Politically Incorrect - Compilation - Music - BEAR FAMILY - 5397102174094 - October 30, 2015
In case cover and title do not match, the title is correct

Politically Incorrect


Get an email once the item is available
Do you have a profile? Log in
Add to your iMusic wish list

Politically Incorrect

You think the 50s were mild-mannered and bland? Think again after youve listened to these 31 tracks drawn from the two decades following World War 2. Today you could lose your job or worse for uttering some of these politically incorrect sentiments. Back then? Lets just say it was a different world fifty or sixty years ago.

As the 31 tracks on this collection show, you could sing with cheerful abandon about topics like pedophilia and domestic violence; you could show open disdain for overweight people, ridicule immigrants who spoke English with a 'foreign' accent, and devalue women for just about anything you pleased.

Youll marvel at what was considered OK in mainstream popular music. Unlike some extreme pop music today, these 31 songs were not meant to upset the audience. What passed for popular entertainment then could be pretty shocking by todays standards.

Various - History: Politically Incorrect

  • 1-CD Digipak with comprehensive booklet, 31 tracks. Total playing time approx. 82 mns.
  • Clean-cut Pat Boone and folkie campus favorites The Kingston Trio make fun of Mexicans in Speedy Gonzales and Coplas
  • Arthur Godfrey, the king of daytime radio and TV in the early 50s, was also the King of Mean Music: check out his Too Fat Polka and Slap er Down Agin, Pa
  • World War 2 mega-stars The Andrews Sisters present a travel brochure for Trinidad featuring mother-and-daughter prostitution in Rum and Coca Cola
  • In Get Out Of The Car, Sammy Davis, Jr. parks his car overlooking the city lights and tells his girlfriend shed better put out or she can get out and walk home!
  • John Lennon regretted writing only one song in his life: the menacing jealous rant, Run For Your Life, which declares infidelity a capital offense
  • Ella Mae Morse not only tolerates beatings from her boyfriend, but brags about them in How Can You Leave A Man Like This?
  • In Girl Fifteen, Floyd Dixon makes it clear he likes em young very young a preference he shares with Fats Domino in Little School Girl
  • Both Jimmy Reed and Ella Johnson find violence a necessary part of domestic life in their versions of Upside Your Head

POLITICALLY INCORRECT IN THE 50'S!

Media Music     CD   (Compact Disc)
Number of discs 1
Released October 30, 2015
EAN/UPC 5397102174094
Label BEAR FAMILY BFY5033861.2
Genre Rock     Rock & Roll
Dimensions 129 × 137 × 9 mm   ·   100 g   (Weight (estimated))

More by Compilation

Show all

Others have also bought

See all of Compilation ( e.g. CD , LP , DVD , Blu-ray and CD-R )