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You don't have to even like John Denver to remember his first big solo hit, "Take Me Home Country Roads." (He'd written "Leavin' On A Jet Plane," a smash for Peter Paul & Mary, under his real name Henry John Deutschendorf.) But "Country Roads" was his breakthrough song, written by Bill Danoff.
If you remember the tune, it was a homespun classic about returning to West Virginia after a while away and was somewhat wistful. But it turns out it may not have always been that way. Danoff had originally written a verse for the tune that almost certainly would have gotten it banned from the radio.
According to American Songwriter, the second verse originally went like this:
"In the foothills, hidin’ from the clouds / Pink and purple West Virginia farm house / Naked ladies, men who look like Christ / And a dog named Poncho nibbling on the rice."
As Denver himself may have said "Far out!" Luckily, he changed it to something a lot more mainstream than naked women and Christ-lookalikes, or we may never have heard of the soft-voiced crooner in the first place.
The Original Verse in “Take Me Home, Country Roads” That Was Deemed Too Risqué for Radio Play
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Those lyrics sure would've scuttled the "he's so square" movement.
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The words were on the recorded version. You just had to spin it backwards to hear them.