to the Top 10 and
made the pagan Hare Krishna chant a household word in the
West. Harrison co-signed the lease on the first Hare Krishna
temple in London. He also gave them a mansion outside
London, which they made into an international ashram
where hundreds of thousands of people have learned about
Hinduism in the heart of the old British Empire. Harrison
financed the publication of Krishna magazine and put up
$19,000 to print the first edition of the Krishna book in 1970.
549
Sadly, though, the love that the Beatles sang about is not
the true love of God in Jesus Christ which oers eternal
salvation for sinful men. The god that Harrison worshipped
and promoted was the Hindi-New Age god of self. In an
interview, he said, The Lord, or God, has got a million
names, whatever you want to call him; it doesnt matter as
long as you call him. ... Every one of us has within us a drop
of that ocean, and we have the same qualities as God, just like
a drop of that ocean has the same qualities as the whole
ocean. Everybodys looking for something, and we are
it (George Harrisons Credo, The Himalayan Times,
Kathmandu Nepal, Dec. 17, 2001). In an interview with the
Hare Krishna organization, Harrison said: The word Hare
calls upon the energy of the Lord. If you chant the mantra
enough, you build up identification with God. Gods all
happiness, all bliss, and by chanting His names, we connect
with him. So its really a process of actually having God
realization, which becomes clear with the expanded state of
consciousness that develops when you chant. ... The best
thing you can give is God consciousness. Manifest your own
divinity first. The truth is there. Its right within us all.
Understand what you are (George Harrison, Hare Krishna
Mant r a , Th e res Not h i ng Hi g h e r, 1 9 8 2 , http : / /
introduction.Krishna.org/Articles/2000/08/00066.html).
In January 1967, a large rock concert was held to promote
Krishna Consciousness and the building of a Hindu temple.
Swami Prabhupada, founder of ISKCON (the International
Society for Krishna Consciousness) shared the stage with the
Grateful Dead, Big Brother and the Holding Company (Janis
Joplins group), Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Jeerson
Airplane. The guru led the 5,000 hippies in the Hare Krishna
chant for an hour.
The British rock band Quintessence was dedicated to
Hinduism. The band members wore Indian robes on stage
and burnt incense and sang songs about Brahman.
553
554
Gene Hoglan, drummer for Dark Angel, said that the song
Hunger of the Undead is about karma, reincarnation,
prolonged sleep or even complete nullification (RIP
magazine, Oct. 1987, p. 10).
Annie Lennox, lead singer for Eurythmics, studied Krishna
with her husband, a Hare Krishna devotee (USA Today, Aug.
9, 1984, p. D1).
The Brothers Johnsons album Right On Time promoted the
Hindu concept of Karma. Be peaceful to your brother/ For
Life wasnt meant to hate/ Guide the hand of one who needs
you/ Good Karma breeds good fate.
Boy George was a devotee of Krishna (Hungry for Heaven,
p. 13).
Robert Palmer said that he believed in reincarnation and
wanted to return as a dolphin (The Rock and Roll Handbook,
cited by John Muncy, The Role of Rock, p. 155).
Chrissie Hynde of the Pretenders believed in reincarnation
and regularly visited a Krishna temple (People, Mar. 23, 1987,
p. 68).
The group Journey promoted reincarnation in their album
Next Journey. The last song is titled Karma.
The back cover of Linda Ronstadts album Silk Purse says
she believes in reincarnation.
Tom Araya, bass player for Slayer, says, I believe in
reincarnation. Everybodys spirit comes back, and once you
have reached your highest point, you move on to a higher
plane (Metal Mania, Dec. 1987, p. 34).
David Cloverdale, lead singer for Whitesnake, says: I
believe more and more in destiny and karma, and theres a
reason for things (Metal Creem Close Up, Sept. 1987, p. 15).
Country singers Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Johnny
Cash, and Kris Kristoerson sang the song Highway Man
which describes past lives and says they will be back again,
again, again, and again
557
Buddhism
Tina Turner practices Buddhism and believes in
reincarnation and psychics. She regularly chants at her
Buddhist altar and told People magazine, Psychics are my
drugs. My real goal in life is opening that third eye (People,
July 15, 1985, p. 46).
Suzanne Vega followed Buddhism since she was 17 and
likes to spend her free hours chanting at a small wooden
altar (Muncy, The Role of Rock, p. 166).
Herbie Hancock has been a devout Buddhist since the
early 1970s. He chants and meditates twice a day before a
rosewood altar. The cover for his Sextant album depicts
Buddhist prayer beads.
In 1966, David Bowie spent some weeks in a monastery
studying Buddhism.
Timothy Learys research with psychedelic drugs led him
into occultic eastern religions and the study of the Tibetan
Book of the Dead, the Bhagavad-Gita, and Zen Buddhist
writings. Learys homosexual research co-worker, Richard
Alpert, who was fired from Harvard with Leary, changed his
name to Baba Ram Dass and became one of Americas most
respected teachers of Eastern disciplines (Mikal Gilmore,
Night Beat, p. 409). Just before Leary died in May 1996,
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Death Metal
Death Metal (also known as Black or Goth Metal, Shock
Rock, or Grindcore) which arose in the 1990s in the United
States and Europe and has spread to Japan and other parts of
the world, focuses on a lyrical glorification of all things
morbid and decaying (Michael Moynihan, Lords of Chaos:
The Blood Rise of the Satanic Metal Underground, 1998, p. 29).
It is exercising a vast influence upon young people today.
Between 1989-1993 Death Metal had become immensely
popular worldwide, with bands drawing crowds in the
thousands on an average night (Ibid., p. 31).
Black Metal songs exhibit a fascination with violence and
death in general, murder, torture, rape, dismemberment, and
mayhem. Death Metal groups have names like Cannibal
Corpse, Carcass, Cloven Hoof, Cradle of Filth, Darkthrone,
Dismember, Deicide, Entombed, Extreme Noise Terror,
Morbid Angel, Napalm Death, Necropolis, Obituary, Slayer,
Unleashed, Venom, Christian Death, and Vicious Circle.
Tampa, Florida, has been a center for some of the most
popular Death Metal groups, including Morbid Angel and
Deicide. Another center for Death Metal is Scandinavia,
particularly Sweden and Norway.
Some of the groups also praise Nazism and celebrate pagan
gods.
All exhibit an anti-Christian philosophy. Johnny Hedlund,
lead singer for the Swedish band Unleashed, makes fervent
declarations on the necessity of destroying the Christian
religion (Lords of Chaos, p. 30). Deicide has songs about the
joy of killing Jesus. Lead singer Glen Benton, who branded an
inverted cross on his forehead, named his son Daemon
(master of the supernatural). Deicides bass player, Eric
Homan, says, Death metal is Satanic. We relay our music
all into Satanism. Varg Vikernes of the Death Metal group
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Marilyn Manson
The fact that the filthy, blasphemous Marilyn Manson was
named Artist of the Year by Rolling Stone magazine in
January 1997 speaks loudly of the moral condition of rock &
roll.
The name Marilyn Manson, which is the name of the band
as well as the stage name of the bandleader (real name Brian
Warner), is from a combination of Marilyn Monroe, the
sensual movie star who committed suicide, and Charles
Manson, the serial killer. Manson and his followers brutally
killed many people, including pregnant actress Sharon Tate.
Marilyn Mansons debut album was recorded in the house
where Tate and four others were murdered. Slogans had been
written on the walls of the house in the victims blood. The
house was purchased by Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails,
who helped produce the Marilyn Manson album. Marilyn
Manson has also recorded one of Charles Mansons rock
songs.
Most of the band members have taken names following
this pattern: a first name from a famous actress or model and
a last name from a convicted serial killer. Names of other
Marilyn Manson band members past and present include
Daisy Berkowitz, Twiggy Ramirez, Gidget Gein, Madonna
Wayne Gacy, Ginger Fish, and Sara Lee Lucas.
Daisy Berkowitz refers to the infamous Son of Sam
murderer, David Berkowitz, who killed several people at close
range with a .44-caliber handgun.
Twiggy Ramirez is named for the skinny model Twiggy
and the serial killer Richard Ramirez, nicknamed the Night
Stalker, who terrorized Los Angeles in the late 1980s,
sneaking into houses through windows to beat, rape, rob,
torture, and kill his victims. He was eventually convicted of
13 murders.
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Rapper Confusion
Rap music, which is overwhelmingly dominated by its beat
and is aggressive and sensual by its very nature, often focuses
on extremely immoral and violent themes; and many rap
musicians have been involved in violent episodes. Even the
secular media calls it very rebellious music (USA Today,
July 6, 2001, p. 4E).
Despite this, rap has become one of the dominant forms of
pop music and has influenced everything from the fashion
industry to popular jargon. It has even been accepted by
Christians as a proper vehicle for the worship of a holy God.
Following are a few of many examples that can be given to
document the character of rap music:
MICHAEL DANGELO ARCHER
Michael DAngelo Archers (b. 1974) father pastors a
Holiness church, and DAngelo was playing piano in the
church band by age five. He was more interested in the world,
though, and in his teenage years he joined a rap group called
I.D.U., and in his late teens he signed with EMI Records (later
absorbed into Virgin Records). Like Marvin Gaye, Prince,
Jimi Hendrix, Santana, and many others, Archer intermingles
an unscriptural spirituality with his very sensual music and
lifestyle. He denies the contradiction between sexuality and
spirituality, claiming that a sincere sexual experience, can be
very spiritual, and sometimes a real spiritual experience can
feel sexual (DAngelos timeless magic, USA Today, Jan. 25,
2000, p. D1). This is contrary to what the Bible says: For the
flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh:
and these are contrary the one to the other (Galatians 5:17).
Archers songs include Feel Like Makin Love and Devils
Pie. His Untitled (How Does It Feel) video is described as
erotic even in USA Today. His 1999 album is entitled
Voodoo. He says he called it that because the myriad
influences found on it can be traced through the blues and
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spite of the pounding and cries for help, refused to open the
door, according to the judges ruling. Though Combs testified
that he was also caught in the crush and fought to help people
that were hurt, a police ocer at the scene testified that
during the crush, he witnessed Combs safely inside the venue
with two women, and that all three had money in their hands
(Live Daily, Jan. 13, 1999).
CRAZY TOWN
Crazy Town is a rap-rock group led by Bret Epic Mazur
and Shifty Shellshock. Their first album in 1990 was titled
Poison. They have performed on Ozzfest heavy metal tours.
Lyrics celebrate sexual conquests and intoxication.
Shellshock, jailed for several months after a spree of
shoplifting and drug dealing a few years back, was on crack
when he tossed a chair out a hotel window during Ozzfest
2000. Struggling with anger and sobriety strengthens our
bonds, Mazur says (New rockers blast away old trends,
USA Today, July 6, 2001, p. 4E).
EMINEM
The real name of superstar rapper Eminem is Marshall
Mathers III (b. 1972). He is the best-selling music artist of the
2000s, having sold more than 155 million albums and singles.
Rolling Stone magazine dubbed him the King of Hip Hop. In
2009, Billboard magazine named him Artist of the Decade.
He was number 83 on Rolling Stones list of 100 Greatest
Artists of All Time.
In Eminems second album, The Slim Shady LP, the Slim
Shady character is a drug-dealing, bloodthirsty thug who
spits furious rhymes about murder, rape, drugs and living by
the law of the urban jungle. The album features constant
references to drug use, sexual acts, mental instability, and
over-the-top violence. The song 97 Bonnie and Clyde is
about a man killing the mother of his child. The singer
explains to his daughter, Wheres mama? Shes just taking a
little nap in the trunk/ Oh, that smell? Dada must have
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A Three-Fold Responsibility
The Bible teaches that there is a three-fold responsibility in
the rearing of Christian children.
First, the child himself is responsible before God.
Even a child is known by his doings, whether his work
be pure, and whether it be right (Proverbs 20:11).
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604
Another area of failure that can produce rock & roll rebels
is the lack of child discipline or improper child discipline.
Following are a few of the essential areas of biblical
discipline:
The discipline must begin early. He that spareth his rod
hateth his son: but he that loveth him chasteneth him
betimes (Prov. 13:24). Many parents do not discipline their
children when they are young. They try to reason with them
instead of using the rod to teach them obedience. They ignore
the childs disobedience. Undisciplined children are a shame
to their parents and a nuisance to everyone else. They grow
up self-willed, angry and frustrated with themselves, and they
do not understand or possess the fear of God.
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5. Unholy Associations
Another cause for failure in Christian homes is to allow
children to develop unholy associations.
Be not deceived: evil communications corrupt good
manners (1 Cor. 15:33).
He that walketh with wise men shall be wise: but a
companion of fools shall be destroyed (Proverbs 13:20).
Flee also youthful lusts: but follow righteousness, faith,
charity, peace, WITH THEM that call on the Lord out of
a pure heart (2 Timothy 2:22).
But king Solomon loved many strange women,
together with the daughter of Pharaoh, women of the
Moabites, Ammonites, Edomites, Zidonians, and
Hittites; OF THE NATIONS CONCERNING WHICH
THE LORD SAID UNTO THE CHILDREN OF
ISRAEL, YE SHALL NOT GO IN TO THEM, neither
shall they come in unto you: for surely they will turn
away your heart after their gods: Solomon clave unto
these in love. And he had seven hundred wives,
princesses, and three hundred concubines: and his wives
turned away his heart. For it came to pass, when
Solomon was old, that HIS WIVES TURNED AWAY
HIS HEART AFTER OTHER GODS: and his heart was
not perfect with the LORD his God, as was the heart of
David his father (1 Kings 11:1-4).
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Conclusion
1. Parenting is a very dicult and serious responsibility,
but parents who are serving the Lord must be careful not to
lose heart. Gods grace and mercy are sucient to cover our
weaknesses and failings.
It is of the LORD'S mercies that we are not consumed,
because his compassions fail not. They are new every
morning: great is thy faithfulness. The LORD is my
portion, saith my soul; therefore will I hope in him. The
LORD is good unto them that wait for him, to the soul
that seeketh him. It is good that a man should both hope
a n d q u i e t l y w a i t f o r t h e s a l v at i o n o f t h e
LORD (Lamentations 3:22-26).
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For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit
against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the
other: so that ye cannot do the things that ye
would (Gal. 5:17).
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Steve Peters, who does not believe all rock & roll is wrong
for Christians, nevertheless makes the following important
admission: Just about the time I think Ive found a goodclean-acceptable secular musician, they blow it on their next
album or tour. And if I have recommended them, suddenly I
find myself scrambling to tell thousands of teens who know-I WAS WRONG (The Truth about Rock, p. 90).
We would remind Mr. Peters that he will never undo all
the damage he has caused by recommending secular rock,
even hesitatingly. Such recommendations by Christian
authority figures are a bright green light to young people that
it is acceptable to explore the filthy world of rock. VERY few
of them will be as cautious about what they listen to as Mr.
Peters claims to be.
6. WE MUST BE CONCERNED ABOUT OUR
INFLUENCE ON OTHERS.
If I listen to soft rock, it is possible that my influence will
encourage others to listen to music that is much worse.
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