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1* "So Far Away" by Music/AvengedSevenfold is not hesitant to show how painful it really is to lose your friend. They are just as important as your parents and without them, you'll feel lost and empty. It also shows that life really is worth living and people should take care of others.
2* Orphaned Land. A Middle Eastern metal band, nearly every one of their songs [[VengeanceFeelsEmpty is about how pointless]], [[RevengeBeforeReason destructive, and futile]] the CycleOfRevenge in the area is. Their song "All Is One" hits this hardest with its plea to the listener to break the cycle:
3-->Evil falls on each of us, that's nothing new.\
4Who cares if you're a Muslim or a Jew?\
5The awakened ones are nothing but a few,\
6And the one to make the difference now is you!
7* "The Last Stop" by the Music/DaveMatthewsBand calls people who kill "in the name of God" out as {{hypocrite}}s throughout the entirety of the song, showing how destructive and evil this mindset is.
8* Music/FiveFingerDeathPunch's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ptzzU7jFQwo Coming Down]]" shows the kinds of things that could make a person be DrivenToSuicide... but at the same time, shows how one friend, one family member, one person who cares could stop them from doing it. The screen at the video's end says it all:
9-->'''[[ThePowerOfFriendship ONE FRIEND COULD SAVE A LIFE]].'''
10** Same goes for Music/{{Nickelback}}'s "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_wfoY56JGc&ab_channel=RoadrunnerRecords Lullaby]]"... just read the Youtube comments.
11** The well-known "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cjVQ36NhbMk How to Save a Life]]" by Music/TheFray is this anvil dropped from orbit.
12* Don Henley's "Dirty Laundry" is a none-too-subtle attack on mass media for the way it victimizes people and trivializes tragedy and heartbreak. It's become a ''lot'' more relevant since it was first released.
13* Music/TheClash. Corporatism, Thatcherism, Industrialism, and the Vietnam War. All songs are, naturally, still very relevant today.
14* In [[Literature/ChildBallads Francis Child's collection of ballads]], the annotation for "Sir Hugh, Or the Jew's Daughter" (Child #155), one of the trope originators of the "blood libel"[[note]]The claim that Jews kill Christian children as HumanSacrifice or just ForTheEvulz[[/note]] is a lengthy explanation of how this belief is wrong and has had horrible consequences for numerous innocent people as when Child compiled the collection in the late 1800s. Given that some people ''still'' believe in the blood libel, this was probably an anvil which needed to be dropped.
15* ''The Last Of The Great Whales'' by Music/TheDubliners. It features this killer of EmpathicEnvironment: ''This morning the sun did rise crimson in the north sky. The ice was the color of blood and the winds, they did sigh.'' Obviously it's a song against whaling.
16* Music/{{Eagles}}:
17** "Life in the Fast Lane" - It's entirely possible to live life ''too'' fast - and the end result will inevitably be to crash and burn.
18** "Lyin' Eyes" - Don't settle for someone who's good right now, and don't pursue sex for its own sake. You'll just end up with a broken heart, wondering about what could have been. "Ain't it funny how your new life didn't change things? You're still the same old girl you used to be."
19** "New Kid in Town" - You may be the hot thing right now, but you can, and ''will'', be replaced eventually.
20** "The Last Resort" - Deals with the devastation of both the natural beauty and the native cultures of the American West, all in the name of "Manifest Destiny". Writer Don Henley has called it a song about "how the West was lost".
21** "Desperado" - "You better let somebody love you before it's too late."
22** "Get Over It" - QuitYourWhining. Stop blaming your problems on everybody else, and quit looking for a FreudianExcuse, because [[FreudianExcuseIsNoExcuse that's not an excuse to not get better]]. If your life sucks, stop complaining and do something about it.
23---> "Victim of this, victim of that; your mama's too thin, and your daddy's too fat? Get over it!"
24** "Already Gone" - You must not be deceived by the various people and things you encounter throughout life. In the context of this song, it seems like the singer may have done just that, pretending to be in a happy relationship when he really had his mind made up. "So often times it happens that we live our lives in chains, and we never even know we have the key."
25* Music/MarvinGaye's "What's Going On", one of the most beautiful, effective {{protest song}}s ever written.
26* "Handlebars" by the Flobots. The clear development from childhood ambitions to being DrunkWithPower is downright chilling in its bluntness.
27* "The Message" by Music/GrandmasterFlashAndTheFuriousFive: [[DamnItFeelsGoodToBeAGangster The thug life is attractive when you're young and directionless]] and think that [[CoolPeopleRebelAgainstAuthority doing things the right way is for fools]], but will destroy your life and lead to violent and humiliating ends.
28* Music/{{Eminem}} is, all things considered, very good at this trope.
29** The album ''Relapse'' drops the anvil of 'Drugs will fuck your life up, and it takes a lot of work to fix it' like an A-Bomb.
30** The track "Beautiful" says in no uncertain terms that you should never let anyone tell you your worth as a human being; everyone is beautiful in his or her own way, and everyone who says otherwise can go hang.
31** "Stan" has "Maybe we should act as though everything we do changes someone's life, because maybe it does" and "There's more to your life than being obsessed with a musician you enjoy".
32** "When I'm Gone" says "Love your family and be there for your children, because they're the most important things in life." In the song itself, Eminem even gives a HypocrisyNod where he admits that he's trying to provide for his daughter, while he knows deep down that he's messing her up from always being away and constantly starting battles with the mother of his kids.
33** "Headlights" says that no matter how much bad blood you have with someone, it's never too late to apologize and try to make amends.
34** "Sing for the Moment" is a scathing criticism of the NewMediaAreEvil attitude in general, "OMG rap is corrupting our children!" in particular.
35* Gordon Lightfoot's "Ode to Big Blue" is as clear as can be in its condemnation of whaling, which at the time of the song's original release had driven many species to the edge of extinction -- and driven some past it.
36** Also "The Canadian Railroad Trilogy", which is a commentary on how many people died for the sake of "progress" during the building of the Canadian Pacific Railroad, and how many of them were Chinese migrants who were paid much less than their Caucasian counterparts.
37** Yet another Gordon Lightfoot song is his 1968 "Black Day in July", about the 1967 Detroit race riots. Radio stations in 30 states banned the song, fearing that it would incite further violence.
38-->Why can't we all be brothers?
39-->Why can't we live in peace?
40-->But the hands of the have-nots keep falling out of reach...
41* "I Was Only Nineteen/A Walk In The Light Green" by Australian folk rock protest band Redgum and covered by the Herd manages to completely explain the horrors of the Vietnam war and the stupidity of war in general.
42** Redgum's other works can be much less subtle than "I Was Only Nineteen": songs about selling off land to foreign countries ("Lear Jets Over Kulgera", "The Last Frontier"), racial relations ("Carrington Cabaret", "Maria") and other topical issues abound in their discography. Even at the end of their career, they released a song about safe sex that was as direct as they could make it ("Roll It On Robbie").
43* Music/EricBogle:
44** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WG48Ftsr3OI And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda]]" is an extraordinarily powerful anti-war song, not at all subtle in its message.
45** Similarly, his song "No Man's Land" (covered by, among others, Music/DropkickMurphys and Music/TheHighKings as "The Green Fields of France").
46--->Now young Willy [=McBride=], I can't help but wonder, why?\
47Do those that lie here know why did they die?\
48And did they believe when they answered the call?\
49Did they really believe that this war would end wars?\
50For the sorrow, the suffering, the glory, the shame\
51The killing and dying were all done in vain\
52For young Willy [=McBride=] it all happened again\
53And again, and again, and again, and again
54** Also, his song "My Youngest Son Came Home Today" (sometimes mistakenly believed to have been written by Billy Bragg, who covered it).
55* No one would call John [=McCutcheon=]'s "Christmas in the Trenches" subtle, but grown men have been driven to tears by it.
56--> "And on each end of the rifle we're the same"
57** Jona Lewie's "Stop The Cavalry" has pretty much the same message, but people hear it as a cute Christmas song.
58* Music/BlackSabbath's "War Pigs" wouldn't gain anything by being subtle.
59* Music/RiseAgainst's song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XP4clbHc4Xg Make It Stop (September's Children)]]" explicitly deals with the bullying and harassment LGBT youth face. According to lead singer [=Tim McIlrath,=] "The message is: It can get better, it does get better, give it a chance to get better, don't end your life prematurely." [=McIlrath=] was also concerned that hard rock could be considered a vehicle for homophobia, as historically the genre has been LGBT-unfriendly, and wanted to make a song to counter such concerns.
60* Music/MichaelJackson - "Man in the Mirror" [1987]. It even hangs a lampshade:
61-->"I'm starting with the man in the mirror\
62I'm asking him to change his ways\
63And no message could have been any clearer,\
64If you wanna make the world a better place\
65Take a look at yourself and make a change"
66** The videos for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4Hcd60VoRM "Earth Song"]] and "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=97nAvTVeR6o They Don't Really Care About Us]]" also qualify (as if the songs themselves didn't drop the hammer heavily enough).
67** Also, "Black or White", about racism and accepting people for who they are.
68** The song "Beat It" bluntly warns people against getting into dangerous confrontations to look tough.
69* Pagan Altar's "Armageddon", "The Interlude", and "The Aftermath", meant to be listened to in sequence, describe a nuclear war that obliterates human civilization.
70-->"Chariots of fire rode roughshod through the world,\
71Men of vision stood ridiculed, seen but never heard.\
72Cries of disillusionment were drowned by man's desire\
73And the need for mass destruction\
74Fueled the raging fire."
75* Music/AtTheDriveIn often has [[WordSaladLyrics hard to decipher lyrics]] but the points in a few songs still stand clear.
76** ”Invalid Litter Dept.”: If a government sees it fit to cover up crimes instead of stopping them from happening, they might as well be supporting those acts.
77** ”Incurably Innocent”: Sexual assault is wrong, and no one should be afraid to speak out about it, regardless of what position of authority the offender had.
78* Music/JohnLennon's entire solo career revolves around WarIsHell anvils. He gave up on subtlety with so many of his Beatles songs (and those of the other group members) being [[EveryoneIsJesusInPurgatory misinterpreted]], the ultimate example being the Charles Manson murders. He wanted to make it very clear what messages he was sending.
79** "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)"
80** Also "Give Peace A Chance" and "Working Class Hero".
81* The oeuvre of Music/BruceSpringsteen is filled with several of these.
82* Music/TheCranberries song "Zombie" takes aim at UsefulNotes/TheTroubles and war in general. When the song came out (1994), The Troubles had been going on for almost eighty years [[note]] In fact, the lyrics state "It's the same old theme since 1916." [[/note]] and the Warrington bombing (which inspired the song) had killed two young boys the previous year.
83* Gladys Knight and the Pips, "Midnight Train to Georgia": Stardom isn't important; love is. People who truly love you will stand by you no matter what happens.
84* Bob Marley - "Redemption Song."
85* Franco De Vita's "No basta" has the anvil "It isn't enough satisfying your offspring's material needs and wants, you also must ''care'' for them and give then moral guidance and emotional support before they get it in other places (or substances) and before they become too old to even consider hearing you". It's like a VerySpecialEpisode in 4 minutes, but it's also one of his best songs, and, given that the song is very obviously directed to fathers (which in Latin America tend to be the biggest absence in many a kid's upbringing, even if they ''are'' living with the mother), that anvil is a very needed one.
86* Folk songs. Only when the songs themselves aren't totally anvilicious to begin with. Good examples from Bob Dylan: "Masters of War," "Oxford Town," "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll," and especially "With God on Our Side:"
87-->If God's on our side,
88-->He'll stop the next war
89** Music/PhilOchs was a particularly cutting 60s folk singer whose Anviliciousness was offset with biting wit, particularly in "Outside of a Small Circle Of Friends" (an anti-apathy song) and "Love Me, I'm a Liberal" (about the hypocrisy of mainstream leftists — it was even updated in the 90s by Jello Biafra!)
90* Music/CrosbyStillsNashAndYoung's "Ohio" isn't at all subtle. And works substantially better because of it. CSN's "Wooden Ships" probably qualifies as well.
91** Music/NeilYoung, who wrote the song, abandoned subtlety again in 2006 with the ''Living with War'' album. Dissent against Pres. Bush was discouraged, even [[http://www.brendan-nyhan.com/blog/2006/07/playing_the_tre.html labeled "treason"]] whether spoken in the press or by fellow politicians. The title track says "I never bow to the laws of the [[SecretPolice Thought Police]]". Another song declares "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4kTnP5VJ1k Let's Impeach The President]]". It was so {{anvilicious}} that it rated a satirical promo on ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' in which Young was credited with an album called ''I Do Not Agree With Many Of This Administration's Policies''.
92*** In an interview a year after that was released, Young revealed that people had been spontaneously hugging him on the street and saying "Thank you, Neil." He said he realized just how badly UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror had been terrorizing the people it was meant to protect.
93** Stephen Stills' "Find the Cost of Freedom" also counts
94--> I think I see a valley\
95[[UsefulNotes/AmericanCivilWar Covered in bones in blue]]\
96All the brave soldiers\
97Who'll never get older\
98Been askin' after you
99* Music/{{U2}} aren't at all subtle about their beliefs and opinions, although the actual ''songs'' are usually too subtle to be called {{anvilicious}}, in that there's usually some room for interpretation. Not always, though:
100** "Sunday, Bloody Sunday"
101** "Rejoice" (''"I can't change the world / But I can change the world in me"'')
102** "Silver and Gold"
103** "Mothers of the Disappeared"
104** "Peace on Earth"
105** "Love and Peace or Else"
106** "Original of the Species"
107** "Crumbs From Your Table"
108** They once did a joint song with Music/GreenDay, called "The Saints Are Coming", which has an underlying message of not giving up, no matter what, you fight for your life if it's in danger. The fact that it was raised ''to help survivors of Hurricane Katrina'', and that the video is part the two playing and part ''news clips of Katrina'' doesn't hurt the message.
109** More than that -- they showed what ''should've'' happened. The sight of military aircraft dropping aid supplies and a tank pulling a stranded ambulance through a flooded street are not ones that quickly leave. The last sign in the video saying "As NOT shown on television" left the message totally unambiguous.
110* This list wouldn't be complete without ''The Legend of Billy Jack'', aka ''One Tin Soldier''. Peace on Earth, indeed.
111-->''Now they stood beside the treasure''
112-->''On the mountain dark and red''
113-->''Turned the stone and looked beneath it''
114-->Peace on Earth ''was all it said.''
115* Bruce Hornsby's ''The Way It Is'', and its equally good remake by Music/TupacShakur, retitled ''Changes''.
116--> '''Hornsby's version:'''
117--> ''They say hey little boy, you can't go where the others go''
118--> ''Cuz you don't look like they do''
119--> ''Say hey old man, how can you stand to think that way''
120--> ''Did you really think about it before you made the rules''
121--> ''He said Son''
122--> ''That's just the way it is, some things will never change''
123--> ''That's just the way it is,'' '''oh but don't you believe them'''
124
125--> '''Tupac's breakdown:'''
126--> ''We gotta make a change...''
127--> ''It's time for us as a people to start makin' some changes.''
128--> ''Let's change the way we eat, let's change the way we live''
129--> ''and let's change the way we treat each other.''
130--> ''You see the old way wasn't working so it's on us to do''
131--> ''what we gotta do, to survive.''
132* While political punk music basically ''is'' this trope, Propagandhi do it particularly well. They manage to sum up their entire ideology in a couple of lines at the end of the two-minute song ''Resisting Tyrannical Government'':
133-->''And yes, I recognise the irony: the system I oppose affords me the luxury of biting the hand that feeds. That's exactly why privileged fucks like me should feel obliged to whine and kick and scream -- until everyone has everything they need.''
134* Music/{{Queen}} was no stranger to this, including ''Is this the World we Created?'' especially in their ''Live Aid'' performance, the song that became a Trope Namer: "WhoWantsToLiveForever", and "Hammer To Fall".
135%% Kenny Chesney's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9-r5qtq2hM The Good Stuff]]".
136* Australian band ''The Cat Empire'' has the song ''The Chariot'':
137--> "this song is written 'bout my friends\
138it's engraved into this song so they know I'm not forgetting them\
139Maybe if the world contain[s] more people like these\
140The the news would not be telling me 'bout all our warfare endlessly..."
141%% The Phil Collins solo effort "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qt2mbGP6vFI Another Day In Paradise]]".
142* Music/TaylorSwift's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pb-K2tXWK4w Fifteen]]". When every song on Top 40 radio or Radio Creator/{{Disney}} is a {{Silly Love Song|s}} about finding the boy that you'll be with for the rest of your life (when it's not about [[IntercourseWithYou having sex]]), hearing a song telling girls ''not'' to look for love in HighSchool comes as quite a shock. It's a message that a lot more girls in middle and high school should be paying attention to.
143* Music/ElvisPresley's song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Ox1Tore9nw In the Ghetto]]" is a clear condemnation of the cycle of violence and poverty of the ghettos, and of the apathy the problems of those communities receive.
144* Music/{{Sugizo}}'s solo songs "Spirituarise" and "No More Machine Guns, Play The Guitar," which are about, respectively, respect for the world and everyone's responsibilty to save it and ending war.
145* Music/LArcEnCiel's songs "Hoshizora" and "As One," which are incredibly strong and incredibly powerful anti-war messages. Don't believe us? Watch Hoshizora (which was written by Hyde as a protest of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq) live on Youtube. Hyde is practically ''sobbing'' as he sings the last line.
146* The film ''{{Theatre/Dreamgirls}}'' had a segment in which Jimmy and the girls "tried to do something new", and recorded a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a83ksByRDtw quasi-protest song]] over the Vietnam war. Curtis, however, was quick to prevent the track's release because it was a "message song".
147* Music/{{Yellowcard}}'s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzzKcpEvrQ8 Two Weeks From Twenty]]. War is everyone's fault.
148* Coolio's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6voHeEa3ig Gangsta's Paradise]]" bluntly depicts the horrors of gang violence and deconstructs the glorified lifestyle that rap culture creates around it. And to drive the nail home even further, it was released around the same time that several well-known rappers were murdered, including Music/TheNotoriousBIG and Music/TupacShakur. Both are believed to be gang related.
149* Music/NineInchNails' album Year Zero dropped the anvil on oppressive governments and, well, [[http://www.ninwiki.com/Year_Zero_Research a lot of things]].
150* Music/{{Loudness}} has done this repeatedly. See ProtestSong on their page. Among others, WarIsHell is a VERY common theme, but everything from spammers to meta on HeavyMetal to animal testing to religion has gotten its turn.
151* Music/XJapan:
152** "Week End" and its promotional video: The CycleOfRevenge and violence in general, whether directed at self as suicide or at others, only leads to more violence and more death, and the end of a life is the end of the world -- at least for the person dying.
153** "Art of Life": Face one's emotional pain and acknowledge it rather than silence oneself. Understand suicidal feelings have meaning, but that ''living'' is a better option than suicide, ''even if life is painful and confusing and difficult.''
154** "Tears": Grief is a real and painful experience.
155** "Without You": The above, plus don't hurt the people you love and who love you, because you ''will'' regret it, and even in loss one must live on.
156* [[Music/TaijiSawada D.T.R.]]
157** "Voices From The Dead": WarIsHell, and an incredibly pointless source of pain and suffering often inflicted via CollateralDamage for reasons many of its victims don't even know or care about.
158** "Empty Room": Mental illness and loss (whether it be financial, social, or otherwise) are isolating and painful experiences, and it is possible to be "all alone in the crowd." This one is even HarsherInHindsight with what eventually happened to the writer in RealLife -- there were ''so many'' people who could have done something to prevent his final breakdown and death, yet no one did.
159** "So What": Fame rarely brings true friends, and the GroupieBrigade, the FalseFriend, and gossips are ''not'' true friends. Don't be them, and if you're a position to earn any of these, don't trust them.
160* [[Music/HidetoMatsumoto hide]]:
161** "Bacteria" and its PV: Fascism and totalitarianism are mundane, common, infectious, and ''must'' be resisted.
162** "Beauty and Stupid": Sex is often emotionally complicated and confusing even when physically desired, and unlike tropes that equate sex with a given set of emotions say, ''that is okay.''
163** "Genkai Haretsu" and its PV: Believe SexIsEvilAndIAmHorny? Congratulations, [[TakeThatAudience you]] [[RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil are the]] [[ILoveTheDead necrophiliac]] VillainProtagonist!
164** "Pink Spider": BeYourself - even if doing so is taking a huge chance.
165** "Pose": ''Everybody wants to be somebody,'' and secondarily, fame isn't necessarily the best road to that.
166** "Oblaat": There are many people happy to lose themselves in mindless pursuits and live stupidly, while ignoring problems. Don't be one of them.
167** "What's Up Mr. Jones": Selling out as an artist is ''not'' a good thing, not even for the one who does it -- waking up and acknowledging one has done it is.
168* Music/FrankZappa dropped so many anvils in his time, it was like "Anvil Chorus", but the anvils never took away from the music. Some ''particularly'' anvilicious albums:
169-->''Music/FreakOut'' (well, every other song)
170-->''Music/AbsolutelyFree''
171-->''Music/WereOnlyInItForTheMoney''
172-->''Music/JoesGarage''
173-->''Music/YouAreWhatYouIs''
174-->''Music/ThingFish''
175* Music/JethroTull drops them by the megaton, but this just makes their music all the more brilliant. Some of ''their'' more anvilicious albums:
176-->''Music/AqualungJethroTullAlbum''
177-->''Thick as a Brick''
178-->''A Passion Play''
179-->''War Child''
180-->''Stormwatch''
181-->''A''
182* Music/SuzanneVega's "Luka" - Child abuse and how no one should ignore the plight of the children enduring it.
183** The LyricalDissonance makes the song even more anvilicious when people pay attention to the lyrics, and so they should.
184** WordOfGod is that the song is worded so as to put the listener in that uncomfortable spot of being the silent witness. (WordOfGod by way of ''Pop-Up Video'', anyway.)
185* Almost every song by Tracy Chapman has an anvil that gets dropped -- greed, helping your family, racial tension, domestic abuse -- she runs the gamut.
186** From ''Behind The Wall'':
187-->Last night I heard the screaming\
188Loud voices behind the wall\
189Another sleepless night for me\
190It won't do no good to call\
191The police\
192Always come late\
193If they come at all\
194\
195And when they arrive\
196They say they can't interfere\
197With domestic affairs\
198Between a man and his wife\
199And as they walk out the door\
200The tears well up in her eyes\
201
202* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IctjZXTg7iQ "Young"]] by Hollywood Undead. "When adults wage war, children are the ones who pay the most." (Link is to an WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender AMV because ''that'' series dropped that anvil as well).
203* Bomani "D'Mite" Armah [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin forgoes subtlety and metaphor]]: "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlKL_EpnSp8 Read a book/Read a book/Read a Motherfuckin' BOOK!]]" Considering the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9OiuDKh_pAg controversy]] around the airing of the video...
204* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KT33KXLQgZE "Waste"]] by Staind. While there are many anti-suicide songs out there, this one is by far one of the most brutal and honest expressions of the emotions one goes through when a friend kills themselves. Instead of going for the usual "It's going to be alright, there's so much to live for!" message that most songs of this type use, it instead says: "Suicide is a cheap way of running away from your problems, and when you die those problems don't just go away. The people you leave behind have to deal with them instead. Fuck you for not being strong enough." The message is effective -- notice that one of the commenters on the linked video says that this song stopped them from committing suicide.
205* Music/ToriAmos' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKzCxi2yf5s "Me and a Gun"]], which is about her real-life rape. Many victims came to terms with their rape because of it, and it lead to Tori co-founding RAINN (Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network), the largest anti-sexual assault organization in America.
206* Music/KateBush's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9n2VSe_lja4 "Breathing"]], which was released during the Cold War. It's about a fetus knowing that a nuclear fallout has happened, but it still wants to live.
207--> ''My radar send me danger, but my instincts tell me to keep breathing.''
208** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M2Wa0LdCsvM "The Dreaming"]] is about the oppression of Australia's Aborigiones. ''Erase the race that claim the place/And say we dig for ore.''
209** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOZDKlpybZE "Army Dreamers"]] is a sad song about the futility of war, sung from the viewpoint of a mother burying her teenage son.
210--> ''What a waste/Army dreamers.''
211* Music/PeterGabriel has lots of these, especially on his third self-titled album ("Melt"). "Family Snapshot" humanizes Lee Harvey Oswald to show how even the most evil among us start out as ordinary humans, "Games Without Frontiers" analogizes the absurdity of warfare in the context of a 70s game show reminiscent of Global Guts, and "Biko" is a stirring tribute to Stephen Biko, one of the first prominent anti-apartheid activists in South Africa to gain worldwide recognition.
212* Music/JohnnyCash's song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfI9B8e9tW4 "Man in Black"]] explains why Johnny Cash always wore black on stage, saying that as long as there was suffering and injustice in the world, he would wear black to remind us.
213* Music/LilyAllen's second album ''It's Not Me, It's You" is full of these. Including:
214** "Everyone's At It": Drugs are bad. Even prescription drugs if abused. Pushing it underground won't solve it.
215** "The Fear": [[CelebrityIsOverrated Money won't make you happy]].
216** "Not Fair": In a romantic relationship, ''all'' aspects are equally important, including the physical. It doesn't matter how nice you are in public if you're not willing to care enough in private to satisfy your partner sexually.
217** "Fuck You": No song with [[PrecisionFStrike this title]] is ever going to be subtle, but it's still a brilliantly effective attack on prejudice.
218** "Hard Out Here", from Lily's third album Sheezus: Women still have to deal with sexism and injustice, and we still have a long way to go before the genders can be considered equal.
219* ''Icon For Hire'' has many of these, include Make a Move (you need to act, not just hope for things to change), but their latest song, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLVqVftHSyE Now You Know]] is a precision-dropped anvil about how sexist the music industry and [[TakeThat rock music fans]] can be, and how ridiculous the double standards for women singers are.
220* Music/RageAgainstTheMachine has many songs which could qualify; one song that stands out is "Darkness", a song about the greed of mankind and how it leads to genocide.
221** "Settle For Nothing", despite being one of their more subdued songs, is still up-front about its message:
222--> "If we don't take action now,\
223We'll settle for nothing later\
224Settle for nothing now,\
225And we'll settle for nothing later."
226* A bit meta maybe, but members of Franz Ferdinand are willing to forthrightly state what many people [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYruygabgUE need to hear]].
227* Music/{{Metallica}} gets a couple "war is hell" Anvils dropped in some of their best songs. The most up-front is "Disposable Heroes", which alternates between the view of a soldier for the verses, and his commander for the chorus:
228-->"Back to the front\
229You will do, what I say, when I say\
230Back to the front\
231You will die, when I say, you must die\
232Back to the front"
233** Their more famous "One", from the view of a [[AndIMustScream severely-disabled]] veteran (and based on the novel ''Literature/JohnnyGotHisGun'' by [[UsefulNotes/TheHollywoodBlacklist blacklisted screenwriter]] Dalton Trumbo), hits it just as hard.
234-->"Darkness imprisoning me / All that I see / Absolute Horror / I cannot live / I cannot die / Trapped in myself / Body my holding cell"
235** And yet again in "For Whom the Bell Tolls" (given that's based on the Creator/ErnestHemingway [[Literature/ForWhomTheBellTolls novel of the same name]], you know it's going to be thick):
236-->"For a hill / Men would kill / Why? / They do not know. / Stiffened wounds test their pride. \
237Men of five / Still alive through the raging glow / Gone insane / from the pain that they surely know \
238[[TitleDrop For Whom the Bell Tolls"]]
239** Also "Hero of the Day", on the same theme, or "... And Justice for All" about the failings of the legal system, and "Master of Puppets" and "Frantic" on the "drugs-are-bad" theme.
240** Dyer's Eve is about someone blaming his/her parents for overprotecting him/her and leaving him/her unprepared for life.
241** There's also the very first anvil the band ever dropped, "Fight Fire With Fire", the opening song from their 1984 album ''Ride the Lightning'', about the dropping of a [[NukeEm similarly heavy object]]. Though songs expressing fear of nuclear warfare weren't exactly uncommon then, it was the first time someone had managed to capture ''just how fucking scary and big a fucking deal it was'' through both lyrics ''and'' music.
242** And of course there is "Blackened". {{Green Aesop}}s have never been so brutal.
243* "Going To A Town" by Music/RufusWainwright expresses his disappointment with America's role in the world under the Bush administration and the rampant homophobia used by politicians for political gains at the expense of its most vulnerable citizens. The message is loud, clear, and unforgiving.
244-->Tell me, do you really think you go to hell for having loved
245-->Tell me, and not for thinking everything that you've done is good
246-->I really need to know, after soaking the body of Jesus Christ in blood
247-->I'm so tired of America
248** To further hammer the point home, during at least one live performance of the song he's dedicated it to the late Edward M. Kennedy, whose successor in the US Senate Rufus is not a fan of.
249* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8iXlB_Vk9VQ "You Say the Battle is Over"]] by John Denver contains a GreenAesop mixed with HumansAreBastards.
250-->Now the blame cannot fall\
251On the heads of a few\
252It's become such a part of the race\
253It's eternally tragic\
254That that which is magic\
255Be killed at the end of the glorious chase\
256\
257From young seals to great whales\
258From waters to wood\
259They will fall just like weeds in the wind\
260With fur coats and perfumes\
261And trophies on walls\
262What a hell of a race to call men
263** According to [[Music/DeadKennedys Jello Biafra]], Denver was dropped by Creator/RCARecords over this plus his testimony before Congress against the [[MoralGuardians Parents Music Resource Center]].
264* Another good John Denver one is [[http://youtu.be/vCR0sHBrNKs "What Are We Making Weapons For (Let Us Begin)"]] deals not just with the futility of war, but with the futility of arms race in general.
265-->Tell me how can it be we're still fighting each other\
266What does it take for a people to learn\
267If our song is not sung as a chorus we surly will burn\
268What are we making weapons for?\
269Why keep on feeding the war machine?\
270We take it away from the mouths of our babies\
271Take it away from the hands of the poor\
272Tell me, "what are we making weapons for?"\
273Have we forgotten...\
274All the vows that were taken...\
275All the lives that were given...\
276Saying "Never again?"
277* Band Aid's (the original one) "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w5cX_ncZLls Do They Know It's Christmas]]" drops a pretty effective anvil about not putting on blinders regarding poverty and needing to actually do something about it.
278* "Father Christmas" by Music/TheKinks, on the other hand, with its call against holiday materialism and in recognition of the poor, was a Christmas Anvil that needed to be dropped.
279* Music/{{Death}}'s "Crystal Mountain", about why proselytizing is forcing yourself on other people.
280** "Misanthrope": yes, there are plenty of bad people in the world, but there are plenty of good people as well, and blindly hating all of humanity just because of the assholes is childish and lazy.
281** "Without Judgement": ignorance and knee-jerk reductivism are comfortable because people are afraid to challenge their worldviews and too lazy to critically evaluate anything.
282* Darryl Worley's song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Geg6_-3jPzI Sounds Like Life to Me]]" repeatedly hammers home that life isn't always easy, but that the hard times shouldn't prevent us from enjoying what we have, and doesn't even try to be subtle about it.
283* Music/TimMinchin
284** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHRDfut2Vx0 Pope Song]]" (warning: Very NSFW) does not mince words about his position on the child abuse scandals in the Catholic Church. The message is that if you are offended by [[ClusterFBomb the way]] he describes the Pope, but ''not'' by molesting priests and the Pope's cover-up and protection of said priests, then you ''seriously'' need to get your priorities straight.
285** "The Fence" points out that the world is not as [[AlwaysChaoticEvil black]] and [[AlwaysLawfulGood white]] as some would believe. Minchin takes the example of how "troops are good" and "paedophiles are evil", arguing that surely there is bound to be some overlap between the groups somewhere along the line, even if the latter is worse than the former.
286** "Thank You God" starts with Tim telling a story of an Australian man named Sam, who prayed to God to cure his mother's eyesight, and her eyesight improved. Though Tim goes into an apparently sincere apology to God for doubting Him, it quickly turns into a sarcastic takedown of Sam's brand of "miracle" story. Through biting sarcasm, Tim calls out this brand of "inspiration" as ConfirmationBias, citing the fact that many people who tell such stories are pretty well-off as it is.
287* Music/{{Angelspit}}'s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EDtD2d30BuU "Girl Poison"]] is a scathing look at how underage girls encounter sex and lose their innocence as a result of the media, which in turn feeds off their insecurities.
288* Lyfe Jennings's S.E.X., another song about teenagers being pressured into sex.
289* Australian pub rock band Midnight Oil pretty much built a career out of dropping anvils about politics and social issues; particularly nuclear disarmament, Aborigine rights, and the working class.
290* Blowin' in the Wind: "How many times can a man turn his head/ And pretend that he just doesn't see?"
291* M.I.A.'s new music video for "Born Free" is extremely graphic in its depiction of [[RedHeadedStepchild young redheaded men]] being rounded up and executed, but it also demonstrates the horror of genocide and the absurdity of the discrimination that's used to justify it.
292* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rfz_QtVM-hk "Sex is Not the Enemy"]] by Garbage: "Sex isn't bad, and you shouldn't be ashamed of your sex life."
293* "Heaven Is Falling", which Music/BadReligion originally released as an "emergency" 7-inch during the first Gulf War. Given the lead time for CD production -- and the brevity of many "wars" against overwhelmingly-disadvantaged opponents -- they didn't think people should have had to wait for the release of ''Generator'' to hear the song:
294-->God I know that it's wrong\
295To kill my brother for what he hasn't done\
296And as the planes blacken the sky\
297It sounds like heaven is falling\
298You promised me a new day dawning\
299I've seen a thousand points of light\
300Like so many points of hatred, shame and horror
301* Music/{{Gorillaz}}' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eH1UmMu3R7o "Feel Good Inc"]] is especially {{Anvilicious}} when accompanied by the video. The anvil -- hedonism is not a way to live your life and it will imprison you sooner or later, leaving you yearning to go back to the little joys of your innocent youth.
302* "Slow Down Gandhi," by Sage Francis:
303-->So what's the truth, quit seeking forgiveness\
304You need to cut the noose, but you don't believe in scissors\
305You support the troops by wearing yellow ribbons?\
306Just bring home our motherfuckin' brothers and sisters
307* Music/HarryChapin's "Cat's in the Cradle". The anvil is to be there for your kids, and appreciate your time with them. The real tragedy to that song, of course, is that the son DID grow up just like the father -- who would never let "... and the kid's got the flu ..." interfere with his affairs.
308* Johnny I Hardly Knew Ya: War affects everyone, especially those left behind.
309* India.Arie's I Am Not My Hair: Drops an anvil on white people and non-black people of color that is [[SeriousBusiness way too focused]] [[ButNotTooBlack on achieving a Eurocentric look.]]
310** As a smaller amount, the black community as well.
311* Lauryn Hill, similar to India.Arie above, released some very anvilicious songs before deciding celebrity wasn't worth it. ''That Thing'' called out people in the black community who claimed to be Christians and Muslims but behaved like sex-crazed exhibitionists. It was practically a sermon, but damn if it didn't make for some fine listening.
312--> How you gonna win when you ain't right within?
313--> Uh-uh, come again.
314* Music/{{Pink}}'s "Stupid Girls" urges young women to rely on their brains. The song and especially the video can be pretty heavy-handed and downright mean to the type of girls she's ripping into, but we're living in a world where young girls are being taught that, in order to matter, you have to have an eating disorder, plastic surgery, and become "famous" for having a sex tape released, so, yeah, Pink actually did a good job of telling viewers that girls need to use their brains if they ever want to make something of themselves.
315** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XjVNlG5cZyQ Raise Your Glass]]" and "F***in' Perfect" are both BeYourself anthems, the latter with a strong anti-suicide theme. (Especially in the [[{{NSFW}} video]].)
316** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wc4L2NzaSB4 U + Ur Hand]]" is all about asshole men who assume that any woman they find attractive is just there for them to fuck. The anvil is, "I'm not here for your entertainment." Lyrics NSFW.
317** "Don't Let Me Get Me" has a great message about Hollywood's expectations to sell their artists as sex symbols is harmful and she compares it to high school where you're judged on the image you give off rather than who you really are
318* John Prine's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sl9ZkYViEIs "Sam Stone"]], an anvil that needed to be dropped about soldiers' addictions after coming home from Vietnam. 'There's a hole in Daddy's arm where the money goes / Jesus Christ died for nothing, I suppose.' Subtle? Not exactly. Beautiful and effective? Very.
319* Billy Joel's "Leningrad": both sides of the Cold War were just people - basically the same in the end.
320--> "We never knew what friends we had until we came to Leningrad."
321** Sting's "Russians" dropped a similar anvil a few years prior (both songs were released in the 80s): ''There is no monopoly in common sense on either side of the political fence / We share the same biology, regardless of ideology.'' Given what happened shortly thereafter, their anvils about moving beyond a black-white Cold War mindset were possibly a reflection of evolving public opinion.
322* Tomboy's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3j4t185wl-0 OK2bgay]]" is [[RefugeInAudacity too ridiculous to be taken seriously]], yet [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin the message]] is too important to ignore.
323* Music/AdamLambert's "Aftermath" has a message which basically boils down to [[YouAreNotAlone you are never alone]]. Proceeds from a remix of the song went to [[http://www.thetrevorproject.org/ The Trevor Project]].
324--> Anytime anybody pulls you down\
325Anytime anybody says you're not allowed\
326Just remember you are not alone\
327In the aftermath.
328* The Music/BowlingForSoup song "I'm Gay" is essentially the message of the ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'' episode below: You don't have to be serious. Sometimes all that matters is if you have fun and enjoy doing what you're doing. And no, it's not Jarret Reddick coming out of the closet.
329** The band themselves also deliver the Anti-homophobia message in many other songs, to the point it becomes a little too anvilicious.
330* Tom Robinson's protest song, "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4lR3ffBsMTc Glad To Be Gay]]". Nothing with that title is going to be subtle; the song is bitingly bitter, sarcastic, angry, and delightful -- and released in the ''mid-seventies''.
331* Music/DavidBowie examples:
332** The final track of ''Music/TheRiseAndFallOfZiggyStardustAndTheSpidersFromMars'', "Rock 'n' Roll Suicide", is one of the most touching expressions of YouAreNotAlone ever, using almost the exact phrase in the lyrics.
333** "Repetition" (''Music/{{Lodger}}'', 1979) is a clanging, dissonant tune that threatens to bruise the ears, but once you've digested the lyrics it makes sense that it be so -- it's a blunt description of the life and mindset of a DomesticAbuser and the cowed acceptance of his victims, a subject undeserving of melodic or vocal tenderness.
334-->Well Johnny is a man\
335And he's bigger than her\
336I guess the bruises won't show\
337If she wears long sleeves\
338But the space in her eyes\
339Shows through
340** Also from (''Music/{{Lodger}}'', 1979), "Fantastic Voyage"
341-->Remember it's true\
342Dignity is valuable\
343But our lives are valuable too\
344* Music/JonLajoie:
345** "Michael Jackson is Dead" is a scathing and unsubtle rant at both the media and general public's hypocrisy toward Michael Jackson, demonizing him while he was alive and canonizing him after he died.
346** Similarly, "Song for Miley" calls out the general public and the media for their hypocritical outrage about Miley Cyrus VMA twerking while being totally fine with several other celebrities doing the same thing in music videos.
347** From "WTF Collective 2", there is "MC Homophobic Fucking Asshole" named that way just in case it wasn't clear homophobia is bad.
348* Music/{{Rush|Band}} has "The Pass" - which states that suicide is NEVER the answer, and that there is always hope.
349* Music/TheYardbirds' "Mr. You're A Better Man Than I" is a successful, [[SarcasmMode bitingly sarcastic]] attack on prejudice.
350* Music/SimonAndGarfunkel. Several songs, but notably "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-BNL9aKf5XE The Sun is Burning]]", which is all the more horrifying because it sounds so ''[[LyricalDissonance happy]].''
351* According to Music/ThirtySecondsToMars' "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLqHDhF-O28 Closer to the Edge]]", you should never regret anything that happens in your life. Even the bad parts make you the person you are now.
352** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zcps2fJKuAI "This is War"]] directly acknowledges the fact that it's trying to drop an anvil in its music video ("This is a song about peace") and is all the better for it.
353* El Général, who wrote and performed the song Rais Ebled, dropped an anvil that needed dropping. It opened the floodgate and started the Tunisian Revolution.
354* Music/EltonJohn's "American Triangle", which is about the real-life [[BuryYourGays murder of Matthew Shepard for being gay]].
355-->'Western skies' don't make it right\
356'Home of the brave' don't make no sense\
357I've seen a scarecrow wrapped in wire\
358Left to die on a high ridge fence\
359It's a cold, cold wind\
360It's a cold, cold wind\
361It's a cold wind blowing, Wyoming
362* [[http://www.facebook.com/RyanCasataMusic Ryan Cassata]] seems to be very fond of this:
363** The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a8RSoOvp1Nc music video]] for "Sleeping Through" is about UsefulNotes/{{transgender}} [[DrivenToSuicide suicide]].
364** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MvFKEZyv_YE "Hands of Hate"]] is about the murders of Mathew Shepard and Lawrence King, and the suicides of Tyler Clementi and Jamey Rodemeyer. All four LGBT youth.
365** "In My Hands" is about anti-LGBT bullying, and was written after he received many letters from LGBT kids telling him about how they had been bullied.
366-->And I'm holding people's stories in my my hands\
367'Cause they write me, and they tell me what's gone wrong\
368And I'm holding people's stories in my hands\
369Because they write me, and they told me who's to blame\
370'Cause they write me, and they told me you're to blame
371* "The Middle" by Music/JimmyEatWorld. Explicit in its theme, it is still something that many a generation of confused and insecure teenagers need repeated back to them. Don't let other people make you question your self-worth, you are worthwhile.
372* Martina [=McBride=]'s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KtNYA4pAGjI "Concrete Angel"]]. Message: "Don't ignore DomesticAbuse just because you're scared. Imagine what the victim is going through. Don't ignore it until something uncorrectable happens." The music video isn't necessary as the lyrics provide enough weight but it certainly makes the blow heavier since they aren't subtle with their images -- because that's the reality of domestic abuse, why should they hide it to make the audience feel better?
373* Jason Michael Carrol's "Alyssa Lies" makes a similar point about child abuse - don't assume someone else has or will report it, and that the excuse of "there's nothing you can do" is just that - an excuse.
374-->My little girl asked me why everybody looked so sad.
375-->The lump in my throat grew bigger with every question that she asked.
376-->Until I felt the tears run down my face,
377-->And I told her that Alyssa wouldn't be in school today.
378* The Music/DeadKennedys' entire career is built of this trope, but "HolidayInCambodia" (don't assume you know how the poor suffer if you're not one of them), "KillThePoor" (the NeutronBomb isn't a good idea) and "Nazi Punks Fuck Off" (... actually, the title pretty much says it all) deserve special mention.
379* "The Irony Of It All" by UK rap/garage outfit The Streets, which all but hammers its message of marijuana's relative harmlessness, compared with the many serious issues with alcohol abuse. Tim the pothead introduces himself as a criminal in his verses, but is practically harmless to the point of not complaining when the pizza delivery sends him the wrong order. Terry the alcoholic lout describes himself as a "law-abider" throughout his verses, but gets into fights regularly and mentions spitting in the face of a police officer.
380* Music/{{Sabaton}} are often thought of as a WarHasNeverBeenSoMuchFun band, but they do have the occasional WarIsHell track. In "Angels Calling", there is no right side or wrong side, just soldiers dying in the mud because of politicians' games. ("Hell on Earth. / ..the ultimate test is a synchronized sacrifice. / ..Dream of Heaven, angels are calling your name") and particularly "The Price of a Mile".
381-->Six miles of ground has been won\
382Half a million men are gone\
383And as the men crawled the general called\
384And the killing carried on and carried on\
385What was the purpose of it all?\
386What is the price of a mile?
387** Similarly, the English version of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zvdbDw5bXnQ "A Lifetime of War"]] has tremendous {{applicability}} to any number of conflicts.
388--->''Two ways to view the world, so similar at times\
389Two ways to rule the world, to justify their crimes\
390By kings and queens young men are sent to die in war\
391Their propaganda speaks those words been heard before\
392\
393Two ways to view the world brought Europe down in flames\
394Two ways to rule\
395\
396Has man gone insane?\
397A few will remain\
398Who'll find a way\
399To live one more day\
400Through decades of war\
401It spreads like disease\
402There's no sign of peace\
403Religion and greed\
404Caused millions to bleed\
405Three decades of war''
406* Music/MoxyFruvous, especially in their early days - from their first album ''Bargainville'' alone, we get "River Valley" (environmentalism), their cover of "Spider Man" (over-comercialization and jingoization of products aimed at children), "The Drinking Song" (dangerous binge drinking), and "Gulf War Song" about the polarization of political positions, with the inimitable line:
407--> What makes a person so poisonous righteous
408--> That he'll think less of anyone who just disagrees?
409* Music/GreatBigSea used to sing about Canadian east-coast political issues, dropping anvils regarding the loss of a valid, viable fishery due to deregulation and commercialization and subsequent overfishing ("Fisherman's Lament"), election promises leading nowhere ("Someday Soon"), and the grand-scale personal depression that follows on the heels of economic depression ("Nothing Out Of Nothing").
410* Ed Sheeran's song ''The A Team'' is, by itself, a touching song about a prostitute who's addicted to illegal drugs. It's not obvious enough to be anvilicious, but the message doesn't take much decoding to understand. ''Little Lady'' is a collaboration using parts of ''The A Team'' with Mikill Pane, who raps about an immigrant whose mother worked to send her to Britain to live with her uncle, in hopes of her having a better life. The girl's uncle is a pimp who brutalises the girl, and when his attacks force her to go to a hospital, she attracts the attention of a nurse who calls the police. The girl refuses to co-operate, and when she goes home she is murdered by her uncle when he sees the number the police gave her to call. Moral: [[spoiler:prostitutes do not deserve to be vilified and punished. They are the victims of their crime, stuck in horrific situations, and they deserve to be helped.]]
411* The ThrashMetal band Metal Church dropped many anvils during their time with Mike Howe as singer (1989–94) but none so effectively as "In Mourning" and "In Harm's Way" off of ''The Human Factor''. All children need to be given love, guidance, and a stable family, and that the lack of these is what causes school shootings, suicide, and other childhood tragedies.
412-->''Maybe if you'd listen then you'd know what I just said\
413If you think the words I'm singing are why your kids are dead\
414Maybe could it be that no one was there to hear\
415Did you pay attention to their angers and their fears?\
416You're trying to find someone to blame who can't be put on trial\
417The enemy you're looking for is laughing all the while\
418I mourn for those who have been so deceived\
419You know the last words that they spoke were "Who loves me?"\
420I hope that someday you will stop and realize\
421Just why so many kids have died''
422* Music/{{REM}}'s lyrics are usually very cryptic, but ''Everybody Hurts'' is so plainly expressed that it might as well be being spoken directly to someone who's contemplating suicide. The message: YouAreNotAlone, however much it may feel like it. Most of humanity will have been depressed at some point, and there are people who are willing to help and don't want you to end your life.
423* Music/ArcadeFire, considering their musical style and inspirations, are quite fond of dropping this every now and then. Notable examples include:
424** "Neon Bible": Squandering church donations and bible sales for selfish reasons rather than for charity, a problem that is not addressed enough.
425** "Intervention": An ironically gospel-inspired ProtestSong that basically says not to use your religion to justify violence, hatred and especially war. Considering the time that ''Neon Bible'' was released, it's undeniably appropriate.
426** "(Antichrist Television Blues)": Uses the metaphor of an overzealous StageDad forcing his only daughter to pursue a career as a Christian singer to make money for himself and avoid work to address the problem of religious and pathological pressure that parents tend to push unto their children.
427** The entirety of ''The Suburbs'': It's a ConceptAlbum that's story centrals around a suburban neighborhood that has been destroyed and used as a defense line during a massive civil war, which could be interpreted as a metaphoric message telling teenagers not to waste their childhood and teenhood on adult issues that will only ruin their lives by overriding nostalgia. The punch that really fuels this theory is the penultimate verse of the entire album, from "The Suburbs (Continued)":
428-->If I could have it back
429-->All the time that we wasted
430-->I'd only waste it again
431-->If I could have it back
432-->You know I'd love to waste it again
433-->Waste it again and again and again
434** "We Exist": A pro-LGBT anthem about a homosexual child [[{{Gayngst}} who is alienated and bullied by their peers and emotionally abused by their parents]]. Coupled with the music video, which depicts a transgender person battling against a group of men in a bar (the dancing in the video possibly being a metaphor for physical abuse), plus being a disco/techno-inspired track ([[ContinuityNod both genres of which have notable gay origins]]), it's incredibly {{Anvilicious}}.
435* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQ0DSJSZ1zo "Never Again"]] by ''Music/{{Disturbed}}'' is about as subtle as a sledgehammer to the face, but gives a powerful message about the horrors of genocide and how they should never happen.
436** Their song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_lnGCQgDSY I'm Alive]]" is about this and how it's wrong to force a person to change who they are, whether in terms of gender or sexuality, religiously or otherwise.
437** The song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ErZLFofFkGg Sacred Lie]]" is especially about Iraq, but more generally about how people need to look for the truth and how war is pointless manipulation of people by their leaders, but at the same time that soldiers are as much victims as civilians.
438** Then there's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HwELajFteTo Another Way To Die]]", which basically amounts to "If we don't stop abusing the environment, [[GaiasVengeance we will all die horribly]]." The music video, on the other hand, juxtaposes wantonly wasteful first-world culture with starvation and painfully strict rationing in refugee camps. This has the effect of beating subtlety to a bloody pulp, shooting it in the face with a machine gun, and then pouring gasoline on its corpse before dropping a nuke on it - and, yet, [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill the egregious overkill]] ''works''.
439** "Legion of Monsters", from the ''Immortalized'' album, is all about how giving attention and fame to mass murderers is only going to create more of them. The song was written out of lead singer David Draiman's anger at seeing the Boston Marathon bomber plastered everywhere after the tragedy, ensuring that the world would remember his name.
440** And then we have "The Vengeful One", from the same album, who is about the moral corruption of the news media. Special mentions go to [[https://youtu.be/8nW-IPrzM1g?si=mfzgYQem9NactyL_ its music video]], that has the subtlety of a loud and violent shotgun. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6CgQGuNK-M&t=8m17s Draiman attributes that to the director, Phil Mucci]].
441* Music/RodStewart's self-penned 'The Killing of Georgie' has an incredibly simple tune (almost entirely one-chord) and a non-too subtle message ('Homosexuals can have loving relationships just like heterosexuals and killing them is wrong') but is all the more powerful because of this.
442* Five Man Electrical Band were very clear when writing the GreenAesop song ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CeVhhHRDcQU I'm a Stranger Here]]'', made especially powerful by how hauntingly the final line in the verse is sung:
443--> ''Oh, you crazy fools, don't you know you have it made?/You've been living in paradise/But take it from one who knows/Who knows the gates of Heaven can close/I only pray that you take my advice/'Cause paradise won't come twice.''
444* Music/RebaMcEntire's song "She Thinks His Name Was John" is about a woman who contracts HIV/AIDS from a one-night stand. It was released in the mid-'90s, a time when many people thought only homosexuals could contract the disease.
445* Sophie Ellis Bextor is not at all subtle with the YouAreNotAlone Anvil in "Mixed Up World", but it still works in the way it is presented. It basically says that yes, life can be really tough and cynical a lot of the time, but that's okay because you're stronger than you think and you're not the only one with the problem.
446* Before they discarded them along with their open Christianity in favor of WordSaladLyrics, Music/{{Underoath}} had a couple big anvils on their [[EarlyInstallmentWeirdness unusually political]] debut ''Act of Depression''. "Heart of Stone" (a [[ReligionRantSong liberal Christian attack]] on TheFundamentalist {{Knight Templar}}s), "Innocence Stolen" (which explains quite bluntly why Rape Is Bad), and the title track (a 10-minute account of a depressed and bullied person DrivenToSuicide that, near the end of the song, shifts POV to the bully who [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone realizes the consequences of his/her actions after seeing the protagonist's dead body]]) express much-needed messages.
447* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=ElCIGdLx4UM We All Bleed Red]] by [[Music/BrooksAndDunn Ronnie Dunn]]. It's one big storm of cliches repeating the message [[NotSoDifferentRemark "we are not so different"]] in various ways, but damn it's powerful and effective.
448-->We all bleed red, we all taste rain
449-->All fall down, lose our way
450-->We all say words we regret
451-->We all cry tears, we all bleed red\
452Sometimes we're strong, sometimes we're weak
453-->Sometimes we're hurt, it cuts deep
454-->We all say words we regret
455-->We're all the same, we all bleed red
456* Music/RogerWaters' work, in its near entirety, is a HUMONGOUS ANVIL spanning across multiple fronts. You name any tropes on this page, chances are very good that Roger's incorporated it within songs, albums, and the like.
457** Music/PinkFloyd's ''Music/TheWall'' is essentially all about showing what happens when you let your emotional wounds get the better of you, as Pink becomes a cold, destructive person. It also makes the point that no matter how far gone you may be, you can tear down the emotional barriers that turn you into such a person. It also drops a surprisingly nuanced anvil about the importance of thinking for yourself: yes, blindly obeying your parents, your teachers, and your government is ''bad'' -- but so is blindly following a charismatic anti-authority figure just to get back at them; if you don't learn from your past and learn to think independently, you can find yourself ''becoming'' the very thing [[YouAreWhatYouHate that you hate]].
458** Many of their anti-war anvils are also far from subtle (especially on ''The Final Cut'' and, again, ''The Wall''), but again, they wouldn't be half as effective if they were. The political anvils on ''Animals'' are also far from subtle, but as with Creator/GeorgeOrwell's ''Literature/AnimalFarm'', which inspired it, they gain much for their directness.
459** More Personal Anvils can be found in his solo work, first with "The Pros & Cons of Hitchhiking," a set of songs inspired by a disjointed series of dreams that border on HumansAreBastards, especially involving the protagonist picking up a hitchhiker, then having sex with said hitchhiker, being kidnapped by terrorists, and having a weird series of encounters before finally waking up. "Radio K.A.O.S." takes up the same anti-war sentiment found in "The Wall," though much more focused on Espionage and judgment of the harsh mistreatment of the local Authorities (akin to Gattica, Rodney King, you name it). Lastly, "Amused To Death" is focused on Western Laziness, how entertainment can be involved, and how God is often blamed by those misfortunate in the midst of their doldrums. To say that Waters' work is moralizing or drops an anvil or two is a massive understatement.
460* "People are People" by Music/DepecheMode, on prejudice and bigotry:
461-->You're punching and you're kicking and you're shouting at me
462-->I'm relying on your common decency
463-->So far it hasn't surfaced but I'm sure it exists
464-->It just takes a while to travel from your head to your fists
465* Stan Rogers's "House of Orange," strong words against both the IRA ''and'' Loyalist terrorists during the Troubles, and the people who were raising money for them in North America.
466* Music/LouReed's ''New York'' is full of [[TheBigRottenApple rants about the dismal state of New York City at the time]] -- AIDS, poverty, corruption, the whole gamut of issues is touched upon. It's usually regarded as one of his best post-Music/VelvetUnderground albums.
467* Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival's "Fortunate Son" is not subtle about how some people get out of military service because of their privileged and fortunate families, while the rest of the population doesn't have that option.
468* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-cE3OF6tv_o "Hero's Song"]] by Brendan James is a poignant anti-war song which also reminds soldiers not to settle for JustFollowingOrders and find their own personal reasons for fighting.
469-->"Fall out, fall out with the rest of your brothers,\
470With the rest of your sisters, and heroes on the line,\
471And carry out what your leader says, because what his leader says,\
472Is that his leader says this is right for the people\
473\
474No one will ever understand why thousands of beautiful, healthy young statues must fall"
475* Music/KatyPerry's "Chained to the Rhythm" isn't terribly subtle about its [[BreadAndCircuses Pop Music is distracting us from issues that matter]] message. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Um7pMggPnug The music video]] is even more on-the-nose with its ignorant-masses symbols, featuring imagery such as the "American Dream Drop", a park ride that drops picturesque houses rather violently, human hamster wheels, a gas station setpiece with open flames in it, and bomb rides.
476* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ep6umYu-Dqw "Paradise" by Eyedea]] spells out why it's dangerous to base your life around your relationships, that loving somebody and needing them are definitely not the same thing, and hope that you learn to find your own happiness instead of always relying on someone else to feel loved. The first two verses focus on a man and a woman trapped in a loveless relationship with each other, and the final verse takes the perspective of the man, who finally decides to let her go for both their sakes.
477--> "I don't expect you to stay chained by the ankle,\
478There's so much world to see, so, fly free my angel\
479I'm dying without you, but it's teaching me to live\
480Heaven ain't something someone else can give... it's all inside of me."
481* Straylight Run's "Who Will Save Us Now?" practically states about its title that "it's a wrong and irrelevant question", because ultimately, you have to decide what's best for you. Not your heroes, not your idols, and definitely not the politicians you elect will show you the right path to take.
482--> "'Who will save us now?'\
483It's a wrong, and irrelevant question\
484Cause we figure it out\
485With the people who love us, who call us their brothers,\
486Through lessons we learn from our fathers and mothers\
487\
488Not looking for someone to find our solutions,\
489To fight all our battles and show us what truth is,\
490But working hard to find our own peace of mind,\
491Living and learning till we know what's right for our lives!"
492* The Indelicates are a very understated British indie rock band who have written several songs about the rarely-discussed (relative to the rest of the world) issues that British people have regarding class and social standing. They even have an entire album devoted to these and other problems with the country, lovingly titled "Diseases of England". [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDl2daXnhL8 Here's]] one of the songs from the aforementioned album, satirizing the condescending attitude of the higher class. And for a nice read regarding the lead singer's own opinions, check [[http://www.indelicates.com/2011/04/27/less-wedding-more-beheading/ this]] out.
493* Amy Studt's "Misfit" criticizes those who conform to social standards and labels them superficial -- saying that it's okay to BeYourself. The video also shows that all cliques can be bad, not just popular ones -- Amy gets bullied by goths and nerds as well and she's only truly happy when she does her own thing.
494* "Something Bout Love" by David Archuleta basically boils down to "Yes, loving someone can end up breaking your heart because they don't deserve it, but that doesn't mean you should stop loving."
495* Even though Music/FaithNoMore are usually touted — even praised — as being a very ''anti''-anvil band, they do occasionally pull out a less-than-subtle mind jolt to prove a vital point.
496** "We Care a Lot", as lighthearted as it is, is a much needed counter to society's shallow facade of compassion that feeds their egos more than any impoverished people.
497** "Zombie Eaters" was an unabashedly creepy TakeThatAudience metaphor for probably a [[ManChild good chunk of their fanbase]]'s relationships with women.
498** "The Real Thing" tells the listener to pay attention to the finer details in the real world in order to appreciate it.
499** "Midlife Crisis" gives a rather {{Squick}}y glimpse behind the narcissistic facade of the much-idolized career celebrity.
500** "Smaller and Smaller" gives a clear picture to what non-first world life is really like.
501** "Everything's Ruined" details the KarmicDeath that befalls overzealous and amoral corporations. Given the band's circumstances at the time, it can also be a metaphor for their battle with the music industry.
502** "Paths of Glory" is probably the closest the band comes to an identifiably {{Anvilicious}} number, and manages to perfectly show a WarIsHell picture with extremely simple music and lyrics.
503---> "I'm not afraid. [[{{Doublethink}} But I'm afraid.]]"
504* ''Music/OrdenOgan'', with ''The Things We Believe In''. If you truly believe in something, be prepared to put your money where your mouth is, and don't be afraid to ''[[HeroicSacrifice die for it]]''.
505* Music/{{Macklemore}}
506** "Same Love" hits you in the face with its message about acceptance of everyone. It mostly focuses on LGBT issues and how, in an age of people trying to be tolerant, the public at large can still have issues with LGBT people. But the song states "it's all the same love" even if people aren't straight, comes from a personal place as Mackelmore cites his own questioning of his sexuality, and [[GayAesop explicitly says "damn right I support it" with regards to gay marriage]].
507--->America the brave\
508Still fears what we don't know.
509** Less serious but still important is the message of "Thrift Shop": buying expensive brands and clothes isn't going to get you laid. Macklemore spends the whole song describing how awesome he feels in hand-me-down clothes.
510--->That shirt's hella dope.\
511But having the same one as six other people in this club is a "hella don't!"\
512Peek, gang, come take a look through my telescope\
513Trying to get girls from a brand? Man, you hella won't!
514* Septicflesh's "Ground Zero": postmodernism is not [[TrueArtIsAngsty "real art"]], it's a masturbatory pity party that sucks out creativity and replaces it with childish nihilism.
515* While it's true that the Music/AliceInChains album ''Dirt'' essentially boils down to DrugsAreBad, it's still a pretty important message - especially considering what ended up happening to former lead singer Layne Staley, who died of a drug overdose.
516** Similarly, Music/JerryCantrell's second album ''Degradation Trip'' (Itself a SpiritualSequel to the afformentioned ''Dirt'') produces a powerful message about the damaging affect addiction and emotional isolation has on one's sanity. These albums would gain absolutely nothing from subtlety; their directness gives them power.
517* Afghan-Iranian rapper Sonita Alizadeh's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n65w1DU8cGU "Brides for Sale"]] is about as subtle about its anti-ArrangedMarriage, pro-women's rights message as an anvil to the head. And deservedly so, since it was written in response to ''her own'' incipient ArrangedMarriage, and the imagery of her rapping with a bar code on her forehead, beaten and bloodied in a wedding dress, was so effective [[http://www.pri.org/stories/2015-05-12/afghan-rapper-escaped-teen-marriage-singing-about-it her parents actually cancelled the wedding, and she got a scholarship to a Utah art school.]]
518* Music/DavidAllanCoe's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5gin7s5qMG8 "Fuck Anita Bryant"]] is probably the first [[GayAesop pro gay rights]] song.
519* As a general rule, Music/KaceyMusgraves throws subtlety right in the trash when she has a point to make: "Follow Your Arrow" is a song promoting acceptance of others and [[BeYourself being yourself]], no matter what others think, and "Biscuits" is a song about how making other people feel bad won't make you feel good. Both are excellent messages and both are delivered about as unsubtly as possible.
520* "Hell is for Children" by Music/PatBenatar is about child abuse, specifically the unfortunately common practice of children being abused by their parents and being coerced into keeping the abuse a secret.
521* "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9EvnVCfHUQ Politically Correct]]" by SR-71 tells how rampant political correctness can cause someone to be unable to connect to anyone and be unable to see and understand other's opinions. As such, the message is that living in constant fear of offending someone is no way to live your life, especially when some people see only what they want to see and are looking for an excuse to be angry.
522* Music/EnterShikari's more politically-charged songs range from symbolic/metaphorical lyrics (Juggernauts) to straight-up statements of the anvil they're trying to drop. For example, [[http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/entershikari/gandhimategandhi.html Gandhi Mate, Gandhi]] begins with a 45-second long rant, and later includes the phrase "If we keep them silent, then they'll resort to violence, and that's how you criminalise change"; and [[http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/entershikari/quellesurprise.html Quelle Surprise]] prominently features the line "If you stand for nothing, you will fall for anything".
523* "American Skin (41 shots)" by Music/BruceSpringsteen, about police brutality, racism, and trigger happiness, is almost timeless, in its anvil dropping. It was written in response to a case where police shot a man 41 times, but with the recent spat of police killing black men who often didn't even present a threat to them, like with [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_of_Laquan_McDonald Laquan McDonald]], who was walking away from the police hold a knife at his side, posing no immediate threat, before being shot 16 times in the back, it takes on a whole new [[ValuesResonance resonance]].
524* Believe it or not, "One in a Million", on the surface an extremely bigoted song which Music/GunsNRoses hasn't quite been able to live down, was intended to be an example of this by Axl Rose, according to reevaluations of the song. Rose's intent was to expose just how deeply entrenched bigotry is in American society and force Americans to confront minority-related issues head-on. Apparently, he thought the best way to go about it would be to put himself in a bigot's shoes and channel his own negative experiences with said minorities into his writing.
525* Music/GreenDay's ''Music/AmericanIdiot'' is initially upfront about how blindly following the media is a bad thing. But surprisingly, the album later makes a turnaround and portrays the other extreme as equally bad: the protagonist blindly rebels against society to alleviate his SmallTownBoredom, but alienates everyone around him in the process, causing him to eventually return home. In other words, those who blindly follow the media and those who rebel against it are both American Idiots.
526* The Antlers' album ''Music/{{Hospice}}'' drops an unsubtle but powerful anvil on abusive relationships, using the metaphor of a romance between a hospice worker and a cancer patient to show how sick, demeaning, and downright damaging they are. It also urges the listener not to buy into {{Freudian Excuse}}s too much. No matter how bad a life the abuser might've had (like the patient in the story), [[FreudianExcuseIsNoExcuse it still does not justify their abuse in any way]], and it's wrong to put up with it because of that. A very depressing anvil, but a very important one, especially given that it's mostly autobiographical.
527--> ''Some patients can't be saved, but that burden's not on you''
528--> ''Don't ever let anyone tell you you deserve that''
529* "That Smell" by Music/LynyrdSkynyrd. DrugsAreBad. Also, don't drink and drive. Made more effective that it's based on the band's own struggles with substance abuse.
530* [=TeddyLoid's=] "Me Me Me" is an anime music video that details the unhealthy [[LotusEaterMachine lifestyle]] of a {{hikikomori}}. Relationships can be scary, introducing yourself to someone can feel intimidating, and love can be painful and draining for people who are new to them, regardless of age. However you can't hide yourself from the world nor can you outrun it. Websites and fiction are tailored to appeal your desires and fantasies rather than let you face a pressuring and somewhat scary world. The world isn't as scary or pessimistic as the media portrays it and real relationships provide a sense of depth, emotion and intimacy that cannot be replicated by fiction or fantasies.
531* Music/PhilOchs "Love Me, I'm a Liberal" is a satisfying punch in the face to pseudo-liberals who act uppity but are deeply bigoted inside.
532* Music/FrankSinatra's song "That's Life" explains the reality of making a mistake. You will receive criticism no matter what you do and there is no such thing as a flawless person. Fortunately, it won't haunt you forever because the world will have bigger things to concern itself with and life goes on regardless.
533--> ''I said that's life, and as funny as it may seem, some people get their kicks stompin' on a dream.''
534--> ''But I don't let it, let it get me down. 'Cause this fine old world, it keeps spinnin' around.''
535* "Paradise by the Dashboard Light" by Music/MeatLoaf: Don't rush into marriage; wait until you know you're ready for it. Also, if you think you're getting into a bad relationship, get out of it while you still can.
536* "Disfigured" by Primitive Man: being a mixed-race black man in America who can pass for white means that while you may reap the benefits of white privilege, you will never truly feel like you belong anywhere and will forever bear the scars of your ancestor's bondage and of all the suffering of your black brethren whose only crime was being born too dark to enjoy the privilege that you enjoy.
537* "The Story of O.J." by Music/JayZ: NoTrueScotsman and internalized self-hatred are both pernicious and a destructive phenomenon in the black community, and downplaying your blackness so you can present yourself as a safe, inoffensive figure to white people is pathetic and makes you a sellout. You're black, whether you like it or not, so embrace your blackness.
538* "Little Lion Man" by Music/MumfordAndSons: The song has two interpretations of its meaning but still carries the same message. Don't give up on yourself but don't be foolishly brave. When you find love, don't waste it by doubting it or fearing if you're going to repeat history. You'll never be truly happy or be able to solve your problems if you're too scared to confront them.
539* Music/{{Aurora|Singer}}'s song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Mc_OM5oNA8 The Seed]]" takes as its chorus a paraphrase of the Creator/AlanisObomsawin quote "When the last tree is cut, the last river poisoned, and the last fish dead, we will discover that we can’t eat money". Heavy-handed? Sure. But in a world where the politicians in charge are mocking and belittling schoolchildren for wanting to fight for the environment, it's also a necessary reminder.
540* Joyner Lucas' song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_Jvmt0vU4s&t=30s Frozen]]" is as blunt as possible in its message: '''Drive Safe.''' Because not doing so can and will result in someone getting hurt, possibly ''killed,'' and that person [[DeathOfAChild may not]] always [[DrunkDriver be you.]]
541** In one of his iconic songs "I'm not racist." teaches the audience that being stubborn and not understanding others with different ideology is bad, because their reasoning might be deeper than they think. In addition, both verse are shown to claim that they are not racist to different race, [[{{Hypocrite}} but has clearly shown themselves to.]] Thankfully, these arguments have been resolved in the end after showing that both are willing to [[BothSidesHaveAPoint listen to their arguments.]]
542* Invoked by Creator/{{VH1}} with a warning about why Music/JanetJackson was performing her ClusterFBomb DomesticAbuse TheReasonYouSuckSpeech "What About" at the 1998 ''[=VH1=] Fashion Awards'' as opposed to one of her lighter, catchier songs.
543* "Me and Mr. Wolf" by Real Tuesday Weld: A relationship built only around sex will be doomed to fail, one partner may take the relationship seriously, while the other may use the relationship to manipulate their partner. In a sexual relationship, someone is bound to be hurt.
544* Jordin Sparks' "One Step At A Time" has a great one about achieving your dreams and YouAreBetterThanYouThinkYouAre. There will be times where it looks hopeless, you will grow impatient, and there will be instances where you fail when it looks like you finally made it, but if you take it [[TitleDrop one step at a time]] and just keep pushing yourself to achieve your dreams, you can make it happen.
545* "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=Y4HVJvTGbkc Feed the Machine]]" by Poor Man's Poison is a candid and brutal criticism of America's abysmal mishandling of the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic.
546* Music/TheyMightBeGiants bring us "Your Racist Friend", a ProtestSong about how, well, [[CaptainObvious racism is bad]], but you shouldn't tolerate people with beliefs like that who [[JustJokingJustification say their remarks are a joke or "satire" to get off scot-free.]]
547--> ''He let the contents of the bottle do the thinking''\
548''Can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding.''
549* ''Everywhere at the End of Time'' by Music/TheCaretaker: A six and a half hour ConceptAlbum that expresses how horrifying and depressing dementia and Alzheimer's Disease is through the use of distorted samples of old-timey jazz.
550* The Music/BodyCount song "No Lives Matter" points out that America's problems with police brutality and persecution of minorities goes past simple racism and into class politics.
551-->''Don't fall for the bait and switch, racism is real but not it\
552They fuck whoever can't fight back, but now we gotta change all that\
553The people have had enough, right now it's them against us\
554This shit is ugly to the core, when it comes to the poor, no lives matter''.
555* Parodied in the Music/WeirdAlYankovic song "Don't Download This Song." "Cuz you start out stealing songs/[[JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope Then you're robbing liquor stores]]/and selling crack and running over school kids with your car."
556* "Green Christmas", a song on Website/YouTube. It is very Anvilicious about its environmental message and has nothing to do with Christmas. The word 'Christmas' was put in there as a form of WolverinePublicity.
557** Not to be confused with "Green Chri$tma$", an anvilly-but-funny swipe at Christmas commercialization by humorist and [[BitingTheHandHumor ad man]] Creator/StanFreberg. Or the Music/BarenakedLadies' "Green Christmas", which is just about being lonely at Christmas.
558** Compare the last, joke line of Relient K's [[http://www.lyriczz.com/lyrics/relient-k/51265-iand%23039%3Bm-getting-nuttin-for-christmas/ I'm Getting Nuttin For Christmas]]: "Well I'm getting nuttin' for Christmas because I contributed to the green-house effect which melts the Polar Ice Caps which melts the North Pole where Santa Claus lives. He's mad. Pbbthh!"
559* In a similar sense, the {{Glurge}}-ridden "Christmas Shoes" definitely qualifies, dropping an anvil about helping the poor so huge you won't know what hit you after the song ends.
560* "Green Blues", an anti pollution song.
561* If you listen carefully to Music/{{Beyonce}}'s "If I Were A Boy", you can hear that she pauses before the words "better man" just so the loud thud sounds from impacting anvils don't drown out the lyrics.
562* How about Story of the Year's album, "The Black Swan"? Almost every song on it screams anti-war messages in your face. Of course, this doesn't stop the music from being good, so who's complaining?
563* Political punk rock is by definition {{Anvilicious}}. Recent Music/GreenDay has been pretty anvilicious, but Anti-Flag is a freaking building, and a big one at that.
564** Propagandhi are the biggest of them all. No matter what choices you make in life or opinions you have about anything, Propagandhi make it their personal mission to make you feel bad about it, whether it's feeling that anything about the current administration is remotely acceptable, eating or milking animals, having any sort of religious belief or feeling, [[MaleGaze looking at a woman's boobs for more than 3 seconds]], or [[NoTrueScotsman listening to music that they don't like]]. And [[FromBadToWorse it gets worse]] with each album. Lines like "Fuck the troops to hell!" are rather hard to top.
565* Music/RiseAgainst has always had political songs, especially in their 2011 album 'Endgame'. Not the mention [[http://dyingscene.com/wp-content/uploads/Rise_Against-End_Game-300x300.jpg the album's cover]].
566* Subverted by most of the crossover and grindcore (yes, it counts as subversion, as Crossover and Grindcore are direct descendants of hardcore punk) bands such as Stormtroopers Of Death, Music/AnalCunt, and Agoraphobic Nosebleed by having songs like "Fuck The Middle East", "Speak English or Die", "Body By Auschwitz", or "White On White Crime". Anal Cunt is a joke band, and to a lesser extent, so is Agoraphobic Nosebleed.
567* Thrash metal is often guilty of this. Music/{{Metallica}}'s 1988 album ''And Justice for All'' is just the tip of the iceberg, most of which is comprised of Music/{{Anthrax}}'s '85-1990 material. Although one must give credit to the German bands for, for the most part, averting it. Music/{{Kreator}}, especially. And then you have the newer bands like Music/MunicipalWaste, who have a 20,000:1 ratio of "let's get wasted and thrash!" lyrics to anvilicious lyrics.
568* Pretty much anything by Lily Allen falls into this category, the most bare-faced example being ''Fuck You'', a twelve-verse rant about how [[StrawCharacter conservatives are necessarily terrible people]], with a chorus consisting entirely of the titular obscenity to drive the point home. Too subtle for ya? While it is anvilicious (and mostly liked for the humour it brings from that), the song isn't about conservatives as such, but about George Bush, according to Lily Allen. Another song that comes under this for some people is ''Everyone's At It'', which is very black and white about drug use (including prescription ones). Of course, it's a pop song. Not known for its nuances.
569** The latter was motivated by Allen watching her brother wasting his life on drugs, which she then made even clearer with the song ''Alfie'' being explicitly about him. Don't worry, he got better. [[spoiler:And became known as the guy who lost his wang on ''Series/GameOfThrones''.]]
570* Anything by the Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy. Imagine a political pamphlet produced by an especially humourless extreme left winger being read out over a drum machine beat. That's pretty much what their album sounded like. Consolidated were similar but at least they had a couple of good tracks.
571* About ninety-nine percent of output of Music/TheSpecials (especially the stuff written by Jerry Dammers).
572* Music/PinkFloyd's 1983 album ''Music/TheFinalCut'', was released in response to UsefulNotes/TheFalklandsWar.
573** In which we learn (again; see "Pigs (Three Different Ones)") that Roger Waters really doesn't like UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher. Okay Rog. We get it.
574** Pretty much anything by Waters counts - after all Music/TheFinalCut is subtitled "A requiem for the post-war dream by Roger Waters, performed by Pink Floyd". He continued to drop the anvil on us in his solo career, and this year's ''Music/TheWall'' tour has decorations that send quite unsubtle messages.
575* Common in modern country music, especially in the wake on 9/11. Music/TobyKeith was a big offender for while.
576* "Capital G" from Music/NineInchNails' ''Year Zero'' album. It's about as subtle as a Texan in a flight suit.
577* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_d8C4AIFgUg WAR]]. Huh! Good God, y'all.
578** ''Literature/EarthTheBook'' parodied this by saying "WAR! Huh! What's it good for... aside from ending slavery... and stopping Hitler."
579** "War doesn't give life, it can only take it away"... Tell that to all the children conceived over the centuries by soldiers knocking up women in the areas where they were stationed.
580* If you pay attention to the lyrics in a lot of Music/MarilynManson songs, you'll find they're ''extremely'' Anvilicious about society, especially when the songs are notably {{sarcas|mMode}}tic.
581* Ray Stevens' album "We the People" hammers the listener over the head with Stevens' conservative Christian views, to the point that even if one ''agrees'' with the overall message, it's still pretty irritating.
582* Goldfinger. No, not [[Film/{{Goldfinger}} that Goldfinger]]. They used to be a pretty good punk/pop band. That was until every other song started to be about animal rights, some of them so over the top that you expect them to start hurling anvils off the stage at you. It's so irritating at times that is just makes you [[SarcasmMode wanna punch a puppy]].
583* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOkF0McZKIw "Blame Halo 3"]], a parody of Akon's "Blame it on Me" about the harms of video game addiction.
584* Most everything done by Otep is basically "Religion, conservatives, greed and rape are wrong and anyone who agrees with any of them must DIE!" Especially in the song Menocide, which is about how women should rise up against men who harm them and kill them.
585* ''Flobots'' are an entirely political band, with every track supporting anarchism or criticising Oligarchy in some way.
586* The ''Cha-Ching'' band songs (from Creator/CartoonNetwork) are this, combined with catchy songs that is nothing more than three-minute extended messages about spending your money right, donating, and how the world will be a better place if you do it. Enforced, since the intention is to teach little kids how to make financial decisions.
587* Music/HarryChapin wasn't one for subtlety. Just listen to "Cat's in The Cradle" or "Flowers are Red" and see if you can't hear what Harry was all about.
588* Music/BeastieBoys would have at least one or two songs full of anvils in their later albums. In Hello Nasty's "The Negotiation Limerick File" one line says "Don't let me begin about heroin livin' six feet deep ain't in the mood". And a good chunk of To the Five Boroughs is anti-Bush rapping, worst offender being "It Takes Time to Build". Some gems include "Ban [=SUVs=] strained out on OPEC" "The Kyoto Treaty he decided to neglect" "The Christian Coalition and the right wing, ooh!" "Environmental destruction and the national debt but still enough for that war chest".
589* The Music/{{Skillet}} song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zk0Sr0C3yYM Rise]] is about the horrors of war and terrorism and standing up to it. To hammer it home, the last 40 seconds forgo singing altogether and just drop anvils.
590* The title track of Music/TheSmiths' album ''Music/MeatIsMurder''.
591* Music/JohannSebastianBach was anvilicious, at least in his {{cantata}} production. Besides the biblical texts, the commenting arias and recitations had one point: ''Seek Jesus inside your heart!'' This message props up in different settings over and over. Added to the soloists, you also have the hymns, supposed to be sung by the congregation. Thus his listeners, attending regular mass in the Leipzig church of st.Thomas, got that message through loud and clear.
592* "Think About It" by Music/FlightOfTheConchords is a parody of this trope in music. In it the narrator complains about various social topics, but keeps going off on random FridgeLogic tangents that [[BrokenAesop break]] or [[CluelessAesop misunderstand]] the moral. For example, while discussing the poor working conditions of children made to work in sweatshops, the narrator starts wondering why shoes are so expensive if the companies selling them are making them so cheaply/easily.
593* Compare the [[EarthShatteringPoster cover art]] of the ''[[http://cache.osta.ee/iv2/auctions/1_1_9301393.jpg Oxygene]]'' LP by Jean-Michel Jarre, and ''[[http://www.audioculture.co.nz/content/images/15057/hero_thumb_pii.jpg Pins In It]]'' by The Human Instinct. Such [[strike:unbearable]] unlikely imagery, independently developed by different artists.
594* Model majority garage rockers Rehabilitation Cruise's two known songs, "I Don't Care What They Say" and "Miniskirts". Both appear in AIP's ''Highs in the Mid-Sixties'' compilations and are over-the-top anvilicious in their promotion of traditional American values. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6fkVOCBEOrE The former song]] condemns draft dodgers and anti-Vietnam War activists, with one chorus starting out with the lines "You're wrong! You're wrong!" in reference to those who see joining the military as unhip, and the outro featuring the singer reciting the Pledge of Allegiance. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFo07kNqf4I The latter song]], while less anvilicious, is also quite out of place in the '60s rock scene, as it chides teenage girls for [[HavingAGayOldTime showing too much skin]] when they wear the titular miniskirts.
595* Much of Alessia Cara's output is unabashed about empowering social outcasts to not have to conform to norms and to just BeYourself. "Here" and "Wild Things" are standout examples, with the former being unsubtly against partying and hedonism. Also, "Scars to Your Beautiful" doesn't waste any time getting to the point with the opening line "She just wants to be beautiful", as it is a female body positivity song.
596* ''Music/KidsPraise'': The presentation of several aesops, especially in the earlier albums, could be painfully heavy-handed, especially when delivered by [[LargeHam overacting kids]]. Later albums tended to have better presentation of their aesops.
597* Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers' "I'm Not a Juvenile Delinquent."
598-->Do the things that's right\
599And you'll do nothing wrong\
600Life will be so nice, you'll be in paradise\
601I know, because I'm not a juvenile delinquent
602* The ''Music/Eiffel65 song'' "Too Much of Heaven" is a quite heavy-handed critique of consumerism and capitalism, and of taking a good thing too far. For perspective, its lyrics talk a ''lot'' about becoming a slave to cash, with the chorus stressing that "Heaven" can always turn around.
603* Subtlety was not in Music/NinaSimone's vocabulary when it came to her {{Protest Song}}s, and they are all the stronger for it. For instance, she recorded a song called "Mississippi Goddam" in 1964, when language of that severity was still at least mildly shocking. Music/TheBeachBoys agonised over using the word "God" in the chorus of "[[Music/PetSounds God Only Knows]]", and that didn't appear until 1966.
604* Music/OperationMindcrime expresses the artists' dislike of problems such as religious and political corruption, income inequality, and drug addiction in a way that is not exactly subtle.
605* The music video for {{Music/GarthBrooks}}'s song "The Thunder Rolls" depicts a philandering husband shot by his wife for violently abusing her and threatening their daughter. A number of music industry women praised the video as a powerful statement against domestic violence. The video was released to The Nashville Network and Country Music Television, who both showed and then quickly dropped the video on the grounds that they didn't promote "gratuitous violence or social issues." Brooks refused to film a disclaimer for the video so he wouldn't seem like he was using the controversy to promote the video, but he didn't need to. Word got out about how quickly the video was pulled, and [[NoSuchThingAsBadPublicity numerous outlets asked to see the video for themselves.]] Radio stations started screening it at fundraisers for women's shelters, and several of these shelters praised Brooks' company Capitol Records for raising awareness of domestic violence. VH-1 started airing the video, and it eventually won awards at the Country Music Association and the Grammys.
606* Ripped to Shreds' "漢奸 (Race Traitor)": As a minority, you will have plenty of valid and major criticisms about your own culture, but you will still feel like a traitor and sellout for making them because you know that people from other cultures will disingenously latch onto and cherrypick your words to endorse their own bigotry.
607* Music/GamaBomb's "Metal Idiot" has a very straightforward message: Nazis are assholes. If you start to witness far-right elements infiltrating your scene, it's your responsibility to purge them by any means necessary. Let them know that you know exactly what they're up to, that they are not welcome, and "say fuck 'em, stamp it out" as quickly as possible.
608-->If you want a picture of the future, it's a kick in the face!\
609You're all alone in this place\
610Clinging to the past, you're a total disgrace!\
611You're no master race!
612* Music/StevieWonder and Charlene's "Used to Be": Things were so much better way back when and the Reagan-era world is going to hell in a handbasket.
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