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Hey everyone, is there a way to stop Spotify from changing my playlists to the clean versions of songs? When looking at the title they still display the explicit tag but when played about half of them have the god awful censor. Some updates of Spotify do not seem to have this issue but the current version does, and I'd rather not have to manually remove and readd every effected song since that seems to be the only "fix."


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Mainly it seems to affect Godsmack on my lists, but Spotify shouldn't be touching any playlist. Also I've seen how apps like twilight break the menu, what kind of spaghetti code is being used if one update works fine and the next doesn't?

"In rare cases, an error or a change in licensing agreements may have occured making the explicit version unavailable. The tracks may be re-linked to the "clean" version temporarily while we fix things."

So I have a "clean" rap and hiphop playlist that I listen to daily at work and I started to notice that a lot of songs seem to allow one use of the "n word" (uncensored obviously). The song that brought it up again was J. Cole Neighbors ( =JYsD9NvJR3eJfX3TA4siPA). The first time he says it in the song it's uncensored but every time after and every other bad word is fine. Is this something like PG-13 movies where they're allowed to use one curse word and it's still ok? The problem becomes if every song in my playlist does this, it's not just one time. It's a small workplace and everyone enjoys the songs but I'm really trying to avoid a complaint or discrimination issue. What gives?

Apparently Spotify has some really good algorithms or hidden listening technology. I noticed the Metadata link above and clicked on it. This exact song was on my review list so I was able to flag it as explicit.

Often times, the "Explicit" tag is added by the label which provides the songs to Spotify. There is no way that every song could be checked for explicit content, even just the "clean" songs, so there are bound to be some that slip through. However, providing feedback on specific songs like you did is helpful for identifying the mistakes.

I have a playlist with about 500 songs in it, pretty much all of the songs in the playlist are clean versions, which I no longer want. I was hoping that there might be a way to change all the lean songs into there explicit forms easily or if I just have to do it one by one, which will take years. By the way, I have it so I'm allowed to download and listen to explicit songs it's just that the song it self is the clean version.

Since the songs are different versions, there is not a quicker way that just downloading all the explicit versions one by one. Let us know if you run into any issues downloading the explicit versions, and we can help.

It's all about searching for the song @coopitas normally our search will provide both results, Explicit and Clean, if available. With the Explicit filter on, you only get the clean versions of a track

I don't understand why Deezer don't have the clean versions for all of the explicit content. 9 times of 10 the reason I find a song like that is because I have heard the radio edit on the radio yet all deezer have is the explicit versions.

I really like that style of playing you're talking about. Clean strats, blackface amps, a bit of verb. Beautiful. SRV's got a few more in that vein...Life Without You, Riviera Paradise, Stang's Swing.

Knopfler's got some good stuff going on on the first couple Dire Straits albums. Obviously Sultan's of Swing, but there's other great tracks like Down to the Waterline, In the Gallery, and Lions to name a few that have great clean strat playing.

As an informed, consenting adult, I would prefer to listen to the "Dirty" versions of songs. As I dislike the "Clean" versions of these songs, I would prefer to not hear them. Currently the only way to do that is to thumb the song down, which just removes it and all versions of it from my shuffle or playlist.

I want to hear artists for who they truly are which is the reason I do not listen to the radio and instead pay for Pandora Premium. I would like to see a feature to block all censored content and only play the original songs.

Is there anyway we can block sensor music just like we can block censored music? I'm just saying I hate getting into a song right in the beginning about to start jamming in the car with my friends and boom it's the censored version... 30 year old man in a car trying to jam out to sensor music in a road trip is the most embarrassing thing ever... It should not be allowed and it should be illegal lol

same problem as always, successfully define explicit for all listeners. even worse if you want to include "suggestive". and there are of course artists who are smarter than the censors, AC/DC's "Big Balls" and Primus' "Wynonna's Big Brown Beaver" immediately come to mind. I have exactly the opposite issue, I DON'T want the sanitized version of a song on my station (if the artist wrote an F-bomb at that point in a song I assume it was because they wanted it there), but I generally manage that by just thumbing down the "radio edit" if it ever plays while thumbing up the real version.

I plop myself down on the patched up seat next to some kid who probably wanted no part of me and decided to give this song, Dance Yrself Clean, a try for the way home. I understand why it took so long to download the song, it was nearly nine minutes!! For me at the time I was unaccustomed to songs longer than five minutes. Reluctantly, yet curious I pressed play.

If you listen to music on the radio, chances are you'll hear a lot of lyrics that don't match the ones on the original album recordings. When songs get profanity, obscenity or references to drugs or sex removed for broadcast, it's a process known as clean editing. Joel Mullis is one of the masters of the art.

He won major credibility in that regard after he tackled a Ying Yang Twins track called "Wait (The Whisper Song)." The song is incredibly raunchy, and to make it safe for airplay, Mullis had to work a lot of magic.

To make his edits sound natural, he replaced certain naughty words with ad-libs, sampled from other songs by the group (hence the clean version's distinctive hook, "Wait till you see my ... oh!"). Elsewhere, a woman's moans, which Mullis pulled from a stock sound effects library, get the message across.

Mullis' edit helped the song become a hit, but his version wasn't safe enough for some outlets. He says that while there are certain specific words that broadcasters are prohibited from airing, there's also a lot of gray area.

Once a song ends up in the hands of a radio station, it can make even more changes. Power 106 in Los Angeles is one of the biggest hip-hop stations in the world, and its music director Emanuel Coquia, better known as DJ E-Man, takes clean edits seriously.

If they feel anything crosses the line, they edit it out with one of a few go-to techniques: A word can be reversed, slowed down so it's unintelligible, or muted entirely. E-Man says muting is the safest option, but if you listen closely you'll hear different types of tweaks on different stations.

There are networks that play it even safer. "The word 'damn' is something that comes up from time to time, and that is something that we do not allow," says Phil Guerini, general manager of Radio Disney.

When I spoke with Guerini, he said almost half of the more than 50 songs on rotation at the time had been edited. That includes a tweaked version of Meghan Trainor's "All About that Bass," in which the line, "She says boys like the girls for the beauty they hold inside" stands in for the more explicitly booty-positive original. The goal, Guerini says, is that families can listen together and things won't get weird.

Gabb Music is a streaming service only available on Gabb Wireless devices. There are two service levels, a radio style listening experience called Gabb Music and an interactive, on-demand listening experience called Gabb Music+

Gabb Music is included in the Standard bundle and Gabb Music+ is included in the Advance bundle. Gabb Music and Gabb Music+ are available as an add-on to the Starter bundle. Gabb Music+ is available as an add-on to the Standard plan.

In addition to the basic Gabb Music functions, Gabb Music+ allows you to create your own playlists, search for and listen to specific songs, and download songs for offline listening. Streaming songs on Gabb Music+ may be done on WiFi as well as using cellular data.

LA-based duo Songs for Sabotage bring with them many years of experience in the New York music scene and in multiple bands and genres. They are releasing their sophomore LP, Clean Trauma, on March 13th, 2024. It represents a significant sound shift in comparison to their previous album, Night of Joy, moving into electronic and dance elements while holding onto more organic underpinnings. For Swedish-born songwriter Lina Sophie and multi-instrumentalist and Producer Richey Rose, it also represents a deep dive in terms of songwriting, reaching back into their youthful experiences to confront the origins of their outsider status and identity.

Richey Rose: I think these songs are a lot more personal in terms of subject matter. We pulled from a lot of childhood, or teenage experiences for both of us. We wrote the bulk of them in 2022 and played the songs live for a while. That helped develop them. Then we started to seriously record them in 2023. 152ee80cbc

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