Democracy In Action! Ten Protest Songs For All-Time
Here are 10 moldy oldies that will forever remain among those that get trotted out whenever we need to get angry in the vaguest kind of way and hope to bring about change without actually doing anything.
10) "I Ain't A Marchin' Anymore"--Phil Ochs: Like "Universal Soldier" but different, this protest anthem is for people who are tired of fighting other people's battles. Steve Earle has certainly done his best to update this sentiment, but I find myself drawn to the old folkie classic, nonetheless. It makes everything seem so quaint.
9) "Fight The Power"--Public Enemy: Ok, this one
probably isn't going to go down as a stone cold classic in that "We Can Sing
This At Any Random Political Rally" kind of way. It begins by dating itself in
the summer of 1989, which is now nearly twenty years ago. But it is the kind of
song that gets people to yell and stamp their feet, meaning it's sort of like
"We Will Rock You" but less likely to be played at sporting events.
8) "Okie From Muskogee"--Merle Haggard: I've always been partial to this song where getting wasted on White Lightning is acceptable and pitching woo is okey-dokey but lots of other similar ideas are considered subversive and likely to bring down an entire nation. It's such a fine line.
7) "If I Had A Hammer"--Pete Seeger: Should I have
picked "We Shall Overcome"? I dunno. Anything by Pete Seeger sounds like a
history lesson to me and what I'd do with a hammer probably isn't what Pete
would do with one. Which is what makes this country so great. We all have
freedom of expression and the right to use a hammer as we see fit.
6) "Give Peace A Chance"--John Lennon: This is right up there with "99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall" in terms of songs that are absolutely no fun to sing. It makes you bored just thinking about it. No one can actually remember the verses. The references are completely dated, but the chorus is one of those keepers that will haunt us all the days of our lives.
5) "Blowin' In The Wind"--Bob Dylan: You're probably
wondering why I didn't choose "The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll,"
considering that William Zantsinger (his real name with the ‘T' re-instated
finally died recently) or that other show stopper, "The Death Of Emmett Till,"
never mind the wonder of "With God On Our Side," a song that may or may not
ever actually end, but I had to go with the obvious, the song that people who
don't know anything about Bob Dylan will know beyond all else because that's
how popular culture works. It's like gum on your shoe but even older and
stickier.
4) "Strange Fruit"--Billie Holiday: People don't think of Billie Holiday as a protest singer and this song about the ugliness of racism just goes to show how backwards things were that even artists who weren't necessarily looking to shake things up could do so without hardly trying.
3) "What's Goin' On"--Marvin Gaye: Gaye managed to
record an entire concept album about waking up and smelling the social
injustices of the oncoming 1970s and unlike many of the songs on this list
actually bears a worthy relisten.
2) "The Times They Are A-Changin'"--Bob Dylan: Bob Dylan has a handful of songs expressing dissatisfaction with the way the world works. This one is just vague enough to work in just about any situation since the only thing we're sure of is that times are always a-changin'.
1) "A Change Is Gonna Come"--Sam Cooke: An awful lot
of people ended up dead in the 1960s. And not just because they partied too
much. That came later. Some people were just in the wrong place at the wrong
time. It's what made people so rightfully paranoid. For some reason, many
people do not like even the idea of change. But it's been proven if you make
things bad enough, people will opt for just about anything. Me? I could go for
a car wash.


But that aside, Nice list Rob. I was about to ask why no punk song got in this, but something tells me that that goes against the purpose of this list, so I'll stay shushed.
And indeed, this is for all time. Good job Rob.
The song is "American Pie, by Don McLean"
I'm old, cut my a break:)
Sorry America, you have lost.
"wouldn't hate it so bad but I felt my race is run"
and fight the power should have been higher, honestly a few of those songs are not known to todays audience
and I never saw whats going on as a protest sons. very deep, but not protest