Essay:Greatest Conservative Songs
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There are many brilliant—and popular—conservative songs.
Here is our growing list:
- "Free Bird" by Lynyrd Skynyrd - Because Conservatives want a free country, and liberals are in love with communism.
- "Wouldn't It Be Nice" by the Beach Boys – Pro-marriage.
- "You Can't Hurry Love (You Just Have to Wait)" – Abstinence for rock fans. The versions by The Supremes and Phil Collins were popular.
- "Have You Forgotten?" by Darryl Worley – Patriotic response to September 11, 2001 attacks.[1]
- "Still the One" by Orleans (1976) – A tribute to fidelity in relationships.
- "Sweet Home Alabama" by Lynyrd Skynyrd – A response to hippie culture. Defends Southerners from stereotyped attacks by liberal, Canadian rocker Neil Young.
- "Stand By Your Man" by Tammy Wynette – Don't expect feminists to like that one! Or Hillary Clinton!
- "Lee Greenwood's rendition" of Battle Hymn of the Republic – "As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free."
- "The Man Comes Around" by Johnny Cash.
- "My Love" by Petula Clark – Christian love in secular form.
- "I Fought the Law (and the Law Won)" by The Crickets – Its title says it all.
- "You Light Up My Life" by Debbie Boone – One of the biggest hits ever, but liberals omit that this song is about Jesus.
- "Jerusalem". Don't let the sword sleep in the hand.
- "Brothers In Arms" by Dire Straits – We're fools to make war on our brothers in arms.
- "The Ascent of Stan" by Ben Folds – Tells the story of a former "textbook hippie man" who realizes that he has become everything that he was protesting against.
- "Starting All Over Again" by Petula Clark – Keep moving onward, even in the most difficult of times.
- "Thank You My Lord" by Petula Clark – The title says it all.
- "Brick" by Ben Folds Five – Shows the regret involved in abortion.
- "Alive" by P.O.D – About being thankful for the gift of life.
- "Gotta Serve Somebody" by Bob Dylan – "It may be the devil or it may be the Lord."
- Jesus Take The Wheel, by Carrie Underwood. A gospel-themed hit from the American Idol winner.
- Mine by Taylor Swift – Talks about how her parents stooped to liberal values and divorced, and how she doesn't want that to happen with the guy she meets, dates, and marries.
- "Red Barchetta" by Rush – Tells the story of a future with excessive regulation, where even driving is illegal.
- "Father of Mine" by Everclear – A reminder of the importance of good parenting. Everclear singer Art Alexakis wrote much of his material from his own perspective of a troubled childhood. At the end of the song, Alexakis promises to be a better father than his own had been.
- The Taxman by The Beatles – George Harrison said, "Taxman was when I first realized that even though we had started earning money, we were actually giving most of it away in taxes."
- Back in the U.S.A. by Chuck Berry – A patriotic song about missing life in the U.S.A.
- "Government Cheese" by The Rainmakers – Humorous spoof of welfare.
- "Angry Young Man" by Billy Joel – The doctrinaire leftist radical with "his fist in the air and his head in the sand" comes in for biting criticism.
- Gimme Back My Bullets by Lynyrd Skynyrd – The name says it all.
- "Spirit In The Sky" by Norman Greenbaum.
- "Don't Let 'Em Take Your Gun" by Grand Funk Railroad – A father gives his son some sage advice.
- "Something For Nothing" by Rush – "You can't get something for nothing, you can't have freedom for free."
- "Neighborhood Bully" by Bob Dylan – Israel's right to exist and defend itself.
- "Get It Right the First Time" by Louisiana's Le Roux – Wealthy Georgia politician is placed in high office and turns out to be a puppet with no ideas of his own. Released in 1980 when Jimmy Carter was up for re-election.
- "Only The Young" by Journey – "The shadows of a golden age, a generation waits for dawn, the brave carry on, the bold and the strong". An anthem for the Reagan Generation.
- "Yours Is No Disgrace" by Yes – Written to, and about, the troops headed for Vietnam.
- "Fair Exchange" and "Sparks of the Tempest" by Kansas – Warnings about totalitarian governments who want to take away your freedom in the name of utopia. Also much of their early 80s material, which has Christian lyrics.
- "In America" by the Charlie Daniels Band – Patriotism makes a comeback in response to the Iran hostage crisis and Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
- "Storm the Embassy" by the Stray Cats – Another conservative song about the Iran hostage crisis.
- "We Must Take America Back" by Steve Vaus – Became an underground country music hit in 1992 after RCA dropped him and took the album out of print due to the political lyrics.
- "Renegade" by Steppenwolf – John Kay's childhood escape from Communist East Germany.
- "Capitalism" by Oingo Boingo – There's nothing wrong with free enterprise.
- "Unborn Child" by Seals and Crofts – This pro-life song was a hit single in 1974, but for some reason gets left off the Seals and Crofts greatest hits albums.
- "Bad Rap (Who You Tryin' To Kid, Kid?)" by Steve Taylor – Takes aim at LA and NY hipsters, the Village Voice, abortion, and "the left-wing band with their head in the sand".
- "Last Kiss" by Wayne Cochran and the C.C. Riders – "Oh where oh where can my baby be; The Lord took her away from me; She's gone to heaven so I got to be good; So I can see my baby when."
- "Love Me, I'm a Liberal" by Phil Ochs – Revealing Liberal hypocrisy for what it is.
- "America USA" by Joey Sudyka – Not very well known, perhaps, but a good patriotic song.
- "Red White and Blue" by Lynyrd Skynyrd.
- "Simple Man" by Charlie Daniels – A song about how drugs and poor politics are a result of people putting their bibles down. Also a strongly pro death penalty song.
- "That Smell" by Lynyrd Skynyrd – A very strong anti-drug use song by America's most well-known Southern rock band.
- Virtually anything by Toby Keith, but especially "Courtesy of the Red, White & Blue (The Angry American)".
- "Under God" by Pat Boone.
- "Christmas Shoes" by NewSons – A Christmas song by a Christian band.
- "God Bless the USA" by Lee Greenwood.
- "God Bless America" by Irving Berlin.
- "No Opportunity Necessary, No Experience Needed" by Yes – "...I know your cross is heavier With every step Every step But I know a man who'd walk miles for you..."
- "Supper's Ready" by Genesis – There's an angel standing in the sun, and he's crying with a loud voice, "This is the supper of the mighty one", Lord of Lords, King of Kings, Has returned to lead his children home, To take them to the new Jerusalem.
- "Your Love Is Extravagant" by Casting Crowns.
- "What If His People Prayed" by Casting Crowns.
- "King Without a Crown" by Matisyahu – A Hasidic Jew raps about God as the source of happiness and salvation from the things of this world: "If you're drowning in the waters and you can't stay afloat ask Hashem for mercy and He'll throw you a rope."
- "Take Me Home, Country Roads" by John Denver (and others) – Celebrates Southern country landscape and traditions.
- "Sin City" by the Flying Burrito Brothers – Attacks modern decadence and predicts divine punishment for sin.
- "I Saw the Light" by Hank Williams (and numerous cover versions) – Redemption from sin through faith.
- "No Son of Mine" by Genesis.
- "Don't Stop" (Thinking About Tomorrow) by Fleetwood Mac – Used by Bill Clinton as his campaign theme song in 1992, but liberals often try to appeal to conservative themes for elections.
- "Lightning Crashes" by Live – The joy and significance of childbirth.
- "Takin' Care of Business" by Bachman-Turner Overdrive – The work ethic and promoting self-employment.
- "Cat's In The Cradle" by Harry Chapin – The importance of traditional families and responsible fatherhood.
- "The Devil Went Down To Georgia" by Charlie Daniels – A deeper message here, as Daniels explains.
- "Big Money" by Rush - Pro-capitalism
- "Real American" by Rick Derringer – patriotic anthem, known as Hulk Hogan's pre-match song
- "Amazing Grace" – A Christian hymn written by English poet and clergyman John Newton (1725–1807), published in 1779.
- "Go Down Moses" performed by Louis Armstrong; written by Sy (Arr) Oliver.
- "Walking Contradiction" by Green Day – Though a vocal critic of the Bush Administration, here Green Day mocks the often self-contradictory and inconsistent liberal ideologies, hence the term "walking contradiction".
- "God and Guns" by Lynyrd Skynyrd – A powerful new song that elaborates on the song title.
- "Staying Alive" by the Bee Gees – Pro-people and pro-staying alive, and this: "we can try to understand/the New York Times' effect on man."
- "Sympathy for the Devil" by the Rolling Stones – Reminds humanity that nobody is perfect and evil is present in the world and needs to be fought.
- "All In by Lifehouse – Describes a relationship with God as being full of commitment and without reservations.
- "The Ballad of the Green Berets" by Sergeant Barry Sadler – Pro-American and pro-military.
- "Iraq No Phobia" by Pro-Pain – It is a pro-American, pro-military heavy metal song about the first Gulf War: "Mohammed's no match for the great Uncle Sam."
- "Bus Stop" by The Hollies – Pro-romance and pro-marriage: "Someday my name and hers are going to be the same."
- "Stranger in Blue Suede Shoes" by Kevin Ayers – Defends the right of businessmen to choose their customers: "we don't serve strangers in blue suede shoes".
- "Union Sundown" by Bob Dylan – The title says it all.
- "People Get Ready" by Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions – An all-time classic song about the glory of the Lord.
- "Get A Job" by The Silhouettes – Self-explanatory; a rebuke to lazy liberals who want to sit around and wait for government handouts.
- "Don't Tread on Me" by Metallica – Pretty self-explanatory meaning; speaks to Conservative values.
- "Hypnotize" by System of a Down – SOAD is a rather left-ish band although this song is about liberals believing anything they see or hear in the media.
- "Gematria (The Killing Name)" by Slipknot – This song is about what the liberals of America, who can get very annoying sometimes.
- "Welcome to the Family" by Avenged Sevenfold – A song about death row, although not anti-death penalty.
- "Turn, Turn, Turn" by The Byrds – An almost word-for-word direct quotation from the Bible, specifically Ecclesiastes, with the addition of the refrain "Turn, Turn, Turn".
- "Critical Acclaim" by Avenged Sevenfold – Pro-America and pro-Military.
- "The Star Spangled Banner" – The American national anthem.
- "YMCA" by Village People – This song praises youth activities at the Young Men's Christian Association; one of the biggest hits of alltime.
- "Dissident" by Pearl Jam – About a woman who engages in liberal values by being impregnated out of wedlock and having an abortion, but immediately regrets doing so.
- "Keep an open mind or else" by McCarthy - about the conservative value of keeping an open mind.
Please add your best conservative picks.