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Its lyrics explicitly deal with cocaine use and addiction. The beginning of the song features a pan flute solo, then a noise of one snorting cocaine, before the starting riff begins. The cover art features a stylised British Rail Aptis ticket , taken from their hometown of Lowestoft , in Suffolk , surrounded by fire.
In 1990, the now standard black-and-white warning label design reading "Parental Advisory: Explicit Lyrics" was introduced and was to be placed on the bottom right-hand section of a given product. The first album to bear the "black and white" Parental Advisory label was the 1990 release of Banned in the U.S.A. by the rap group 2 Live Crew . [ 3 ]
"The Hell Song" is a song by Canadian rock band Sum 41. The song was released on February 10, 2003, as the second single of the band's album Does This Look Infected?. "The Hell Song" became a top-40 hit in Ireland, Italy, and the United Kingdom. On May 29, 2015, it was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).
The pop superstar’s 11th album “The Tortured Poets Department” contains seven explicit songs — “The ... “hell.” However, her fifth and sixth albums both have two naughty words each ...
(sometimes abbreviated to There Is a Hell...) is the third studio album by British rock band Bring Me the Horizon. It was released on 4 October 2010 by Visible Noise . The album was produced by Fredrik Nordström and Henrick Udd at IF Studios in Gothenburg , Sweden, with additional work at Sunset Lodge Studios in Los Angeles, California.
The FCC ruling is referenced in "Offensive Language" from the album Parental Advisory: Explicit Lyrics and HBO special Doin' It Again, both 1990 recordings of the same performance; however, the routine that follows is entirely different. The Class Clown version can also be heard on the vinyl/cassette only release Indecent Exposure (1978).
The lyrics read: “When it feels right, nothing else matters / Is this real life too good to be true? / Take me all night, I can feel the passion in your eyes / I’m still in love with you.” ...
Capitol Records was initially hesitant to release "Bitch" as the lead single from Blurring the Edges (1997) due to the song's explicit lyrical content. [3] The label's vice president of artists and repertoire, Perry Watts-Russell, and producer Geza X both expressed their concerns about the song's lyrics potentially having a negative impact on ...