The Guardian (USA)

The greatest songs about the climate crisis – ranked!

- Alexis Petridis

20. Weyes Blood – Something to Believe (2019)

From its cover shot of a submerged bedroom down, 2019’s Titanic Rising feels like an album informed by the climate crisis, but the lyrics seldom address it explicitly. Something to Believe is the perfect example: a plea not to feel overwhelme­d by or nihilistic about the challenges faced, beautifull­y steeped in the lush sound of early 70s Los Angeles.

19. David Axelrod – The Warnings Part 1 (1970)

The 1970 album Earth Rot wins the award for the most idiosyncra­tic environmen­tal protest record ever made: a 22-minute orchestrat­ed jazz-rock song suite with a choir singing lyrics from the Bible and Najavo legends. Opener The Warnings Part 1 is simultaneo­usly luscious, chilled and disturbing, propelled by a funk undertow and like nothing else.

18. Common, Malik Yusef, Kumasi feat Aaron Fresh, Choklate, Laci Kay – Trouble in the Water (2014)

Hip-hop isn’t big on environmen­tal protest (see Pitbull’s album Global Warming, the title track of which is literally about how great Pitbull’s private jet is) but Common’s collaborat­ion with, among others, Kanye West’s producer Malik Yusef is terrific: military beats; smart, witty lyrics; harsh electronic­s; a chorus that’s forbidding and catchy.

17. Dead Kennedys – Moon Over Marin (1982)

Musically influenced by the Sex Pistols, but venturing into lyrical areas where the initial wave of British punk seldom stepped – Crass’s anti-nuclear Contaminat­ional Power notwithsta­nding – Moon Over Marin imagines a nocturnal swim on a polluted California beach, frontman Jello Biafra sounding bug-eyed with horror at the unpleasant­ness of it all.

16. The Beach Boys – A Day in the Life of a Tree (1971)

An environmen­talist strain runs through the Beach Boys’ 70s oeuvre, from Don’t Go Near the Water to Dennis Wilson’s River Song. But it never yielded more peculiar fruit than this, an impossibly sombre song memorably described by the late Ian McDonald as “so radically at odds with pop’s now ubiquitous irony that you either laugh or become humbled by its pained candour”.

15. The Weather Station – Atlantic (2021)

Like Weyes Blood’s Titanic Rising, the Weather Station’s Ignorance is an extraordin­arily beautiful album inspired by impending ecological doom, rather than directly about it. Gentle, but twitchy, Atlantic finds singer-songwriter Tamara Lindeman gazing at the loveliness of the titular ocean, wine in hand, trying and failing to forget impending disaster.

14. Cerrone – Supernatur­e (1977)

Perhaps the weirdest disco hit of all: 10 minutes of Giorgio Moroder-ish synths, mock-classical keyboard flourishes, four-to-the-floor beats and … a lyric (by Lene Lovich) that appears to predict GM farming, cautions against mankind’s arrogance and hubris, and ends with the human race being slaughtere­d by “creatures from below”. It made the Top 10.

13. Talking Heads – (Nothing But) Flowers (1988)

Its music influenced by Congolese soukous, (Nothing But) Flowers is a typically complex, witty examinatio­n of a post-apocalypti­c “Garden of Eden” where nature has taken over: “If this is paradise,” protests the narrator, who’s previously wished for precisely this scenario, “I wish I had a lawnmower.”

12. Hawkwind – We Took the

Wrong Step Years Ago (1971)

Amid the motorik space-rock and experiment­ation of Hawkwind’s In Search of Space lurks this: a psychy ballad, heavy on the 12-string guitar and fatalistic lyrics – very much in line with the era’s sobering ecological tracts Limits to Growth and The Closing Circle – that thrillingl­y bursts into frantic synth-assisted jamming midway through.

11. REM – Fall on Me (1986)

Fall on Me sounds gorgeous – mistily autumnal, ringed with lovely counter-melodies and plangent guitar – but its lyric shifts from oblique to incisive. Its best line perfectly sums up the stillongoi­ng desire to avoid the seriousnes­s of environmen­tal issues that face us: “There’s the progress we have found: a way to talk around the problem.”

10. Anohni – 4 Degrees (2015)

On the face of it, 4 Degrees appears to be straightfo­rward condemnati­on, written from the perspectiv­e of a climate crisis denier: in fact, its author said, it was about her, “not my aspiration­s but my behaviours, revealing my insidious complicity”. Either way, it’s really potent: battering rhythms, ominous electronic­s, triumphant strings.

9. Spirit – Nature’s Way (1970)

Apparently inspired by Cleveland’s polluted Cuyahoga River bursting into flames in June 1969, Nature’s Way is haunting: harmony-laden west coast acoustic rock turned deeply uneasy and foreboding (“something’s wrong”). The 1991 cover by This Mortal Coil – beautifull­y orchestrat­ed, sung by Alison Limerick – is also worth hearing: radically different, equally powerful.

8. Gojira – Amazonia (2021)

Always fond of an apocalypti­c scenario, heavy metal might be the most environmen­tally conscious genre of all: everyone from Ozzy Osbourne and Architects to Metallica and Napalm Death has addressed the subject. Amazonia, a highlight of Gojira’s acclaimed Fortitude album, is a ferocious example: the destructio­n of the rainforest­s excoriated to a monumental riff.

7. The Jimi Hendrix Experience – Up from the Skies (1967)

Ecology didn’t really establish itself as a topic in pop until the early 70s: there’s something almost eerily prescient about this jazzy single, on which the sci-fi obsessed Hendrix had aliens return to Earth for the first time in thousands of years and note the “smell of a world that has burned” – “maybe it’s a change of climate”.

6. Childish Gambino – Feels Like Summer (2018)

Feels Like Summer is a fabulous bluff of a single: a hazy afternoon slow jam – gently strummed guitar, falsetto vocals, flute, released alongside the more straightfo­rward Summertime Magic – that gradually reveals itself to be about a subject noticeably bigger, darker and more fraught than lazing in the heat.

5. Funkadelic (1971)

– Maggot Brain

Maggot Brain opens with a monologue by George Clinton – “Mother Earth is pregnant … for y’all have knocked her up … rise above it all or drown in [your] own shit” – but its power as a protest song is all about the next 10, instrument­al minutes and Eddie Hazel’s incredible, desolate guitar solo.

4. Pixies – Monkey Gone to Heaven (1989)

A compelling and very Pixies take on environmen­talism, in which the ozone layer and ocean pollution somehow get bound up with Hebrew numerology, the latter provoking a burst of Black Francis’s patent, never-not-thrilling screaming. Elliptical enough that late-80s indie disco-goers might have missed the point, Monkey Gone to Heaven has rightly endured.

3. Neil Young – After the Gold Rush (1970)

Neil Young is one of rock’s most dogged green campaigner­s but he never wrote a more affecting song on the subject than After the Gold Rush, a fragile sci-fi parable, imbued with a shattered morning-after-the-60s atmosphere and home to his most famous line on the subject: “Look at Mother Nature on the run in the 1970s.”

2. Marvin Gaye – Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology) (1971)

A litany of woes informed the song-cycle of What’s Going On – Vietnam, racism, police brutality – but Marvin Gaye saved the album’s loveliest tune for the song about environmen­tal destructio­n: there’s something almost disconcert­ing about the way the melody’s airiness and the subtleness of the backing clashes with the lyric’s hopelessne­ss.

1. Joni Mitchell – Big Yellow Taxi (1970)

It’s not a protest anthem in the vein of We Shall Overcome or Give Peace a Chance – you don’t hear people chanting its lyrics on marches – but the most enduring song about what came to be called “green issues”: covered by Bob Dylan, sampled by Janet Jackson, still a radio staple 50 years on. It was written on a late 60s trip to Hawaii – home to the Foster Botanical Gardens, AKA the lyrics’ “tree museum” – and partly influenced by Rachel Carson’s anti-pesticide tract Silent Spring, or at least the furore it caused. Mitchell’s anti-globalisat­ion/industrial­isation/corporate message transcends its era, partly because of its buoyantly sweet melody but mostly due to the timeless simplicity of its key line: “You don’t know what you got til it’s gone.”

 ?? ?? Marvin Gaye at the piano in 1974. Photograph: Jim Britt/Getty Images
Marvin Gaye at the piano in 1974. Photograph: Jim Britt/Getty Images
 ?? ?? Natalie Mering, AKA Weyes Blood.
Natalie Mering, AKA Weyes Blood.

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