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Working Class Anthem
- 118 statements
- 19 feature instances
- 15 referencing feature instances
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A Job Song is the kind of song workers sing to keep themselves motivated while they work. The subversion of this is the Working Class Anthem, a song that motivates the worker into rebelling against the job in favor of putting it in its place. Much like the Earth Song, the Working Class Anthem is the type of song with a political agenda. In this case, it criticizes the economic conditions of the time, usually written and sung for and by the working class at the expense of the rich and powerful. Such topics include: low-wages, terrible working conditions, Bad Bosses that either abuse or are apathetic to the very laborers that give them their fortune, company scrip, environmental degradation caused by big industry, wage slavery, debt, the Military-Industrial Complex, private prisons, no bathroom breaks, and a whole host of other problems caused by an exploitative system. While straight examples are sung by Working-Class Heroes, Villain Songs sung to glorify these societal ills also qualify. Songs that glorify things like income inequality and 20-hour workdays are usually sung by Sleazy Politicians and Upper-Class Twits who you Love to Hate, thus you associate these terrible things with a Very Punchable face. Whether or not the moral of the song is "Capitalism Is Bad" or "Capitalism is deeply-flawed and needs a few amendments" depends on the example. Sub-Trope of Protest Song. A pretty familiar topic in Country Music and heartland music (and maybe, depending on the artist, some punk, folk, and blues music, too). |
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Working Class Anthem | isPartOf |
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Working Class Anthem / int_1afa31a2 | type |
Working Class Anthem | |
Working Class Anthem / int_1afa31a2 | comment |
RENT: "What You Own" depicts Mark struggling to keep his head down in his soulless tabloid job, until he finally realizes he needs to quit to work on his own film, honoring his friends who are struggling with AIDS. | |
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RENT (Theatre) | hasFeature |
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Working Class Anthem / int_5bfa9c98 | type |
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Warframe: "We All Lift Together" sung by the indentured workforce of Fortuna about the futility of working off their debts for the "greater good" of the Corpus' profit margins. | |
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Working Class Anthem / int_7832b74c | type |
Working Class Anthem | |
Working Class Anthem / int_7832b74c | comment |
Steven Universe: In "Sadie Killer", Steven and the Cool Kids form a band, but struggle to find their sound. Sadie joins them for a horror movie night after an exhausting shift at the Big Donut; motivated by her frustration, she and the band create a song called "The Working Dead" in which Sadie compares her working-class life to being a zombie. At the end of the episode, she joins the band and quits her awful job. | |
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Steven Universe | hasFeature |
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Working Class Anthem / int_7953de6a | type |
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Newsies: In contrast to the Job Song "Carrying the Banner" that starts the film, "Seize the Day" and "The World Will Know" depict the newsboys resolving to strike against Pulitzer and Hearst for fairer treatment. | |
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Working Class Anthem / int_7ea4fd21 | type |
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Wasteland 3 DLC The Battle Of Steeltown features a version of Joe Hill's "There Is Power In A Union" as part of its soundtrack — consistent with the DLC's industrial setting of Steeltown. | |
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Working Class Anthem / int_89c084b2 | type |
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The Rolling Stones' "Salt Of The Earth" is about how working-class people and their struggles are overlooked in society. | |
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Working Class Anthem / int_912dc878 | type |
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"The Fine Print" by The Stupendium is a Filk Song dedicated to the video game The Outer Worlds, a song about how much it sucks to live under the hyper-capitalist society the game takes place in. | |
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Working Class Anthem / int_981ea73a | type |
Working Class Anthem | |
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"There Is Power In A Union" is the name of two separate songs, one written by songwriter and Industrial Workers Of The World member Joe Hill in 1913, and the other by Billy Bragg in 1986. | |
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Working Class Anthem / int_98c961e2 | type |
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Helluva Boss: In MAMMON'S MAGNIFICENT MUSICAL MIDSEASON SPECIAL (ft. Fizzarolli), Fizzaroli, with some encouragement from Blitzo and Asmodeus, sings "Two Minutes Notice", a song doubling as one of these as well as a "The Villain Sucks" Song towards his Bad Boss, Mammon, telling him how he's finally fed up with all of Mammon's abuse and that he's finally quitting. | |
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Working Class Anthem / int_9ab064e6 | type |
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Working Class Anthem / int_9ab064e6 | comment |
Les Misérables is full of them: "Work Song" depicts the harsh conditions of the prisoners doing manual labor, many of whom have received punishments that outweigh their crimes. "At the End of the Day" shows the poor of France constantly struggling to keep bread on the table with their meager jobs, with whisperings of uprising. "Do You Hear the People Sing?" invokes the trope. While it is sung by the relatively well-off college students, they are attempting to incite an uprising in the lower classes who are most affected by the unfair laws. It doesn't work. The song has since been used in a number of real-life protests. |
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Working Class Anthem / int_ac03a2dd | type |
Working Class Anthem | |
Working Class Anthem / int_ac03a2dd | comment |
"Skid Row (Downtown)" from Little Shop of Horrors highlights this, particularly in the Urchins' verses. | |
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Working Class Anthem / int_b0fc9724 | type |
Working Class Anthem | |
Working Class Anthem / int_b0fc9724 | comment |
Parodied on Saturday Night Live with "Corporate Nightmare Song", where four Emo employees in an office job start out complaining about the "working stiff" lifestyle until one by one they're all won over by it. | |
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Saturday Night Live | hasFeature |
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Working Class Anthem / int_b612c4d1 | type |
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bo en and Gus Lobban's "Money Won't Pay" is a peppier variation. It goes into how working every day just to make a living and constantly doing overtime can wear a body down, but advocates for the listener to forget it once in a while and dance the night away. | |
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Working Class Anthem / int_c711661 | type |
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Epica's "Resign to Surrender - A New Age Dawns - Pt. IV" poetically calls out income and wealth inequality with stanzas like "Now that all hands are tied / We're panic stricken / Wealth out of sight / Demolition, the damaged pride / The price of ambition", and closes on the lines "Chasing our addictions, we're stunting our growth / Once we get rid of this ballast we'll be able to / Restore the balance and distribute our wealth". | |
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Epica (Music) | hasFeature |
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Working Class Anthem / int_dee37309 | type |
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In the Heights: Sonny's verse in "96,000" involves him dreaming of using the lottery money to protest the status quo in the barrio. | |
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In the Heights (Theatre) | hasFeature |
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Working Class Anthem / int_e7e37776 | type |
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Firefly: Played for Laughs, then Drama, in "Jaynestown", wherein "The Man They Call Jayne" describes how Jayne Cobb stole a safe full of money from the Magistrate of Canton and then dropped it on his impoverished ceramics workers. Actually, Jayne and his then-partner Stitch Hessian stole the money for themselves, but their shuttle got hit by anti-aircraft fire on the way out and Jayne tossed the money to save weight, after shoving Stitch out first. The safe landing where the "mudders" could get it was a coincidence. | |
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Working Class Anthem / int_eded6020 | type |
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"How Bad Can I Be?" from The Lorax (2012) is a song sung by the Once-ler once his Thneed business takes off and manages to make a profit. While the song on its surface espouses the virtues of a profit-centric worldview, it's actually a Villain Song that shows the Once-ler slowly being corrupted by his success (and the bad influence of his family). We see in the song that not only is his business causing massive devastation to the environment, but he starts buying into a Social Darwinist mindset to justify it and starts "donating" to Fake Charities for good PR. | |
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The Lorax (2012) | hasFeature |
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Working Class Anthem / int_f3ba0692 | type |
Working Class Anthem | |
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Billy Elliot: Because Billy's father and brother are involved in the 1984-1985 U.K. Coal Miners Strike, many of the songs focus around this, including "The Stars Look Down", "Solidarity", and "Merry Christmas Maggie Thatcher". | |
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Working Class Anthem / int_f656b211 | type |
Working Class Anthem | |
Working Class Anthem / int_f656b211 | comment |
Sweet Charity: "There's Gotta Be Something Better Than This" starts out with Charity and her friends resolving to find a way out of their dead-end taxi dancer jobs, but subverts the trope when their dream jobs end up being just menial service jobs. | |
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