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    • Billie Holiday, “Strange Fruit” This track has to be at the top of the list; it’s that influential. One of the first racism protest songs to be recorded in popular music, 1939’s “Strange Fruit” is based off a poem written by Abel Meeropol.
    • Woody Guthrie, “This Land Is Your Land” One of the most iconic songs in American lore, “This Land Is Your Land” is actually such an important protest song for the verses that aren’t typically sung.
    • “We Shall Overcome,” Pete Seeger. Written as a gospel hymn by a Methodist minister in 1900 and originally adapted during a tobacco workers strike in 1945, “We Shall Overcome” came to represent defiance, endurance, tenacity and sheer determination.
    • Bob Dylan, “Blowin’ in the Wind” The tune that endeared Dylan to legions of card-carrying folkies, “Blowin’ in the Wind” remains the standard template for every protest song that’s come along ever since.
  1. Jan 23, 2021 · The Best Protest Songs Represent the Universal Fighting Spirit of Music. Kendrick Lamar, Marvin Gaye, Bob Dylan, Jamila Woods and more music that has defined a century of...

  2. www.timeout.com › music › best-protest-songs-of-all-time14 Best Protest Songs of All Time

    • Tolly Wright
    • “Strange Fruit” by Billie Holiday. When Billie Holiday recorded “Strange Fruit” in 1939, it became the first song by black artist to ever be released with such bold and explicit lyrics about racism.
    • “We Shall Overcome” Based on the gospel song of the same name by Rev. Dr. Charles Albert Tindley, one of the most influential African American ministers of the turn of the 20th century, “We Shall Overcome” became synonymous with the black civil rights movement of the 1950s and ‘60s.
    • “War” by Edwin Starr. “War,” as in “What is it good for? Absolutely nothing,” became a funky battle cry among the thousands of Vietnam War protesters on college campuses across the America.
    • “Mississippi Goddam” by Nina Simone. Written in 1963 by Nina Simone in response to the assassination of Medgar Evers, a civil rights activist who fought to end segregation at the University of Mississippi, “Mississippi Goddam” is a song damning the racist actions of the Deep South.
    • Radiohead – Idioteque (2000) Radiohead - Idioteque (Oficial video HD) Subs Español. In 2001, the Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change issued its third report and came to the conclusion: "There is new and stronger evidence that most of the [global] warming observed over the last 50 years is attributable to human activities".
    • Pixies - Monkey Gone To Heaven (1989) Pixies - Monkey Gone To Heaven (Official Video) One of the more oblique protest songs on the list, Black Francis ponders the destruction of the ozone layer and the oncoming environmental apocalypse in terms of the Old Testament "numbers" for Man, God and the Devil.
    • Rage Against The Machine – Killing In The Name (1992) Rage Against The Machine - Killing In the Name. Rodney King was savagely beaten by members of the Los Angeles police in March 1991, and the whole incident was caught on camera.
    • Green Day - American Idiot (2004) Green Day - American Idiot [OFFICIAL VIDEO] The title track of Green Day’s 2004 album was o riginally written as a response to US President George W Bush and the war in Iraq that came out of the September 11 attacks.
    • Billie Holiday – Strange Fruit
    • Woody Guthrie – This Land Is Your Land
    • Bob Dylan – Masters of War
    • Sam Cooke – A Change Is Gonna Come
    • Nina Simone – Mississippi Goddam
    • Buffalo Springfield – For What It’S Worth
    • Aretha Franklin – Respect
    • James Brown – Say It Loud – I’m Black and I’m Proud
    • Creedence Clearwater Revival – Fortunate Son
    • Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young – Ohio

    Written as a poem by Abel Meeropol – a white, Jewish teacher and member of the American Communist Party – and published in 1937 before he set the lines to music, “Strange Fruit” exposes the sheer brutality of racism in the United States at the time by way of a stark, powerful description of a postcard Meeropol had seen depicting a lynching. Juxtapo...

    It’s remarkable to think that a song as entrenched in the American psyche as Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land” started life as an answer song. Guthrie had grown increasingly irritated with what he considered to be the smug complacency of Irving Berlin’s “God Bless America”(inescapable in the late 30s, thanks to radio playing Kate Smith’s ver...

    While plenty of Dylan’s early forays into politicized writing leave room for interpretation, “Masters Of War” sees the then 21-year-old at his most pointed. On the release of its parent album, The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, he told Village Voicecritic Nat Hentoff, “I’ve never really written anything like that before… I don’t sing songs which hope peop...

    This early 1964 track was a departure for Sam Cooke, who hadn’t previously addressed the Civil Rights Movement in his music. But the times were a-changing and he’d been inspired both by Dylan’s “Blowing in the Wind” and Dr. Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech. (Cooke wrote the song after his band was turned away from a whites-only motel in...

    You can hear the moment on Nina Simone’s 1964 album recorded at Carnegie Hall: After winning the crowd with some show tunes she announces another show tune, “but the show hasn’t been written for it yet.” Then she launches into “Mississippi Goddam” and the laughing stops. Written in the wake of the murder of Emmett Till, Civil Rights activist Medgar...

    Though the song’s outlived the circumstances, this Stephen Stills landmark was inspired by a specific event: During 1966 the Sunset Strip police got impatient with hippie kids hanging around, and imposed a 10pm curfew – initially targeting the Whiskey a Go Go, where Buffalo Springfield were the house band. The result was two months’ worth of nightl...

    “Respect” certainly wasn’t a feminist manifesto when Otis Redding sang the original version, though Otis wasn’t anti-feminist either: In his version, his partner could do whatever she pleased with her time as long as she showed a little respect when he got home with the money. Aretha’s version is very much a demand to be treated right, and she slig...

    Though he’d changed the face of black music a few times by 1968, that year’s “Say It Loud – I’m Black And I’m Proud” was the first song on which James Brown made an overt statement on civil rights – and it was a typically mold-breaking way of making his feelings known. The tone of the civil-rights movement had so far been one of a request for equal...

    Few political songs have been subject to more misunderstanding than John Fogerty’s Vietnam-era treatise. Most everyone got what Fogerty meant in 1969: The song pointed a finger at the class-centric nature of the draft system, calling out the “senator’s sons” who managed to avoid service. (A President’s grandson, David Eisenhower, apparently inspire...

    While the old saying claims that a picture is worth a thousand words, in the case of a photograph taken by student John Filo and later printed in Lifemagazine, a picture also inspired one of the best protest songs of its time. The photograph was taken in the immediate aftermath of the Ohio National Guard opening fire on students protesting the Viet...

  3. Jan 8, 2024 · The 25 Most Important Protest Songs of All Time. 1. No More Auction Block – Fisk Jubilee Singers, et al. (1900s) “No More Auction Block” may not be familiar to you by title. But there’s a strong argument that this is the most important protest song ever written.

  4. Nov 11, 2021 · Best Protest Songs: 20 Political Anthems That Demand Change. Giving a voice and taking a stand, the best protest songs serve as a record of the fight against ineffective and corrupt policy-makers.