The Civil Rights and anti-Vietnam actions within the late ’50s and ’60s spawned dozens of traditional protest anthems, some as pleading as Marvin Gaye‘s “What’s Goin’ On” and few as eviscerating as “Mississippi Goddam” by Nina Simone. Even the sneering punks of the anti-Thatcher/Reagan ’80s gave us underground anthems from D.R.I., Lifeless Kennedys, The Ramones, Billy Bragg, and the compulsory Intercourse Pistols, to not point out barely extra refined Chilly Struggle statements from U2, Sting, Nena, and Bruce Springsteen (even when nearly all of the individuals did not absolutely perceive that one).
One thing started stirring in Trump’s second time period, nonetheless. Starting in the course of 2025, politically-minded (or simply fed up) musicians slowly started making their rage and frustration identified. Very like Kent State served as a flashpoint for activism in 1970 (famously captured in CSNY‘s “Ohio”), the brutal and horrific escalations of I.C.E. in Minneapolis in early 2026 acted as gas to the fireplace for this emotion and we began to see an actual outpouring of pointed, accusatory, and simply plain indignant music from a number of the sharpest pens. Beneath is a free timeline of the recorded protest music to date in Trump’s remaining(?) time period.
“Livin within the USA” by Low Reduce Connie
Launched on Might 27, 2025
Low Reduce Connie’s brash frontman Adam Weiner croons “I am livin’ within the USA however it ain’t my dwelling” showcases the alienation of realizing that your neighbors and fellow residents act in violent and malicious ways in which really feel international to your core. Stark and annoyed, the piano and violin intertwine alongside the pleading lyrics.
“Fake You Keep in mind Me” by Tom Morello
Launched on July 9, 2025
In the summertime of 2025, the Rage Towards the Machine guitarist launched a riff-powered request recounting migrants in cages on the mercy of a chilly and vengeful regime. It’s informed from a mom’s perspective and divulges the trauma of households separated by state violence whereas calling for resistance towards rising fascism.
“Be a part of Ice” by Jesse Wells
Appeared on YouTube on August 7, 2025
Very like Woody Guthrie used his wry sense of wit when tearing down outsized egos, Jesse Wells’ biting (and humorous) “Be a part of Ice” acts as a fake recruitment industrial whereas taking stabs on the type of of us who can be doubtless candidates. “In the event you’re missing management and authority/Include me and search out minorities” has the type of “aw shucks” perspective Guthrie pioneered out of 1 facet of his mouth. This music is among the many first to call the DHS stormtroopers in its title, however actually not the final.
“Unhealthy Information” by Zach Bryan
A snippet appeared on Oct 3, 2025 and the music was launched on Jan 9, 2026
A number of of the songs on this record are rage-filled, and some use parts of humor to get their factors throughout, however none really feel as actually overwhelmed down as plaintive nation troubadour Zach Bryan’s “Unhealthy Information.” The heartfelt singer delves deep into his soul and pulls out strains about consistently receiving unhealthy information and the toll it takes.
“Streets of Minneapolis” by Bruce Springsteen
Launched on January 28, 2026
The killing of Renée Good on January seventh, 2026 and the homicide of Alex Pretti simply weeks later appear to have resonated deeply with songwriters, and a flurry of songs in protest emerged instantly after. Essentially the most high-profile thus far is Springsteen’s “Streets of Minneapolis,” with its direct language in regards to the occasions on Nicollet Avenue, the federal thugs of “King Trump,” and “Miller and Noem’s soiled lies.” The Boss’ mega-hit “Born within the USA” has been misconstrued as a patriotic fist-pumping anthem, however it’s unlikely that the uncooked lyrics of “Streets of Minneapolis” will endure the identical misunderstanding.
“Metropolis of Heroes” by Billy Bragg
Launched on January 28, 2026
No stranger to talking reality to energy, Billy Bragg has been a power for change because the late Seventies, and his January launch is not any totally different. Taking cues from Martin Niemöller’s writing First They Got here, Bragg is unwilling to face by and never converse out. His intensely-strummed guitar and plaintive voice urges us repeatedly to not stand by and to “get of their face” to face up towards terror, tyranny, homicide and fascism.
“Minnesota Nazis” by NOFX
Launched on January 29, 2026
Rounding out our trio of January 2026 songs is an equally enraged however extra pumped up missive from punk legends NOFX. The political nature of their callouts to Brownshirt brigades and Nazis of their neighborhood brings to thoughts the spirit of their 1994 music “Good Authorities.” The music ends with the biting “America, why cannot all of us agree/It is OK to guage and have some hate for individuals/In the event you base it on their ethics/Not their ethnicity.”
“Citizen I.C.E.” by Dropkick Murphys
Launched on February 4, 2026
Fellow punks Dropkick Murphys have been on the forefront of this wave of activism since dedicating their music “First Class Loser” to Trump in 2025 in addition to pulling out of “Punk within the Park” exhibits after discovering the promoter supported the Trump marketing campaign. They pull no punches of their accusatory “Citizen I.C.E.” the place the band blasts by means of a minute-and-a-half of punishing accusations, shouting “Too scared to hitch the navy, too dumb to be a cop” in true old-school hardcore fashion.
“American Obituary” by U2
Launched on Feb 18, 2026
Most lately, the legendarily outspoken U2 reawakened their early protest voice in “American Obituary,” with Bono speed-recounting parts of the Minneapolis killings balanced with pleas to God and extolling a mom’s love. The music rounds out with the mantra “The ability of the individuals is a lot stronger than the individuals in energy” and we will hope that’s true.
For higher or for worse, that is only a partial record of the protest music from the previous twelve months or so. What have we missed and what else ought to we be listening for?
