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- The Australian 1970 Radio Ban or 1970 Record Ban was a "pay for play" dispute in the local music industry that lasted from May until October. During this period, a simmering disagreement between commercial radio stations – represented by the Federation of Australian Radio Broadcasters (FARB) – and the six largest record labels – represented by Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) – resulted in major United Kingdom and Australian pop songs being refused airplay. The government-owned Australian Broadcasting Corporation – which had its own copyright and royalty arrangement with recording and music publishing companies – did not take part in the dispute. The ban did not extend to releases by American artists. Some radio disc jockeys, such as Stan Rofe, defied the ban by playing songs according to their personal tastes. Teen-oriented pop music newspaper Go-Set reported on the dispute: it interviewed affected musicians and its journalists argued for the removal of the ban. Once the ban was lifted, status quo ante resulted: APRA's record companies returned to supplying free promotional material and FARB's radio stations resumed playing their records. During the ban some Australian musicians recorded covers of UK artists' hits on previously minor labels. The Mixtures, for example, recorded Mungo Jerry's "In the Summertime" on the Fable Label which was released in August. It peaked at No. 1 for nine weeks to be displaced by "Yellow River" – originally by Christie – which was covered by two Australian groups, Jigsaw (from Melbourne) and Autumn (from Sydney). Music charts from the period indicate that in the years immediately following the ban, there was a significant reduction in the number of Australian acts who scored major chart peaks. (en)
- A discórdia do rádio na Austrália em 1970, foi uma disputa "pay to play" (pague para tocar) entre as gravadoras de discos e as emissoras de rádio locais, durando entre maio e outubro. O desacordo entre a Federação de Emissoras Australianas de Rádio (FARB) e a Associação Australasiana de Direitos Performáticos (APRA, as seis maiores gravadoras) resultou em canções pop de sucesso da Austrália e Reino Unido serem recusadas a serem tocadas no rádio. A Australian Broadcasting Corporation, do governo, tinha seus próprios acordos, e por isso não foi envolvida na disputa Uma vez que o banimento foi suspenso, o status quo ante foi o resultado: as gravadoras da APRA voltaram a fornecer material promocional gratuito para as rádios, e as rádios da FARB voltaram a tocá-las. (pt)
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- The Australian 1970 Radio Ban or 1970 Record Ban was a "pay for play" dispute in the local music industry that lasted from May until October. During this period, a simmering disagreement between commercial radio stations – represented by the Federation of Australian Radio Broadcasters (FARB) – and the six largest record labels – represented by Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) – resulted in major United Kingdom and Australian pop songs being refused airplay. The government-owned Australian Broadcasting Corporation – which had its own copyright and royalty arrangement with recording and music publishing companies – did not take part in the dispute. The ban did not extend to releases by American artists. Some radio disc jockeys, such as Stan Rofe, defied the ban by playing son (en)
- A discórdia do rádio na Austrália em 1970, foi uma disputa "pay to play" (pague para tocar) entre as gravadoras de discos e as emissoras de rádio locais, durando entre maio e outubro. O desacordo entre a Federação de Emissoras Australianas de Rádio (FARB) e a Associação Australasiana de Direitos Performáticos (APRA, as seis maiores gravadoras) resultou em canções pop de sucesso da Austrália e Reino Unido serem recusadas a serem tocadas no rádio. A Australian Broadcasting Corporation, do governo, tinha seus próprios acordos, e por isso não foi envolvida na disputa (pt)
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- 1970 radio ban (en)
- Discórdia do rádio na Austrália em 1970 (pt)
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