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Top 10 Protest Songs

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    [INTRO MUSIC]
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    [BYRDS PLAYING]
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    NARRATOR: Give
    them three chords,
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    and they'll give you the truth.
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    THE BYRDS: (SINGING) The
    times, they are a-changin'.
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    NARRATOR: Welcome
    to watchmojo.com,
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    and today we're
    counting down our picks
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    for the top 10 protest songs.
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    BOB MARLEY: (SINGING)
    Get up, stand up.
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    Don't give up the fight.
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    NARRATOR: For this
    list, we've chosen
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    songs that argue
    against the status
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    quo, ask for change in social,
    political, or other spheres,
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    and/or are associated with
    particular events, periods,
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    movements, et cetera.
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    EDWIN STARR: (SINGING)
    War, huh, yeah.
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    What is it good for?
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    Absolutely nothing.
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    PETE SEEGER: (SINGING)
    We shall overcome.
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    NARRATOR: Number 10-- "We
    Shall Overcome," Pete Seeger.
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    PETE SEEGER: (SINGING)
    We shall overcome.
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    NARRATOR: Although the song
    had been kicking around,
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    in some form, since--
    well, no one really knows.
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    "We Shall Overcome" has become
    synonymous with Pete Seeger.
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    PETE SEEGER: (SINGING) The
    whole wide world around.
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    The whole wide world around.
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    NARRATOR: The banjo-slinging
    folk legend certainly
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    had a hand in shaping
    the song as we know it.
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    Used as a musical
    form of protest
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    during the Civil
    Rights Movement,
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    the anthem features
    simple, but honest, lyrics
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    that made it a ready battle cry
    for any group facing adversity.
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    PETE SEEGER: (SINGING)
    deep in my heart--
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    NARRATOR: Plus, it continues
    to be recorded in support
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    of a number of causes today.
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    PETE SEEGER: (SINGING)--believe
    we shall overcome--
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    [THE EDGE PLAYING GUITAR]
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    NARRATOR: Number 9--
    "Sunday Bloody Sunday," U2.
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    U2: (SINGING) Mm, oh.
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    NARRATOR: Despite being drenched
    in U2's signature echo pop
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    sound, "Sunday Bloody Sunday"
    is actually the band's response
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    to the British Army's armed
    attack of Northern Irish Civil
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    Rights protesters in 1972.
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    U2: (SINGING) Puts my back up,
    my back up against the wall.
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    Sunday, Bloody Sunday.
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    NARRATOR: Also known as
    the Bogside Massacre,
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    the incident resulted
    in over a dozen deaths.
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    U2: (SINGING) Sunday,
    Bloody Sunday.
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    Sunday, Bloody Sunday.
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    NARRATOR: Thanks to
    its clanging guitars,
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    and military-inspired
    beat, it's become one
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    of the group's signature songs.
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    U2: (SINGING) How long?
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    How long must we sing this song?
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    How long, how long?
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    Tonight--
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    NARRATOR: But it's the
    respect, and authority,
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    with which U2 tackles
    the subject matter, that
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    really makes it stand out.
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    U2: (SINGING) wipe
    your blood shot eyes.
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    Sunday, Bloody Sunday.
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    Wipe your tears away.
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    Sunday, Bloody Sunday.
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    NARRATOR: Number 8--
    "F*** tha Police," NWA.
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    NWA: (RAPPING) F*** tha
    police, coming straight from
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    the underground.
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    A young n**** got it
    bad cause I'm brown.
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    NARRATOR: With this
    gangsta rap track,
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    NWA went straight outta Compton,
    and straight into controversy.
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    NWA: (RAPPING) F*** that
    shit, cause I ain't the one,
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    for a punk motherf*****
    with a badge and a gun,
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    to be beaten on--
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    NARRATOR: By presenting
    a clear street-view look
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    at racially-motivated police
    brutality, "F*** tha Police"
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    got the rappers
    noticed by the FBI.
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    NWA: (RAPPING) Yo, Dre
    I got something to say.
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    F*** the police.
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    F*** the police.
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    F*** the police.
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    NARRATOR: The government
    agency's attention
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    to lyrics that appeared to
    support violence towards cops,
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    actually helped fuel the
    band's cred and popularity.
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    NWA: (RAPPING)**** the police
    and Ren said it with authority,
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    because the n***** on
    the street is a majority.
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    A gang--
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    NARRATOR: Meanwhile, the song
    has become a classic protest
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    song.
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    And the weight behind
    its title phrase,
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    has become a recurring
    theme in hip-hop music.
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    (RAPPING) Dumb
    mother****** with a gun.
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    And if I'm rolling
    off the 8, he'll
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    be the one that I take
    out, and then get away.
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    While I'm driving off laughing
    this is what I'll say.
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    F*** the police.
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    [GUITAR PLAYING] Number
    7-- "Ohio," Crosby, Stills,
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    Nash, and Young.
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    CSNY: (SINGING) Tin
    soldiers and Nixon coming,
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    we're finally on our own.
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    On May 4th, 1970, the
    Ohio National Guard
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    fired on several
    peacefully-protesting Kent
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    State University students.
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    CSNY: (SINGING)
    Gotta get down to it,
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    soldiers are cutting us down.
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    NARRATOR: After he saw
    photos of the shootings that
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    left four dead in Ohio,
    Neil Young wrote the lyrics
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    to this protest song.
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    NIEL YOUNG: (SINGING)
    four dead in Ohio.
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    NARRATOR: David Crosby, Steven
    Stills, and Graham Nash,
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    then joined him in the
    studio to record the rocker.
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    CSNY: (SINGING) How can
    you run when you know?
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    NARRATOR: Though some AM radio
    stations banned the single
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    for its unflattering
    namedropping of President
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    Nixon, Ohio still reached the
    Billboard Hot 100's top 20,
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    following its release.
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    CSNY: (SINGING)
    Four dead in Ohio.
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    Four dead in Ohio.
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    Four dead in Ohio.
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    NARRATOR: Number 6--
    "Killing in the Name,"
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    Rage Against The Machine.
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    RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE:
    (SINGING) Killing
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    in the name of.
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    NARRATOR: Never a group to
    shy away from tough issues,
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    Rage quickly
    established themselves
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    as a politically-minded act
    with their debut single.
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    RAGE AGAINST THE
    MACHINE: (SINGING)
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    Some of those that work forces,
    are the same that burn crosses.
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    NARRATOR: The rap metal band
    turned "Killing in the Name"
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    into a musical attack
    on police brutality,
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    institutional racism,
    and the Klu Klux Klan.
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    Through its snorting baselines,
    Tom Morello's unorthodox guitar
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    part
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    [TOM MORELLO GUITAR SOLO]
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    NARRATOR: And f-bombs.
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    Lots and lots of f-bombs.
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    RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE:
    (RAPPING) F*** you,
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    I won't do what you tell me.
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    F*** you, I won't
    do what you tell me.
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    NARRATOR: Despite
    its explicit lyrics,
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    the track has become
    their signature tune,
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    and has been covered
    by multiple artists.
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    RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE:
    (RAPPING) F*** you,
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    I won't do what you tell me.
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    F*** you I won't do
    what you tell me.
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    F*** you I won't do
    what you tell me.
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    F*** you I won't do
    what you tell me.
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    NARRATOR: Number 5-- "Fight
    the Power," Public Enemy.
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    (RAPPING) Listen if you're
    missin' y'all, swingin' while
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    I'm singin', givin'
    whatcha gettin'.
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    Knowin' what I know, while
    the black bands sweatin,
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    and the rhythm rhymes rollin'.
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    PUBLIC ENEMY: While the Beastie
    Boys were fighting for their,
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    right to party, Chuck D,
    Flavor Flav, and the rest
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    of the Public Enemy crew,
    were fighting for their right
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    to do pretty much
    everything else--
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    PUBLIC ENEMY: (RAPPING)
    Fight the power.
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    NARRATOR: --fused with
    aggression, defiance,
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    and rebellion.
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    (RAPPING) Fight the power.
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    NARRATOR: The lyrics of
    Fight the Power are steeped
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    with samples of
    African-American culture,
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    and shots at the
    American establishment.
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    PUBLIC ENEMY:
    (RAPPING) Sample a look
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    back you look and find nothing
    but rednecks for 400 years,
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    if you check.
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    Don't worry be happy.
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    Was a number one jam.
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    Damn if I say it you
    can slap me right here.
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    NARRATOR: Along with playing in
    Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing,
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    the song has since
    become an anthem
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    for urban, underprivileged
    young adults.
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    PUBLIC ENEMY: (RAPPING)
    Fight the power.
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    We've got to fight
    the powers that be.
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    THE WAILERS: (SINGING)
    Get up, stand up--
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    stand up for your rights.
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    NARRATOR: Number 4-- "Get
    Up, Stand Up," The Wailers.
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    THE WAILERS: (SINGING)
    Don't give up the fight.
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    NARRATOR: Struck by
    the devastating poverty
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    found in Haiti, Bob Marley
    teamed up with Peter Tosh
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    to write this
    three-minute number.
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    THE WAILERS: (SINGING)
    We're sick and tired
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    of the ism-skism, dyin' and go
    to heaven in a Jesus' name--
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    NARRATOR: In the early
    '70s, many Haitians
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    fled the country in the
    hopes of freeing themselves
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    from these conditions.
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    THE WAILERS: (SINGING) And you
    can fool some people sometimes,
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    but you can't fool all
    the people all the time.
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    And now you see the
    light-- what you gonna do?
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    Stand up for your rights!
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    NARRATOR: With its solid reggae
    groove, and powerful lyrics,
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    "Get Up, Stand Up"
    urged those who remained
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    to fight for their rights.
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    Thanks to its powerful
    message, it quickly
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    became a concert staple
    for Marley and the Wailers.
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    (SINGING) Get up stand up--
    don't give up the fight.
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    NARRATOR: And was the last song
    the Rastafarian performed live
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    before his death in 1981.
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    THE WAILERS: (SINGING)
    Don't give up the fight.
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    NARRATOR: Number 3-- "The
    Times They Are a-Changin'," Bob
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    Dylan.
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    BOB DYLAN: (SINGING) Come
    gather 'round people,
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    wherever you roam, and admit
    that the waters around you have
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    grown--
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    NARRATOR: Written
    when America was
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    on the cusp of
    great social change,
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    and just prior to
    JFK's assassination,
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    this is Bob Dylan's call
    for open-mindedness,
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    and a warning to the old guard.
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    BOB DYLAN: (SINGING) Come
    senators, congressmen,
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    please heed the call.
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    Don't stand in the doorway.
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    Don't block up the hall.
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    NARRATOR: The coming
    generations quickly
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    adopted it as an anthem of
    change, due to its timeless
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    lyrics.
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    BOB DYLAN: (SINGING) The
    battle outside raging,
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    will soon shake your windows
    and rattle your walls.
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    For the times they
    are a-changin'.
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    NARRATOR: The Times
    They Are a-Changin'
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    also reach the UK Top 10,
    and cemented Dylan's place
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    in folk music, and
    as a protest singer.
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    BOB DYLAN: (SINGING)
    And the first one
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    now will later be last.
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    For the times they
    are a-changin'.
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    [SONG CHANGES]
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    Number 2-- "What's
    Going On," Marvin Gaye.
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    MARVIN GAYE: (SINGING) Mother,
    there's too many of you crying.
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    NARRATOR: In the first track and
    single from "What's Going On,"
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    Marvin Gaye questions the
    world, and times, around him.
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    MARVIN GAYE: (SINGING) Don't
    punish me with brutality.
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    But talk to me, so you
    see, what's going on.
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    NARRATOR: The initial
    spark for the song
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    was an act of police brutality
    witnessed by co-writer Obie
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    Benson during an
    anti-war protest.
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    After Gaye added
    his own touches,
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    the track was released without
    Motown boss Berry Gordy's
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    consent, as he hated the track.
    (SINGING) We need some unity,
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    some love--
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    NARRATOR: Lucky for us
    all, "What's Going On"
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    topped the soul charts, and
    became Motown's fastest-selling
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    single to that point.
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    RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE:
    (SINGING) Hear me people, oh.
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    What's going, what's going on?
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    Before we unveil
    our top pick, here
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    are a few honorable mentions.
  • 10:45 - 10:48
    CCR: (SINGING) Some folks are
    born made to wave the flag.
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    Ooh, they're red,
    white, and blue.
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    BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN:
    (SINGING) Born in the USA.
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    I was born in the USA.
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    BUFFALO SPRINGFIELD:
    (SINGING) Stop
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    children, what's that sound?
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    Everybody look whats going down.
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    What are we fighting for?
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    Don't ask me, I don't give a
    damn, next stop is Vietnam--
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    And it's five, six, seven,
    open up the pearly gates.
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    SAM COOKE: (SINGING)
    A long time coming,
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    but I know a change gonna come.
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    MIA: (RAPPING) I throw this
    shit in your face when I see ya.
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    Cause I got something to say.
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    I was born free.
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    I was born free.
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    NARRATOR: Number 1--
    "Give Peace a Chance,"
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    the Plastic Ono Band. (SINGING)
    Everybody's talking about
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    Bagism, Shagism, Dragism,
    Madism, Ragism, Tagism--
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    NARRATOR: Paving the
    way for Imagine--
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    JOHN LENNON: (SINGING)
    Imagine all the people.
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    NARRATOR: --this John
    Lennon-penned track
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    provides the sentiment that
    Lennon is best remembered for.
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    PLASTIC ONO BAND:
    (SINGING) All we are saying
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    is give peace a chance.
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    NARRATOR: Quickly she adopted
    as the anti-Vietnam war song,
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    give peace a chance was
    conceived, and recorded,
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    during the ex-Beatles Montreal
    bed-in with wife Yoko Ono,
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    and later sung by 500,000
    people at the Moratorium March
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    on Washington.
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    PLASTIC ONO BAND:
    (SINGING) All we are saying
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    is give peace a chance.
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    NARRATOR: While it reached
    the Billboard Hot 100's Top
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    20, and the UK
    charts Top Five, it's
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    the song's hopeful tune that
    has given it its enduring
  • 12:36 - 12:37
    legacy in rock and roll.
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    PLASTIC ONO BAND: (SINGING)
    is give peace a chance.
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    NARRATOR: Do you
    agree with our list?
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    What's your favorite
    protest song?
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    For more rebellious Top
    10's published every day,
  • 12:46 - 12:49
    be sure to subscribe
    to watchmojo.com.
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    JOHN LENNON: (SINGING)
    --is give peace a chance.
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    JOHN LENNON: OK, beautiful.
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    Yeah.
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  • 12:57 - 13:01
    [OUTRO MUSIC]
  • 13:01 - 13:08
Title:
Top 10 Protest Songs
Description:

iTunes Links Below to Buy the Songs in the Video!

Give them three chords and they'll give you the truth. Welcome to WatchMojo.com, and today we're counting down our picks for the top 10 protest songs.

"Killing in the Name" (1992)
Rage Against the Machine http://bit.ly/1fQfYT4

"Give Peace a Chance" (1969)
Plastic Ono Band http://bit.ly/1iApShn

"We Shall Overcome" (1963)
Pete Seeger http://bit.ly/1mZfj9B

"Get Up, Stand Up" (1973)
The Wailers http://bit.ly/1rOOSTx

"The Times They Are a-Changin'" (1964)
Bob Dylan http://bit.ly/1ftctY8

"What's Going On" (1971)
Marvin Gaye http://bit.ly/1pOOuXu

"Fortunate Son" (1969)
Creedence Clearwater Revival http://bit.ly/1fyqxPJ

"Born in the U.S.A." (1984)
Bruce Springsteen http://bit.ly/1heaW37

"Fight the Power" (1989)
Public Enemy http://bit.ly/SaBgWF

"Ohio" (1970)
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young http://bit.ly/1hWi03N

"Fuck tha Police" (1988)
N.W.A. http://bit.ly/1koRov9

"Sunday Bloody Sunday" (1983)
U2 http://bit.ly/SaBLje

"For What It's Worth" (1967)
Buffalo Springfield http://bit.ly/1fQhl4f

"I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-to-Die Rag" (1967)
Country Joe and the Fish http://bit.ly/1lzgquj

"A Change Is Gonna Come" (1964)
Sam Cooke http://bit.ly/1nIdcXC

"Born Free" (2010)
M.I.A. http://bit.ly/PR44RN

Special thanks to our users dave2318, happychaosofthenorth Noah J. Odom, antonius1903 and Margaret Rd for submitting the idea on our Suggest Page at WatchMojo.com/suggest!

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http://watchmojo.com/suggest/Top%2010%20Protest%20Songs

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
13:08
ut_captioning edited English subtitles for Top 10 Protest Songs

English subtitles

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