DETROIT FEDS EYES ‘LOUIE, LOUIE’ LYRICS . . . SEPTEMBER 11, 1965

From the MCRFB news archives:

Feds Sparks Investigation For Second Year In A Row

 

 

 

 

 

MCRFB: To view FBI investigative reports on “Louie, Louie” from 1964-1965 click here.

(Actual letter of complaint below; verbatim) —

 

 

Received, February 7, 1964;  FBI Criminal Division

 

(This letter/memo is found on page 13 of the actual 119 page FBI report-investigation, from the FBI link above; see photo below).

 

 

January 30, 1964

 

Mr. Robert F. Kennedy

Attorney General U.S.A.

Washington, D.C.

 

Dear Mr. Kennedy:

 

Who do you turn to when your teenage daughter buys and brings home pornographic or obscene materials being sold along with objects directed and aimed at the teenage market in every City, Village, and Record shop in this nation?

My daughter brought home a record of “LOUIE, LOUIE” and I, after reading that the record had been banned from being played on the air because it was obscene, proceeded to try to decipher the jumble of words, the lyrics are so filthy that I can-not enclose them with this letter.

The record is on the WAND label #143 and recorded by the KINGSMEN “a Jerden Production by Ken Chase and Jerry Dennon” and there is an address 1650 Broadway, New York, N.Y.

I would like to see these people, the “artists” the Record company and the promoters prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

We know there are obscene materials for those who seek it, but when they start sneaking in this material in the guise of the latest ‘teenage rock and roll hit record these morons have gone too far.

This land of ours is headed for an extreme state of moral degradation what with this record, the biggest hit movies, and the sex and violence exploited on T.V.

How can we stamp out this menace ?  ?  ?  ?

 

Yours very truly,

[NAME BLACKED OUT]

 

Document stamped, recorded declassified; February 4, 1984

FBI Division: CRIMINAL GEN. CRIME SEC. [END of FBI memo]

 

Actual “Louie, Louie” letter of complaint to the DOJ; letter remanded to FBI in 1964 (Click on image for larger view)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HOLLYWOOD — Allegations that the lyrics to the song “Louie, Louie” are obscene have popped up for the second year in a row, with the FBI calling in Limax Music publisher Max Feirtag for a first hand review of the lyrics. So far, the original lyrics have not been questioned.

Feirtag said the local FBI office called him after a complaint was reportedly filed in Detroit. Fiertag also indicated he showed the FBI the current sheet music and the original copyright. The disputed single was recorded by the Kingsmen in 1963 on the Wand record label.

Feirtag was told the FBI had contacted Wand in New York in their investigation. Last year, Feirtag offered $1,000 to anyone coming up with a copy of the obscene lyrics. When the original embroilment began last summer,  Feirtag learned that someone in Indiana had written obscene lyrics for the calypso song and had sent them to the Governor. The state governor in turn had asked the Indiana Broadcasters Assn. to ban the disk. The broadcasters association called the allegations unfounded.

Feirtag claims to have never seen a copy of the obscene lyrics but was told by Vern Stierman, program director of KEEL, Shreveport, La., that he had a copy. “When I asked him to mail me a copy, he said he wouldn’t chance putting it through the mails,” Feirtag said. Further FBI review are pending. END.

FBI dispatch to FBI field office in Detroit; regarding lyrics to “Louie, Louie” by the Kingsmen (Click on image for larger view)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Addendum: For more on the “filthy” lyrics in “Louie, Louie,” as deciphered in a FBI memo, see pages 14 and 22 of the FBI’s actual report in the attached link above.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5R60kVchBps

(Information and news source: Billboard; September 11, 1965).

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FLASHBACK POP MUSIC HISTORY: MAY 10

From the MCRFB music calendar:

Events on this date: MAY 10

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Five Beatles in 1960. Pete Best on drums. On the right, Stuart Sutcliffe wearing shades. (Click on image for larger view).

1960: A group from Liverpool named the Beatals (sic) changes it’s name to the Silver Beatles after local scenester Brian Cassner declares the first name ridiculous. The five-piece band — at this point includes Stu Sutcliffe on bass (and Tommy Moore on drums) audition to become singer Billy Fury’s backing group. though they don’t get the main gig, they do score backing up fellow Liverpudllian Tommy Quickly on a Scottish tour.

1963: The Rolling Stones recorded their first recordings for Decca Records, including the Chuck Berry cover “Come On,” but were all critically rejected by the label as significantly “dreadful.”

1964: Dusty Springfield makes her first U.S. television appearance on CBS-TV’s Ed Sullivan Show, singing “I Only Want To Be With You.”

1965: “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” is recorded today by the Rolling Stones.

1965: The Beatles record two hits today, “Dizzy Miss Lizzie,” and Ringo sings lead in the second number, “Bad Boy.”

Janis Joplin performing at the Filmore East in March 1968. (Click on image for larger view).

1966: Struggling singer Janis Joplin, back home in her native Texas, is invited back out to San Francisco by her friend Chet Helms, who invites her to audition with a group he’s managing called Big Brother and Holding Company.

1968: Reacting to alleged abuse of concert attendees by the police, Doors bad-boy Jim Morrison incites a riot at the Chicago Coliseum.

1969: Tricia Nixon, daughter of the U.S. President, invites the Temptations and the Turtles to perform at a White House ball. For some apparent reason, Turtle guitarist Mark Volman keeps falling off the stage; rumors started to run amuck that he and several members (unamed) of the group allegedly snorted coke before the gig on Lincoln’s desk.

1972: Slade begins their first tour as headliners, performing at St. George’s Hall in Bradford with the Status Quo as the opening act.

1974: Eric Clapton records today, “I Shot The Sheriff.”

1974: The Main Ingredient is awarded a gold record by the RIAA for their million-seller, “Just Don’t Want To Be Lonely.”

The Commodores.

 

1974: Led Zeppelin launches their new record label, Swan Song, with a swank dinner at the Bel Air Hotel in Los Angeles that quickly resorts into a food fight.

1975: The Commodores “Slippery When Wet” charted, becoming their first top 40 hit at No. 19 and their first No. 1 R&B hit. The group began their carreer playing the club circuit, but unlike other acts, it wasn’t the local club circuit. The group made their start in French resorts like St. Tropez.

 

2004: Glen Campbell is sentenced to 10 days in jail after he pleads guilty for drunk driving and leaving the scene of an accident involving another vehicle the previous November in Phoenix. That’s him mugging a mean one on the left.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And that’s just a few of the events which took place in pop music history, on this day…. MAY 10.

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FLASHBACK MOTOR CITY HAPPENINGS ’68 . . . FEBRUARY 10, 1968

From the MCRFB news archive: 1968

Music Happenings In and Around Detroit Town, 1968

 

 

 

 

“Society’s Child” Janis Ian in 1968.

Janis Ian appeared Friday, February 2 in concert at the Masonic Auditorium…. The Sam and Dave Revue opened Friday, February 2, at Cobo Hall, including an 18-piece orchestra and other acts from the Stax/Volt stable of artists…. Rhetta Hughes appeared in the Roostertail’s main dining room during the week of January 18 through 24.

…Red Buttons headlined at the Roostertail Supper Club for 10 days through February 3, and the Four Tops are scheduled to open there Monday, February 12…. MGM Records will present their new artist Every Mother’s Son as part of a promotional campaign at the Roostertail’s Upper Deck for Robin Seymour’s celebrity night on Wednesday, February 14…. Bob Harper is the new disk jockey at WKNR, filling the all-night spot…. The all-night hours at Detroit’s super-soul station WCHB is now being filled by Ron White, and Leon Ivan is the new early afternoon deejay at WJLB….

The beautiful Queen of Soul in 1968. (Click on image for larger view).

…Dave Shafer, formerly with CKLW, is now head promotion man for Records Distributors here…. Tom Shannon, top disk jockey at CKLW, has scheduled his second TV production at WJBK Channel 2 for Friday, February 16. The format of the show will consist of discussion about radio with other Detroit area disk jockeys. Representing the other stations in the area for Shannon’s discussion will be Ernie Durham for WJLB, Dick Purtan for WKNR,  Hank O’Neal for WJBK, and Bill Williams for WCHB. Video tapes will be shown of performances by the Temptations, Marvin Gaye and Every Mother’s Son…. Laura Lee is currently performing at the Phelps Cocktail Lounge, and James Carr has just closed there…. CKLW Channel 9 plans to begin a weekly taping of live, nightclub type shows at the 20 Grand Driftwood Lounge, to be telecast on Thursdays.

…Aretha Franklin will perform her first Detroit concert Friday, February 16, at the Cobo Hall Arena. With her will be Erma Franklin and the Young-Holt Unlimited…. Al Williams will present the “Memphis Sounds Show” at the Riviera Theater for seven-days, February 23-29. This show will include Eddie Floyd, Barbra Merger, Pat Lewis, J. J. Barnes, Pig meat Markham, the Cassanovas, Dusty Williams, Denis Thomas, Ruby Andrews and Timmy Willis.

Detroit Solid Hitbound Producer, Don Davis.

…Don Davis, formerly the music director for Solid Hitbound Productions here, has set out to start his own operation under the name of Groovesville Records. One of the first acts signed on WCHB, has been appointed production manager for that station.

…Motown Record Company has filed suit for $1 million against a theater here which recently opened, calling itself the “Beverly Motown Theater.” Motown contends the name is a fraud on the public and an “unlawful infringement” on the Motown trade name…. MGM’s Orpheus is set for the Chessmate through Sunday, February 18. Philips Records 4 Seasons are scheduled for a Detroit Concert this coming Friday, February 16. END

 (Information and news source: Billboard; February 10, 1968).

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FLASHBACK POP MUSIC HISTORY: MAY 8

From the MCRFB music calendar:

Events on this date: MAY 8

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Johnny Ray.

1954: The BBC bans Johnny Ray’s latest single, “Such A Night,” from airplay due to it’s somewhat suggestive lyrics. It would later become a hit for Elvis Presley.

1961: Teen idol Ricky Nelson turns 21 and, eager to shed his teeny-bop image, changes his professional first name to “Rick,” which he would insist upon being called for the rest of his career.

1963: Chicago R&B great Major Lance records “The Monkey Time.”

1962: Beatles manager Brian Epstein, already discouraged somewhat from the Decca records rejection, runs into engineer Ted Huntley while at the HMV Record Store in London. Huntley suggest sending the bands’s demo to a producer at EMI by the name of George Martin.

George Martin with Brian Epstein at the Beatles’ EMI studio in 1966.

1967: During filming of what would become the documentary Don’t Look Back, Bob Dylan gets the idea to make a short film of his single, “Subterranean Homesick Blues,” featuring him standing in an alley next to London’s Savoy Hotel. The film features Dylan with the company of his two friends, Allen Ginsberg and Bob Neuwirth flipping cue cards with the lyrics of the Dylan song on them.

1967: Gerry and the Pacemakers, increasingly out of step with changing rock trends, announce their disbandment.

1969: The Beatles sign a contract making Allen Klein their manager (through his company ABKCO). Paul, pointedly, refuses to show up and sign the agreement, a decision that will eventually lead the group to dissolve as a band.

1972: Following promoter’s Sid Bernstein’s decision to reinvent Radio City Music Hall in New York as a rock venue, Billy Preston becomes the first rock performer to headline at the famous landmark.

1976: John Sabastian’s “Welcome Back” hits No. 1 on the Billboard chart.

1976: On stage during Bob Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue in Houston, Willie Nelson joins Dylan for a stirring rendition of the country standard, “Will The Circle Be Unbroken,” dedicated (as is the concert itself) to freeing wrongfully convicted ex-boxer Rubin “Hurricane” Carter from his murder sentence.

For refusing — fired — Radio One deejay Johnny Walker.

1976: BBC’s Radio One fires deejay Johnny Walker after he refuses to promote the teeny-bop group Bay City Rollers’ “Saturday Night” on the station.

1990: Tom Waits wins his $2.5 million lawsuit against snack giant Frito Lay for using a Waits “sound-alike” in a television commercial promoting their product.

1991: 55 year-old Rolling Stones’ bassist Bill Wyman divorces his second wife, 21 year-old model Mandy Smith, after three years of marriage.

1998: The three former Beatles, along with Yoko Ono, win an injunction stopping the re-release of the band’s live 1962 “Star Club” tapes,  recorded in Hamburg at the famous venue.

2006: Apple Computers wins a long, long legal battle over rights to sell music over the internet without violating the trademark of the Beatles’ Apple label.

2006: Former MC5 bassist Michael Davis is badly injured in a motorcycle accident while riding in his hometown in Detroit, Michigan.

 

 

 

 

 

And that’s just a few of the events which took place in pop music history, on this day…. MAY 8

 


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FLASHBACK POP MUSIC HISTORY: MAY 7

From the MCRFB music calendar:

Events on this date: MAY 7

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ray Charles, 1953.

1955: Ray Charles breaks through with his first No. 1 R&B hit, “I’ve Got A Woman,” a revamped version from a gospel standard called, “It Must Be Jesus.”

1958: The Champs appear on Dick Clark’s American Bandstand and perform their No. 1 instrumental hit, “Tequila.”

The incredibly shrinking-Paul in Help! (Click on image for another view).

1965: At London’s Twickenham Studios, the Beatles film scene in Help! entitled “The Exciting Adventure of Paul On The Floor,” where a suddenly-shrunken Paul McCartney tries to hide his newly-naked body.

1966: Simon & Garfunkel’s “I Am A Rock” enters the charts.

1966: The Mamas and The Papas “Monday Monday” hits No. 1 on the Billboard chart.

1967: During Moscow’s May Day celebrations, several teens dance the twist in outright violation of the Ministry Of Culture’s orders against Western decadence.

1967: Breaking his self-imposed exile after a motorcycle accident the previous year, Bob Dylan gives his first post-crash interview to the New York Daily News.

1968: Singer-songwriter Reginald Dwight changes his name legally to Elton Hercules John, the first and last names taken from his former bandmates in Bluesology, Elton Dean and Long John Baldry.

1972: Tom Jones’ Special London Bridge Special, featuring the Carpenters and Engelbert Humperdinck and celebrities alike including Kirk Douglas to Charlton Heston, airs on the BBC.

1978: Bob Dylan’s upcoming series of concerts at London’s Wembley Empire sells out all 90,000 tickets in just under eight hours.

1982: Diana Ross is awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame at 6712 Hollywood Blvd.

The Wicked Mr. Pickett lived up to his name with several drunken-driving arrests, as booked in his hometown Englewood, NJ, police dossier.

1991, In his hometown of Englewood, NJ, Wilson Pickett is arrested for insisting on driving over the lawn of his neighbor, Donald Aronson, who just happens to be the town’s mayor. After finding a knife and a baseball bat in his vehicle, attempted murder is added to the charges. Pickett is inexplicably let off with a charity concert and a years’ probation.

1991: Rolling Stone bassist Bill Wyman, 54, ends his two-year marriage to Mandy Smith, 21, whom he had begun dating at age 13. Despite in only spending two months total with Wyman during their marriage, she receives a settlement of $6.5 million.

2002: London authorities wrap up their four-month investigation of Who guitarist Pete Townsend, charged with downloading child-pornography in 1999. Townsend, who claimed he was researching a book he was writing about his own childhood sexual abuses, was not jailed but was placed on a national sex offender registry.

Deaths: Ron Wilson (The Surfaris), 1989; Eddie Rabbitt, 1998; Alphonso Howell (The Sensations), 1998; Rudy Maugeri (The Crew Cuts), 2004; Dave Fisher (The Highwaymen), 2004.

 

 

 

 

And that’s just a few of the events which took place in pop music history, on this day…. MAY 7.

 

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DETROIT RADIO WARS: CKLW HIRES BILL DRAKE AND PAUL DREW . . . APRIL 8, 1967

From the MCRFB news archives:

CKLW HIRES DREW, IN STEPS TO TUMBLE DETROIT LEADER WKNR

 

 

 

 

 

DETROIT — CKLW, the 50,000-watt RKO General operation here, has brought in Paul Drew as program director and will soon launch an all-out campaign against market-leader WKNR. Drew, former program director at WQXI in Atlanta, has slated May 1 as the day to bow with the station’s new sound — “Fun Radio.”

Paul Drew, the legendary program-director at CKLW in 1967

“Fun Radio” will include a jingles package that was custom made for the station’s and “for the sound I’m looking for,” Drew said.

Prior, there has been talk that Bill Drake, a programming consultant, was going to the station. Drake has set the program for RKO’s KHJ in Los Angeles and also revamped entirely San Francisco’s KFRC — both highly successful today in their markets. Though Drew would not commit himself, every indication is that he’ll use the same template/model that had been programmed at the two leading West Coast stations.

What will be in use will be the same playlist, rule-of-play with a shortened record format. “We’ll play whatever is necessary to play the hits, but the playlist will fluctuate.” This will not eliminate the playing of new records by new artists, evidently, as the station had played on the air about a week ago with “Sunshine Girl” by the Parade, a new record which had been introduced to the station by A&M Records promotion man Don Graham.

Already, CKLW has begun a sort of sneaky promotion campaign, in wake of their intent in placing the station at the top in the Detroit market with no holds barred. WJR, the easy listening outlet in Detroit, as long billed itself as “The Great Voice of the Great Lakes.” CKLW has aired the slogan: “The Choice of the Great Lakes.” WKNR, the leading Hot 100-formatted station in the market, is promoting a concert with Paul Revere & The Raiders on April 8. CKLW had bought a large section of front-row seats to the show and will be giving them away for free to listeners on the air, a ploy in part of the station’s ongoing blitz from the station’s promotion department.

 (Information and news source: Billboard; April 8, 1967).

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FLASHBACK POP MUSIC HISTORY: MAY 4

From the MCRFB music calendar:

Events on this date: MAY 4

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1956: England’s New Musical Express erroneously reports that ‘Elvin’ Presley will be performing in an upcoming gig at the Palladium in London. Elvis Presley never did Europe.

1957: ABC-TV premiers Alan Freed’s Rock and Roll Revue show, an attempt to replicate the success of their own American Bandstand. The first show features performances by the Clovers, The Del-Vikings, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, Sal Mineo and Guy Mitchell.

The first Grammy Award winner Domenico Modugno in 1959.

1959: The very first Grammy Awards are held in Los Angeles, with Record Of The Year honors going out to Domenico Modugno’s “Volare (Nel Blu Depinto De Blu)” and Henry Mancini’s The Music Of Peter Gunn soundtrack winning Record Album Of The Year. The Champs’ “Tequila,” for some reason, takes home Best Rhythm and Blues Performance honors.

1964: British musicians Ray Thomas and Mike Pinder form an R&B group, naming themselves the Moody Blues. The group’s name comes as a derivative from Dukes Ellington’s “Mood Indigo.”

1967: The Turtles’ hit “Happy Together” is certified gold by RIAA.

1968: Twiggy, one of England’s first supermodels, catches an 18 year-old singer named Mark Hopkins on the BBC-TV talent show Opportunity Knocks and calls friend Paul McCartney, who eventually signs her to Apple Records and gives her one of his songs, “Those Were The Days,” to record.

1968: Steppenwolf makes its U.S. television debut, performing “Born To Be Wild” on ABC-TV Dick Clark’s American Bandstand.

Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young’s “OHIO” single; released in 1970.

 

1970: The US National Guard opens fire on Vietnam war protesters at Kent State University in Ohio, killing four unarmed students and wounding eleven more. After seeing photos of the shooting later in the week in LIFE magazine, Neil Young immediately writes the song, “Ohio,” which Crosby, Stills and Nash will record the next day. Twenty-five years later to the day, Peter Paul and Mary play a commemorative concert at the university, performing Dylan’s “Blowin’ In The Wind.”

1977: The Beatles long-anticipated and only live LP, The Beatles At The Hollywood Bowl is released.

1985: The legendary Apollo Theater re-opens in Harlem after a massive  $10,000,000 dollar makeover.

David Bowie’s ex, Angie. (Click on image for larger view).

1990: In an interview, David Bowie’s ex-wife, Angie (she was of whom the Stones penned and sang of in their hit), claims for the first time in how she walked in on her ex, and Mick Jagger — caught — having sex with each other.

1992: Baltimore mayor Kurt Schmoke declares today “KISS Day” and presents the band with an honorary key to the city.

2008: Martha Reeves’ home in Detroit is burglarized and $1,000,000 worth of recording equipment is stolen. In just a few hours, the perpetrator is captured while attempting to hock the stolen-merchandise for a bargained steal — $400.00.

 

 

 

 

 

And that’s just a few of the events which took place in pop music history, on this day….

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