List of songs about the Cold War
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This is a list of songs about the Cold War.
Title | By | Notes |
---|---|---|
"1999" | Prince | "Yeah, everybody's got a bomb, We could all die any day", referring to nuclear proliferation |
"2 Minutes to Midnight" | Iron Maiden | refers to the Doomsday Clock, the symbolic clock used by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. In September 1953 the clock reached 23:58, the closest the clock ever got to midnight when the song was written. This occurred when the United States and Soviet Union tested H-bombs within nine months of one another. |
"99 Luftballons" | Nena | the song imagines a world where the release of 99 balloons triggers governments to scramble fighter jets to intercept them, ultimately leading to total nuclear annihilation. |
"Advice to Joe" | Roy Acuff | (1951), a pro-US song, mocking Stalin and bringing up the German invasion of the Soviet Union |
"Amerika" | Herbert Grönemeyer | About the influence of the US and its conflict with Russia on German culture during the 1980s. |
"Back in the USSR" | the Beatles (1968) | expresses the singer's great happiness on returning home to the USSR from the United States; political observers saw it as pro-Soviet |
"Ball of Confusion" | The Temptations | Vietnam protest song, later covered by various artists including Love and Rockets. The cover by Love and Rockets could be interpreted as being in response to the hostilities between the US and USSR during the eighties. |
"Balls to the Wall" | about human rights | |
"Bay of Pigs" | Civil War | About the Bay of Pigs Invasion. |
"Be Not Always" | The Jacksons | 1984 song from their Victory LP |
"Bonzo Goes to Bitburg" | written in reaction to the visit paid by U.S. president Ronald Reagan to a military cemetery in Bitburg, West Germany, on May 5, 1985 | |
"Born in the USA" | Bruce Springsteen | about the Vietnam War and the mistreatment of veterans |
"Breathing" | Kate Bush | about a foetus aware of what is going on outside the womb and frightened by nuclear fallout, which implies that the song is set either during a nuclear war scare or a post-apocalyptic birth |
"Bullet the Blue Sky" | originally written about the United States' military intervention during the 1980s in the Salvadoran Civil War | |
"Burning Heart" | Survivor | the East versus West conflict is reflected by the fight in the boxing ring between Rocky and Ivan Drago |
"Button Pusher" | The Dubliners | a song about USAF "Missilemen" in underground ICBM bases, who would initiate the actual launch |
"Cambodia" | Kim Wilde | main theme is criticism about the US bombing campaign (Operation Menu) on Eastern Cambodia during the Vietnam War. |
"Christmas at Ground Zero" | "Weird Al" Yankovic | About the celebration of Christmas in a post-apocalyptic world. |
"Crazy Train" | Ozzy Osbourne | main theme is criticism of Cold War |
"Cruise Missiles" | Fischer-Z | About cruise missiles being put up in places close to where people live. |
"Cult of Personality" | Living Colour | |
"Dancing with Tears in My Eyes" | Ultravox | About a couple dancing for the final time, as a nuclear bomb is about to be dropped. |
"De Bom" | Doe Maar | Dutch-language song about the threat of nuclear annihilation, as well as about modern day-to-day life. |
"Defcon" | Impakt (Dunk Yer Funk Records) | |
"Defcon One" | Pop Will Eat Itself | |
"Der Blaue Planet" | Karat | About the world being on the brink of nuclear destruction. |
"Distant Early Warning" | Rush | |
"Dominion/Mother Russia" | The Sisters of Mercy | |
"Eighties" | Killing Joke | |
"Enola Gay" | Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark | About the bombing of Hiroshima. |
"Epitaph" | King Crimson | |
"Eve of Destruction" | Barry McGuire | |
"Everybody Wants to Rule the World" | Tears for Fears | |
"Everyday Is Like Sunday" | Morrissey | |
"Fireworks" | The Tragically Hip | set in 1972 in Canada and Russia, it references the Canada–USSR hockey series, "crisis in the Kremlin," nationalism, and the "fake Cold War." |
"The Fletcher Memorial Home" | Pink Floyd | |
"Forever Young" | Alphaville | |
"Fortunate Son" | Creedence Clearwater Revival | discusses the sons of "fortunate" men in America who avoided the draft to Vietnam thanks to their family's wealth or prestige |
"Games Without Frontiers" | Peter Gabriel | |
"God, Country and My Baby" | 1961 song written by John Dolan and performed by Johnny Burnette | |
"Goodnight Saigon" | Billy Joel | (1982), about the Vietnam War |
"Good Technology" | Red Guitars | "We've got missiles, can tear the world apart", referring to nuclear weapons |
"Great Atomic Power" | Charlie Louvin | using the fear that nuclear bombs could wipe out the world to invoke repentance |
"A Great Day for Freedom" | ||
"Hammer to Fall" | Queen | |
"A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall" | Bob Dylan | (1962) – widely interpreted as a reference to the Cuban Missile Crisis, even though it was written before that date |
"Hello Vietnam" | written by Tom T. Hall and recorded by Johnnie Wright (1965) | |
"Heresy" | Rush | |
"Heroes" | David Bowie | a love song depicting lovers kissing "by the wall"; many songs from Bowie's "Berlin Trilogy" albums invoke themes of the Cold War, as they were recorded in West Berlin. |
"Hiroshima" | Wishful Thinking | About the bombing of Hiroshima. |
"Holidays in the Sun" | Sex Pistols | |
"I Melt with You" | Modern English | About a couple making love during nuclear annihilation. |
"I Won't Let the Sun Go Down on Me" | Nik Kershaw | |
"It's a Mistake" | Men at Work | |
"Killer of Giants" | Ozzy Osbourne | |
"Land of Confusion" | Genesis | |
"Lawyers, Guns and Money" | Warren Zevon | |
"Leningrad" | Billy Joel | About the lives of Billy Joel and a Russian man named Victor, how they both grew up during the Cold War and how they eventually met each other in Leningrad. |
"Listen to the Radio (Atmospherics)" | Tom Robinson | An autobiographic song, in which Robinson recalls his life in East Berlin. |
"London Calling" | The Clash | Lyrics reflect concern at contemporary world events and the potential for a nuclear apocalypse: "The ice age is coming, the sun's zoomin' in/ Engines stop running, the wheat is growin' thin/ A nuclear error, but I have no fear" |
"Morning Dew" | Bonnie Dobson | The song is presented as a dialogue between the last two survivors of a nuclear holocaust. |
"Mutually Assured Destruction" | Gillan | |
"New Frontier" | Donald Fagen | |
"New Year's Day" | U2 | |
"Nikita" | Elton John | a love song set against the East German border: the singer describes his crush on a beautiful border guard whom he cannot meet because he is not allowed into the country. |
"Nuku pommiin" | Kojo | The Finnish entry for the 1982 Eurovision Song Contest, which is about the threat of nuclear bombs. |
"Oh Moscow" | Lindsay Cooper | |
"Ordinary People" | The Box | Canadian pop rock song (1987), drawing contrasts between life in the US and USSR |
"Over de muur" | Klein Orkest | Dutch-language song about the differences and parallels between the divided East and West Berlin. |
"Party at Ground Zero" | Fishbone | |
"Radio Free Europe" | R.E.M. | |
"Ready or Not" | Bananarama | about escaping over the Berlin Wall to reunite with a lover |
"Red Star Falling" | Saxon | |
"Remember Russia" | Fischer-Z | |
"Renegade" | Steppenwolf | |
"Right Here, Right Now" | Jesus Jones | |
"Ronnie – Talk To Russia!" | cover says "Featuring Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev" | |
"Russians" | Sting | about hoping the "Russians love their children too" because that could be the only thing to save them from destruction if the East and West keep provoking each other |
"Seconds" | U2 | |
"Since Yesterday" | Strawberry Switchblade | |
"So Long Mom (A Song For World War III)" | Tom Lehrer | |
"Sonderzug nach Pankow" | Udo Lindenberg | Protest song to the tune of Chattanooga Choo Choo, about how Lindenberg was denied access to the GDR. In the song, Lindenberg depicts Erich Honecker, then-current leader of the GDR, as someone who secretly enjoys Western music. |
"Soviet Snow" | Shona Laing | |
"Stand Or Fall" | The Fixx | [1] |
"State of the Nation" | Industry | |
"Strange Frontier" | Roger Taylor | On the Strange Frontier album; the song was included on the Greenpeace Non-Toxic Video Hits VHS and Laserdisc compilation |
"Subterraneans" | David Bowie | |
"This Cold War With You" | Floyd Tillman | |
"The Tide Is Turning" | Roger Waters | |
"The "Fish" Cheer/I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-to-Die Rag" | Country Joe and the Fish | A protest song about the Vietnam War. |
"Them and Us" | Don Henley | |
"This is Welfare" | The Dutch | About how welfare has led to World War 2 and possibly a nuclear Armageddon in the near future. |
"Two Minute Warning" | Depeche Mode | |
"Two Suns in the Sunset" | Pink Floyd | |
"Two Tribes" | Frankie Goes to Hollywood | |
"Vamos a la playa" | Righeira | About a visit to the beach after a nuclear explosion has taken place.[2] |
"The Visitors" | ABBA | |
"Walking In Your Footsteps" | The Police | A song which compares the extinction of the dinosaurs to that of mankind in the face of a looming nuclear apocalypse. |
"The Wall" | Steppenwolf | |
"Washington Bullets" | The Clash | from the Sandanista! album (a reference to the communist rebel group in Nicaragua), the song condemns American anti-communist military activity in Latin America, ending with criticism of other major superpowers during the era. |
"War" | The Temptations | A protest song on the futility of war, written in response to the Vietnam War. Later also covered by Edwin Starr and Bruce Springsteen. |
"We Didn't Start the Fire" | Billy Joel | (1989) – a cleverly structured list of historical events of the Cold War period from the 1950s–1980s, making special mention of the "communist bloc". |
"Weeping Wall" | David Bowie | described by Bowie as intending to evoke the misery of the Berlin Wall (see the description of "Heroes" above) |
"Welterusten meneer de president" | Boudewijn de Groot | Dutch-language protest song about the Vietnam War and Lyndon B. Johnson. |
"West of the Wall" | written by Wayne Shanklin, recorded as a single by Toni Fisher (1962) | |
"What are we making weapons for? (Let us begin)" | John Denver and Alexander Gradsky | This song protests against government expenditure in weapons instead of in their citizens. It was the first time an artist from the USSR got together with an artist from the US to sing about this matter. |
"When the Wind Blows" | David Bowie | Soundtrack to the film of the same name, about an elderly couple trying to survive after an atomic bomb has been dropped. |
"White Train" | Bananarama | about the train that carried nuclear missiles across the US |
"Wind of Change" | Scorpions | About the reunification of East and West after the Cold War. |
"With God on Our Side" | Bob Dylan | "I've learned to hate the Russians, All through my whole life, If another war comes, It's them we must fight" |
"Wooden Ships" | Crosby, Stills, and Nash | also performed by Jefferson Airplane. Describes two survivors of a nuclear holocaust, one from each side and wondering "Who won?" |
"World Destruction" | Time Zone | |
"Wozu sind Kriege da" | Udo Lindenberg |
References
[edit]- ^ "Stand or Fall by the Fixx - Songfacts".
- ^ Conze, Eckart; Klimke, Martin; Varon, Jeremy, eds. (2017). Nuclear Threats, Nuclear Fear and the Cold War of the 1980s. Cambridge University Press. p. 120. ISBN 978-1-107-13628-1.