List of songs about the Vietnam War
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
This is a list of songs concerning, revolving around, or directly referring to the Vietnam War, or to the Vietnam War's after-effects. For a more complete listing see "Vietnam on Record",[1] and the "Vietnam War Song Project".[2]
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Some popular songs of this variety include:
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This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
0-9
- "19" by Paul Hardcastle
- "1954 Cha Bỏ Quê, 1975 Con Bỏ Nước" by Phạm Duy [about the two large migrations: in 1954 and 1975.]
- "2 + 2 = ?" by The Bob Seger System
- "50,000 Names" by George Jones [about the Vietnam Memorial wall]
- "53rd & 3rd - The Ramones [about The Green Berets describing them and what they do]
- "7 O'Clock News/Silent Night" by Simon & Garfunkel
- "8th of November" by Big & Rich
- "21st Century Schizoid Man" by King Crimson
A
- "Agent Orange" by Grinder
- "Agent Orange" by Sodom
- "Agent Orange Song" by Maan Shah
- "Alice's Restaurant Massacree" by Arlo Guthrie
- "All Along The Watchtower" by Bob Dylan
- "All My Children of the Sun" by Pete Seeger
- "Am I Ever Gonna See My Baby Again" by The Sweet Inspirations
- "Amerika the Brutal" by Six Feet Under
- "America, F**k Yeah" by Trey Parker
- "An American Draft Dodger in Thunder Bay" by Sam Roberts
- "Another Christmas Without My Son" by Reverend Oris Mays
- "Artefucked" by Nargaroth
- "Article IV" by Good Riddance (About US soldiers during The Tet-Offensive fighting for survival and protesters back in the states)
B
- "Bà Mẹ Phù Sa" (all you need is love) Phạm Duy [about a peasant woman who hides a government agent when she sees a Vietcong, and in turn hides the Vietcong when she sees a government platoon coming.]
- "Bài Ca Dành Cho Những Xác Người" (Song for the Corpses) by Trịnh Công Sơn [about the Battle of Huế and the Massacre at Huế]
- "Back in Vietnam" by Lenny Kravitz
- "Back to Vietnam" by Television Personalities
- "Back to the World" by Curtis Mayfield
- "Ballad of a Crystal Man" by Donovan
- "Ballad for a Soldier" by Leon Russell & Marc Benno
- "Ballad of the Green Berets" by Staff Sgt. Barry Sadler
- "Ballad of Vietnam" by Ludvick Rummel
- "Battalions of Fear" by Blind Guardian
- "The Battle Hymn of Lt. Calley" by Terry Nelson
- "The Battle of Vietnam" by Hal Willis
- "Beach Party Vietnam" by The Dead Milkmen
- "The Big Parade" by 10,000 Maniacs
- "Big Time in the Jungle" by Old Crow Medicine Show
- "Billy Don't Be a Hero" by Paper Lace
- "Blackmail the Universe" by Megadeth
- "Black Flame" by Renaissance
- "Black Wall" by Dennis DeYoung
- "Blowin' in the Wind" by Bob Dylan
- "Born in the U.S.A." by Bruce Springsteen [references the Siege of Khe Sanh among other things.]
- "Born on the Fourth of July" by Tom Paxton
- "Broken Heroes" by Saxon
- "The Boy Who's Never Found" by The Katydids
- "Brainwashed" by The Bossmen ((tells what happens to the people who come back from the war in Vietnam, and shows the post war trauma that happens))
- "Bring the Boys Home" by Freda Payne
- "Bring Them Home" by Pete Seeger
- "Brother Did You Weep" by Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger
- "Brothers Under the Bridge" by Bruce Springsteen
- "Bungle in the Jungle" by Jethro Tull
- "Burning Bridges" by Pink Floyd
- "Burnt Alive" by Rocket from the Crypt
- "Burnt Out Souls" by Despair
- "Business Goes on as Usual" by the Chad Mitchell Trio
C
- "Ca Dao Mẹ" (Mother's Lullaby) by Trịnh Công Sơn [about a mother's sacrifices during wartime]
- "Camouflage" by Stan Ridgway
- "Carried by Six" by Internal Void
- "Charlie Boy" by the Lumineers
- "Charlie Don't Surf" by The Clash
- "Charlie Freak" by Steely Dan
- "Child in Time" by Deep Purple
- "Cho Một Người Vừa Nằm Xuống" (For a Person Just Fallen Down) by Trịnh Công Sơn [dedicated to Lưu Kim Cương, a friend of the author who died in battle. Who is a South Vietnamese Air Force pilot.]
- "Christmas in Vietnam" by Johnny and Jon
- "Chuyện hai người lính" (Story about two soldiers) by Phạm Duy [1968, about two soldiers on different front lines who "kill each other because of love of Vietnam"]
- "Clean Cut Kid" by Bob Dylan ((tells how a normal American boy is changed to a fierce fighting boy by the use of drugs, pills, and alcohol))
- "Coming Home Soldier" by Bobby Vinton
- "Commando" by The Ramones
- "Compared To What" by Gene McDaniels
- "Compulsory Hero" by 1927 [deals with conscription in Australia during the Vietnam War]
- "Copperhead Road" by Steve Earle
- "Cops of the World" by Phil Ochs
- "Cowboys on Horses with Wings" by Hoyt Axton
- "Cousin Randy" by Infectious Grooves
- "Cream Puff War" by Grateful Dead
D
- "Daddy Won't Be Home Anymore" by Dolly Parton
- "Đại Bác Ru Đêm" (Cannon's Night Lullaby) by Trịnh Công Sơn [about bombardment in the city]
- "Dancing in the Ashes" by Psychotic Waltz
- "Dân Ta Vẫn Sống" (Our People Still Lives) by Trịnh Công Sơn
- "Daniel" by Elton John [the verse dealing most specifically with the Vietnam War was removed by lyricist Bernie Taupin shortly before being recorded.]
- "Dead Yankee Drawl" by Manic Street Preachers
- "Dear Uncle Sam" by Loretta Lynn
- "Dear Mr. President" by Pink
- "Death" by The Pretty Things
- "Death Sound" by Country Joe and the Fish
- "Deathbed" by Relient K
- "Death Tone" by Manowar
- "Desperation Part IV" by Redemption
- "Did You Ever See Me" by Shrubs
- "Do the Russians Want War?" by Mark Bernes
- "Does Anybody Know I'm Here?" by The Dells
- "Đợi Có Một Ngày" (Wait Until the Day) by Trịnh Công Sơn [expressing the author's desire for peace]
- "Doin' All Right" by The Fugs
- "Đồng Dao Hoà Bình" (Children's Song of Peace) by Trịnh Công Sơn
- "Don't Cry My Love" by The Impressions
- "Don't Cry My Soldier Boy" by Thelma Houston
- "Don't Walk Away" by Shrubs
- "Down On The Base" by Leon Russell & Marc Benno
- "Draft Dodger Rag" by Phil Ochs
- "Draft Morning" by The Byrds
- "Draft Resister" by Steppenwolf
- "Drive On" by Johnny Cash
E
- "Echoes" by Pink Floyd
- "El Derecho de Vivir en Paz" by Víctor Jara
- "Edge of Darkness" by Iron Maiden
- "Eve of Destruction" by Barry McGuire [written by P. F. Sloan]
- "Everyday Combat" by Lostprophets
F
- "Fear of Napalm" by Terrorizer
- "The "Fish" Cheer/I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-to-Die Rag" by Country Joe and the Fish
- "Fellows in Vietnam" by Inez and Charlie Foxx
- "Fightin' for the U.S.A." by Jerry Reed
- "The Fightin' Side of Me" by Merle Haggard
- "Fight to be Free" by Nuclear Assault
- "Find the Cost of Freedom" by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
- "First Blood" by Evile
- "First Vietnamese War" by The Black Angels
- "Forget Me Not" by Martha Reeves and the Vandellas[3]
- "For Fuck's Sake" by The Almighty
- "Fortunate Son" by Creedence Clearwater Revival
- "Front Line" by Stevie Wonder
- "Future Shock" by Evildead .
- "For What It's Worth" by Buffalo Springfield
G
- "Galveston" by Glen Campbell
- "Galveston Bay" by Bruce Springsteen
- "Giải phóng miền Nam" (Liberate the South) by Huỳnh Minh Siêng
- "Gia Tài Của Mẹ" (A Mother's Legacy) by Trịnh Công Sơn
- "Giọt Nước Mắt Cho Quê Hương" (A Teardrop for Homeland) by Trịnh Công Sơn
- "Gimme Shelter" by The Rolling Stones[4]
- "Give Peace a Chance" by John Lennon (Plastic Ono Band)
- "Going to Vietnam" by Big Amos
- "Goodnight Saigon" by Billy Joel
- "The Great Goodnight" by Magellan
- "The Great Mandala" by Peter, Paul and Mary
- "Greetings" by The Valadiers (also recorded by The Monitors)[3]
- "Grey October" by Peggy Seeger
- "Gunya Down" by Pro-Pain
H
- "Hallelujah Day" by The Jackson 5
- "Hand of Doom" by Black Sabbath
- "Handsome Johnny" by Richie Havens
- "Hands Off Vietnam!" by Dzhilda Mazheykayte
- "Hanoi Hannah" by Roger McGuinn
- "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)" by John Lennon
- "Hát Trên Những Xác Người" (Singing on Corpses) by Trịnh Công Sơn [written following the Tet Offensive]
- "Hallå Där Bonde" (Hello there Farmer) by Knutna Nävar
- "Heart of Darkness" by Grave Digger
- "Hello Vietnam" by Johnnie Wright (also recorded by Dave Dudley)
- "Hello Vietnam (Goodbye My Love)" by Ray Hildebrand
- "Here's to the State of Richard Nixon" by Phil Ochs
- "High" by Richard Marx
- "Home" by Mac Davis. Also recorded by Gary Puckett & The Union Gap
- "Home from the War" by Lugh Damen
- "Ho Chi Minh City" by Shrubs
- "Huế Sài Gòn Hà Nội" (Huế, Saigon, Hanoi) by Trịnh Công Sơn [expresses the author's desire for a peaceful, united Vietnam.]
- "Human Being Lawnmower" by MC5
- "Hungry for Blood" by Virus
- "Huyền Sử Một Người Mang Tên Quốc" (Ballad of a Person named Quốc) by Phạm Duy [about Phạm Phú Quốc, a RVAF pilot who bombed the Independence Palace in Saigon. He was shot down in North Vietnam in a mission to bomb the North.]
I
- "I Ain't Marching Anymore" by Phil Ochs
- "I Believe I'm Gonna Make It" by Joe Tex
- "I Can't See You No More (When Johnny Comes Marching Home)" by Joe Tex
- "I Can't Write Left-Handed" by Bill Withers
- "I-Feel-Like-I'm-Fixin'-To-Die Rag" by Country Joe and the Fish
- "I Don't Wanna Go To Vietnam" by John Lee Hooker
- "I Gotta Go To Vietnam" by John Lee Hooker
- "I Have Seen the Rain" by James T. Moore (featuring Pink, his daughter)
- "I'm Your Captain (Closer to Home)" by Grand Funk Railroad
- "In the Name of John" (Russian: "Во имя Джона") by unknown Soviet military advisor
- "Inoculated City" by The Clash
- "Into the Fire" by Sabaton
- "I Should Be Proud" by Martha Reeves and the Vandellas
- "Is This War a Useless War" by Moore & Napier
- "It Better End Soon" by Chicago
- "It's America, Love It or Leave It" by Ernest Tubb
- "It's for God, and Country, and You, Mom (The Ballad of Vietnam)" by Ernest Tubb
- "It's Good News Week" by Hedgehoppers Anonymous
- "I Want to Come Home for Christmas" by Marvin Gaye
- "I Was Only Nineteen (A Walk in the Light Green)" by Redgum
- "Imagine" by John Lennon
- "I've Seen All Good People" by Yes
J
- "Jacknife Johnny" by Alice Cooper
- "Jimmy Mack" by Martha Reeves and the Vandellas[3]
- "Jimmy Newman" by Tom Paxton
- "Jimmy's Road" by Willie Nelson
- "Johnny Come Lately" by Steve Earle
- "Johnny Pissoff Meets the Red Angel" by The Fugs
K
- "Keep a Light in the Window Until I Come Home" by James W. Alexander
- "Keep the Flag Flying" by Johnnie Wright
- "Kentucky Kid" by Yuri Vizbor
- "Khe Sanh" by Cold Chisel
- "Kill for Peace" by The Fugs
- "King Henry" by Pete Seeger
- "Kuiama" by the Electric Light Orchestra
L
- "Last Train to Clarksville" by The Monkees
- "Last Train to Nuremberg" by Pete Seeger
- "Lay Down (Candles in the Rain)" by Melanie Safka
- "A Letter From My Son" by Melverine Thomas
- "A Letter from Vietnam (To Mother)" by Hank Snow
- "Letters from Vietnam" by B.o.B
- "Little Becky's Christmas Wish" by Becky Lamb
- "A Little Dog and His Boy" by The Sunrays (written by Rick Henn)
- "Living in the Shadow" by Demon
- "Lonesome Vietnam" by George Riddle
- "Lost in the Flood" by Bruce Springsteen
- "Lyndon Johnson Told the Nation" by Tom Paxton
M
- "M-16" by Sodom
- "Magic Dragon" by Sodom
- "Machine Gun" by Band of Gypsys (Jimi Hendrix)
- "March to the Witch's Castle" by Funkadelic
- "Marching Off to War" by William Bell
- "Masters of War" by Bob Dylan
- "Medieval" by James
- "Meneer de president" by Boudewijn de Groot
- "Memento Mori" by Patti Smith
- "The Minute Men (Are Turning in Their Graves)" by Stonewall Jackson
- "Monk Time" by The Monks
- "Monster" by Steppenwolf
- "Moratorium" by Buffy Sainte-Marie
- "More Than a Name on a Wall" by The Statler Brothers
- "Một Buổi Sáng Mùa Xuân" (One Spring Morning) by Trịnh Công Sơn [about a child killed by landmine]
- "The Motor City Is Burning" by John Lee Hooker
- "Mother, Where Is My Father" by David Peel & the Lower East Side
- "Mountains" by Manowar[5]
- "My Boyfriend's Coming Home for Christmas" by Toni Wine
- "My Name is Lisa Kalvelage" by Pete Seeger about a mother, a War-bride from Germany, who speaks out against the war
- "My Son John" by Tom Paxton
- "My Uncle" by The Flying Burrito Brothers
- "Mr. Lonely" by Bobby Vinton (#1 - 1964)
N
- "Napalm in the Morning" by Sodom
- "The Nang, the Front, the Bush and the Shit" by El-P
- "Near Thái Nguyên Bridge" by Alexander Gusev
- "Như có Bác Hồ trong ngày vui đại thắng" (If Only Uncle Ho was Here On the Day of Victory) by Phạm Tuyên.
- "Nối Vòng Tay Lớn" (Joining Hands) by Trịnh Công Sơn [expresses the author's wish for peace. This song was played on the radio after the communist forces took over Saigon's radio station during the Fall of Saigon.]
- "No One to Follow" by Anvil
- "A Nurse in the U.S. Army" by Connie Francis
O
- "Oh! Camil (Captain America: The Winter Soldier)" by Graham Nash
- "Ohio" by Neil Young
- "Okie from Muskogee" by Merle Haggard
- "Old Hippie" by The Bellamy Brothers
- "Old Porch Swing" by Eddy Arnold
- "One Tin Soldier" by The Original Caste
- "An Open Letter to My Teenage Son" by Victor Lundberg
- "Open Letter to the President" by Roy C
- "Orange Crush" by R.E.M.
- "Over and Out" by Alkaline Trio
P
- "Paint It Black" by Rolling Stones
- "Peace Train" by Cat Stevens
- "Peace Will Come" by Tom Paxton
- "Peace Will Come (According to Plan)" by Melanie Safka
- "Pencil Marks on the Wall" by Henson Cargill
- "Penny Evans" by Steve Goodman
- "People Get it Together" by Eddie Floyd
- "People, Let's Stop the War" by Grand Funk Railroad
- "Permission to Fire" by Holy Moses
- "Phantom" (Russian: "Фантом") [Russian song by unknown author.]
- "Pieces of a Man" by Gil Scott-Heron
- "Play Little Music Box Play" by Donna Loren (written by Billy Page)
- "Please Mr Kennedy (I Don't Wanna Go)" by Mickey Woods[3]
- "Please Mr President" by King Solomon
- "Please Settle in Vietnam" by Lightnin' Hopkins
- "Please Uncle Sam (Send Back My Man)" by The Charmels
- "Please Wait For Me (My Darling)" by Masters Of Soul
- "Premature Burial" by Mercenary
- "Pretty Little Vietnamese" by Johnny Wright
- "Price of Paradise" by The Minutemen
- "Private Sorry" by The Pretty Things
- "Private Wilson White" by Marty Robbins
- "Pull Out the Pin" by Kate Bush
- "Purple Heart" by Sabaton
Q
- "Quê hương đau nặng" (Our country in pain) by Trịnh Công Sơn.
- "Question" by The Moody Blues
R
- "Rachel’s Coming Home" (aka "Rachel") by Russell Morris
- "Rapture" by Impaled Nazarene
- "Raymond" by Brett Eldredge
- "The Rebel" by Carl Hauck
- "Readjustment Blues" by Bill Danoff, sung by John Denver
- "Red" by Barefoot Truth
- "Reflected Prayer" by Shrubs
- "Reflections of My Life" by The Marmalade
- "Remember" by Biohazard
- "Remember the Heroes" by Sammy Hagar
- "Requiem for the Masses" by The Association
- "Return to Vietnam" by Master
- "Revolution" by The Beatles
- "Revolution 1" by The Beatles
- "Ricochet" by Bionic Jive
- "Riding With Private Malone" by David Ball
- "Rooster" by Alice in Chains
- "Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town" by Kenny Rogers and the First Edition
- "Running Gun Blues" by David Bowie
S
- "Saigon" by John Prine
- "Saigon Bride" by Joan Baez
- "Saigon Ơi Vĩnh Biệt" (Saigon, Goodbye) by Nam Lộc [an anthem for Vietnamese refugees having to flee their homeland after the Fall of Saigon.]
- "Saigon Shrunken Panorama" by The Mountain Goats
- "Sam Stone" by John Prine
- "Sandman" by America
- "Save the Country" by Laura Nyro, also recorded by The Fifth Dimension
- "Sean Flynn" by The Clash
- "Search and Destroy" by The Stooges
- "The Seductive Nature of Female Sexuality" by Buried Inside
- "Shapes of Things" by The Yardbirds
- "Shell Shock" by Manowar
- "Shut Out the Lights" by Bruce Springsteen [deals with Post-traumatic stress disorder of a returning veteran]
- "Simple Song of Freedom" by Bobby Darin
- "Singin' in Vietnam Talkin' Blues" by Johnny Cash
- "Sit Down Young Stranger" by Gordon Lightfoot
- "Skies on Fire" by AC/DC
- "Sky Pilot", written by Eric Burdon, recorded by The Animals
- "Slaughter" by Billy Preston
- "Smiley" by Ronnie Burns
- "Soldier" by Stephen Stills
- "Soldier" by Neil Young
- "Soldier Boy" by The Shirelles[3]
- "Soldier of Misfortune" by Ogre
- "Soldier's Goodbye" by William Bell
- "Soldier's Plea" by Marvin Gaye[3]
- "A Soldier's Prayer, 1967" by Archie Bell & the Drells
- "Some Gave All" by Billy Ray Cyrus
- "Someday at Christmas" by Stevie Wonder
- "Something to Believe In" by Poison
- "Son of the Freeway" by Gravestone
- "Song About the Vietnamese Friend" by Edmund Iodkovsky & Vano Muradeli
- "South Carolina" by Gil Scott-Heron
- "Spiral of Violence" by Whiplash
- "Spitting" by Rocket from the Crypt
- "Standing on the Corner" by Watson & The Sherlocks
- "Still in Saigon" by the Charlie Daniels Band
- "Stop the War" by Edwin Starr
- "Stop the War in Vietnam" by Laurel Aitken
- "Straight to Hell" by The Clash [deals with the abandonment of Vietnamese children fathered by American soldiers]
- "Student Demonstration Time" by The Beach Boys
- "Summer Side of Life" by Gordon Lightfoot
- "Sunshine" by Jonathan Edwards
- "Surf Nicaragua" by Sacred Reich
- "Surrender" by Cheap Trick
T
- "Take Good Care" by Tony Mason
- "Take the Star Out of the Window" by John Prine
- "Talking Vietnam" by Phil Ochs
- "Talking Vietnam Potluck Blues" by Tom Paxton
- "Ta Phải Thấy Mặt Trời" (We Must See the Sun) by Trịnh Công Sơn
- "That Black Wall" by Danny Barnes
- "The Wall" by Tim Murphy
- "The Wall" by Bruce Springsteen
- "Theme for an American Hero" by Chip Taylor
- "Theme for an Imaginary Western" by Jack Bruce
- "There Won't Be Any Snow (Christmas in the Jungle)" by Derrik Roberts
- "This is Radio Clash" by The Clash
- "Three-Five-Zero-Zero" from the musical Hair
- "Through the Ages" by Bolt Thrower
- "Tình Ca Người Mất Trí" (Love Song of Someone Who Lost Their Mind) by Trịnh Công Sơn [about women with lovers who are soldiers]
- "This Ain't Nothing" by Craig Morgan
- "This Cowboy's Hat" by Lee Kernaghan [talks about his uncle dying in 1969 in Vietnam]
- "To Susan on the West Coast Waiting" by Donovan
- "Travelin' Soldier" by Bruce Robison (popularized by the Dixie Chicks)
- "Train to Vietnam" by The Rudies
- "Trường Sơn Đông - Trường Sơn Tây" by Hoàng Hiệp [from a poem by Phạm Tiến Duật, about PAVN soldiers on the Ho Chi Minh trail.]
- "The Road of Life from Hanoi" by unknown Soviet military transportation officer
U
- "Uncle Sam" by Jimmy Hughes
- "Uncommon Valor: A Vietnam Story" by Jedi Mind Tricks
- "Universal Soldier" by Buffy Sainte-Marie; also recorded by Donovan
- "Unknown Soldier" by The Doors
- "Unknown Soldier" by Breaking Benjamin
- "Unnatural Selection" by Ayreon
- "Us and Them" by Pink Floyd
V
- "Vaya con Dios-Fellow in Vietnam" by Inez and Charlie Foxx
- "Verbal Razors" by Exodus
- "Viet Nam Blues" by Dave Dudley
- "Vietnam" by Abner Jay
- "Vietnam" by Phil Ochs
- "Vietnam" by J. B. Lenoir
- "Vietnam" by The Satellites
- "Vietnam" by Jimmy Cliff
- "Vietnam" by Lars Frederiksen and the Bastards
- "Vietnam" by T-Bone Walker
- "Vietnam Blues" by J. B. Lenoir
- "Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh" by Ái Vân and The Blue Guitars
- "Vietnam Talkin' Blues" by Johnny Cash
- "Vietnam Vets" by Circle One
- "Vietnamerica" by The Stranglers
- "Vietnamese Baby" by New York Dolls
- "Vietnow" by Rage Against The Machine
- "Violence and Bloodshed" by Manowar
- "Volunteers" by Jefferson Airplane
W
- "Waist Deep in the Big Muddy" by Pete Seeger
- "Wait For Me" by Brothers of Soul
- "Walking on a Thin Line" by Huey Lewis and the News
- "Wake Up" by Rage Against the Machine
- "Wandering the swamps of Vietnam" by unknown Soviet military advisor
- "War" by Edwin Starr (also recorded by The Temptations and performed by Bruce Springsteen)
- "War Games" by The Monkees
- "The War Drags On" written and recorded by Mick Softley; also recorded by Donovan
- "The War Is Over" by Phil Ochs.
- "War Pigs" by Black Sabbath [written about the politicians who were responsible for the war.]
- "War Song" by Neil Young
- "War Sucks" by The Red Krayola
- "Watergate Blues" by Gil Scott-Heron
- "We Just Did What We Were Told" by Don Forbes
- "Welcome the Boys Back Home" by Bill Moss & the Celestials
- "Welcome to the Real World" by Sweet Savage
- "Welcome Wagon" by Nasty Savage
- "Welterusten Meneer de President" by Boudewijn de Groot
- "What Are You Fighting For" by Phil Ochs
- "What We're Fighting For" by Dave Dudley
- "What's Going On?" by Marvin Gaye
- "When the Hunter Becomes Hunted" by Tank
- "When You're only nine" by The Toe River Valley Boys[6]
- "Where Are You Now, My Son?" by Joan Baez
- "Where Have All the Flowers Gone?" by Pete Seeger
- "White Boots Marching In A Yellow Land" by Phil Ochs
- "The Willing Conscript" by Tom Paxton
- "Wild Irish Rose" by George Jones [about a homeless, alcoholic Vietnam veteran][7]
- "Wish You Were Here, Buddy" by Pat Boone
- "Working for the Yankee Dollar" by The Skids
- "Winning the Hearts and Minds" by Good Riddance (About the violence committed by US soldiers against Vietnamese peasants)
X
- "Xmas in February" by Lou Reed
Y
- "Yellow River" by Christie
- "Youngstown" by Bruce Springsteen
- "Your Flag Decal Won't Get You Into Heaven Anymore" by John Prine
- "Your Heart Belongs To Me" by The Supremes[3] & The Velvelettes
- "Yesterday Died, Tomorrow Won't Be Born" by Good Riddance (about a POW slowly losing his mind)
See also
References
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- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?cc=mqr;c=mqr;c=mqrarchive;idno=act2080.0049.406;rgn=main;view=text;xc=1;g=mqrg
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