Folk music has been at the heart of protest anthems for decades, and some of those iconic tracks from the 1960s and 1970s are still revered and even used at rallies today. Letโs take a quick look at four folk songs that became protest anthems!
1. โBlowinโ In The Windโ by Bob Dylan
โBlowinโ In The Windโ from 1962 is one of Bob Dylanโs most revered songs, and itโs also one of the most well-known protest anthems of the 20th century. Itโs an absolute classic, but Bob Dylan himself once said that it wasnโt a protest song at all.
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It makes sense why he prefaced his performance of the tune with that warning. The song itself doesnโt really take a stand against anything in particular. However, it raised a number of questions about society and the world at the time in 1962. It has since taken on a life of its own and become a protest anthem, whether or not Bob Dylan wanted it to.
2. โGoing Down To Mississippiโ by Phil Ochs
Phil Ochs knew his way around political protest songs in the 1960s, the most well-known being the 1965 folk song โGoing Down To Mississippiโ. Itโs no secret that Mississippi was one of the scariest places to live as a black person at the height of the Civil Rights Movement. This song was Ochsโ attempt at solidarity.ย
The song resonated with protestors, and it became an anthem of sorts in the years that followed. โSomeone’s got to go to Mississippi just as sure as there’s a right and there’s wrong / Even though you say the time will change, that time is just too longโ is one of the most powerful lines in any protest song.
3. โOnly A Pawn In Their Gameโ by Bob Dylan
Yes, Bob Dylan gets another entry on this list. Heโs one of the most well-known folk artists to pen protest anthems, so it only makes sense that heโd get another spot on our short list. โOnly A Pawn In Their Gameโ by Bob Dylan was written about the death (or assassination) of civil rights activist Medgar Evers.
Itโs a tribute of sorts, but it also goes beyond Eversโ death. Dylan explored the greater problem that needed to be fixed. And he wasnโt afraid to pen a few biting lines in this anthem.
4. โOh Freedomโ by Joan Baez
Joan Baez is the queen of protest music, and โOh Freedomโ is one of her very best. Baez didnโt write it, however. โOh Freedomโ is actually a post-Civil War freedom song that has its roots in the African-American community.
The song has been covered many times, but Baezโs rendition gets an entry on this list because of when and where she decided to cover it. Baez performed the song morning of Martin Luther King Jr.โs famous โI Have A Dreamโ speech, and it has been a go-to protest anthem ever since.
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