Title: Pop music, censorship, and subculture
1Pop music, censorship, and subculture
2Pop music, censorship, and subculture
- Protests and censorship
- General perspectives
- Moral panic, media effects, and adolescent
stereotyping - Prevalence and content of problem music
- Effects of problem music
- Delinquency and criminality, illegal drugs,
permissive sexual attitudes, sexual and racial
discrimination, self-harm and suicide,
(mis)interpretation of lyrics - Is there a case for censorship?
3So what?
- Litman and Farberow (1994)
- On 23rd December 1985, Ray Belknap and James
Vance from Reno, Nevada spent the afternoon
drinking beer, smoking cannabis, and listening to
the Stained Class album by heavy metal band,
Judas Priest. Belknap had just lost his job and
Vance had just quit his, leading to an angry
confrontation with his mother. Late in the
afternoon they jumped out of a first floor window
and took a sawn off shotgun to a nearby church
yard with the intention of fulfilling a suicide
pact. When they arrived, 18 year old Ray shouted
life sucks, put the gun under his chin and
pulled the trigger, causing fatal injuries. A few
moments later, 20 year old James did the same and
although he didnt die, shot off the lower
portion of his face. The parents sued Judas
Priest and their record company, claiming that
the album their sons had been listening to all
afternoon drove them to suicide. One song on the
album, Beyond the Realm of Death featured the
lyrics He had enough / He couldnt take anymore
... Ive left the world behind ... This is my
life / Ill decide not you. Another song Heroes
End featured the lyrics, Why do you have to die
if youre a hero? The parents later claimed that
the suicide attempts also resulted from the words
Do it having been recorded backwards into
another song on the album, Better By You, Better
Than Me. - The parents lost their case
4Licentious pop star behaviour
- Long-standing concerns about media and pop music
- Then shall we allow our children to listen to
any story anyone happens to make up, and so
receive into their minds ideas often the very
opposite of those we shall think they ought to
have when they are grown up? (Plato The
Republic) - Ragtime and jazz criticised for their immoral
effects on listeners (McDonald, 1988) - Dean Martins Wham bam thank you Mam banned in
1951 - In 1953, jukeboxes were outlawed within hearing
distance of churches in six counties of South
Carolina - In 1954 Ruth Thompson introduced legislation to
the USA Congress to ban the mailing of
pornographic records - During the 1950s Houstons Juvenile Delinquency
and Crime Commission banned 50 records in a week
simply because they were rock and roll - Certain cases become very well-known
5Licentious pop star behaviour
- Elvis Presleys turbulent 1956
- 5th June 1956 sings I want you, I need you, I
love you on ABC TV and his pelvic thrusts cause
outcry from 40 million viewers - Im not trying to be sexy. Its just my way of
expressing how I feel when I move around. My
movements are all leg movements. I dont do
nothing with my body I dont believe Id sing
the way I do if God hadnt wanted me to I dont
think Im bad for people. If I did I would go
back to driving a truck - 1st July 1956 forced to sing Hound Dog to a dog
on NBC TV while wearing a tuxedo - Following court order his Florida concerts during
August 1956 are filmed for evidence of movement
below the waist - If teenagers want to pay their money to come
out and jump around and scream and yell, its
their business - During 1956 spent 26 weeks at number 1 in the
American charts and accounted for half of his
record companys total income
6Licentious pop star behaviour
- John Lennon
- 1966 claim that The Beatles were more popular
now than Jesus led to record burnings before
Lennon claimed he was commenting with regret on
declining religiosity - Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds (and just about
everything else between 1965 and 1968) and drug
references - Cliff Richard
- Criticised by Yugoslav Embassy for portrayal of
their country in his films - Sex Pistols
- God Save the Queen in 1977 Jubilee Year
- The facist regime She aint no human being
- Record pressing workers walk out
- Only got to number 2?
7Licentious pop star behaviour
- Madonna
- Threatened with arrest for fake masturbation
during concerts - Video for Like a Prayer featured her having sex
on an altar with a black Jesus - Gangsta rap
- E.g. Niggaz with Attitudes F that Police
- Artist X
- Accused of inciting school massacres, having oral
sex on stage, smoking excrement, handing out
cocaine - 2000 Democratic American Vice-Presidential
candidate, Joe Lieberman, says they are perhaps
the sickest act ever promoted by a mainstream
record company - Florida concerts were picketed by Christian
groups who distributed a protest prayer against
those foul and evil spirits who have brought /
The music group XXXX into Orlando, calling on
Jesus to help So that they cannot sow lies / And
spread discontent among our youth - Licentious behaviour always a concern but
becoming more extreme
8The PMRCs Filthy Fifteen c.1985
- Judas Priest Eat Me Alive
- Sexual / Profane - Sounds like an animal /
Panting to the beat / Groan in the pleasure zone
/ Gasping from the heat - Motley Crue Bastard
- Violent - Out goes the light / In goes my knife
/ Pull out his life / Consider that bastard dead
Got your neck in the noose / I got nothing to
lose - Prince Darling Nikki
- Sexual / Profane I met a girl called Nikki / I
guess you could say she was a sex fiend / I met
her in a hotel lobby masturbating with a
magazine - Sheena Easton Sugar Walls
- Sexual / Profane The blood races to your
private spots / Lets me know theres a fire /
You cant fight passion when passion is hot /
Temperatures rise inside my sugar walls Come
spend the night inside my sugar walls - W.A.S.P. (Animal) F Like A Beast
- Sexual / Profane - I do whatever I want to to
you / Ill nail your ass to the sheets / A pelvic
thrust and the sweat starts to sting you / I f
like a beast
9- Mercyful Fate Into The Coven
- Occult References - Take this white cross and go
to the middle of the ring / Come, come into my
coven / And become Lucifers child / Now crush
it, crush the cross / Suck the blood from this
unholy knife / Say after me my soul belongs to
Satan - Vanity Strap On Robby Baby
- Sexual / Profane Cant find on the internet but
searching does take you to several pornography
sites - Def Leppard High N Dry
- Drugs / Alcohol Advocated - Saturday, I feel
right / Ive been drinking all day On the
bottle, Im on the line / Im up and feeling
fine - Twisted Sister Were Not Gonna Take It
- Violent - Well fight the powers that be / Just
dont pick our destiny Were right / Were free
/ Were right / Youll see - Madonna Dress You Up
- Sexual / Profane Gonna dress you up in my love
/ All over your body Let me cover you with
velvet kisses
10- Cyndi Lauper She Bop
- Sexual / Profane - I wanna go south and get me
some more They say I better stop or Ill go
blind They say I better get a chaperone /
Because I cant stop messing with the danger zone
/ No I wont worry and I wont fret / Aint no
law against it yet - AC/DC Let Me Put My Love Into You
- Sexual / Profane - Dont you struggle / Dont
you fight / Dont you worry / Because its your
turn tonight / Let me put my love into you Let
me cut your cake with my knife - Black Sabbath Trashed
- Drugs / Alcohol Advocated - I was going down the
track about a hundred and five And yet my mind
was blowing / I drank a bottle of tequila and I
felt real good - Mary Jane Girls In My House
- Sexual / Profane - When it comes down to making
love / Ill satisfy your every need / And every
fantasy you think of Ill keep you happy and so
satisfied / In my house, in my house - Venom Possessed
- Occult References - Look at me, Satans child /
Born of evil thus defiled / Brought to life
through Satanic birth / Raised in hell to live on
earth I am possessed by all that is evil / The
death of your god I demand / I spit at the virgin
you worship / And sit at my lord Satans left
hand
11Protestors
- PMRC founded in 1985 by Tipper Gore
- Apparently prompted by her daughter playing
Darling Nikki from Princes Purple Rain album - U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and
Transportation (19 September 1985) led to
parental advisory sticker - On the agenda was the labelling of records so
that at least the whole family knows what is in
them, and not just the child who buys the
record. - Attached to 59 of rap CDs and 13 of heavy metal
CDs - By 2000 19 states of the USA had considered
regulating distribution of stickered CDs - Crime to sell to minors (Missouri, Pennsylvania,
Louisiana) - Punish juveniles who buy stickered albums (e.g.
Pennsylvania wanted to send them on community
service at a rape crisis centre) - Allow individual towns to impose stricter
standards of obscenity (Ohio) - Ban completely the sale of all labelled albums
(city of Leominster, MA) - Allow local prosecutors and judges to ban the
sale of erotic music to minors (Washington) - Make mandatory a system of labelling sexually
explicit or offensive lyrics (Missouri and other
states)
12Protestors
-
- Other nationwide action in the USA
- 1990 ruling by a USA federal court (later
overturned) that 2 Live Crews As Nasty As They
Wanna Be was legally obscene, and the subsequent
prosecution of a record store owner who sold it
and (failed) attempt to prosecute the group
following a Florida performance - 1993 demonstrations about lawlessness and
obscenity in rap organised by NAACP - 1994 Senate Judiciary Sub-committee on Juvenile
Violence concerning misogyny by male and
self-degradation by female rappers (e.g. Hes
got me open like 7-11 Salt n Pepas Whatta
Man) - Wal-Mart wont stock stickered CDs
- Other stores wont stock them for fear of
litigation - In 2000 Clinton called for ratings system for all
entertainment - In June 1997 Governor G.W. Bush banned Texan
state pension funds from investing in companies
producing stickered albums - Not just the USA
- Australia considering banning sales of some CDs
to under 18s
13Protests
- Bizarre local censorship
- Louisiana sheriff arrested skating rink owner and
confiscated 60 CDs by e.g. Britney Spears (and a
Disney film soundtrack) following claims that
they were involved in starting a fight in the
rinks car park - Many radio stations banned the Dixie Chicks (even
after a public apology) after one group member
voiced embarrassment at coming from the same
state as President George W. Bush - Ohio police made a 13 year old hand over an
allegedly obscene t-shirt promoting a tour of rap
group Insane Clown Posse - Michigan high school pupil suspended for wearing
a t-shirt promoting Korn that featured no lyrics
or words apart from the bands name - Four Texan high school students suspended for
attending a Backstreet Boys concert which
violated a school policy forbidding involvement
in inappropriate music - Many others see e.g. website of American Civil
Liberties Union
14Protests A need for research
- Legal confusion
- Rulings usually over-turned on freedom of speech
- Political confusion
- Conservatives hate government meddling in
everyday life but concerned about public decency - Liberals hate censorship but say we cant ignore
suicidal young rock fans from broken homes - Musical confusion
- Musical meaning is a function of context and
therefore often ambiguous to parents (e.g.
Hendrixs Star Spangled Banner) - Sex and drugs stereotype of pop music does not
justify censorship some young people can take a
mature, critical approach to music (but others
cant)
15Three general perspectives
- Moral panic
- Media effects
- Adolescent stereotyping
16Moral panic
- Public reaction to problem music similar to moral
panics e.g. ordination of female priests,
paedophilia, gay marriage etc. - Cohen (2003)
- Moral panics are widespread emotional outcries
that occur over particular social and moral
issues - Originate in the discovery of a particular
problem group / factor (e.g. paedophilia) - Heavy media coverage means they are perceived as
more pervasive than actually the case - Reinforced by the media whenever similar
instances come to light (e.g Soham murders in
2002, teachers on Sex Offenders Register in 2006) - Public sensitised to label future events as also
resulting from the problem group / factor (e.g.
missing child paedophile murder) - Leads to the perception of a major threat and of
the urgent emotional need for a solution with
severe repercussions for the folk devils in
question (e.g. the cut em off brigade) - Solutions championed by moral entrepreneurs who
highlight certain solutions to further their own
objectives (e.g. opposition political groups) - Moral panics maintain social order through the
ostracising and eventual elimination of
particular problem groups / factors from
mainstream society
17Moral panic
- Applies to problem music
- Mainstream society needs a folk devil to blame
for (perceptions of) a violent society - Occasional high profile cases (e.g. Elvis, Sex
Pistols, Marilyn Manson) - An urgent need to act against producers of this
music (e.g. stickers, bizarre legal actions) - Moral entrepreneurs at the forefront (Lynxwiler
and Gay, 2000) - Liking for heavy metal and rap was lower among
females, married participants, those who hold
conservative attitudes toward gender roles, and
those who attended religious services
18Media effects
- No large effects of the media on large portions
of population - Limited effects on specific sub-groups do exist
- July 2000
- Joint statement by the American Psychological
Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics,
the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry, the American Medical Association, the
American Academy of Family Physicians, and the
American Psychiatric Association stated that the
data point overwhelmingly to a causal connection
between media violence and aggressive behavior in
some children. - Villani (2001)
- Reviewed effects of TV, films, pop music,
advertising, video games, and computers /
internet usage - The primary effects of media exposure are
increased violent and aggressive behavior,
increased high-risk behaviors, including alcohol
and tobacco use, and accelerated onset of sexual
activity (p.392). - Anderson and Bushman (2002)
- Meta-analysis established link between aggression
and media violence - Suggests heavy rock and rap might cause problems
for some people
19Stereotypes of adolescence
- A time of storm and stress
- Adolescents like problem music because it
reflects alienation from family / society - But
- Offer, Ostrov, Howard, and Atkinson (1988)
- 5938 adolescents from Japan, Israel, Hungary,
West Germany, Italy, Australia, Turkey,
Bangladesh, Taiwan, and the United States - Over 90 denied a) holding a grudge against
parents and b) that parents were ashamed of them - DuBois-Reymond (1989)
- 96 of Dutch adolescents satisfied with their
home life - Problem music does not reflect alienation from
family / society
20Stereotypes of adolescence
- Identity crisis
- Adolescents accept dubious moral values from
problem music without question because they
havent resolved self-identity - But only a few adolescents experience identity
crisis - Marcias (1966) four types of identity status
- Identity diffusion (avoidance)
- Identity foreclosure (premature commitment)
- Identity moratorium (try out different
identities) - Identity achievement (commitment to ideals and
plans) - But few are experiencing moratorium
- Adolescents have no incentive for uncritical
acceptance of the messages of problem music
21Prevalence and content of problem music
- Economic clout of adolescents
- Listening times
- The importance of music
- Content
- Popularity of sex and violence
- General caveats
22Economic clout of adolescents
- Dortch (1994)
- In 1993 16-19 year old USA boys had US75 per
week to spend and girls had US82 - Sellers (1989)
- Spending by American 12-19 year olds in 1988
totalled US55 billion, and totalled US248
billion when including purchases they made on
behalf of their families - British Phonographic Industry
- World music sales, although down 1.3 on the
previous year, were worth US33.6 billion in 2004 - UK CD sales of 174.6 million in 2004
- UK music industry earns more than steel or water
supply - Christenson and Roberts (1998)
- Recording Industry Association of America data
showing that under 24 year olds accounted for
40-50 of all sales of pop music in the USA.
23Listening times
- Very high
- Davis (1985)
- Estimated that between 7th and 12th grades the
average USA pupil has had 10500 hours of
deliberate exposure to music - Lyle and Hoffmann (1972)
- Estimated that a quarter of 10 year olds in the
USA listened to music for four or more hours per
day - Roberts and Henriksen (1990)
- All incidences of exposure to music (i.e.
foreground and background) in 9th and 11th grade
USA pupils - Listening time 3-4 hours per day
- Corresponding figure for television viewing
2-2.5 hours - Music television
- Early studies suggested about 3 hours per day
- More recent research suggests less than an hour
per day - Certainly not strangers to music video
24The importance of music
- Leming (1987)
- 46 of 11-15 year olds regarded music as very
important and only 7 said it was not important
at all - The Horatio Alger Foundation (1996)
- Music was their USA 13-17 year olds number one
non-school activity - Roberts and Henriksen (1990)
- Music media were the most preferred item that 7th
to 11th grade USA school pupils would take with
them to a desert island - Fitzgerald, Joseph, Hayes, and ORegan (1995)
- 76 of Irish boys and 81 of girls were
interested in music as a leisure pursuit - The leisure activity they were most interested in
25Content 1. Sexuality
- Cole (1971)
- Analysed the lyrics of the top 10 songs for each
year of the 1960s and found that love-sex was
the predominant theme (p.389) - Even when protest pop was at its height, sexual
relationships remained pop musics core subject
matter. - Christenson and Roberts (1998) review
- A gradual reduction over the past 50 years in the
number of songs with a boy meets girl theme -
about 90 in 1941-2, 70 in 1966, 50 in the
early 1980s, back up to around 70 by the late
1980s - More emphasis now on sexual and physical aspects
of love and less on emotional aspects (e.g.
Fedler, Hall, and Tanzi, 1982)
26Content 2. Sexism
- Society has become more egalitarian pop maybe
hasnt - Wilkinson (1976)
- Pop songs from 1954-1968 portrayed men and women
as equally likely to be primary actors or
initiators in relationships - But it all went wrong from the 1970s to mid-1990s
- Hyden and McCandless (1983)
- Pop songs from 1972-1982 had males portrayed more
often as demonstrating initiative and competence,
whereas females were more seductive and more
powerful than men. - Sherman and Dominick (1986)
- More than 75 of videos contained sexual
suggestion (e.g. kissing, fondling), and females
were dressed provocatively about half the time
they appeared. - Vincent, Davis, and Boruszkowski (1987)
- Over 50 of videos from 1985-1987 featured a male
artist treated women in a condescending way
27Content 2. Sexism
- Seidman (1992)
- Strong sex-typing of occupational roles acted out
in music videos from 1987, and women more likely
to wear sexually provocative clothing - Sommers-Flanagan, Sommers-Flanagan, and Davis
(1993) - Men engaged in more aggressive and dominant
behaviour in music videos than do women women
engaged in more implicitly sexual and subservient
behaviour and women were more frequently the
object of explicit, implicit, and aggressive
sexual advances - Signorielli, McLeod, and Healy (1994)
- Analysed the commercials shown on music
television - Females appeared less often, but when they did
they tended to have more beautiful bodies, wore
skimpier clothing, and were looked at more often
than others - Gow (1996)
- Music videos from the early 1990s
under-represented women and emphasised their
physical appearance rather than their musical
ability
28Content 2. Sexism
- Recent glimmers of hope
- Seidman (1999)
- Analysed music videos from 1993, comparing these
with his earlier sample - In the 1993 videos males and females were still
portrayed overwhelmingly in sex-typed jobs males
were still over-represented (63 of characters
vs. 37 females characters), more adventuresome
and violent and women were still more
affectionate, nurturing, and sexually pursued,
and wore more revealing clothing (33.4 of
characters vs. 7.0 of male characters) - However, males were no longer more aggressive,
domineering, and victimised than women, and
females were no longer more dependent, fearful,
and in pursuit of others sexually
29Content 2. Sexism
- Dukes, Bisel, Borega, Lobato, and Owens (2003)
- Analysed the 100 most popular songs in the USA
between 1958 and 1998 - Over time references to love in lyrics performed
by female artists decreased although women still
made more references to love than men - Male artists steadily increased their use of sex
words while this peaked for females during
1976-1984 - More recent songs and songs performed by white,
female artists expressed greater romantic
selfishness (i.e. love on my terms) - Number of songs by women increased over time
towards a position of equality (from 15 of songs
between 1958-1972, 43 in 1976-1984, up to 53 in
1991-1998) - Problems still persist
- For every Spice Girls preaching a (rather vague)
message of girl power a 2 Live Crew have lyrics
commanding a woman to Nibble on my like a
rat does cheese - 2004 MOBO awards highlights ongoing concerns
about homophobia
30Content 3. Racial matters
- Dukes et al (2003)
- Black musicians responsible for 40 of those
all-time top 100 songs that were released between
1958-1972, 27 of those 100 songs released
between 1976-1984, and 63 of those 100 songs
released between 1991-1998 - Hakanen (1995)
- Rap and RB / soul (and jazz) produce
predominantly positive rather than negative
emotions - But
- Brown and Campbell (1986)
- Blacks were more likely to be portrayed in videos
shown on Black Entertainment Television whereas
whites were more likely to be portrayed in videos
shown on MTV - Rich, Woods, Goodman, Emans, and DuRant (1998)
- Analysis of 518 music videos concluded that
Compared with United States demographics, blacks
were overrepresented as aggressors and victims
of violence, whereas whites were
underrepresented. White females were most
frequently victims. Music videos may be
reinforcing false stereotypes of aggressive black
males and victimized white females (p.669)
31Content 4. Death, violence, and destruction
- Popularity of music with themes concerning
homicide, Satanism, and suicide (HSS) - Wass, Raup, Cerullo, and Martel, et al.
(1988-1989) - 17 of rural participants and 24 of the urban
participants were fans of HSS rock - ¾ of fans were male and nearly all were white
- Wass, Miller, and Stevenson (1989)
- 17.5 were fans of HSS rock
- HSS fans more likely to have parents who were
never married or remarried and less likely to
have married parents, to be male, white, and
enrolled in urban schools - Wass, Miller, and Redditt (1991)
- 120 13-18 year old offenders
- 91 were fans of rock of whom 54 were fans of
HSS rock - HSS fans more likely to be white and have dropped
out of school
32Content 4. Death, violence, and destruction
- Plopper and Ness (1993)
- Analysed USA music sales charts from 1955 to 1991
- Only 90 of the 9311 songs (.97) that reached the
charts concerned death - Popularity of death songs peaked in the 1960s,
and only eight of the 90 were released in the
1980s and early 1990s - But
- Death songs were disproportionately popular
25.5 of death-related songs reached number 1
compared to only 8.6 of other songs, and while
57.8 of death-related songs reached the top 10
only 36.2 of other songs did - Of the songs concerning the death of common
people, murder and other forms of violence (e.g.
executions, shootings of criminals) accounted for
48 of the deaths - Attitudes towards death least expressed in these
songs were that life is dear and death is
undeserved, references to the tangible realities
of death were limited, and there was little
sustained attention to grief and grieving
33Content 4. Death, violence, and destruction
- Music videos
- Greeson and Williams (1986)
- Only 15 of videos featured violence
- But
- Baxter et al (1985)
- 53 of their videos contained depictions of
violence or crime - About a quarter showed physical violence against
people, and 10 displayed weapons - Sherman and Dominick (1986)
- 56 of their videos included overt violence, and
only 12 of violent acts led to injury - Kalis and Neuendorf (1989)
- 61 of MTV videos contained objects or events
that represented or threatened physical harm. - Tapper, Thorson, and Black (1994)
- Violence in 29 of rap videos (versus 6 in soul
videos)
34Content 4. Death, violence, and destruction
- Recent falling violence
- DuRant, Rich, Emans, Rome, Allred, and Woods
(1997) - 22.4 of MTV videos contained open violence
(Country Music Television 11.8, Black
Entertainment Television 11.5) - Weapon carrying was higher among music videos on
MTV (25.0) than on Black Entertainment
Television (11.5), Video Hits One (8.4), and
Country Music Television (6.9) - Smith and Boyson (2002)
- 15 of videos contained violence
- But portrayal of violence and destruction was
casual and without consequences - 56 of the violent interactions depicted showed
no injury to the victim 72 of all violent
interactions did not feature the victim
experiencing pain 17 of all violent scenes
showed the violence being rewarded or positively
reinforced 79 of violent scenes featured no
punishments 88 of violent videos were presented
in authentic or realistic contexts and only 3
of all music videos featured an anti-violence
theme
35Popularity of sex and violence
- Does this content attract people?
- Two studies indicate that sex does, violence
might (not), and sex and violence together dont - Hansen and Hansen (1990)
- High violence led to negative reactions to the
song and video and also to students feeling less
happy, more fearful, more anxious, and aggressive - Sexual imagery led to greater musical and visual
appeal, although the combination of sex and
violence did not - Zillmann and Mundorf (1987, p.316)
- The involvement of sexual stimuli intensified
appreciation of the music and that violent
stimuli tended to have a similar effect. However,
the combination of sexual and violent images
failed to enhance appreciation (p.316)
36Popularity of sex and violence
- Individual differences
- Christenson (1992)
- 10-12 year olds did not feel that sexual images
and lyrics were appropriate for them - Greeson (1991)
- Liking for sex in music videos was lower among
college- than high school-aged participants, so
liking for sex in music may peak in the mid-teens - Sex in music videos was more popular among
working class participants, those who went to
church less often, and males - Zillmann and Mundorf (1987)
- Sexual images made the music more sensual and
romantic for males, whereas females found music
devoid of visual embellishments most romantic
37General caveats
- Individual differences mediate the appeal (and
likely impact) of salacious content - Most research is North American
- Need to research music in other regions
- But North American music has global reach
- Lloyd and Mendez (2001) found that over 2/3 of
Botswanan 14-20 year olds had weekly exposure but
the majority did not accurately perceive
culture-specific language and images in the USA
music videos - Pop music is ever-changing so new research needed
constantly - Oldies radio means that 1980s and 1990s
research is relevant to modern world
38General caveats
- Depends on the musical style
- Rap and heavy rock worst
- Smith and Boyson (2002)
- Rap (27) and rock (20) videos were more likely
than adult contemporary (4) to feature
justifiable violence - DuRant, Rich, and Emans et al (1997)
- 20.4 of rap videos and 19.8 of rock videos
feature violence compared to 5.9 of RB and
10.8 of country videos - Weapon carrying higher in rock (19.8) and rap
(19.5) videos than in rhythm and blues (6.9),
and country (6.3) videos - DuRant, Rome, Rich, Alldred, Emans, and Woods
(1997) - Smoking shown in 30.1 of rap videos and 21.6 of
rock videos compared to 10.9 of RB videos and
11.7 of country videos - Alcohol use shown in 27.4 of rap videos and
24.7 of rock videos compared to 16.8 of RB
videos and 20.7 of country videos
39General caveats
- Problem content not limited to rap and rock
though - Tapper, Thorson, and Black (1994)
- Sexual imagery in 46 of rap videos, but also in
50 of soul videos and 45 of pop videos, and
only 8 of heavy metal videos - DuRant, Rich, and Emans et al (1997)
- 71.7 of rap videos and 76.5 of rock videos made
no reference to sexuality or eroticism compared
with only 45.5 of RB videos and 54.8 of adult
contemporary videos - Smith and Boyson (2002)
- No differences between rap, rock, RB, and adult
contemporary videos in the number of violent
attacks that did not lead to consequences for the
victim, the depiction of blood / gore following
violence, and the humourous depiction of
violence. - What we mean by problem music not so clear cut
as protestors suggest - Legislation needs to work at the level of the
song and not the genre
40Effects of problem music
- General issues
- Delinquency and criminality
- Illegal drug usage
- Permissive sexual attitudes
- Sexual discrimination
- Self-harm and suicide
- (Mis)interpretation of lyrics
41General issues
- Dubious content may not be enough for censorship
- Offensive content may be enough for some but
- There is an off button
- Depiction of sex and drugs may have (some)
educational value - Censorship may require evidence of negative
effects resulting from exposure - Effects of problem music on several attitudes and
behaviours - Delinquency and criminality, drug usage, drinking
and smoking, permissive sexual attitudes, sexual
and racial discrimination, and self-harm and
suicide - Correlational and experimental studies considered
separately - Marriage guidance correlates with divorce its
not the same as a correlation between pollution
and height - Experiments allow cause and effect but are
particularly prone to demand characteristics
psychology students know the stereotypical
effects of rap and rock better than most
42Delinquency and criminality correlational studies
- Personality measures indicative of a tendency
toward delinquency and criminality - Sensation seeking and a preference for heavy
metal music - e.g. Arnett, 1991a, 1992 Kim, Kwak, and Chang,
1998 McNamara and Ballard, 1999 - Disinhibition and time spent listening to defiant
music - Dillman-Carpentier, Knobloch and Zillmann (2003)
- Psychoticism, reactive rebelliousness, and
enjoyment of rebellious videos - Robinson, Weaver, and Zillmann (1996)
- North, Desborough and Skarstein (2005) found a
positive relationship between psychoticism and
British participants liking for each of rap, nu
metal, hip hop, and rock, but not RB, indie
music, or chart pop
43Delinquency and criminality correlational studies
- Aggression
- Rubin, West, and Mitchell (2001) found that fans
of problem music score higher on a measure of
aggression than non-fans - Other personality factors linked to delinquency /
criminality - Schwartz and Fouts (2003) - fans of heavy music
were more tough-minded, overly assertive in their
relationships with others, less concerned /
indifferent to the feelings and reactions of
others, more moody, more pessimistic, overly
sensitive, discontented, more impulsive, more
disrespectful of societys rules, and had less
academic confidence - Hansen and Hansen (1991) - heavy metal fans
higher on Machiavellianism (i.e. manipulative,
cynical, and amoral) and machismo (i.e. sexism
and hypermasculine), lower on need for
cognition time spent listening to heavy metal
correlated positively with a belief that Satanism
is widespread and punk fans less accepting of
authority - Trostle (1986) - fans of heavy metal more likely
to believe in witchcraft and the occult
44Delinquency and criminality correlational studies
- Poor school performance
- Tanner (1981)
- Canadian teenage heavy metal fans were more
likely than others to have a low commitment to
school - Sun and Lull (1986)
- Time spent watching music videos was negatively
related to happiness at school - Larson and Kubey (1983)
- Frequency of music listening associated with
lower levels of academic performance - Roe (1984)
- Low commitment to school and low academic
achievement predict liking for oppositional
music - Took and Weiss (1994)
- Adolescent fans of heavy metal and rap more
likely to have below-average school grades and a
history of counselling in elementary school for
school problems
45Delinquency and criminality correlational studies
- Risk-taking
- Arnett (1991)
- Male heavy metal fans more likely than non-fans
to engage in risky driving, risky sexual
behaviour, and drug use - Female heavy metal fans more likely to engage in
shoplifting, vandalism, risky sexual behaviour,
and drug use - Arnett (1992)
- Rock fans reported higher rates of reckless
behaviours such as drink-driving, driving over 80
mph, having sex without contraception, having sex
with someone known only casually, drug use,
shoplifting, and vandalism - Martin, Clarke, and Pearce (1993)
- Australian fans of rock / metal scored higher on
a measure of risk-taking than did pop fans
46Delinquency and criminality correlational studies
- Actual criminality
- North and Sheridan (submitted)
- Eysenckian criminality correlated positively with
liking problem music - Wingood, DiClemente, Bernhardt, Harrington,
Davies, Robillard, and Hook (2003) - Participants who had had higher exposure to rap
videos had greater unemployment and less parental
monitoring - Even when these were controlled, those with heavy
exposure to rap were three times more likely to
have hit a teacher and more than 2.5 times as
likely to have been arrested during the 12-month
follow-up period - Atkin, Smith, Roberto, Fediuk, and Wagner (2002)
- Controlled degree of exposure to other violent
media - Listening to problem music related to the
commission of verbal aggression (i.e. swearing,
insulting or passing nasty comments)
47Delinquency and criminality correlational studies
- Singer, Levine, and Jou (1993)
- Liking for heavy metal related to delinquency
among high school pupils with low parental
control - North and Hargreaves (in press)
- British fans of problem music had carried out 20
delinquent / anti-social acts more frequently
within the past two years - Martin, Clarke, and Pearce (1993)
- Australian adolescents scored higher on a
delinquency scale if they liked rock / metal
rather than pop - Wass, Miller, and Reditt (1991)
- People in juvenile detention three times more
likely than high school students to have heavy
metal as their favourite musical style - Epstein, Pratto, and Skipper (1990)
- 96 of their sample of adolescents with
behavioural problems listed heavy metal as their
favourite music
48Delinquency and criminality correlational studies
- Caveats to the correlational evidence
- 1. Studies which investigate a third factor in
addition to musical preference and a measure of
delinquency / crime tend to show that the former
has a strong effect in mediating the relationship
between the latter two. - Epstein, Pratto, and Skipper (1990) found people
with behavioural problems overwhelmingly liked
heavy metal but musical preference could predict
only participants race and could not predict
problem behaviour race may underlie the link
between problem music and problem behaviour - Singer, Levine, and Jous (1993) found that
liking for heavy metal was related to delinquency
among school pupils with low (but not high)
parental control implies that parental control
is very important in predicting delinquency /
crime relative to the role of problem music - Similar findings in North, Desborough, and
Skarstein (2005) Arnett (1991 1992) Took and
Weiss (1994)
49Delinquency and criminality correlational studies
- 2. Numerous failed attempts to establish a
music-delinquency link - Personality
- Gardstrom (1999) found rap preferred by male
felons only 4 perceived a music-deviance
connection, and believed instead that the music
was a mirror of their lifestyles - Actual delinquency
- Miranda and Claes (2004) found a link between
liking French rap and street gang membership, but
also that liking for American rap was linked
significantly to lower propensity towards theft,
and that hip hop / soul were significantly linked
to lower theft and hard drug use - North and Hargreaves (in press) found that fans
of hip hop / rap were among those more likely to
have been arrested, but no more than for fans of
blues and country rock fans were among those
least likely to have been arrested - Armstrong (1993) showed rap and country lyrics
treated murder, manslaughter, and assault
similarly
50Delinquency and criminality correlational studies
- Conclusions
- There is a relationship between liking problem
music and delinquency / crime - The pattern of evidence is not entirely
consistent - The link between problem music and delinquency /
crime is much stronger among those from
vulnerable backgrounds - The relationship is strengthened by e.g. high
psychoticism, membership of an undervalued ethnic
/ social group, high sensation-seeking, negative
family relationships, low parental controls, and
whether or not participants are male. - Is it these background conditions that cause both
liking for problem music and also delinquency /
crime?
51Delinquency and criminality experimental studies
- Controlled exposure to problem music and
subsequent acts of delinquency / criminality - Two theoretical explanations
- Social learning theory (Bandura, 1973 1977
1994) - New behaviours can be learned through observation
and direct imitation - Cannot explain media effects that do not
demonstrate direct imitation of the behaviours
portrayed - Cognitive priming theory (Berkowitz and Rogers,
1986) - Media violence primes additional information in
memory that is related to the behaviour portrayed - The entire category of information becomes more
salient, and more likely to be employed - Exposure to violent music media should prime
related delinquent tendencies these guide
assessment of the media in question and the
future attitudes and behaviour of viewers /
listeners - Some evidence for this
52Delinquency and criminality experimental studies
- Hansen and Hansen (1990)
- Showed music videos that did (not) portray
anti-social behaviours - Participants then saw a confederate in another
room perform or not perform an anti-social hand
gesture targeted at the experimenter - Participants then evaluated the confederate
- Findings confirmed prediction of cognitive
priming theory the anti-social videos should
lead to more favourable assessments of the
confederates hand gesture than should the
non-anti-social videos - Johnson, Jackson, and Gatto (1995)
- A supposed memory test showed either 8 rap
videos containing violent images, acts, and / or
lyrics, 8 non-violent rap videos, or no videos - A supposed decision-making experiments in which
participants read a passage describing a dating
couple. The male becomes violent when a male
friend of the female gives her a kiss. Is the
violence acceptable? - Participants then read a second passage that
described two male friends one went to college
but the other is unemployed yet wealthy. Which do
they want to be like? - Participants shown the violent videos were more
accepting of violence, and wanted to be more like
the man who acquired material wealth without a
college education
53Delinquency and criminality experimental studies
- But two studies fail to support cognitive priming
- Wanamaker and Reznikoff (1989)
- Participants write stories about five ambiguous
pictures - Heard a rock song with either nonaggressive music
and nonaggressive lyrics, aggressive music and
nonaggressive lyrics, or aggressive music and
aggressive lyrics - No effect on aggressiveness in participants
stories or their scores on a measure of hostility - Violent music did not prime access to violent
cognitions - Gowensmith and Bloom (1997)
- Exposure to heavy metal increased arousal in all
participants, but did not increase levels of
anger in participants who were already heavy
metal fans - Evidence is inconclusive
54Illegal drug usage correlational studies
- No experimental evidence
- Robinson, Pilskaln, and Hirsch (1976)
- Young mens use of marijuana, amphetamine,
barbiturates, and hallucinogens (and alcohol, but
not heroin) related positively related to liking
for protest music - Usage of marijuana, for example, increased from
about 25 for those having only one or no protest
favorites to almost 50 among those having 2 or 3
protest favourites (p.125). - King (1988)
- 59 of those hospitalised for substance abuse
named heavy metal as their favourite style of
music compared to 17 of those hospitalised for
other psychiatric disorders - Martin, Clarke, and Pearce (1993)
- Rock / heavy metal fans 50 more likely to admit
use of marijuana, tobacco, and alcohol than pop
fans
55Illegal drug usage correlational studies
- Wingood, DiClemente, Bernhardt, Harrington,
Davies, Robillard, and Hook (2003) - Adolescents with greater exposure to rap videos
were 1.5 times more likely to use drugs over a 12
month follow up than those with less exposure,
even when controlling for factors such as
employment status, parental monitoring of their
whereabouts, and religiosity - Roberts, Dimsdale, East, and Friedman (1998)
- Adolescents who had strong (and particularly
negative) emotional responses to music were more
prone to drug use - Hansen and Hansen (1991)
- These usage patterns permeate perceptions of
reality - Heavy metal fans