19 December 2005 A.D. Iranian President Ahmadinejad Bans All Western Music on State TV
and Radio
Editors.
“Ahmadinejad bans all Western music in Iranian state television and radio
broadcasts.” History.com. 19 Dec 2014. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/ahmadinejad-bans-all-western-music-in-iranian-state-television-and-radio-broadcasts. Accessed 19 Dec 2014.
The first known pronouncement by a public
figure regarding the potential of popular music to act as a socially
destabilizing force comes from the first century B.C., when none other than the
great philosopher Plato wrote, "When the mode of the music changes, the
walls of the city shake." Many similar pronouncements have followed in the
2000 years since, with defenders of the status quo labeling musicians as
diverse as Igor Stravinsky, Elvis Presley and Ice-T as dangers to society. On
this day in 2005, in one fell swoop, newly elected Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad put that label on those musicians and many more when he announced a
total ban on Western music on state-run television and radio in the Islamic
Republic of Iran.
The announcement of the ban was entirely in
keeping with the antipathy to Western culture that President Ahmadinejad had
previously shown as the mayor of Tehran. While in that office in 2003, for
instance, Ahmadinejad had issued a ban on all outdoor advertisements featuring
international soccer star David Beckham. In truth, however, the ban on Western
music was simply a restatement of a longstanding official policy first put in
place in Iran following the 1979 Islamic Revolution. In banning all music
except that with an explicitly religious theme, Iranian leader Ayatollah
Khomeini had remarked at that time that "Music dulls the mind because it
involves pleasure and ecstasy, similar to drugs. It destroys our youth who
become poisoned by it."
In the decades following the revolution but
prior to the election of Ahmadinejad, tolerance for Western music had increased
to the point that the works of certain Western musicians—George Michael, Eric
Clapton, The Eagles and Kenny G. in particular, according to the BBC—had become
relatively common on Iranian state television. The ban announced by President
Ahmadinejad put an end to that practice, but predictably did little to stamp
out enthusiasm for Western music in a nation where 70 percent of the population
was younger than 30 as of 2008. As reported in Time magazine and The
San Francisco Chronicle that same year, underground scenes devoted to
homegrown, Western-style pop, rock and hip-hop continue to thrive in the
Iranian capital despite the ban announced on this day in 2005.
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