When U.S. radio stations banned John Lennonโs track โCold Turkey,โ he was quick to point out that the decision reflected a problem with society, not a problem with his art. Lennon first presented the divisive song to the Beatles as a potential single while the band was finishing their 1969 album โAbbey Road,โ but his offer fell flat, and the rest of the band said no.
Instead, Lennon released โCold Turkeyโ as a Plastic Ono Band single, making it his second solo release post-Beatles. It peaked at a humble No. 30 spot on the Billboard Hot 100 and a relatively more successful No. 14 on the U.K. Singles Chart. However, it didnโt take long for American radio stations to begin banning โCold Turkeyโ from the airwaves.
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The Controversy Surrounding โCold Turkeyโ
While John Lennon had been known to write in nonsensical mumbo-jumbo, a la โI Am The Walrus,โ his controversial โCold Turkeyโ track was far more literal. He and his second wife, Yoko Ono, had just come down from a short-lived heroin addiction. Lennon describes the harrowing experience in the song, including his bodyโs physical reactions to the withdrawals.
Thirty-six hours rolling in pain, Lennon sings. Praying to someone, free me again. Oh, Iโll be a good boy, please make me well. I promise you anything. Get me out of this hell. The lyrical content, paired with the songโs abrasive production style, caused several American radio stations to ban โCold Turkeyโ for its implicit reference to drugs. In David Sheffโs All We Are Saying, Lennon blamed the national ban for the songโs lukewarm success.ย
But Lennonโs issue with the radio ban wasnโt that he wanted to sing about drugs and was upset that he couldnโt. On the contrary, he believed he had made a decisively anti-drug song, and the fact that U.S. radio stations couldnโt see that is what peeved him.
John Lennon Said His Banned Song Reflected A Greater Problem
In a 1980 interview with Playboy magazine, Lennon lamented the irony of American radio stations banning an anti-drug song over its references to illegal substances. โTheyโre so stupid about drugs, you know,โ Lennon said. โTheyโre not looking at the cause of the drug problem: Why do people take drugs? To escape from what? Is life so terrible? Are we living in such a terrible situation that we canโt do anything without reinforcement of alcohol, tobacco? Aspirins, sleeping pills, uppers, downers, never mind the heroin and cocaine. Theyโre just the outer fringes of Librium and speed.โ
Lennon echoed similar sentiments in All We Are Saying, adding that the U.S. was too busy focusing on who was selling or taking drugs. The real focus, Lennon argued, should be on why Americans felt compelled to take the drugs in the first place. โIโm not preaching about [drugs],โ the musician insisted (via CheatSheet). โIโm just saying a drug is a drug, you know.โ
The ex-Beatleโs feelings about โCold Turkeyโ were so strong that he even included the songโs chart position in a public protest against his home country. Lennon and his fellow Beatle bandmates had previously received a Member of the Order of the British Empire award, and in 1969, Lennon returned his M.B.E. to the Queen. โI am returning the M.B.E. in protest against Britainโs involvement in the Nigeria-Biafra thing, against our support of America in Vietnam,โ Lennon wrote in a letter he sent with his award (via the New York Times). โAnd against โCold Turkeyโ slipping down the charts.โ
Photo by Edward Wing/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
