1971 Folk-Rock Classic, Banned by the Government, Became a Counterculture Anthem ...Saudi Arabia

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Brewer & Shipley's "One Toke Over the Line" was released as a single in March 1971 and quickly became one of the year's most unlikely hits. The song ultimately climbed to No. 10 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming the duo's only Top 40 hit and turning a backstage joke into a national phenomenon.

According to singer Michael Brewer, he and partner Tom Shipley were preparing to go onstage at a club in Kansas City when Shipley returned from what Brewer jokingly described as "a breath of fresh air" and announced, "Man, I'm one toke over the line."

"Just right on the spot, I started singing, 'One toke over the line, sweet Jesus,'" he later recalled in an interview with Rock Cellar Magazine. By the following day, the pair had turned the joke into a song.

In fact, Brewer later said they almost didn't record it. The song only made it onto their 1970 album Tarkio after a well-received performance at Carnegie Hall convinced their record label that it had potential.

As "One Toke Over the Line" climbed the charts in early 1971, the Federal Communications Commission issued a public notice reminding broadcasters that they were responsible for reviewing lyrics that could be interpreted as promoting illegal drug use. The notice warned that stations had a duty to exercise control over their programming and suggested that failing to do so could raise questions about whether operating a station remained in the public interest.

Rolling Stone reported in April 1971 that multiple Top 40 stations had dropped "One Toke Over the Line" from their playlists after the FCC action. Program directors argued that the song's title was an obvious reference to marijuana and worried about potential consequences.

Even as government officials and radio stations were criticizing songs with drug references, "One Toke Over the Line" somehow found its way onto the squeaky-clean Lawrence Welk Show. The program, known for its family-friendly audience and conservative image, featured a performance of the song by singers Gail Farrell and Dick Dale.

Brewer later joked that he and Shipley had unexpectedly landed on President Richard Nixon's enemies list and were publicly criticized by Vice President Spiro Agnew, who condemned songs he viewed as drug-culture propaganda.

The public clearly agreed.

More than five decades later, it remains Brewer & Shipley's signature song and one of the most recognizable folk-rock hits of the era.

Related: 1972 Rock Epic, Lasting Nearly 19 Minutes, Named the Greatest Long Song of All Time

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