Category Archives: Protest Tunes

DJ General Strike’s Top 40 Protest Songs of 2025

An illustrative graphic featuring a raised fist holding a microphone, symbolizing protest and activism. In the background, a large crowd with raised fists is depicted, suggesting solidarity and movement. The text reads 'Protest Tunes' and 'Top 40 Protest Songs of 2025' alongside the logo for 'SHOUTS MUSIC BLOG'.

Happy New Year comrades. This is DJ General Strike, host of the weekly protest music radio show, Protest Tunes on 91.3 KBCS FM in Seattle, WA. I broadcast 2 hours of radical protest music of all genres and eras every Wednesday at 9 PM. 2025 was a great year for protest music, as there was certainly a lot to protest this year in the US, given the rise of MAGA-fascism under Trump’s second term.  The massive No Kings Protests in June and October inspired many great protest songs, as did the ICE-Out movement against Trump’s immigration crackdown, the cover-up and eventual limited release of the Epstein files, the ongoing genocide in Gaza, the cost-of-living crisis exacerbated by Trumpโ€™s tariffs and DOGE cuts, and the attacks on the transgender and LGBT community.

Over the last year, Iโ€™ve compiled a playlist of over 1,100 of these protest songs, which you can listen to in its entirety here, and Iโ€™ve made 4 shows on my top protest songs of each season, or what I call โ€œMolotov Hot Tracks.โ€ Iโ€™ve painstakingly narrowed that high volume of songs down to my top 40 protest songs of 2025.  I aired most of these songs on my show on New Yearโ€™s Eve, which you can listen to an archive of here.

The songs are organized by genre below for ease of listening (and alphabetically within genre), and you can also listen to all 40 on this Spotify Playlist. Without further ado, hereโ€™s my top 40 Protest Songs of 2025.


Folk

1. Hundred Year Hunger by Billy Bragg

Billy Bragg is an English protest singer-songwriter, author, and activist. The song about the Gaza genocide and the historical events that led to it was inspired by the book Hundred Year Hunger by E. Mark Windle. The song is also a benefit for the Amos Trustโ€™s Gaza Appeal. This single was released on September 8th to coincide with the humanitarian aid Global Sumud Flotilla for Gaza.

2. Little Flame by Carsie Blanton

Carsie Blanton is a singer-songwriter and guitarist based in New Orleans, US. About this song, just released December 5th, she said, “I’ve been learning a bunch of protest songs, and I had that itchy-brain feeling that I might be searching for a song that didn’t exist yet. I wanted to tie together the loose ends of history into one long tapestry of solidarity; a kind of unified theory of liberation movements.”

3. Everyone’s in the Street by Dispatch ft. Ani DiFranco

Dispatch is an indie/roots band from Boston, US, and this track features Grammy-winning feminist folk-rock singer-songwriter, author, and activist Ani DiFranco. This song connects modern protest movements to the legacy of social change activism. Dispatch said, “This song pays homage to some of the great activists of our time, John Lewis, Delores Huerta, Alice Stokes Paul, and Lois Curtis. It highlights the importance of gathering in community to pursue justice and wage peace.”

4. No Kings by Jesse Welles ft. Joan Baez

Jesse Welles is a protest singer-songwriter and guitarist from Arkansas, US. He released a solo version of this song the day before the October No Kings protests, and in early November, he performed it live with legendary 84-year-old folk singer and activist, Joan Baez, at his San Francisco Fillmore concert. A couple of weeks later, they recorded the duet in-studio and just released it on December 12th.

5. Amerikkka’s Veins by Jordan Smart

Jordan Smart is a singer-songwriter currently based in Ludlow, US. This song is the opening track on his album Confessions of a CEO. Jordan recorded the tracks between one and three takes at Small Blue Studio in Lexington, Kentucky, with J. Tom Hnatow. This is a powerful anthem against police brutality, inspired by the Black Lives Matter movement.

6. Heavy Foot by Mon Rovia

Mon Rovia is a child refugee of the Liberian Civil War, who was adopted at age 7 and brought to Tennessee, US, and created a sound that he dubbed โ€œAfro-Appalachian.โ€ About this song, he said, โ€œHeavy Footโ€™ lays bare the scars of a broken system, all under the weight of a heavy-footed government. Yet, through this gravity, it sings of unbreakable unityโ€”reminding us that in the face of oppression, our love and solidarity can defy the forces that try to hold us down.โ€

7. Fire In America by Sasha Allen

This viral protest song by transgender singer-songwriter and former The Voice finalist Sasha Allen uses far-right activist Charlie Kirkโ€™s assassination in September as a lens to examine the perpetual cycle of violence in America. The song sparked controversy after MSNBC’s Joy Reid praised its lyrics, leading to widespread conservative backlash online.

8. If the People Unite by Seth Staton Watkins

Seth Staton Watkins is a folk singer from St. Louis, US. Though from the States, he primarily sings and is best known for his renditions of traditional/rebel Irish tunes and sea shanties. He records and produces all of his music in his home studio. He describes this anti-Trump rallying cry as “a song to succor a weary soul through the bitter cold of winter”.

Rock

9. A World of Love and Care by Ezra Furman

Ezra Furman is a Jewish transwoman and Boston, US-based singer-songwriter and author, who previously released three albums as Ezra Furman and the Harpoons. This utopian song about building a better world is off her new album Goodbye Small Head, released in May.

10. The List by Moon Walker

Brooklyn, US-based indie-rock artist Harry Springer composes, produces, and performs all of Moon Walker’s music in his bedroom. He started Moon Walker at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, to pass the time and make some extra money selling songs to music libraries. Since then, Moon Walker has had viral success on TikTok and has now amassed over 100 million streams and sold out shows across America. He released this single about Trumpโ€™s Epstein Files cover-up in October.

11. Big Crime by Neil Young & The Chrome Hearts

Young is a Legendary singer, songwriter, and musician formerly of bands Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young. This song, released September 8th, lambasts Donald Trump, features his backing band, The Chrome Hearts, and was recorded during a sound check at a concert on Chicagoโ€™s Northerly Island.

R&B/Pop

12. Build A Ballroom by A Gift from Todd & Ken Sandberg

A Gift From Todd is a Baltimore, US-based artist and content creator. This viral a capella protest song against Trumpโ€™s demolition of the east wing of the White House to build a $300 million ballroom funded by private donors was first shared on TikTok in October. It gained significant traction on social media, leading to various duets and collaborations, notably this version with actor, singer, and podcaster Ken Sandberg, which they released together in November.

13. Sleeves Up by Crys Matthews

Crys Matthews is a former drum major and classically-trained clarinetist turned folk singer. Matthews says she is using her voice to answer Dr. Martin Luther King’s call to be “a drum major for justice.”  She was born and raised in a small town in North Carolina by an A.M.E. preacher. She released this post-Trump-election call to action on inauguration day.

14. Pretrial (Let Her Go Home) by Fiona Apple

The three-time Grammy-winning genre-bending singer-songwriter and pianist released this rallying cry for pretrial reform in May, her first original song in five years. โ€œPretrial (Let Her Go Home)โ€ is a protest anthem shaped by Fiona Appleโ€™s activism, including years of court watching, community organizing, and listening to the women impacted by pretrial incarceration in Prince Georgeโ€™s County, Maryland, as a volunteer with the organization CourtWatch PG.

15. Lady Liberty by Galactic & Irma Thomas

Galactic is a funk band from New Orleans, US, formed in 1994. Irma Thomas is an 84-year-old pillar of American R&B and blues history known as the โ€œSoul Queen of New Orleansโ€. They released this single about the erosion of democracy under Trump in January, off their collaborative album Audience With The Queen, which dropped in April.

16. Reparations by Kirby

Kirby is a soul singer-songwriter from Mississippi, US.  Before pursuing a solo career, she was a songwriter for stars like Ariana Grande, Rihanna, Beyoncรฉ, and Paul McCartney. This track, calling for reparations for slavery, was inspired by her grandparentsโ€™ story and her ancestors who were slaves on the Dockery cotton plantation. Itโ€™s off her sophomore album, Miss Black America, released in August.

Reggae/Ska

17. Last Call In America by Fishbone ft. George Clinton

Fishbone is an all black ska/funk/rock fusion band formed in 1979 by brothers John and Phillip Fisher and their friends in junior high school in Los Angeles, US. This song features the godfather of funk, George Clinton, and is off their newest album, Stockholm Syndrome, which dropped June 27. The song speaks directly to the current social, economic, and political climate in America under Trump’s second term.

18. World Citizen by Irie Souljah & Kabaka Pyramid

Irie Souljah is a Spanish Reggae artist, born and raised in Barcelona, who relocated to Jamaica in 2014. After dropping out of music school in his mid-teens, he started going to street parties with his friends, where he discovered reggae icons and started the band, Mystic Souldiers, which became one of the biggest reggae acts in Spain. The track features conscious contemporary Jamaican reggae artist Kabaka Pyramid. This single, released in July, critiques anti-immigrant policies around the world and calls for truly open borders, where every person is considered a โ€˜world citizenโ€™ with freedom to move and migrate as they need or desire.

19. The Way You Tune It Out by JER

JER is a YouTuber, musician, composer, and music educator who hosts the YouTube channel Skatune Network, where they post ska covers of popular songs, earning the fan nickname “The CEO of Ska”. They also play trombone for ska-punk band We Are the Union. They released this single, about normalizing and turning a blind eye to injustice, in June, off their album Death of the Heart, which came out in August.

20. Street Cry by Young Veterans, Sizzla, Luciano & Turbulence

Young Veterans Music is an independent record label operating out of Kingston, Jamaica. They brought together 3 prominent conscious Jamaican reggae artists for this song; Luciano, Jamaican second-generation roots reggae singer whose lyrics promote consciousness and eschew slackness (vulgarity); Sizzla, a contemporary reggae artist noted for his high number of releases (56 albums to date); and Turbulence, a reggae artist known for mixing roots reggae with elements of dancehall and Rastafarian spirituality. Released in August, the song calls attention to the struggles of the poor and the need for systemic change to end poverty.

Hip-Hop

21. Inamo, Customs Enforcement by Bambu

Bambu is a Filipino-American community activist and rapper from Los Angeles, US, now based in Oakland.  Bambu utilizes his music as a tool for a larger goal – to reach and support youth who face issues of poverty and gang violence that he experienced, and move them to question what goes on in the world, with the eventual goal of organizing and activism. This song against Trumpโ€™s immigration crackdown (inamo is a curse word in Tagalog) is off his newest album, They’re Burning the Boats, released in October.

22. Sick, Sad World by Bob Vylan

Bob Vylan is an English political punk-rap duo based in London, also known as The Bobs, as both of them go by the stage name Bobbie Dylan (with different spellings). Their leading the crowd in the Gaza solidarity protest chant “death, death to the IDF” during their performance at Glastonbury Festival this June resulted in their visas for an upcoming tour in the US being revoked. They released this single about the cost of living crisis on October 10th.

23. rage by Dezi

DEZIโ€™s an Los Angeles, US-based alt-pop/hip-hop artist whose music comes from embracing every aspect of her identity. โ€œMy whole life is about riding the in-between. Iโ€™m Cuban American, Iโ€™m bisexual, Iโ€™m very femme but also very masc. For a long time, I felt like I had to choose which parts of myself to show, but now Iโ€™ve stopped trying to be some sort of perfect package.โ€ About this song, she said, โ€œIt’s a song for the people who feel their best isn’t enough, who were sold an unattainable dream due to the systems our government created.โ€

24. THREAT LEVEL ORANGE by Earth to Eve

Earth to Eve is the solo project of Los Angeles, US-based indie-pop artist Eve Weisberger. Almost every aspect of her songs, the writing, lyrics, production, mixing, and mastering, is all done by her alone. She released this viral anti-Trump protest song this July, which was designed to be sung easily at protests.

25. No Kings In The USA by Gangstagrass ft. Allison Russell

Gangstagrass is a Bluegrass and hip-hop fusion group, best known for the theme song of the FX show Justified. Founded in 2006 by US producer Rench to “make super funky jams of hip-hop and bluegrass that bring together the best of both worlds.” They released this song featuring Canadian roots artist Allison Russell, to coincide with โ€œNo Kingsโ€ protests on June 14th.

26. 3.5% by Hyphen

Hyphen is an English rapper and songwriter of Indian origin who was working in finance and feeling depressed and lacking purpose, and started making music to help him deal with depression, which gave him a new sense of purpose. This track is inspired by the 3.5% rule, developed by political scientist Erica Chenoweth, which suggests that when about 3.5% of a population actively participates in a nonviolent protest movement, it’s highly likely to succeed in achieving major political change. This song is off Hyphenโ€™s new EP, This Might Be It, released in August.

27. EVERYTHING’S ON FIRE by Lil Darkie

Lil Darkie is an experimental rapper, producer, and visual artist known for pushing the boundaries of genre and expression from Long Beach, US. Blending elements of hip-hop, punk, metal, folk, country, and electronic music, his work is raw, aggressive, and unapologetically honest. This track, about the rising cost of living and rising fascism in the US, is off his new album USD, released July 24th.

28. fucked up by Macklemore

Four-time Grammy-winning hip-hop artist Macklemore came up with the persona “Professor Macklemore” for an art project involving a superhero while attending High School in Seattle, US.  He rose to international success collaborating with producer Ryan Lewis as the duo Macklemore & Ryan Lewis. Macklemore released this protest single against Trumpโ€™s second term and the genocide in Gaza in February, with all proceeds going to UNRWA.

29. START A FIRE by The Neighborhood Kids

The Neighborhood Kids are a conscious hip-hop collective from San Diego, US, on a mission to spark unity and drive social change through music. DAMAG3 is a transgender alternative hip-hop artist who started out making music in their bedroom outside of New Orleans, and released their first songs in 2021. The Neighborhood Kids and DAMAG3 released this collaborative anti-capitalist call to arms in July.

30. Sirens by SkyDxaddy

SkyDxddy is a pop/hip-hop singer/songwriter who calls her genre โ€œTraumacore.โ€ She says about herself โ€œI started making music after everything I went through, so many people go through trauma, of all kinds. And weโ€™re bred not to talk about it. Thatโ€™s so harmful. My music allows the listener to feel it, process it, and feel power from the fact that they made it out.โ€ This song about militant resistance to violence against women, is off SkyDxddy’s debut album, TRAUMACORE: RAW AND UNCUT, which she released this May.

Metal/Hardcore

31. PO$T AMERICAN by Dead Pioneers

Dead Pioneers emerged as an extension of vocalist Gregg Deal’s performance art,  blending music with critical cultural commentary. Rooted in  themes of identity and resistance, the bandโ€™s sound acts as a platform for addressing the complexities of Indigenous experience. They released this single against white nationalism and American patriotism in January, which is also the title track of their newest album released in April.

32. Clockworked ft. LANDMVRKS

Stray from the Path is a Political hardcore band formed in 2001 in Long Island, US. โ€œTheir music fuses hardcore with metallic precision, hip-hop swagger, punk urgency, and political commentary.โ€ This song against apathy and conformity to rising fascism is the title track off their new and final album, Clockworked, released May 30th, and features French metalcore band LANDMVRKS.

33. Scene 1 by SUMAC & Moor Mother

Pacific Northwest trio Sumac is a post-metal supergroup formed in 2014. It features the Vancouver, Canada-based Nick Yacyshyn, Seattle, US-based Brian Cook, and Vashon Island, US-based Aaron Turner. Moor Mother is a Jazz poet, rapper, musician, and activist from Philadelphia, US, of the bands Irreversible Entanglements and 700 Bliss. This song against European colonialism and anti-black racism is off their collaborative concept album The Film, released in April.

34. HOSTAGE (they will not erase us) by TX2

TX2, AKA Timothy Evan Thomas, is a queer musician who blends hip hop, metal, and punk rock from Fort Collins, US.  TX2’s first went viral on TikTok Tok and he now has 1.3 million followers and 45 million likes on the platform. TX2 also started the “X Movement”, which is all about bringing awareness to mental health issues, and has been donating proceeds from this song to The Trevor Project, the leading suicide prevention and crisis intervention organization for the LGBTQ+ community. About this track, which is a rallying cry for equality, visibility, and justice, for the queer and trans community, which he released in April, TX2 said, “This is our anthem. They will not erase us.โ€

Punk

35. Down to Riot by Cheap Perfume

Cheap perfume is an unapologetically political feminist punk band out of Denver, US, formed in 2015. About this single, released July 18th, off their album Don’t Care. Didn’t Ask (released this October). Guitarist-vocalist Jane No said, โ€œThis working-class anthem was inspired by hearing so many people after the pandemic complaining that โ€˜No one wants to work anymore.โ€

36. Protect Trans Kids by Evan Greer & Ryan Cassata

This song is a collaboration of two trans activist-musicians: Ryan Cassata, a trans masc singer-songwriter, actor, YouTuber, speaker, and activist based in New York, US; and Evan Greer, a trans fem digital rights activist, writer, and musician from Boston, US. They released this punk anthem this Trans Day of Visibility (March 31st). About the track, Greer said, “The goal of this song is to remind people that itโ€™s actually pretty f–ing simple: Let [trans] kids be kids. Stop bullying them. Just leave them alone.โ€

37. BRAINROT by Grandson

Grandson is an American-Canadian singer, songwriter, rapper, and activist based in Los Angeles, US, who began releasing music in 2015. BRAINROT was his first new release in two years since the Venom film theme song, and the lead single off his album INERTIA, which dropped in September. About the song, Grandson said, โ€œโ€˜BRAINROTโ€™ is about the distraction of the internet, the way our attention span is weaponized and attacked by technology companies to prevent any real momentum building on the pressing issues of our generation.โ€

38. Bad Apple by Lambrini Girls

Lambrini Girls are an English punk rock duo formed in Brighton by Phoebe Lunny and Selin Macieira-BoลŸgelmez, who are both LGBT and neurodivergent.  They took their name from Lambrini, a brand of sweet sparkling pear cider, associated with low-class women. This anti-police brutality track is off their album Who Let the Dogs Out, released in January.

39. Not In Your Mouth, None Of Your Business by Peaches

Peaches is a queer feminist Canadian electroclash musician, performance artist, director, and producer known for her sexually transgressive persona. She began her musical career in the 1990s as part of the folk trio, Mermaid Cafe, and is now 59 years old. She released this single in October, the lead single off her first album in over a decade, No Lube So Rude, due in 2026. This song is a rousing battle cry for bodily autonomy and a protest against the Trump administrationโ€™s attacks on trans and queer peopleโ€™s freedom.

Jazz

40. A Plea by Flea

This Eight-minute jazz single was released on December 2nd by the Red Hot Chili Peppers bassist, and second-best bassist of all time (according to Rolling Stone). He was first called “Flea” as a teenager for his seeming inability to sit still, and the nickname stuck. This track is the first preview of his forthcoming solo jazz album. Flea describes the songโ€™s lyrics as โ€œyearning for a place beyond, a place of love, to help us all to live harmoniously and productively in a way thatโ€™s healthy for the world.”

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DJ General Strike’s Top 40 Protest Songs of 2024

Happy New Year comrades, this is DJ General Strike, host of the weekly protest music radio show, Protest Tunes on 91.3 KBCS FM in Seattle, WA. I broadcast 2 hours of radical protest music of all genres and eras every Wednesday at 9 PM. 2024 was an active year for protest music, in light of the Presidential election in the US and the General election in the UK. Many great anti-war songs were also released against Israelโ€™s ongoing war/genocide in Gaza. Over the last year Iโ€™ve compiled a playlist of over 800 of these protest songs, which you can listen to in its entirety here, and Iโ€™ve made 4 shows on my top protest songs of each season, or what I call Molotov Hot Tracks. I narrowed that high volume of songs down to my top 40 protest songs of 2024.  I aired most of these songs on my show last Wednesday, New Yearโ€™s Day, which you can listen to an archive of here. Iโ€™ve organized these 40 protest songs by genre below for ease of listening (and alphabetically within genre), you can also listen to all 40 on this Spotify Playlist. Without further ado hereโ€™s my top 40 Protest Songs of 2024.

Folk

Grammy winning feminist folk-rock singer-songwriter, author and activist. One of the first artists to create her own label in 1990, she is called ‘the mother of the DIY movement’ and has sold over 5.5 million albums on her own Righteous Babe Records. New Bible is an anti-capitalist song, the 2nd single off of her album Unprecedented Sh!tโ€™, Aniโ€™s 23rd release, released July 12th.

Carsie Blanton is a singer-songwriter and guitarist based in New Orleans, US. Blanton says she โ€œwrites anthems for a world worth saving.” About this song this single released May 31st, she said it’s “a โ€œf— the democratic party for sitting on its hands during a genocideโ€ kind of a song.โ€

Petrie is an English folk singer-songwriter and guitarist from Leicester, England. She began performing in 2006, but in 2010 the advent of the Conservative-led coalition government influenced her, as a socialist, feminist, and lesbian, towards an increasing emphasis on political songwriting.  This track is off of her new album Build Something Better, released March 8th.

Welles, is a singer-songwriter and guitarist from Arkansas, US, who was the frontman of the bands Dead Indian, formed in 2012, and Cosmic-American, formed in 2015. In 2024, Welles garnered attention on social media for authoring and performing satirical protest songs, like this viral anti-war-on-Gaza song, which satirizes common justifications for war.

Seth Staton Watkins is a folk singer from St. Louis, US, who is best known for his renditions of traditional Irish rebel tunes. He records and produces all of his music in his home studio. He released “Stand Together”, a rewrite of his 2023 song โ€œIt’s Not the Poor Folkโ€, this November in the wake of Trump’s electoral victory.

Sister Wife Sex Strike is a Seattle-based anarchist folk punk band comprised of Sister Pigeon and Sister Moth. The band’s name is inspired by a real life sex strike that they went on in 2021. They released this anti-Zionist single on July 4th, off of their new album Sister Wife Sex Change, which dropped August 2nd.

Rock and Roll

Frank Turner is an English punk, folk and indie-rock singer-songwriter who began his career as the vocalist of post-hardcore band Million Dead, then embarked upon a primarily acoustic-based solo career following the band’s split in 2005. This anti-authoritarian song off of Turner’s new album Undefeated, is a rewrite of an old unreleased song of his, called Practical Anarchist.

MC5 (Motor City 5) was an American rock band formed in Lincoln Park, Michigan, in 1963. The last two members of the band, Wayne Kramer and Dennis Thompson passed away this year, while they were working on their all-star comeback album Heavy Lifting which features guests like Tom Morello, Slash, Vernon Reid, and more.  The album was released this October, timed to the bandโ€™s posthumous induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Primal Scream are a Scottish rock band originally formed in 1982 in Glasgow by Bobby Gillespie and Jim Beattie. Primal Scream had been performing live from 1982 to 1984, but their career did not take off until Gillespie left his position as drummer of The Jesus and Mary Chain. This epic nine minute track compares settler colonialism in Ireland, Scotland and Palestine.

R&B/Pop

This Welsh musician, composer, producer, filmmaker and author performs solo and with  rock band Super Furry Animals, who obtained mainstream success in the 90s, and the electro-pop band Neon Neon. He’s considered a figurehead of the era known as Cool Cymru, a Welsh cultural movement in music and film in the 1990s and 2000s. This anti-government corruption song is off of his newest album Sadness Sets Me Free released last January.

Shaina Taub is a Vermont-raised, Brooklyn-based composer, singer-songwriter and performer. This song is newly written for Taubโ€™s musical about the Women’s Suffrage Movement, โ€œSuffsโ€ upcoming Broadway run. Taub wrote the music, lyrics, and book for the musical and also stars as Alice Paul in โ€œSuffsโ€.

The 74 year old living legend, had his first Billboard No. 1 hit at the age of 12, and has won 25 Grammys (the most by any solo artist). This is Stevieโ€™s first new song since 2020, and it encourages people to get involved and seize the crucial moment that the U.S. and the world find themselves in right now.

Sunny War is a Blues/Folk/Punk guitarist from Nashville, US. โ€œWalking Contradictionโ€ is the first single from her album Armageddon In A Summer Dress, which drops on 21st of February 2025. Sunny War wrote its songs after moving into her late fatherโ€™s 100-year-old house in Chattanooga. A big fan of Crass, the influential British anarcho-punk collective, she recruited Crassโ€™ Steve Ignorant to perform on this track.

Reggae/Ska

DJ Pamplona is an independent audio engineer from Rio de Janeiro Brazil, of the group Dub Ataque. He is now based in Florida where he owns his own studio and record label, Pamplona Beats. This anti-war-on-Gaza song features Soom T, a Scottish reggae singer of Indian origin.

Zion I Kings, a family of producers and musicians from three respected roots production houses, finished and released this posthumous track by the late Peetah Morgan in July. Peetah, who passed away on February 25th, was the lead singer of Grammy-winning  contemporary reggae band Morgan Heritage, formed in 1994 by five children of reggae artist Denroy Morgan.

The Undercover Hippy is UK based singer-songwriter Billy Rowan, who spent 7 years DJโ€™ing and MCโ€™ing on the Drum & Bass circuit, then started The Undercover Hippy as a solo act in 2007 and now plays with a 5 piece band. 100% of proceeds from this track are donated to Palestinian charities: Sanabel Team, The Sameer Project and We Are Not Numbers.

Jazz/Spoken Word

aja monet is a poet, writer, lyricist and activist based in Los Angeles, US. She was the youngest poet to ever hold the title Nuyorican Poets Cafรฉ Grand Slam Champion at the age of 19 in 2007. This song was inspired by Langston Hughes’ 1938 poem, โ€œFor the Kids Who Died.โ€

Meshell Ndegeocello is a singer-songwriter, poet, and bassist. Her music incorporates a wide variety of influences, including funk, soul, jazz, hip hop, reggae and rock. She’s been nominated for 11 Grammys, and won two. This epic 8 minute track is off of her new album, No More Water: The Gospel of James Baldwin, which pays homage to the eminent writer and activist, James Baldwin.

Hip-Hop

Abe Batshon is a Palestinian American songwriter, artist and entrepreneur born in San Francisco and raised in Hayward, California. This single, released in February about the war in Gaza, also features Lebanese singer Samer and Detroit-based Palestinian-American hip hop artist Sammy Shiblaq.

Arrested Development was formed in Atlanta, US, in 1988 by rapper and producer Speech and turntablist Headliner. They were the first hip hop band to win a Grammy for Best New Artist, in 1993. This track is from their new album Bullets In The Chamber, released in January, which is so full of great protest songs, it was hard to pick just one.

Brother Ali is a blind, albino rapper, community activist, and member of the Rhymesayers Entertainment hip hop collective from Minneapolis, US. In this track Ali, who is Muslim, and anti-zionist Jewish producer unJUST tackle Israelโ€™s assault on the Palestinian people. They released this single in March, off of their collaborative album Love and Service which came out in April.

Eddie Mack is an Arab-American Hip-Hop artist from Detroit, US. Mack engineers and produces and writes all of his own music. His distinct sound combines vintage Hip-Hop tracks with contemporary production methods. This sequel to his October 2023 protest song against Israelโ€™s war on Gaza, The Sound Of War, was released in August.

Harris J, AKA โ€œthe Muslim Justin Bieberโ€ is a young British Muslim artist whose debut album, Salam, was released in 2015. This song features rapper Lowkey, an Iraqi-British rapper and activist from London.  These two London-based Muslim artists collaborated on this anti-war track against Israelโ€™s war/genocide in Gaza.

Kimmortal is a Queer Filipina emcee and singer-songwriter based in Vancouver, BC. Their debut album Sincerity was entirely crowd funded by her community. In this follow up to Kimmortalโ€™s November 23โ€™ single against Israelโ€™s war on Gaza, Stop Business As Usual, they feature Toronto R&B/Hip-Hop artist Phoenix Pagliacci of TRPP and  transgender American-Peruvian rapper Bobby Sanchez.

The Seattle star rapper released this follow-up to his viral Spring protest single on September 20th, and performed it live for the first time in Seattle the next day at the Palestine Will Live Forever benefit concert. The track features Palestinian-American artists Anees and Amer Zahr, Gaza-born rapper MC Abdul, and the LA Palestinian Kids Choir. Just like the first song, Macklemore is donating the proceeds from โ€œHindโ€™s Hall 2โ€ to UNRWA.

Considered one of the pioneers of female rap, MC Lyte first gained fame in the late 1980s, becoming the first female rapper to release a full solo album in 1988. Sheโ€™s back after ten years with a brand new album, called โ€˜1 of 1โ€™. In this song MC Lyte, Stevie Wonder, and Common address systemic injustice and the pervasive impact of racism on African Americans.

Rapsody began her career at North Carolina State University, where she joined hip hop collective H2O and its spinoff group Kooley High, despite not having rapped before. She launched her solo career in 2008. This song off her new album Please Donโ€™t Cry is about the police murder of Breonna Taylor, and samples Bob Marleyโ€™s โ€œI Shot the Sheriffโ€.

Metal/Hardcore

Formed in LA in 1990 and fronted by rapper Ice T. who first established himself as a rapper then co-founded the group with lead guitarist Ernie C out of their shared interest in heavy metal music. Body Count have been credited for paving the way for the rise of rap metal and nu metal, even though Ice-T does not rap in most Body Count songs. This track critiques the American two party system, comparing the Democrats and Republicans to warring gangs.

FEVER 333 is a political rap-core trio formed in Inglewood, US, in 2017 by members of Letlive,  Chariot and Night Verses. Originally named The Fever, 333 represents the bandโ€™s three core principles of community, charity and change. This anti-police brutality single, released in August, is off of their new album โ€˜Darker Whiteโ€™, released on October 4th.

English rapper and songwriter of Indian origin. Hyphen had an usual start in music – he  was working in finance and feeling depressed and lacking purpose, and started making music to help him deal with depression, which gave him a new sense of purpose. He released this immigrant rights, anti-1% single this October.

Ren is a Welsh songwriter, musician, rapper, producer, director and disability rights activist, he has had chronic Lyme disease for over 10 years. He was a member of the indie hip-hop band Trick The Fox and the British busking band The Big Push. He released this anti-capitalist single on October 18th.

Serj Tankian is an Armenian-American musician and activist, best known as the lead vocalist, primary lyricist, keyboardist, and occasional rhythm guitarist of the heavy metal band System of a Down, formed in 1994. Tankian says he wrote this song during the early days of System of a Down. Itโ€™s about the Armenian genocide that took place during WWI, and how it still impacts his family and the broader Armenian community.

Tom Morello, is a guitarist, singer-songwriter, and political activist, best known for his tenure with Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave. This new solo single, off his upcoming solo rock album, Morello calls the song โ€œa salute to the transformative power of musicโ€. It features a guest guitar solo by his 13-year-old son, Roman Morello.

Punk

Destroy Boys are a teen punk band from Sacramento, US. Their name was taken from words that singer Violet Mayugba wrote on her chalkboard at home during a period of relationship troubles. This feminist anti-assault/harassment anthem from their new album, Funeral Soundtrack No. 4 features fellow feminist punks Mannequin Pussy, from Philadelphia, and Scowl from Santa Cruz, California.

Dropkick Murphys are Celtic punk band from Massachusetts, US. About this song, frontman Ken Casey says, โ€œFor nearly a decade, the division between red and blue, right and left, has grown deeper, darker and uglierโ€ฆNobody enjoys this more than the billionaires, who are making record profits off the blood, sweat, and tears of the working classโ€ฆ They love it when we fight amongst ourselves, because their biggest fear is us joining together to come after themโ€ฆTHE REAL ENEMY.โ€

Punk rock band from Santa Cruz, US, formed in 1986. Known for their energetic sound and thought-provoking lyrics, the band briefly disbanded before reuniting in 2012. They released this protest single as a call to action ahead of the U.S. election on October 22nd.

Lady Parts is a band created for the British sitcom, We Are Lady Parts, created, written, and directed by Nida Manzoor, who alongside her siblings, also writes and supervises the music for the show. The series follows a British punk rock band named Lady Parts, which consists entirely of Muslim women. This track is off the showโ€™s soundtrack, We Are Lady Parts (Music From The Original Series – Seasons 1 & 2) released May 31st.

Lambrini Girls are a queer feminist three-piece punk band from Brighton, UK, known for their energetic, emotive lyrics and political commentary. About this single released in February the band said  โ€œโ€™Gods Countryโ€™ is our long, overdue call-out of the government and rise of the far right… We have the audacity to call our country โ€˜Greatโ€™. So we ask you, โ€˜Are you sure?โ€

This 7-member Irish Folk Punk Band from Germany, started out as a duo, playing in small barns and pubs as โ€œThe Oโ€™Reillys,โ€ and a little later mutual friends joined them as the โ€œPaddyhatsโ€ and turned the duo into a full band. This anti-fascist song is โ€œdirected against political and social currents that endanger democracy โ€“ and calls on people to speak up, rise up and fight together for freedom and justice.โ€

Pop punk band with grunge influences founded in Baltimore, US in 2019, after the three members met at Johns Hopkins University. Pinkshift has used their platform to advocate for racial diversity, Palestine, and gender inclusivity. This anti-Trump song began its life as an โ€œanti-fascist poemโ€ written by vocalist Ashrita Kumar.

DJ General Strikeโ€™s Top 40 Protest Songs of Summer 2024

Greetings comrades, this is DJ General Strike, host of the weekly protest music radio show, Protest Tunes on 91.3 KBCS FM in Seattle, WA. I broadcast 2 hours of radical protest music of all genres and eras every Wednesday at 9 PM. Every quarter, I put together a radio show and playlist of my favorite new protest songs released that season, which I call โ€œmolotov hot tracks.โ€ This Summer saw the release of many great protest songs, most notably songs about the upcoming US presidential election and songs against Israelโ€™s ongoing war/genocide in Gaza.ย  I aired most of these songs on my show last Wednesday 9/25, (during the stationโ€™s Fall fund drive) which you can listen to an archive of here. Iโ€™ve organized these 40 protest songs by genre below (and alphabetically within genre). You can also listen to all 40 songs on this Spotify Playlist. I hope you all are inspired by these molotov hot tracks!

Folk

Carsie Blanton – Ugly Nasty Commie Bitch

Carsie Blanton is a singer-songwriter and guitarist based in New Orleans. Blanton says she โ€œwrites anthems for a world worth saving.” She describes this one minute viral song, which was inspired by some internet trolls, as โ€œa new song to unify the working class.โ€œ


Crys Matthews – The Difference Between – (feat. Melody Walker & Chris Housman)

Crys Matthews is a former drum major and clarinetist turned folk singer, who is using her voice to answer MLKโ€™s call to be “a drum major for justice.”   About this song she said “This is a reclamation not just of the space Black artists have been denied in Country and Americana music, not just of the space LGBTQ people have been denied in communities of faith, not just of the autonomy women have been denied over our own bodies, but a reclamation of the South that raised me.โ€


Jesse Welles – The Poor

Jesse Welles, AKA Welles, is a singer-songwriter and guitarist from Arkansas. Welles was also the frontman of the bands Dead Indian, formed in 2012, and Cosmic-American, formed in 2015. In 2024, Welles garnered attention on social media for authoring and performing folk protest songs, like this one.  He released an album of these protest songs called Hells Welles, in July.


Sister Wife Sex Strike – From the River to the Sea

Sister Wife Sex Strike is a Seattle-based anarchist folk punk band comprised of Sister Pigeon and Sister Moth. The band’s name is inspired by a real life sex strike that they went on in 2021. They released this anti-zionist single on July 4th, off their new album Sister Wife Sex Change, which dropped August 2nd.

Rock and Roll

Ghost – The Future Is A Foreign Land

Ghost  is a Swedish rock band known for combining theatricality, heavy metal, and arena rock, formed in 2006. Renowned for their costumed stage presence, Ghost’s members are known as “Nameless Ghouls” and the lead-singer is called “Papa Emeritus”. The track is off the soundtrack of Ghostโ€™s debut movie, Rite Here, Rite Now.


Scarlet Rebels – How Much Is Enough

Scarlet Rebels are a five-piece melodic rock band from Llanelli, South Wales, formed in 2018. They’re known for their efforts to raise money and collect donations for local food banks and charities. This track is off their new album, โ€œWhere The Colours Meetโ€ released in August.


Sleater-Kinney – Here Today

Sleater-Kinney are a riot girl turned indie rock band formed in Olympia, WA in 1994 by Corin Tucker of  Heavens to Betsy  and Carrie Brownstein of  Excuse 17. The group’s name derives from Sleater Kinney Road, where they used to practice together. This single released September 3rd will be a bonus track on the deluxe version of Little Rope coming out in October.

R&B/Pop

She Drew The Gun – Mirrors

She Drew The Gun is a psych pop band known for its often political lyrics, from Wirral, England. Louisa Roach, started She Drew the Gun in 2013 as a solo project, then expanded it to a four-piece band in 2015. About this song, Roach said โ€œit’s about trying to heal, and about getting sick of trying to heal but also about how healing in a neoliberal world is also recognising your oppression.โ€


Stevie Wonder – Can We Fix Our Nation’s Broken Heart

The 74 year old living legend, had his first Billboard No. 1 hit at the age of 12, and has won 25 Grammys (the most by any solo artist). This is Stevieโ€™s first new song since 2020, which encourages people to get involved and seize the crucial moment that the country and the world find themselves in right now.


Tune Yards – Rally

Tune Yards is an Oakland-based music project of Merrill Garbus and Nate Brenner. Their music draws from an eclectic variety of sources and uses elements such as loop pedals, ukulele, vocals, and lo-fi percussion. Rally was a bonus new track on the 10th anniversary deluxe reissue of their 2014 album Nikki Nack, released 8/9.


Zeshan B – Change (Is On the Way)

Zeshan B is an Indian-American singer, multi-instrumentalist, songwriter and recording artist from Chicago. He started his music career as an opera singer, but early on in his opera career, he formed a world music string band with some of his colleagues and left the world of opera behind him. This hopeful song is off his new protest songs album O Say, Can You See? released in late July. 

Reggae/Ska

AHI – My People

AHI is a Canadian singer-songwriter, of Western Caribbean descent, from Toronto. His stage is an acronym of his full name Ahkinoah Habah Izarh.  About his songs, AHI says, โ€œI write the songs I need to hear. I share them just in case someone else might need them too.โ€ AHI released this black pride single August 16th.


Arivu – Billions

Arivu, is an Indian composer, rapper, singer and songwriter. He was a member of  The Casteless Collective and leads the 10-piece band Ambassa, founded in 2022. He is best known for his independent singles, like this one. This global justice song is off Arivuโ€™s new album Valliama Peraandi, released in July.


DJ Pamplona & Soom T – War and Bombs

DJ Pamplona is an independent audio engineer from Rio de Janeiro Brazil, of the group Dub Ataque. He is now based in Florida where he owns his own studio and record label, Pamplona Beats. This anti-war on Gaza song features Soom T, a Scottish reggae singer of Indian origin.


Peetah Morgan, Zion I Kings – Who Run the World

Zion I Kings, a family of producers and musicians from three respected roots production houses, finished and released this posthumous track by the late Peetah Morgan in July. Peetah, who passed away on February 25th, was the lead singer of Grammy-winning  contemporary reggae band Morgan Heritage, formed in 1994 by five children of reggae artist Denroy Morgan.

Jazz/Swing/Spoken Word

Cats and Dinosaurs – Neoliberalism Is Dead

Cats and Dinosaurs, known as โ€œthe worldยดs most radical swing band,โ€ are a socialist and feminist swing collective from Gothenburg, Sweden. They make vintage jazz and blues music with political lyrics, and stop motion music videos in Swedish and English.


Meshell Ndegeocello – Tsunami Rising

Meshell Ndegeocello is a singer-songwriter, poet, and bassist. Her music incorporates a wide variety of influences, including funk, soul, jazz, hip hop, reggae and rock. She’s been nominated for 11 Grammys, and won two. This epic 8-minute track is off her new album, No More Water: The Gospel of James Baldwin, which pays homage to the eminent writer and activist James Baldwin.


Morley – Where Are We

Born and raised in New York City, Morley, blends jazz, soul, and folk traditions with lyrics about human rights and environmental justice. This song is about healing ancestral trauma and building a better future for the next generation. The chorus is a traditional hymn from Nigeria, sung in Yoruba, meaning, “Giving thanks to the most high.”

Hip-Hop

Eddie Mack – The Sound Of War, Pt. 2

Eddie Mack is an Arab-American Hip-Hop artist from Detroit. Mack engineers and produces and writes all of his own music. His distinct sound combines vintage Hip-Hop tracks with contemporary production methods. This sequel to his October 2023 protest song against Israelโ€™s war on Gaza, The Sound Of War, was released in August.


Harris J ft. Lowkey – Hourriya (Freedom)

Harris J, AKA โ€œthe Muslim Justin Bieberโ€ is a young British Muslim artist whose debut album, Salam, was released in 2015. This song features rapper Lowkey, an Iraqi-British rapper and activist from London.  These two London-based Muslim artists collaborated on this anti-war track against Israelโ€™s war/genocide in Gaza.


Heems, Vijay Iyer – Manto 

Heems is an Indian-American rapper from Queens, New York, best known for being part of the alternative hip hop groups Das Racist and Swet Shop Boys.  Heems is also an activist and board member with the South Asian community organization SEVA.  This song is about the 1947 partition of India and Pakistan, and features Indian-American composer and pianist Vijay Iyer.


Hyphen – Deskjob

Hyphen is an English rapper and songwriter of Indian origin. He was working in finance and feeling depressed and lacking purpose, and started making music to help him deal with depression, which gave him a new sense of purpose. Hyphen said this song is โ€œabout corporate life sucking a** while being at work is weird and disorientingโ€.


Macklemore – Hind’s Hall 2

The Seattle star rapper released this follow-up to his viral Spring protest single on September 20th, and performed it live for the first time in Seattle the next day at the Palestine Will Live Forever benefit concert. The track features Palestinian-American artists Anees and Amer Zahr, Gaza-born rapper MC Abdul, and the LA Palestinian Kids Choir. Just like the first song, Macklemore is donating the proceeds from โ€œHindโ€™s Hall 2โ€ to UNRWA.

MC Lyte – Change Your Ways (feat. Stevie Wonder and Common)

Considered one of the pioneers of female rap, MC Lyte first gained fame in the late 1980s, becoming the first female rapper to release a full solo album in 1988. Sheโ€™s back after ten years with a brand new album, called โ€˜1 of 1โ€™. In this song MC Lyte, Stevie Wonder, and Common address systemic injustice and the pervasive impact of racism on African Americans.


Old Boy Rhymes – American Pyramids (feat. Mr Lif & Sage Francis)

Alaska-born, third world-raised OldBoy Rhymes, released his debut album in August on Sage Francisโ€™ Strange Famous Records. About his stage name, he said โ€œI donโ€™t believe a no-name nobody has ever dropped a debut album from out of nowhere, in their late 30โ€™s, featuring a bunch of genre icons.โ€ On โ€œAmerican Pyramids,โ€ all three emcees liken the American currency structure to a large pyramid scheme.


Wax and Eric Krasno – Things Are Changin (feat. Marlon Craft)

Indie rap legend Wax and modern funk guitarist Eric Krasno (AKA Kraz), have been friends and occasional collaborators for many years and released their epic collaborative album LIGHT YEARS this August. This track features NYC-based Rapper Marlon Craft, known for his politically conscious lyricism and throwback jazzy beats.

Metal/Hardcore

BODY COUNT – F**k What You Heard

Formed in LA in 1990, fronted by rapper Ice-T who first established himself as a rapper then co-founded the group with lead guitarist Ernie C out of their shared interest in heavy metal music. Body Count have been credited for paving the way for the rise of rap metal and nu metal, even though Ice-T does not rap in most Body Count songs. This track critiques the American two party system, comparing the Democrats and Republicans to warring gangs.


Corporate Avenger- War Is Won

Corporate Avenger are an 8 member native rap metal band from Southern California, including members of The Kottonmouth Kings,  20 Dead Flower Children & No Doubt. Their first album in 2001 was met with backlash by conservative and religious watchdog groups leading to some retailers refusing to stock their album. This single which dropped August 31st is their first release in 19 years.


FEVER 333 – No Hostages

FEVER 333 is a political rap-core trio formed in Inglewood, California, in 2017 by members of Letlive,  Chariot and Night Verses. Originally named The Fever, 333 represents the bandโ€™s three core principles of community, charity and change. This anti-police brutality single, released in August, is off their new album โ€˜Darker Whiteโ€™, set for release on October 04.


Serj Tankian – Justice Will Shine On

Serj Tankian is an Armenian-American musician and activist, best known as the lead vocalist, primary lyricist, keyboardist, and occasional rhythm guitarist of the heavy metal band System of a Down, formed in 1994. Tankian says he wrote this song during the early days of System of a Down. Itโ€™s about the Armenian genocide that took place during WWI, and how it still impacts his family and the broader Armenian community.

Punk

Chasing Ghosts – Amnesia Everybody

Chasing Ghosts are an Australian-Aboriginal-lead indie-punk band. According to the band, โ€˜Amnesia Everybodyโ€˜ is about โ€œnon-indigenous Australians and their failure to acknowledge not just the atrocities of our past, but in also choosing to not think about them at all. Instead, a different history arose in Australia โ€“ one of negative stereotypes that victim-blamed First Nations Peoples for our own marginalisation and systematic decimation.โ€


CLAMM – Define Free

CLAMM are a Melbourne-based Australian punk trio. Their songs are about โ€œtrying to navigate systems of power and oppression while retaining a healthy sense of self and mental health.โ€ About this song, off their new EP Disembodiment, the band says โ€œDefine Free speaks to the idea that even within the privilege of a first world country, how free is the individual?โ€


Destroy Boys – You Hear Yes (feat. Mannequin Pussy, and Scowl)

Destroy Boys are a teen punk band from Sacramento, CA. Their name was taken from words that singer Violet Mayugba wrote on her chalkboard at home during a period of relationship troubles. This feminist anti-assault/harassment anthem from their new album, Funeral Soundtrack No. 4 features fellow feminist punks Mannequin Pussyfrom Philadelphia, and Scowl from Santa Cruz, California.


Mike and the Molotovs – Monarchy in the USA  

Mike and the Molotovs are a country punk band, self-described as “Spaghetti Punkโ€ฆserving up fresh satire and catchy anti-corporate rock and roll.โ€ Theyโ€™re a supergroup made up of country and punk luminaries based in Phoenix, Arizona. This song is the title track off their 6-song EP of irreverent working-class anthems, โ€œMonarchy in the USA,โ€ released in August.


Millie Manders and The Shutup – Me Too

London born, classically-trained multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Millie Manders, formerly of Second Sense, launched her solo career in 2013 and formed her punk band โ€œThe Shutupโ€ in 2015. This song, inspired by the #MeToo movement against sexual violence is off their new album Wake Up, Shut Up, Work released in August.


The Oozes – Piggies In Blankets (feat. Grove)

The Oozes are Queer-Punk band from London. Their music โ€œcentres trans liberation, opposing the conventional, embracing the bizarre and uplifting the oppressed.โ€ This anti-police brutality track features Jamaican-British rapper, Grove, a genre-defying, non-binary femme artist based in Bristol.


The O’Reilly’s and the Paddyhats – Rise Up, Tear Down

This 7-member Irish Folk Punk Band from Germany, started out as a duo, playing in small barns and pubs as โ€œThe Oโ€™Reillys,โ€ and a little later mutual friends joined them as the โ€œPaddyhatsโ€ and turned the duo into a full band. This anti-fascist song is โ€œdirected against political and social currents that endanger democracy โ€“ and calls on people to speak up, rise up and fight together for freedom and justice.โ€


Problem Patterns – I Think You Should Leave

Problem Patterns are โ€œfour shouty queers who write songs for right now.โ€ They don’t have a front person, they swap instruments and roles to ensure that each member of the group has a voice. This single, released at the end of June, tackles negative attitudes towards their hometown of Belfast and was inspired by a journalist who disparaged Northern Ireland.


Rent Strike – Escape from Mobius Strip Mall

Rent Strike are a Lansing, MI based folk punk band.   Their sound falls somewhere in the intersection between folk, indie, punk, metal, and jazz. This prison abolitionist song which โ€œaims to explore and free the listener from the titular psychic prison apparatusโ€ is off their upcoming album Mรถbius Strip Mall, due out October 4th.


Zebrahead – Doomsday on the Radio

Zebrahead is a punk rock band from La Habra, California, formed in 1996.  All 4 band members, whose bands at the time shared the same practice space, met each other experimenting with different music styles together. This led to them all leaving their old bands and forming Zebrahead. About this song the band said โ€œWhen the world gives you lemons in the news and mediaโ€ฆmake some f**king lemonade and embrace it.โ€