The List

The Vietnam Era Soundtrack: 5 Protest Songs Across Genres

The Vietnam War was a tragic and stressful time in the world, particularly for American soldiers, veterans, and the families they left behind. As a result of the very polarizing war, a lot of protest music debuted during the late 1960s and early 1970s. And some of those Vietnam War protest songs are still revered today. Some of them have even been repurposed for new political or cultural movements. Letโ€™s take a look at just some of the best.

โ€œAll Along The Watchtowerโ€ by Bob Dylan (1967)

Bob Dylan wrote a few songs about the Vietnam War. In fact, โ€œMasters Of Warโ€ could have made it to this list, too. However, Iโ€™m particularly fond of the folk rock classic, โ€œAll Along The Watchtowerโ€, which blends together biblical lyrics, the use of archetypal characters, and excellent storytelling that were clearly inspired by the Vietnam War, particularly the United Statesโ€™ involvement. And if youโ€™re more familiar with Jimi Hendrixโ€™s soaring version of this song, I donโ€™t blame you.

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โ€œFortunate Sonโ€ by Creedence Clearwater Revival (1969)

Few songs are as closely associated with the Vietnam War as โ€œFortunate Sonโ€ by Creedence Clearwater Revival, released in 1969. This is CCRโ€™s signature song, and a fine and poignant exploration of how unfair the war was to American soldiers who sacrificed either their lives or their sanity to a conflict that seemingly had no end in sight.

โ€œImagineโ€ by John Lennon (1971)

This song is on the softer side of Vietnam War protest songs. โ€œImagineโ€ was released by John Lennon in 1971, and itโ€™s less of a direct protest song and more of a soft rock ballad that explores what the world would be like without war, money, material possessions, and other things that were bogging society down at the time. 

โ€œThe Unknown Soldierโ€ by The Doors (1968)

How about a little bit of psychedelia? After all, it is era-appropriate. โ€œThe Unknown Soldierโ€ by The Doors is a very direct protest song about how the Vietnam War conflict was being played out in American media at the time. According to lore, Jim Morrison was inspired to write this song after visiting the famed Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.

โ€œ21st Century Schizoid Manโ€ by King Crimson (1969)

I donโ€™t think this proggy, jazzy, almost proto-metal tune gets as much love as a protest song as it should. โ€œ21st Century Schizoid Manโ€ by King Crimson is one of my favorite Vietnam War protest songs, released in 1969. This song is disjointed, unpredictable, and poetic in its criticisms of the Vietnam War, with lyrics that are at times vulgar and in your face. And that makes it all the more memorable.

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