Arts and Culture

Playlist: Rise Up!

“The corporate revolution will collapse if we refuse to buy what they are selling—their ideas, their version of history, their wars, their weapons, their notion of inevitability. Remember this: We be many and they be few. They need us more than we need them.” -Arundhati Roy

A playlist for starting revolutions, rebellions, and uprisings. Remember to bring water, power snacks, pay-phone money, and several days worth of any prescription medication you take to any protests you attend! Listen to the playlist on Spotify here!

1. “I Was a Teenage Anarchist” Against Me!

“I Was A Teenage Anarchist” is the perfect song to prepare for any revolution. Against Me!’s music reflects singer/guitarist Laura Jane Grace’s experiences as a queer transgender woman and the politics surrounding identity and the body.

2. “The Resistance” Skillet

Skillet (suprisingly) identifies as a Christian rock band. Don’t let this discourage you though, their lyrics aren’t particularly religious. “The Resistance” will pump you up and remind you why you’re rising up in the first place.

3. “Viking Death Mark” Billy Talent

The most heavy rock/punk song on this playlist, “Viking Death March” speaks directly to tearing down capitalism. The best thing about Billy Talent? They’re a band that came out of Meadowvale in Mississauga—my hometown!

4. “Welcome to the Black Parade” My Chemical Romance

I went to karaoke with friends almost my age and somehow none of them knew this song. Regardless, “Welcome to the Black Parade” remains the anthem of disenfranchised youth rebelling against everything and anything.

5. “Shake the Ground” Cherri Bomb

Featured on the soundtrack album for Avengers (2012), “Shake the Ground” is a high-energy song about not doing what you’re told and breaking down the systems that thought they could control you in the first place.

6. “American Idiot” Green Day

A suprising number of hit songs in the 2000s were about saying ‘fuck you’ to the system. Green Day might be a more mainstream punk/ rock band, but that doesn’t make “American Idiot” any less relevant (or any less of a jam).

7. “The Revolution/The Establishment” Shad

Shad is a Juno Award-winning hip-hop artist from London, Ontario. “The Revolution/The Establishment” is exemplary of revolutionary music—every single lyric speaks to combatting oppression, inequality, and injustice.

8. “Uprising” Muse

“Uprising” is the quintessential uprising song, speaking to government oppression and civil unrest. Its sound has been compared to sci-fi soundtracks, perhaps to speak to the dystopian world in which we are all currently living.

9. “Vox Populi” Thirty Seconds to Mars

“Vox Populi” is a deeply unifying song. The use of crowds of voices creates a feeling of camaraderie, reminding you that you are never alone in standing up for your beliefs and there will always be others willing to fight alongside you.

10. “Revolution” The Score

As with the rest of the songs off of The Score’s 2017 album Atlas, “Revolution” sounds as though it belongs in a movie soundtrack. A powerful alt-rock war song, this is the sort of music to blast from your speakers mid-riot.

11. “Viva La Vida” Coldplay

Coldplay’s famous “Viva La Vida” looks at the historic revolutions that have influenced the world we live in today. It’s a reminder that revolutions have always existed and, as long as there are oppressors, will always continue to exist.

12. “Rich, White, Straight Men” Kesha

“Rich, White, Straight Men” is an unapologetic middle finger to the racist, sexist, homophobic men that run most of the world. It perfectly ends the playlist by imagining a future in which the world is so much better than it is right now.