I’ll start. System of a Down.

Recently it seems like some people are JUST NOW realizing that Bring me the horizon is not Christian friendly and I wonder how many other artists can we put into the bag of “Wait, they were political this whole time?”

  • Evan
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    8 months ago

    This thread has been reported to us. I’ve temporarily made the decision to keep it (other mods; feel free to override). While the question could have been phrased a hell of a lot better (“what are your favourite bands that people don’t get the real meaning of?”), its a valid question and doesn’t quite fall into the “offensive” rule.

    Community: please stay civil. The fact that a song can be political does not mean it is worth debating if it’s politics are correct. If discussion significantly devolves into personal attacks, bans will be issued regardless of partisanship.

    • @WhyAUsername_1
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      128 months ago

      Off topic: I love how clear you are in your articulation. I wish to develop this skill some day . If you don’t mind me asking, how would one develop such a skill?

      • EvanM
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        8 months ago

        I must confess that you’re the first person to tell that to me — English class was always a disaster! The only thing I can point to is practice: I have a blog here that I write at regularly. The other component might be luck? They say that a broken clock is right twice a day and I’m inclined to agree.

        In any case, thank you!

        • @Threadsdeadbaby
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          28 months ago

          Aww yall are cute :) eloquence is a skill one must practice regularly. I agree you are quite good at typing out shit

  • @[email protected]
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    8 months ago

    Gotta love how so many MAGAites are bopping to Rage Against the Machine, without realizing that they themselves are part of the most vile and extreme version of the machine. They just latched on to the “fuck you, I won’t do what you tell me” from “Killing in the Name” without that single grain of self awareness necessary to connect the only two dots there are.

    • @[email protected]
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      518 months ago

      He’s the one who likes all our pretty songs
      And he likes to sing along
      And he likes to shoot his gun
      But he knows not what it means
      And I say ‘yeah’

      • @[email protected]
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        8 months ago

        Unrelated to this thread, but that chorus is among my favorite duets. Dave and Kurts voices mesh so incredibly well.

        And I do like shooting guns… wait…

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        I always thought it was “To be in love” instead of “and I say ‘yeah’” until now. I never really understood that lyric, which is kinda ironic.

    • @MrVilliam
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      158 months ago

      Their media literacy is effectively zero. They’re the reason there are like 6 dogshit transformers movies that glorify the military, racism, and womanizing.

    • @Threadsdeadbaby
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      58 months ago

      That’s their deluded way of stealing the song. Real eyes realize real lies

          • Cowbee [he/they]
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            128 months ago

            You aren’t spreading anything, nobody on this platform legitimately wants Trump, and you aren’t going to convince a bunch of leftists to vote for Trump.

          • @Reddfugee42
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            118 months ago

            We are aware rednecks and Nazis exist.

            We’re also aware we defeated you the first two times and we’ll defeat you again if we need to. 🤷‍♂️

    • @EarWorm
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      158 months ago

      What do you mean? They’re just songs about nice things, like bringing your own beer to a party, jumping on a pogo stick and shimmying until the break of dawn, yeah. Oh, and cocaine. Lots of cocaine.

      • @Threadsdeadbaby
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        8 months ago

        I like grabbing my brush and doing a little makeup in the morning to start the day

    • @[email protected]
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      8 months ago

      “Everybody” knows that song, and thinks of it as a harmless party song. “Nobody” has heard their earlier stuff which alternates between punk and anarchism-pop.

      If I remember correctly, they emerged from the blue collar punk scene, and draws a lot of their political views from there.

      • @[email protected]
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        8 months ago

        Nothing special to see or hear in any of the following: their earlier stuff, their later stuff, tracks 2–12 on the same album, the 10,000 word essay in the liner notes, their followup single, etc.

  • @[email protected]
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    8 months ago

    I’ve always understood SoaD to be overtly political, with songs like Prison Song, Attack, BYOB, A.D.D., and on and on… I listened to them for a long time because I enjoyed the music, but when I gave more than two seconds to think about the lyrics, I immediately understood them to be political in nature (which I actually enjoyed and appreciated more).

    When I want non-political music, I almost avoid lyrics entirely, or listen to old-timey songs about broken hearts and love. I particularly enjoy early jazz guitar like Billy Banks, or The Ink Spots. Or some good EDM like Jaded and Noizu.

    There’s a bit of politics in so much lyrical music, even if it is less transparent, seemingly nonsensical stuff. I do enjoy a good revelation about some bands, though. Like the amount of veterans my age that listen to Lamb of God but are very enthusiastic about military service and God and country types, or as has been mentioned in the thread already, that whole thing with Rage Against the Machine. I feel like SoaD falls into this category a lot too, with these particular people.

    There are certainly moments of social commentary in RHCP songs, but I do enjoy Frusciante’s and Flea’s musical prowess to a degree that I don’t care at all what they’re saying at times, and just very much enjoy the tunes.

    Edit: After reading replies in here, I oughta mention I’m wrong and political music doesn’t actually exist.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 months ago

      The most hilarious part is the drummer stating that most SoaD music is not about politics, and people only think it is because of Serj’s activism

  • originalucifer
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    218 months ago

    weird al. huge range of actual parodies and his own songs as ‘style’ parodies. always clean, good fun

    • @friend_of_satan
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      8 months ago

      I loved his music until he admitted that all of it was Al-generated.

      I also loved it afterwards, but I loved it until then too.

      • @grue
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        118 months ago

        That joke is a testament to the ubiquity of sans-serif fonts these days.

      • @[email protected]
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        48 months ago

        I can’t tell if you’re kidding but I’m pretty sure he meant Al as in Uppercase A and lowercase L. As in “Weird Al”

  • @derekabutton
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    218 months ago

    WHY. DO. THEY ALWAYS SEND THE POOR. (Repeat a dozen or so times)

    Sorry but no way they are non political. That’s just one example from a more well known song. Haven’t they publicly spoken on the Armenian genocide, too? If you need to separate your art from your politics, perhaps you should re review your politics. It’s inherent in most aspects of life.

    • @MrVilliam
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      58 months ago

      Yeah lmao, SOAD is one of the most political musical performers in history. And that shouldn’t be a bad thing. Music is art and art is expressive. If you have nothing to say with your art, then you’re just trying to manufacture a commodity to be purchased. And I have nothing against that either because artists gotta eat, but there is a pretty big difference between passionate artistic expression and trying to make something that will sell.

      Tangentially, it’s also hilarious to me when people on the right throw so much hate at artists and art schools and the uselessness of art, but both expect art to be good and available and are surprised to learn that the best artists tend to be leftists. Like yeah, no shit, your group discourages art and artists; it’s no wonder you don’t produce much good art. Plus conservatism as an ideal is basically “things are good as is” while the best art is critical of the status quo and is meant to inspire. What’s inspirational about “things are pretty good”? Imagine telling a story with no arc or conflict, just keep things the way they are. Snooze. Nobody dances or cries or moshes or beams when they’re just content.

    • snownyte
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      28 months ago

      Yeah I was about to say, System of a Down is largely a political band. Serj Tankian never ever lets down the fact that he has to remind people of the Armenian Genocide and why not? The whole band is Armenian. A lot of their songs is referencing political issues.

      So to say they’re non-political would be saying the same if they replaced SOAD with Rage Against the Machine.

    • @hactar42
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      68 months ago

      I’ve been listening to punk for 30 years now. I’m so glad politics have never made their way into the scene.

  • @Mighty
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    118 months ago

    Wait. You said “non political music” (as if that were a thing) and then you say SoaD???! Please read their lyrics. They are full of politics. From war protests to the Armenian genocide to anti-science and pseudo-science weirdness.

    Music is always political.

  • folkrav
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    108 months ago

    The BMTH thing to me is hilarious. Their first popular single was “Pray for Plagues”, where Oli is asking God to burn this world to the ground, for fucks sake. I guess those fans discovered them post-deathcore and mostly know their singles without reading the lyrics too much, or at all? I genuinely don’t know how else they’d get this idea it’s a Christian friendly band lol

    • @[email protected]
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      -78 months ago

      The BMTH thing to me is hilarious

      • Should I save 1½ seconds typing?

      • If that makes my post incomprehensible?

      I’ll never understand how people decide that trade-off is a good one.

      • folkrav
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        118 months ago

        It’s a direct answer to the main post, which mentions two bands, and this one is one of them. I thought the context implied the reference, visibly it didn’t, so I’m sorry for that. No need for the snark.

  • SuiXi3D
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    108 months ago

    Serious discussion: Rise Against.

    Taking the title literally: Alestorm.

  • @[email protected]
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    8 months ago

    non political

    SOAD

    if anything this is a good troll 🤣 but ill bite:

    soad is one of the bands you ask for.

  • @[email protected]
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    78 months ago

    I’d put Willie Nelson in there, in large part because a lot of country listeners are right-wing and completely oblivious.