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3[[folder:Folk]]
4* "Merry Little Minuet," written by Sheldon Harnick and recorded by the Kingston Trio, is a cheerful little ditty about bad news from all over the world.
5* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=roxxhOxnupM "Motherfucker Got Fucked Up"]], by Folk Uke, is a sweet, cheerful uke strum-along by two gentle-voiced girls... set to GangstaRap-styled lyrics of violence and profanity about hurting motherfuckers who get in their way.
6** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EgVZrPUhUgQ Knock Me Up]] from the same duo is yet another cheerful ditty... about wanting to get pregnant via anonymous sex.
7** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00-mxcPZsKs Shit Makes the Flowers Grow]] is a woman trying to cheer up her significant other, and [[DamningWithFaintPraise failing to do so.]] They also know karate.
8* Kris Kristofferson. "Billy Dee" has an upbeat tune, but when you listen to the lyrics it's about a young man who gets lost in addiction and eventually [=OD=]s.
9* Singer and guitar player Jim Croce has a few songs like this. One, "Salon and Saloon", ''should'' be happy and upbeat--it's a song about two old high school friends reuniting and chatting. Instead, it sounds like someone's entire family just died. Likewise, "Time in a Bottle" is a touching song about how much the singer cares for someone, yet it sounds wistful and bleak (perhaps justified, as the refrain says "But there never seems to be enough time to do the things you want to do once you find them").
10* Harvey Andrews' "Hey, Sandy", about [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandra_Scheuer Sandra Scheuer]], has a fairly bouncy tune, to the point where at least one folk singer has demanded of an audience who seemed to be enjoying it "Do you actually know what this is about?"
11* "The Helicopter Song" a.k.a. "The Warder in the Joy" by the Wolfe Tones. If you just listen to the melody, you'd never realize it was about a prison break.
12** Hell, even if you listen, unless you know a little Irish English, you ''still'' might not realize it's about a prison break.
13* Bill Staines' "Jubilee" is a happy little number describing a celebration long ago in (presumably) New Orleans. It's even managed to find its way onto an album of children's music. The lyrics, however, are written from the perspective of a group of hobos who showed up to make music with whatever objects they could find.
14--> They was bangin' on the banjos‚ they was pickin' on guitars
15--> They was blowin' out the bass notes on the crockery jars
16--> They was slidin' on the washboards, bangin' spoons upon their knees
17--> Jubilee, Lord, wasn't it a Jubilee!
18* Canadian folk singer James Gordon gives us "Hockey Town", a jaunty pop-like number about a thirteen-year-old girl getting sexually assaulted by a seventeen-year-old member of her town's hockey team. Here's what happens next:
19--> Now she's lying in the leaves;
20--> She cries till someone calls the police.
21--> The policeman says "I can't believe
22--> The story that you're telling me!
23--> They are all such fine young men,
24--> [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney With expensive lawyers to defend them]].
25--> Why don't you go on home? And then
26--> Don't hang around the rink again."
27--> ''[...]''
28--> Everybody says that he'll go far.
29--> He's got a contract with the Dallas Stars,
30--> And tonight, down at the local bar,
31--> They laugh about the way they dropped the charges!
32* Voltaire's "Come, Sweet Death" is an upbeat song dedicated to Death of the Endless from the ''[[ComicBook/TheSandman Sandman]]'' comics. But it is completely in-character for [[PerkyGoth Death]], of course.
33** Most of Voltaire's songs are like this. BRAINS! is a piece of swing-type music from ''WesternAnimation/TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy'' about Billy gathering brains for an evil meteor. And it was awesome.
34** He even has a bouncy song about this trope, called "Death, Death (Devil, Devil, Evil, Evil)"
35** And "The Headless Waltz" which is about... um... [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin pretty much exactly what you'd expect]]
36** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_YUFFMA4V-w "Die die die di-die die"]]
37** You know those tunes that just sound like they were written so that the [[{{Eagleland}} American]] government could inspire patriotism? Set to one of those lyrics about how much he hates the place and wishes someone would [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tuy4Bpz080Q "Bomb New Jersey"]].
38** Guess what the gospel-esque [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t6rLMchPYSw&feature=related "Hell in a Handbasket"]] [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin is about]].
39* [[Music/DonMcLean Don "It Means I Never Have To Work Again" McLean's]] "Primetime". The music sounds pretty upbeat. The lyrics...
40-->''We had to burn the city 'cause they wouldn't agree\
41That things go better with democracy''
42* Filker Music/TomSmith has the cheery tune "Walking Along the Beach..." The chorus starts, "I'm singin' a 'walking along the beach while you're slitting your wrists' song." He [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] this in one live performance by commenting before the song, "Somehow, this has become a sing-along. Which means that one of us is really weird, folks!"
43* [[http://www.metrolyrics.com/for-lovin-me-lyrics-peter-paul-mary.html "For Lovin' Me"]] is a cheerful, happy song about how the main character has broken someone's heart and will break it again "someday when your poor heart is on the mend," plus has done the same to many others. And it goes on and on.
44* Music/PhilOchs' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ulTmmTIlM_o "Outside of a Small Circle of Friends"]] is a cheerful song about people's apathy towards murder and poverty.
45** "When in Rome" has elements of this as well, with the bits about the narrator brutally killing people generally being set to the most upbeat parts of the song. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T3azVsot95s]][[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAuRU_T0hSk]]
46* Tom Paxton's "Buy A Gun For Your Son" sounds rather upbeat and jaunty, and might be mistaken for pure jingoism... until you listen to the whole song.
47--> ''With your picture on the wall\
48He'll get that long-awaited call\
49And press the firing buttons with a smile!''
50* Pete Seeger's cover of Tom Paxton's "What Did You Learn In School Today?" is up there. A cheery little number that [[FridgeBrilliance sounds exactly like a song a Kindergarten teacher would sing with their class]], but is actually about all the lies children's heads are filled with in school as a form of indoctrination and an effort to raise them with naive, wide-eyed nationalism at the expense of the truth or compassion. Yikes.
51* Music/{{Damien Rice}}:
52** "Amie" is a cheerful song with swooping orchestrals...about a man trying to convince a young girl to sit on his garden wall and read him a pornographic novel.
53** "Me My Yoke + I" is a desperate, dark song about the joys of discovering masturbation.
54* Music/ViennaTeng
55** "Now Three". [[WordOfGod By her own admission]] this song is an anxious and nervous happy song.
56** "Radio", in which a girl calmly and curiously imagines herself being mortally wounded in a suicide bombing in San Francisco.
57** "Whatever You Want" has a very happy melody about a corrupt businessman who sees his life fall to pieces irreparably when he's betrayed by his wife and his right-hand man.
58* Music/LisaHannigan has “What’ll I Do” from ''Passenger'': an upbeat song buoyed by stomping beats and plucked violins, yet with lyrics telling of the singer’s despairing introspection after a breakup.
59* Paul Kelly's rock song "How to Make Gravy" is a regretful song that takes the form of a letter written by a man who's in prison, to his brother. The narrator talks about the assorted members of his family, throws in tips for making the gravy that he normally makes, but it's completely heartbreaking when he talks about how it's nearly Christmas, and he won't be there to see his family- especially with the line "Won't you kiss my kids on Christmas Day? Please don't let them cry for me."
60* "Jesuitmont" by the Celtic band Kornog, is a bouncy, energetic number - about an evil stepmother and her cook murdering her stepdaughter and baking her into a pie for her father to eat. (Why they choose to do so is never explained.)
61* Finnish folk-pop group Music/{{Varttina}}; sometimes exemplify this trope, especially on their earlier albums, which feature dizzyingly chipper songs about unhappy marriages, villages full of idiots, and the general wretchedness of life.
62** "Matalii ja Mustii" is about a town where the girls are ugly, the boys are stupid, and the children are presumably below average. The [[LazyBum lazy]], [[ReallyGetsAround experienced]], [[LadyDrunk alcoholic]] narrator is not impressed. The song was featured in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}''.
63** "Marilaulu" is about pouring boiling lead into gossiping old women's mouths, after cutting out their tongues.
64*** Mind you, the gossip was about the narrator's [[BlackWidow habit of disposing of her unsatisfactory husbands]].
65** "Kivutar" is about an evil goddess, and the black magic she is preparing to unleash on the world.
66** "Iro" tells the story of a girl who never ever found a lover...the list goes on.
67* Music/StanRogers loves these kinds of songs:
68** "Barrett's Privateers", his most famous song, is an upbeat, a capella, easy to sing along with song about the eponymous crew's sole survivor describing the single battle the ship had and cursing everything for leaving him a broken man on the wrong side of the Atlantic.
69** "The Flowers of Bermuda" is a fast-tempo song about a shipwreck and the captain's HeroicSacrifice.
70** "Flying", which sounds as majestic as the title suggests, is sung by a washed-up hockey star about how he's training another generation of kids to get used up and thrown aside by the sport.
71** "Canol Road" is the story of a man with cabin fever who murders a stranger in a bar and freezes to death while fleeing, interspersed with some SceneryPorn descriptions of the place where he died.
72* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J11mJ29jZEg "Chane Ke Khet Mein"]] from the UsefulNotes/{{Bollywood}} movie ''{{Anjaam}}''. The song lyrics are about rape, but the song is very upbeat and sung ''at a wedding!'' It could be interpreted as being about a "rape fantasy" scenario or an instance of rough albeit consensual sex in a chickpea field, but still...
73* Bruce Cockburn's "Dancing In Paradise." Mellow, relaxing music and the chorus is simply, "There's dancing in paradise . . . dancing in paradise..." However, Cockburn wrote the song in Jamaica and the verses are used to graphically describe the violence, poverty, and corruption he saw there.
74* Zig-zagged in the '60s song "Red Rubber Ball", covered by various artists (written by Paul Simon and Bruce Woodley), has a very upbeat tune with lyrics about a guy who got ditched by his girl. The guy is fine about this ("The worst is over now, the morning sun is shining like a [[TitleDrop red rubber ball]]..."), but half of the song is a rant about how bad the girl treats him. ("The roller coaster ride we took is nearing to an end, I bought my ticket with my tears, that's all I'm gonna spend,")
75* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OVKepUX5R5Y "Bäckamannens brud"]] by Swedish band Sarek is a relatively happy-sounding song... about a woman dancing with [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neck_(water_spirit) the Neck]], who [[TheBadGuyWins drowns her in the end]].
76* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJNR2EpS0jw "Dumb Ways to Die,"]] produced for the Melbourne Metro, is a light, bouncy little tune, with a sweet-voiced mezzo lead. The title [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin tells you what it's about]].
77* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXDTRPzCLQs Džamije Lete]] by Momčilo, sounds like a happy upbeat song...but the lyrics in Serbian are about blowing up mosques and terrifying acts of violence towards ethnic Bosnians.
78* The Tallest Man On Earth's "The Gardener" is a happy, catchy, cute tune about a paranoid man who kills any guy who could so much as bat an eyelid at his significant other (or who could possibly tell him about something he doesn't want to know about his SO, if you interpret it that way), and buries them in his garden to fertilize his plants. It's... jarring.
79* Andy Irvine's rendition of Marcus Turner's ''When the Boys Are On Parade'' is performed with Irvine's typical bouncy beat and rapid singing. Of such lyrics as :
80--> Merely the whim or intuition of an elected politician
81-->Makes a melee without conditions as the monster quits the cage
82-->It's a machine that knows no quarter dealing death and sowing slaughter
83-->Raping mothers, wives, and daughters in an all-consuming rage
84* Peter, Paul and Mary's ''El Salvador'' is a cheery song about how horrible life is in a Central American country going through a civil war, ending with a plea to the US government to stop propping up the established government so that the war can finally end.
85* Music/SteamPoweredGiraffe's "Fire Fire" combines the band's catchy upbeat family-friendly musical style with a tragic tale of people ''burning to death in a spaceship''. In contrast, David Michael Bennett's solo performance of the same song plays the lyric heartbreakingly straight.
86* The Haitian Creole folk song "Feuilles-O" has become a standard in the English-speaking world, usually performed in soothing lullaby style. [[http://www.bradpriddy.com/paul_simon/feuill.htm The lyrics]], however, are actually an anguished plea from a mother to a voodoo healer about her sick child.
87* The Limeliters' fast-paced, energetic rendition of "Betty and Dupree", a song about a guy who shoots a jeweler because he can't afford a diamond ring for his girlfriend.
88* Mexican ''Narcocorridos'' are jolly ballads set to upbeat mariachi band music... [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WIPBdDkYRYg about brutal Drug Wars-related violence.]]
89* African-American folk singer Lead Belly's song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46h56pidCiE Cotton Fields]], [[CoveredUp later made popular by]] {{Music/The Beach Boys}}' and {{Music/Creedence Clearwater Revival}}'s covers, is a cheerful, jaunting ditty about the hardships and poverty faced by the black cotton farmers in the American south.
90* "Day is Done" by John Prine is a sweet song, so innocent sounding... but it's about adultery.
91* [[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=MLg83QMmlGs “Katusha”]] by the Red Army Choir. Despite being a marching song sung by a bunch of tough-sounding Russian guys, it's about a girl named Katusha (Russian version of Katie) and her love for a young soldier. If you don't speak Russian, reading a translation of the lyrics and realizing that it's a love song can be a big surprise.
92* "They Built the Ship Titanic" is a traditional camping song with cheery upbeat music about [[UsefulNotes/{{RMS Titanic}} a certain ship's]] encounter with an iceberg.
93* The 1907 song "Red Wing" is supposed to be a sad story about a young Indian girl whose lover rides away to battle and is killed in action, but it's hard to truly feel the maiden's sense of grief when it's set to the tune of [[Music/RobertSchumann Schumann's]] "The Merry Peasant", which was also used as the tune for "A Quake! A Quake!" from ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}''.
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95
96[[folder:Folk Punk]]
97* Flogging Molly's songs often turn out this way. Almost all of them are in major keys with happy, fast-paced fiddle or pipe tunes as the melody. A recurring theme lyrically, on the other hand, is grief for lost youth, lost love and/or the generally crappy lot in life of the Irish. See "Light of a Fading Star"; "Tomorrow Comes a Day Too Soon"; "My Sweet Roisin Dubh"; "The Rare Ould Times"; "Tobacco Island"; and "What's Left of the Flag". "Screaming at the Wailing Wall" is one of their few songs ''not'' about these things, but remains a chipper-tuned downer.
98** "The Rare Ould Times" isn't their song ([[RefrainFromAssuming and it isn't even the proper name of]] [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dublin_in_the_Rare_Old_Times the song]]), though it generally ''is'' performed with the intent of lyrical dissonance.
99* Every song by Music/AndrewJacksonJihad.
100* Music/ThePogues:
101** "Sit Down by the Fire" is a cheerful ditty about how the fey will come into your home and murder you.
102** "The Wake of the Medusa" is about a ship's crew being scammed out of gold and left with a box of old rope.
103** "The Turkish Song of the Damned" is about a man who abandoned his shipmates to drown, and the dead (83 of them) come back to claim a debt from him, the lyrics also imply that he was hearing the wail of a banshee before this happened.
104** In no other Christmas song besides "Fairytale of New York" will you hear the lyrics "You scumbag, you maggot, you cheap lousy faggot" or "you're an old slut on junk" as pipes play a cheerful tune.
105** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=swQNNjXztsI Thousands are Sailing]]" is a tune filled with very bittersweet lyrics about the experience of Irish emigrating to America, itself a subject mired in tragedy, heartbreak, and hope, with plenty of success and failure for the immigrants. It also has recurring string sections that sound like they come right out of a merry jig and will definitely let you understand what the song means when it refers to those immigrants finding refuge in music and dance despite their circumstances.
106[[/folder]]
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108[[folder:Folk Rock]]
109* Music/JonathanCoulton re-imagined "Baby Got Back" as a light-acoustic ballad and Destiny's Child's "Bills, Bills, Bills" as a bluegrass fusion number. The former is hilarious, the latter arguably works better than the original.
110** "Baby Got Back" still works after the humor of the dichotomy fades since his rendition makes the crass lyrics sound oddly touching.
111** "Skullcrusher Mountain" is about an EvilOverlord in love.
112** "Re: Your Brains" is a song about a zombified office worker cheerfully trying to negotiate with his still-human co-worker ("All we want to do is eat your brains / We're not unreasonable, I mean, no one's gonna eat your eyes").
113** "Chiron Beta Prime" is a bouncy Christmas song set in the aftermath of a RobotWar.
114*** The lyrics of this one imply it may intentionally be invoking the trope in order to sneak it out past the Robot Overlords. Did I say overlords? I meant ''protectors''.
115** "Shop Vac" is about post-suburban marital problems. Seriously.
116** "I Crush Everything", an extremely sad tune about the loneliness suffered by... a giant squid. Who ''hates'' dolphins.
117** Coulton also penned the lyrics and tune to "Still Alive", the ending song to the game ''VideoGame/{{Portal}}''. It's a cheery little pop tune sung by [[spoiler:the insane AI [=GLaDOS=]]], with lyrics [[spoiler:congratulating Chell in a very passive aggressive manner, as well as implying things are much, much worse on the outside of the Enrichment Center. (''"While you're dying I'll be still alive / And when you're dead I will be still alive..."'')]]
118** Nor should you forget "The Future Soon", about someone dreaming of a future where he can build a robot army on a space station to conquer the earth and force the love of his life to be his bride...
119** A case of this done ''deliberately'' is "I Feel Fantastic". Coulton wrote the song after reading a ''Scientific American'' article about mood-altering medication. The song is a cheery tune about how great life is, but it quickly becomes clear the singer doesn't feel a genuine emotional state at any point in the song, instead letting medication control all of his moods.
120** Another rather deliberate instance is his song "Not About You", in which he insists that he's over his previous relationship and that he doesn't obsess over his ex, [[HypocriticalHumor even though it's obviously not true]].
121** Slashdot's unofficial anthem, "Code Monkey", is about a programmer who doesn't leave his crap job only to have a chance to see and chat with a secretary girl who won't even accept small gifts from him. It's also another fine example of Coulton's love of shifting the focus back and forth [[MindScrew to screw with people's minds]].
122** [[http://www.jonathancoulton.com/wiki/index.php/Blue_Sunny_Day "Blue Sunny Day"]] was written after Jonathan decided, just once, to make a song that was "kind of bouncy and happy". However, as he says, "once I had decided to use the phrase "blue sunny day," it was hard not to notice that the word "blue" can have another meaning. From there it's only a quick jump to vampire suicide." Notably, he tried hard ''not'' to make it about a sad vampire.
123** How about "Make You Cry?" If you don't listen to what he says, it sounds nice and peaceful...with lyrics like:
124-->The love I hate\
125The hate I need\
126The pain that pulls me through\
127I can't wait\
128To watch you bleed\
129When Your heart's broken too
130** "Betty and Me" is a very fast (almost ''frenetic'') bluegrass sort of tune about how the narrator's relationship with his wife is getting better since they're having a baby, except for the many, ''many'' clues within the song that it's not ''his'' baby. Slightly subverted, since it's abundantly clear the singer is totally unaware of this and is genuinely happy about how "Betty says he'll be taller, and Betty says he'll be smarter, and Betty says that our baby will be better than me."
131** "Good Morning Tuscon" is about a news anchor who snaps and goes on a murderous rampage during a broadcast, then burns down the studio.
132** In fact, it's easier to just list the songs which are genuinely upbeat, so I will:
133*** "You Ruined Everything," a song he wrote for his daughter, which, despite the title, is actually about how much he loves being a dad.
134*** "Big Dick Farts A Polka," a song InTheStyleOf Music/PaulAndStorm, about Rich Wocjinski, "Big Dick to his friends, who despite his name is famous for what issues from his ass."
135*** And "Dance, Soterios Johnson, Dance," about the secret double-life of his favorite radio host.
136* The Corrs have more than a few, including:
137** "Give Me A Reason", is about a relationship that was ended and the dumpee has no clue as to why.
138** "All In A Day", an intense song about how bad someone's life can get in one day.
139* Same thing goes for nearly every song on Thao Nguyen's latest album. With her gleeful, indie-folk style, loss and uncertainty never sounded so fun.
140* The 1967 song "Sunday Will Never Be The Same" by Spanky and Our Gang has an upbeat tune with beautiful harmonies, but the lyrics describe how breaking up with her lover has forever destroyed the singer's enjoyment of Sunday morning walks in the park.
141* "I Saw Her Again" by the Mamas & the Papas sounds pretty happy and light, but the lyrics...[[CreatorBreakdown are about an affair that happened within the band]].
142* "Wild World" by Cat Stevens (and [[CoveredUp by several artists since]]) is a cheery little number about a parent warning his/her daughter, who's about to leave home, of all the dangers she faces out there.
143* Many interpret the folky harmonies of Stephen Stills' "Love the One You're With" to mean that it's a song about communal love and appreciation for what we have around us. However, lines like "Concentration slip away, cause your baby is so far away" and "There's a girl right next to you, and she's just waitin' for something to do" suggest a darker meaning, that the song would seem to be celebrating unfaithfulness.
144* Paul Simon did this in a few songs -- "Mother and Child Reunion" is, depending on your perspective, a weirdly overwrought song about a custody battle or a gutwrenching story about a dying child (although Simon claims he wrote it about a chicken-and-egg dish he saw in a Chinese restaurant); "You Can Call Me Al" is essentially about loneliness and futile introspection with an anvilicious shot of "it could be a lot worse" in the third verse; "Me and Julio Down By The Schoolyard" is a rollicking happy tune about family rejection and unrest in poor neighborhoods.
145* Music/TheMountainGoats are masters of this trope. "No Children" is kind of upbeat and perky — you could almost dance a jig to it — even though it has some of the nastiest, most spiteful lyrics ever committed to music. "Dance Music" is about stalking a girl and watching your parents' marriage fall apart, but the tune is similarly happy.
146* "You Will Burn" as recorded by Steeleye Span. The tone of the music calls to mind uplifting anthems such as "We Shall Overcome." The lyrics are about (and from the POV of) a group of people who break into your house, kidnap you, take you into the woods "where none will hear your cry," mutilate you, kill your children, raze your house, and [[BurnTheWitch burn you at the stake]], all the while declaring that they're saving your soul.
147* Music/SimonAndGarfunkel's song "The Sun Is Burning". A sweet, melodic little piece, which is about a nuclear holocaust.
148** "I Am a Rock" sounds upbeat, but is about a recluse locking himself away. "The Boxer" is also up there in terms of this trope. The "Lai-la-lai!" in the chorus just adds to it. "Leaves That Are Green" is about the brevity of life and inevitability of death, and yet the actual music is lively and upbeat. (Blame the harpsichord)
149** Simon and Garfunkel are masters of this trope. "Richard Cory" is about a wealthy, successful businessman committing suicide. "A poem on an underground wall" is about someone writing the F word on a subway station wall. "A most peculiar man" is about yet another suicide, and ends with the lines, "All the people said 'What a shame that he's dead, but wasn't he a most peculiar man?'" And yet, for some reason, everyone associates the duo with uncompromised, naive idealism.
150* Music/MoxyFruvous' "Drinking Song" sounds just like a drinking song (and a song ''about'' drinking) that you might find in an average pub, albeit with a tinge of the melancholy - until you listen to the lyrics and realize it's about how the singer's drinkin' buddy dies of alcohol poisoning - "''He passed out on the sundeck that morning / quietly singing goodbye''"
151** Similarly, their song "Independence Day" seems to be a sad breakup song, but there's a definite undercurrent of "Boy, I'm glad she's gone and I can breathe again."
152* One of the biggest crowd-pleasing numbers of Music/HarryChapin was "30,000 Pounds of Bananas", which tells, with jaunty high energy, the true story of a truck driver transporting the titular fruit to Scranton, Pennsylvania who crashes and dies horribly. He originally composed it at a more meditative piece, but when it emerged that the song was funny, he sped it up and added a section where he riffed on his difficulties in writing a satisfactory end to the song. This didn't sit well with the trucker's widow, and it was agreed that ''Bananas'' would never be performed in Scranton, Pennsylvania.
153** Another Chapin tune, "Dreams Go By", is a bouncy-sounding number masking a bittersweet tale of two people whose childhood dreams are deferred and ultimately discarded by work, marriage, and family.
154* The Music/GreatBigSea version of ''Captain Kidd'', about a notorious [[strike:English]] Scottish privateer, is very upbeat and cheerful. The song presents a (fictitious) account of the eponymous Kidd, wherein he is an ObviouslyEvil privateer captain who is a {{Jerkass}} to his dad, hates God, and kills people for fun. He tries to [[HeelFaceTurn turn over a new leaf]], but unfortunately, [[DeathEqualsRedemption death does NOT equal redemption]] for Kidd, and he is hanged. However, in the end, he [[GoOutWithASmile goes out with a smile]], warning others to behave, "or you'll wind up just like me!". The song is very catchy, by the way, as are a lot of GBS songs.
155** BTW, the song is OlderThanTheyThink: GBS [[CoveredUp did a cover]] of a traditional Newfoundland folk song (as usual), which is ''purported'' to come from the time of Kidd himself.
156** Also performed by Great Big Sea, we have ''Excursion 'Round the Bay'', which is a cheerful, bouncy song about a guy killing (accidentally or intentionally, it's not clear) his wife.
157* Music/TheDecemberists' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4X9lJH05B0 "Culling of the Fold"]] starts out sounding like ragtime circus music--and then it starts telling you to cut people up. The chorus is about killing your lover to prevent overpopulation, or possibly to eat them.
158* "Scatterlings of Africa" is a cheerful-sounding and very upbeat piece of music... about the trials and difficulties of the uprooted and refugee populations of the eponymous continent.
159* "Walk You Home" by Passenger is an upbeat, bouncy tune that initially sounds like a song about the first flush of love with lyrics about accidentally touching hands at the coffee machine, but actually describes a stalker's infatuation with a work colleague that is out of his reach. It gets creepy when he starts sitting in a neighbor's tree with a pair of night vision binoculars, amongst other things.
160* "Day is Done" by John Prine is a sweet song, so innocent sounding... but it's about adultery.
161* "Sunny Came Home" by Shawn Colvin has a bright, upbeat, even peaceful melody. The song, by contrast, is about a woman, the titular Sunny, who burns down her house to escape her DarkAndTroubledPast, and is heavily implied to have killed herself at the end.
162[[/folder]]
163
164[[folder:Folktronic]]
165* "Jenny Again" by Tunng. Folksy guitar strumming in a minor, nonetheless peaceful, key. The song's lyrics are in the imperative - a man giving instructions to the friend of him and his girlfriend. Advice about what to do after [[MurderTheHypotenuse said friend has murdered the man singing the song over the girlfriend, Jenny]]. The chorus tells the perpetrator not to worry "because no-one saw [the victim] fall". The serene style of the music certainly doesn't bring stabbing to the forefront of your mind.
166** Tunngs arguably most famous song, Bullets, is cheery and soft. Its lyrics feature such gems as "Our blood and guts are out", "We cut our fingers off to give ourselves a little extra insight" and "Carve angels on your eyes and all is undone".
167[[/folder]]
168
169[[folder:Irish Folk]]
170* The Gaelic song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hkFHCP19UaA "Bean Phaidin"]] is a pretty fun song about petty jealousy, then you get to the fourth verse: "May you break your legs, Paidin's wife/ May you break your legs, your legs/ May you break your legs and your bones". Wait, what?
171* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6qSuoUPGEA "Weile Weile Waile"]] by Music/TheDubliners. Upbeat tune? Check. Happy children for the background vocals? Check. Infanticide and execution? Check.
172** It actually ''is'' a children's song from Dublin.
173* The song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTGF7t4Ztpw The Irish Ballad]]" by Tom Lehrer. It's a song about a girl who kills her entire family--and then lets herself be arrested, "for lying she knew was a sin". And the tune is not dark or even melancholy, and it's completely matter-of-fact about the way she kills off her family members one-by-one.
174** Lehrer did this intentionally, as he felt it was almost stereotypical for traditional Irish ballads to be cheerful little ditties with ample amounts of nonsense lyrics ("rickety-tickety-tin") despite being about such pleasant topics as murder, suicide, and death in general.
175** Given his fondness for satire and black comedy, his songs are often upbeat and hammy regardless of whether the topic is pollution, murder, World War 3 or a vacation in the most stereotypical of stereotypical Mexicos.
176* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0impJmZlBKA "My Little Armalite"]] is actually quite cheerful sounding. Also, it's a song dedicated to an assault rifle, though the lyrics can be still humorous in the way they describe the tables turned on the British when the IRA is better armed.
177* The cheery and bouncy tune [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZM7ltlq_lbM "Broad Black Brimmer"]] sounds light and happy. It even talks about a mother dressing her son in the clothes of the father. Very adorable. Except... the clothes are the uniform of the Irish Republican Army, and the boy's father survived the war against British imperialism, only to be killed in the resulting bitter civil war, and the boy is following in his father's footsteps to join the IRA and fight on for Irish independence.
178* Barleycorn's version of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CmpTVe1DrsI&feature=related The Men Behind The Wire]] sounds peppy and cheerful in the melody, but the song is about racism, and political oppression (Not for them a judge and jury/Nor indeed a trial at all/But being Irish means you're guilty/So we're guilty one and all).
179* Generally invoked in-song ''Here's a Health to the Company''. The singer and his friends are ''trying'' to have one joyous night before they go their separate ways, but the sad tone suggests they can't keep their minds off the fact that they might not ever see each other again.
180* "Do You Love an Apple?" appears to be a light-hearted ditty about two young people in love, but a closer look at the [[http://www.traditionalmusic.co.uk/folk-song-lyrics/Do_You_Love_an_Apple.htm lyrics]] reveals that it's actually a cynical song about a woman lamenting her life going downhill because she got too attached to her drunken lout of a boyfriend and knows that she can't leave him. Even the title hints at this: it's an allusion to Eve [[Literature/TheBible eating the apple in the Garden of Eden]]--that is, mindlessly grabbing for something that seems sweet, but turns out to have unintended consequences.
181* ''Well Below the Valley'' is sung in an upbeat, sometimes seductive melody. The lyrics? Incest, rape, infanticide and the devil taking the victim to hell.
182* Clannad recorded a fast-paced, fairly cheerful version of "Two Sisters", a song about a young woman who murders her sister because she wants to marry her suitor.
183* Really, the fact we have a separate section for Irish folk says it all. Pretty much every upbeat Irish song is going to be this.
184-->'''Creator/GKChesterton:''' "The Irish are the race that God made mad, for all their wars are merry and all their songs are sad."
185* "The Foggy Dew": a very pretty song with downright bloodthirsty lyrics about the Easter Rising. "The night fell black, and the rifles's crack/Made Perfidious Albion reel/In the leaden rain/Seven tongues of flame shone out o'er the lines of steel/And by each blade, a prayer was said/That to Ireland her sons be true/And when the dawn broke/still the war flag shook out its folds in the foggy dew."
186[[/folder]]

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