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Big Muddy
05-17-2017, 08:32 AM
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The FBI Laboratory weighs in on the “dirty” lyrics of “Louie Louie”


"""Based on outcry from parents who bought into what may have started as an idle rumor, the FBI launched a formal investigation in 1964 into the supposedly pornographic lyrics of the song “Louie, Louie.” That investigation finally neared its conclusion on this day in 1965, when the FBI Laboratory declared the lyrics of “Louie Louie” to be officially unintelligible.

No one will ever know who started the rumor that “Louie Louie” was dirty. As written by Richard Berry in 1955, the lyrics revolve around a sailor from the Caribbean lamenting to a bartender named Louie about missing his far-away love. As recorded in crummy conditions and in a single take by the Kingsmen in 1963, lyrics like “A fine little girl, she wait for me…” came out sounding like “A phlg mlmrl hlurl, duh vvvr me” Perhaps it was some clever middle-schooler who started the rumor by trying to convince a classmate that those lyrics contained some words that are as unprintable today as they were back in 1963. Whatever the case, the story spread like wildfire, until the United States Department of Justice began receiving letters like the one addressed to Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and dated January 30, 1964. “Who do you turn to when your teen age daughter buys and brings home pornographic or obscene materials being sold…in every City, Village and Record shop in this Nation?” that letter began, before going on to make the specific assertion that the lyrics of “Louie Louie” were “so filthy that I can-not enclose them in this letter.”

Over the course of the next two years, the FBI gathered many versions of the putative lyrics to Louie Louie. They interviewed the man who wrote the song and officials of the record label that released the Kingsmen’s smash-hit single. They turned the record over to the audio experts in the FBI laboratory, who played and re-played “Louie Louie” at 78 rpm, 45 rpm, 33 1/3 rpm and even slower speeds in an effort to determine whether it was pornographic and, therefore, whether its sale was a violation of the federal Interstate Transportation of Obscene Material law. “Unintelligible at any speed” was the conclusion the FBI Laboratory relayed to the investigators in charge on this day in 1965, not quite exonerating “Louie Louie,” but also not damning the tune that would go on to become one of the most-covered songs in rock-and-roll history."""

Big Muddy
05-17-2017, 08:43 AM
It's funny that I remember exactly where I was, the first time I heard that song....I was a freshman in high school, sitting at a table in our school grill with Neal Simmons, Steve Romine and Rita Alford....there was an old radio, sitting on the shelf behind the lunch counter....we never paid any attention to the words of the song, but it was a catchy tune, so Neal and Rita got up, and started doing the twist.

It's funny how I can remember all that, but can't remember what I did, yesterday. ;)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wx-8_GI4d2c

Thumper
05-17-2017, 09:10 AM
Yep, it was one of my favorites. Personally, I've never been one to even give a squat about lyrics. It was all tune and beat to me. In contrast, I had a girlfriend who loved to sing along with most any song and knew every word to a bazillion of them. If a new hit song came out, she'd memorize the words within days of its release. Dang, the government could have saved a small fortune by simply asking her what the lyrics were! :)

What a waste of time, money and effort. TBH, I don't remember the big stink over the lyrics. Of course, in the pre-internet days, word didn't spread like it would today. I remember there was another big bout of craziness back in the day where people swore artists were including Satanic messages in their music, but you had to play the song backwards to hear it. I can't remember which songs, but the Beatles were targeted a couple of times.