Category: Music Discourse (Page 3 of 14)

7 Indie Songs About Serial Killers

It’s easy to find tons of lists online that recycle the same 10-15 songs about murderers/serial killers.

Here are 7 indie/less well-known songs about serial killers, by bands including Swans, Sun Kil Moon, and Xiu Xiu:

1. “Deep Red Bells” by Neko Case

About Gary Ridgway, the Green River Killer, who murdered women in California and Washington in the 1980s and 1990s. Convicted of 49 murders, Ridgway confessed to killing almost 100 women (his victims were usually prostitutes). Neko Case wrote “Deep Red Bells” about the fear she felt growing up in Tacoma, Washington when the Green River Killer was active.

2. “Killing For Company” by Swans

About Dennis Nilsen, the Muswell Hill Murderer, who killed at least 12 men in London between 1978 and 1983. With “Killing For Company,” Swans makes a pun to refer to Nilsen’s loneliness – he was so lonely that he literally killed the men that he brought back to his house.

3. “House Sparrow” by Xiu Xiu

About Richard Chase, the Vampire of Sacramento, who killed 6 people in Sacramento, California from late 1977 to early 1978. With a history of mental illness, Chase drank the blood of his victims, cannibalized their corpses, and committed necrophilia. The title “House Sparrow” refers to the birds that a young Richard Chase killed before drinking their blood.

4. “Mary Ann” by Suny Lyons

About Mary Ann Cotton, who murdered up to 21 people via arsenic poisoning in the mid-1800s in England. Considered England’s first serial killer (male or female), Cotton killed 8 of her children, 7 of her step-children, 3 husbands, her mother, 1 boyfriend, and a friend. Suny Lyons sings about Cotton’s method of killing, most directly with the chilling line “She’s the one who poisoned me.”

5. “Notown Blues” by Black Lips

About Kenneth Bianchi and Angelo Buono, known as The Hillside Stranglers, who killed girls and women in Los Angeles from 1977 to 1978. Bianchi and Buono were cousins who posed as undercover police officers in order to kidnap, rape, torture, and kill their victims, who ranged from 12 to 28 years old. The lyrics of “Notown Blues” are from the first person perspective of The Hillside Strangler: “Gonna roll around the land, killing everyone I can.”

6. “The Shankill Butchers” by The Decemberists

The Shankill Butchers were a group of Protestant men who killed up to 32 random Catholic people in Belfast, Northern Ireland between 1975 and 1982. The Shankill Butchers used cleavers and butcher knives to kill Catholics at night. The Decemberists describe the Shankill Butchers with the lyric “They used to be sweet little boys…now killing is their only source of joy.”

7. “Richard Ramirez Died Today Of Natural Causes” by Sun Kil Moon

The title refers to Richard Ramirez, the “Night Stalker,” who killed at least 13 victims in Los Angeles and San Francisco from 1984 to 1985. Ramirez participated in home invasion robberies in which he would rape and kill his victims. Mark Kozelek of Sun Kil Moon wrote the song “Richard Ramirez Died Today Of Natural Causes” when Ramirez died in 2013 of B-cell lymphoma while on death row.

Molly Rankin

I find it interesting to look into the history of “new” bands, discovering how they formed their sound and what the earlier incarnations looked and sounded like.

Before forming Alvvays, Molly Rankin released an EP of solo songs, like “Way Home,” a country/folk song —

and toured solo, playing songs from the EP like “Mistake” —

Ednaswap: “Torn”

Did you know that the song “Torn” had been around for years before Natalie Imbruglia hit the top of the charts with it in 1997?

The first recording of “Torn” was actually in Danish by Lis Sørensen in 1993:

Ednaswap (the writers of “Torn”) also recorded a slower-tempo, ’90s alternative rock version for the 1995 album:

WSJ: Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift WSJ

Taylor Swift wrote an article for the Wall Street Journal offering her take on the future of the music industry.

Swift argues that recorded music is worth money because art is important, rare, and valuable. Although I agree that music should not be free, it’s an unfortunate reality of the digital streaming era that music is no longer rare — any human being with a computer and Internet connection can create and distribute his or her music.

Good music is certainly rare and valuable, but because good music is not tangible, there’s no feasible way to enforce that listeners don’t consume without paying (streaming services are the industry’s best bet to make a little money from listeners).

Additionally, Swift predicts that genre distinctions will no longer matter as much to an artist’s career — genres will instead become more of an organizational tool. Perhaps that’s true, and we can see how country has shifted to pop, and how some people currently classify EDM as pop. A point that Swift doesn’t mention is that genres fluctuate over decades as musical influences, regional variations, and digital technology shape a given genre’s sound. And new genres will emerge that sound like more than the sum of their influences.

Finally, she discusses the importance of artists stepping out of their comfort zones and keeping their audiences interested and engaged by surprising (not shocking) them. In an age of already limited (and rapidly shrinking) attention spans, Swift is right on the mark. Writing this very article in the Wall Street Journal is a perfect example of doing just that.

TuneGlue & Music Map

To read more about my work as a Music Data & Curation specialist, check out my LinkedIn.

TuneGlue was a visual music map — you typed in any artist/band, and TuneGlue provided you with a cluster of related artists/bands. It was a quick, easy way to discover music you might not otherwise find.

Life Hacker also has a little write-up explaining how TuneGlue worked.

Music Map is a similar tool — enter the name of any artist/band, and Music Map gives you a free floating, hovering map of related artists.

Although I love music data and analytics, I don’t use sites like TuneGlue or Music Map as a music discovery tool.

They do, however, provide nice alternatives to organize/view/think about music and bands in a different way than you might otherwise.

Music Map Arctic Monkeys

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2024 After The Show

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑