this post was submitted on 04 Sep 2025
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I feel global political oppression or global wars usually produce great music but Macklemore might be the peak.

Nothing against him, some of his songs are good, but I expected real rage inducing stuff with everything going on. Or is this just the state of music as a whole?

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[โ€“] Juice@midwest.social 6 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (1 children)

Well recession pop is back, check out the new Lady Gaga or Kesha albums. So there is that sort of dissonance and syncopated funkier rhythms in pop music which can usually be connected to economic and social downturn.

I know that shit is worlds away from what you're referring to, I think you're looking for something more aggressive.

I think the 2022 Every Time I Die record Renegade goes pretty fucking hard, I listen to Planet Shit about once a month and just rage.

Planet B by King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard goes pretty hard.

You can always check out whatever Napalm Death is doing, much of their stuff is political and social commentary, in fact I love ND lyrics.

No one has the " popular understanding of 'transgender' didn't really exist for gen x but whatever it's going to be, these songs are mostly about needing to transition but feeling unable to" that Kurt Cobain had, but Kurt did once say that early Nirvana was an attempt at copping Gang of Four, and Go4 is very political, critical and high energy. esp their first album "Entertainment!" and "Solid Gold". After that they become kinda disco.

Also consider diving into the incredible wealth of protest music produced before the 60s. The 60s is kind of understood as a high water mark for protest music, but IMO a lot of Dylan and stuff was promoted more because he was actually less political than like Phil Ochs. Woody Guthrie, Victor Jara, The Almanac Singers, Odetta, etc., had much sharper politics than most well known artists who came after.

Finally, last but best, not new but largely undiscovered and forgotten, the Swedish RATM: the 1998 album The Shape of Punk to Come by the Refused. By far, one of my absolute favorite left wing records

[โ€“] Bluefalcon@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

My whole thing, that a lot of people are missing,this generation doesn't have a lot of great music produced from the political time.

Maybe it is a rear mirror view type of thing. Billie Holiday did not shy away due to her believes.

If others don't know, she was harassed by the federal government. Back then, it was easy for record companies to silence you compared to today

[โ€“] Juice@midwest.social 6 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (1 children)

So I'm a socialist, in that I go to meetings voluntarily and get in trouble all the time. I spend a ton of time heavily invested in this political stuff. And one thing that is like desperately missing from our movements is any kind of culture. So that's something that I'm also thinking about a lot, and I think a lot of people are. Not sure what to do really, still trying to figure that stuff out, but I'm actively trying to figure that out.

Run the Jewels def have some overtly political stuff, a few tracks with Zach de la Rocha even, although Killer Mike is a little disappointing politically, but many artists are. They have newer stuff but I just really like this song

Another group to check out is the Coup. Been making records since before the gangsta rap come up in the 90s even. Their newer stuff is pretty popular with young people too.

Both these songs are over a decade old, fuck me

[โ€“] Bluefalcon@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

Yes, that is my point. We aren't getting this generations stop the killing or down with the president. Nixon, Reagon, and Bush all got called out by name.

Kendrick is goimg after a know groomer while a know rapist watches. We are having families riped apart by a secret police force while a netflix anime is topping the charts.

It blows my mind and confuses me. Especially when I hear younger generations complain about nothing being done, while their peers do nothing.

I guess I should be happy no one recommended country music.

[โ€“] Juice@midwest.social 4 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

nothing being done

Yeah that's its own sort of doomer individualism. I wish I could tell you, as someone who teams up with others to do things that the view disappears in practical work, but tbh it seems like it only increases. Idk. There are def lots of young people joining the movement. Hasn't reached a critical point but it's growing.

I wish we had more artists since most are like political sickos

[โ€“] Farvana@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 3 weeks ago

RATM listeners as a group didn't do anything either.

I don't think music actually compels people to action, conditions do.