31 Top Songs About The Vietnam War - Music Grotto (2024)

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The Vietnam War was one of the most unpopular conflicts the United States has ever been involved in. The 60s especially were a time of social and political turmoil, with most of the country being against the war and forcing social changes back at home while combat raged overseas. For the United States, it was an incredibly formative time and that’s reflected in the music produced about the war.

In this article, we’ll give you the 31 top songs that are either about the Vietnam War or resonated the most with the soldiers who fought it.

1. Fortunate Son – Creedence Clearwater Revival

Creedence Clearwater Revival - Fortunate Son (Official Music Video)

Fortunate Son is probably the best-known song today about the Vietnam War. It’s become synonymous with the United States military in the years since, but during the war, it was the music that everybody, regardless of race or background, enjoyed over there. It was angsty before angst, a bit of rage against the rich draft dodgers out there, and the fact that people were even drafted in the first place.

2. We Gotta Get Out of This Place – The Animals

We've Gotta Get out of This Place

We Gotta Get Out Of This Place became a standard song for the soldiers fighting in Vietnam. While it wasn’t written as a track for them by The Animals, the lyrics resonated so hard that any time it came on the radio, entire camps of soldiers would join in singing along with the song. A truly important track for the veterans who fought there and a song that still holds power today.

3. Still in Saigon – The Charlie Daniels Band

Still In Saigon

Still In Saigon by The Charlie Daniels Band is both poetic and sad. The fiddle player that beat the devil in a contest puts on his storyteller hat for this one. The song details the story of a Vietnam veteran, from being drafted into the war to his return home. It’s vastly important for understanding the PTSD and emotional trauma the man had to deal with after coming home as well, something that doesn’t get highlighted nearly enough.

4. Rooster – Alice in Chains

Alice In Chains - Rooster (Official HD Video)

Rooster by Alice In Chains was written by Jerry Cantrell in tribute to his father who had served in Vietnam. His father’s nickname had been ‘Rooster’ during the conflict, and the song details the emotional scars that had impacted their whole family and include several references to activities his father had to participate in during the war. It became an incredibly successful single for the band, but more importantly, it helped heal the issues between father and son.

5. All Along The Watchtower – Jimi Hendrix

The Jimi Hendrix Experience - All Along The Watchtower (Official Audio)

In the years since Jimi Hendrix played All Along The Watchtower, Bob Dylan—who made the original recording of the song—has had to play it on electric guitar because of how well Hendrix did it. Hendrix himself was a veteran and would have been sent to Vietnam had he not been discharged for medical reasons. Maybe that’s why the legend felt so compelled by the conflict.

6. Ohio – Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

Ohio

The Vietnam War would have been bad enough on its own. But things were rough at home too, with violence being directed at protesters of the war. Ohio was written about the four students killed at Kent State University in 1970 during an anti-war protest.

7. Where Have All The Flowers Gone? – Pete Seeger

Where Have All the Flowers Gone?

Pete Seeger lifted a few lines for this song from the book And Quiet Flows The Don. Where Have All The Flowers Gone is a peaceful, anti-war protest track that looked at all of the chaos and violence of the time period and just asked why.

8. (Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay – Otis Redding

Otis Redding - (Sittin' On) The Dock Of The Bay (Official Music Video)

While this song wasn’t written directly about the Vietnam War, it was penned by Otis Redding shortly after he had agreed to go visit the troops there. (Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay is a very lonely track, featuring a wanderer that just wants to go home—something many soldiers could relate to.

9. Gimme Shelter – The Rolling Stones

Gimme Shelter (Remastered 2019)

The only way to describe Gimme Shelter is as a wall of sound. It’s a beautiful soundscape that can be related to any conflict, but its release in 1969 placed it squarely in the frame of the Vietnam War. It also helps that it’s one of the best tracks The Rolling Stones put out that didn’t have its own single release.

10. For What It’s Worth – Buffalo Springfield

Buffalo Springfield - For What It's Worth (Official Audio)

While For What It’s Worth was inspired by a rally in L.A. rather than the Vietnam War, the lyrics sure do point to it being an anti-war protest song. Sweepingly eerie, the track was indicative of the chaos running amok in the United States during the 60s and the terrible violence veterans experienced during the Vietnam War.

11. I Feel Like I’m Fixin’ to Die Rag – Country Joe McDonald

I Feel Like I'm Fixin to Die Rag

Country Joe McDonald was a Navy veteran, and this song is rife with military humor. According to him, the track wasn’t a protest, but more an illustration of the way soldiers could complain without getting in trouble. It resonates with veterans because of the sarcastic bitterness it expresses in a humorous way.

12. Vietnam – Jimmy Cliff

Vietnam

The Vietnam War turned many people against the government, especially after draft orders were implemented. It was also one of the first times Americans saw no point in a conflict, turning popular opinion in the states against the war. Vietnam by Jimmy Cliff was a quintessential protest song of the time, begging for peace and unity instead of violence.

13. War – Edwin Starr

War

This funky number is one of those classic songs almost everyone has heard, but may not know the origin of it. But what is war good for? If you can’t think of much, you understand the point of this protest track by Edwin Starr. An anti-war protest song wasn’t a fresh idea during the Vietnam War, but this one had a little more soul than some of the prettier numbers.

14. Imagine – John Lennon

IMAGINE. (Ultimate Mix, 2020) - John Lennon & The Plastic Ono Band (with the Flux Fiddlers) HD

Imagine is one of the greatest songs of all time and something that transcends any single conflict. It illustrates what the world could look like if there were no borders, no conflict, no religion, and no division between people. It’s a lovely sentiment that many, especially during and after the Vietnam War, could resonate with.

15. Leaving on a Jet Plane – Peter, Paul & Mary

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2m\u002d\u002dR3J6f4

Leaving On A Jet Plane is a song that will bring tears to the eyes of a lot of Vietnam veterans’ family members. They had to say goodbye to their loved ones, not knowing if they would ever return and in many cases against their own wishes. It was one of the most poignant protest tracks of the era.

16. Detroit City – Bobby Bare

Bobby Bare - Detroit City (Audio)

One of the most prevalent feelings Vietnam veterans had while in combat was the desire to go home. That’s why so many of the songs on this list have that as a big theme and resonate with those veterans, Detroit City by Bobby Bare is no different, as in it, he just wants to go home.

17. The Letter – The Box Tops

The Box Tops - The Letter (Audio)

The Box Tops tapped into one of the most important motivators for soldiers during the Vietnam War when they sang The Letter. Mail was incredibly important for morale, with letters from home being the only thing that kept many soldiers from giving up.

18. Green, Green Grass of Home – Porter Wagoner

Green, Green Grass of Home

Tom Jones eventually recorded this song, but Porter Wagoner did it first and it was this version that many Vietnam War veterans listened to while in combat. It’s a very sad track, detailing feelings of loneliness, longing, and homesickness. That was what a lot of young soldiers had to deal with during the Vietnam War, which made the song resonate with them even more, especially ones who didn’t sign up to fight.

19. Chain of Fools – Aretha Franklin

Chain of Fools

Aretha Franklin had a powerful voice, and she used it to rage against a lot of things. While she’s best known for songs about racial and sexual equality, the Vietnam War didn’t escape her scope. Chain Of Fools became even more important once the war started, with the title being used to reference the military chain of command by militiamen serving overseas.

20. What’s Going On – Marvin Gaye

Marvin Gaye - What's Going On (Official Video 2019)

In light of the 60s being incredibly confusing and all of the social shifts going on in the United States at the time, you’d be forgiven for asking what the hell is going on. That was basically the sentiment Marvin Gaye put into What’s Going On, inspired by talking to his brother, a man who served three years in the Vietnam War.

21. Draft Morning – The Byrds

The Byrds - Draft Morning (Audio)

One of the biggest problems of the Vietnam War was the draft. People were plucked from their lives and sent to fight against their will by the government. It was insane, absurd, and unfair. This is exactly what The Byrds describe in their song Draft Morning.

22. Peace Train – Cat Stevens

Peace Train (Remastered 2021)

Some anti-war songs don’t call anybody out and instead just plead for an end to the violence and a little bit of peace. That was the main message in Peace Train by Cat Stevens, a track that called for peace as the war in Vietnam raged on without a foreseeable end.

23. Give Me Love (Peace On Earth) – George Harrison

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EjHLxTGn\u002d\u002ds

George Harrison actually wrote Give Me Love (Peace On Earth) about the war in Bangladesh rather than the Vietnam War, but it came out in 1973. That meant it came at the tail end of the Vietnam War, eventually becoming a popular anthem of peace after the conflict had ended.

24. Bring The Boys Home – Freda Payne

Bring the Boys Home

One of the most popular sentiments during the Vietnam War era—and even today—has been to just bring home all of our troops. Freda Payne put that to music in 1971 with Bring The Boys Home, a song about the psychological toll of war, both for soldiers in combat and their loved ones back at home.

25. 19 – Paul Hardcastle

19 Original

The track 19 by Paul Hardcastle mostly describes the trauma Vietnam veterans went through and highlights the fact that a large portion of the soldiers who were sent there were just kids. It was inspired by a documentary about the war, released in 1985, but it’s still one of the best Vietnam War songs out there.

26. Bungle In The Jungle – Jethro Tull

Bungle in the Jungle (2002 Remaster)

This song definitely may not be related to the Vietnam War at all, but it’s been interpreted that way by many. Soldiers spent all of their time in the jungles of Vietnam, running to or from different things. It also makes sense to call it a bungle—incompetent activities—as many people saw the Vietnam War as stupid for us to be involved in.

27. Viet Nam – Minutemen

Viet Nam

It’s no secret today that the United States motivations in the Vietnam War were questionable. It wasn’t even a secret when the conflict was going on, as it was one of the most unpopular moves in the history of the country. Vietnam by Minutemen was a political song that brought those motivations into question.

28. Search and Destroy – Iggy & The Stooges

Iggy & The Stooges - Search And Destroy (Bowie Mix) (Audio)

Search And Destroy was emblematic of the ferocious violence that raged during the Vietnam War, and it wasn’t apologetic about it. It’s loud, messy, and tumultuous, emulating the way war would sound. While it didn’t release until near the end of the war, the distorted sound became all the more powerful when listened to during that conflict.

29. The Unknown Soldier – The Doors

The Unknown Soldier

An unfortunate reality of war is that there will be people lost that we don’t know about. The Unknown Soldier by The Doors is a tribute to those servicemen and women, becoming one of the most iconic songs of the Vietnam War and detailing the experiences of veterans of the conflict.

30. Okie from Muskogee – Merle Haggard

Merle Haggard - Okie From Muskogee (Live)

Country music and the military are very much intertwined, as even today it’s the genre that pays the most respect to the sacrifice of our veterans. This has been a theme for a long time, with Merle Haggard releasing Okie From Muskogee in 1969 in tribute to the Vietnam combatant’s sacrifices.

31. Straight to Hell – The Clash

The Clash - Straight to Hell (Remastered)

There were unfortunately a lot of children fathered by American soldiers in Vietnam. Their fate was not going to be a good one, but Straight To Hell by The Clash highlights the awful future waiting for a lot of those children.

Dakotah Blanton

As a contributing writer for Music Grotto, Dakotah writes and produces professional music/media content. He works closely with editorial staff to meet editorial standards and create
quality content for the Music Grotto website. Dakotah is passionate about music in a wide variety of genres, from hip-hop to country and lo-fi to metal, and he enjoys creating music pieces for Music Grotto.

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As a passionate music enthusiast and historian, I've delved deep into the cultural and historical context surrounding the Vietnam War and its impact on music. I've actively researched and analyzed the songs mentioned in the article, drawing on my extensive knowledge of the era, the artists, and the socio-political climate. My aim is to provide you with a comprehensive understanding of how these songs resonate with the Vietnam War experience.

The Vietnam War was a tumultuous period in American history, marked by widespread opposition and social upheaval. Music served as a powerful medium for expressing dissent, reflecting the sentiments of both the anti-war movement and the soldiers who fought in the conflict. Let's explore the key concepts and themes related to the songs listed in the article:

  1. Fortunate Son – Creedence Clearwater Revival:

    • Context: A scathing critique of social and economic inequality, particularly addressing the privileged avoiding the draft.
    • Relevance: Became an anthem for the anti-establishment sentiment during the Vietnam War.
  2. We Gotta Get Out of This Place – The Animals:

    • Context: Originally not written for the war, but its resonant lyrics made it a favorite among soldiers expressing their desire to leave Vietnam.
    • Relevance: Became an unofficial anthem for troops seeking an escape from the harsh realities of war.
  3. Still in Saigon – The Charlie Daniels Band:

    • Context: Narrates the story of a Vietnam veteran's journey, shedding light on the emotional trauma and PTSD faced upon returning home.
    • Relevance: Highlights the often-overlooked struggles of veterans post-war.
  4. Rooster – Alice in Chains:

    • Context: Written as a tribute to the songwriter's father, a Vietnam veteran, exploring the impact of war on a family.
    • Relevance: Addresses the emotional scars and complexities faced by veterans and their families.
  5. All Along The Watchtower – Jimi Hendrix:

    • Context: Hendrix's rendition of Bob Dylan's song reflects the turbulent nature of the times and Hendrix's own veteran status.
    • Relevance: The haunting guitar work adds a unique layer to the anti-establishment theme.
  6. Ohio – Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young:

    • Context: Written in response to the Kent State University shootings, expressing outrage at the violence against war protesters.
    • Relevance: Captures the atmosphere of social unrest and government responses to anti-war sentiments.
  7. Where Have All The Flowers Gone? – Pete Seeger:

    • Context: A timeless anti-war protest song that questions the futility of war and loss.
    • Relevance: Reflects on the cyclical nature of conflict and the human cost of war.
  8. (Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay – Otis Redding:

    • Context: While not directly about the Vietnam War, its melancholic tone resonates with soldiers longing to return home.
    • Relevance: Captures the universal theme of homesickness and the desire for peace.
  9. Gimme Shelter – The Rolling Stones:

    • Context: Released during the Vietnam War era, its powerful sound and lyrics make it relevant to the chaotic nature of the time.
    • Relevance: Symbolizes the need for refuge and shelter in the face of turmoil.
  10. For What It’s Worth – Buffalo Springfield:

    • Context: Inspired by societal tensions, it became associated with anti-war sentiments and protests.
    • Relevance: Captures the overall sense of unrest and calls for reflection on the consequences of war.

These songs, among others, form a musical tapestry that reflects the diverse experiences and emotions of those living through the Vietnam War. The artists used their craft to voice dissent, provide solace, and contribute to a collective narrative that defined an era. The intersection of music and history during this period remains a compelling subject of exploration.

31 Top Songs About The Vietnam War - Music Grotto (2024)

FAQs

What song reminds you of the Vietnam War? ›

We've Gotta Get Out of this Place, The Animals

We had absolute unanimity is this song being the touchstone. This was the Vietnam anthem. Every bad band that ever played in an armed forces club had to play this song.

What was one of the most popular songs soldiers in Vietnam listened to? ›

"Fortunate Son" by Creedence Clearwater Revival (1969) Edwin Starr's 1970 rendition of the Temptations' song “War (What Is It Good For)” “What's Going On,” by Marvin Gaye (1971)

What is the song that plays in every Vietnam movie? ›

You could be thinking of Creedance Clearwater Revival's song Fortunate Son.. That or “Run through the Jungle” . Both of those are used extensively in several Vietnam movies.

What was the most requested song by soldiers in Vietnam in 1965? ›

1. “We Gotta Get Outta This Place” – The Animals (1965) – while not explicitly about Vietnam, the song's themes became a popular anthem with the troops.

What music was listened to in Vietnam War? ›

Sometimes the music was live: soldiers strumming out Bob Dylan and Curtis Mayfield songs at base camps; Filipino bands pounding out “Proud Mary” and “Soul Man” at enlisted-men's clubs and Saigon bars; touring acts from Bob Hope and Ann-Margret to Nancy Sinatra and James Brown granting momentary calm.

How many songs are about the Vietnam War? ›

Fifty years on, more than 5,000 songs have been recorded about the war, forming an international conversation about a conflict that tore apart the fabric of politics, society and culture.

What kind of music was popular during the Vietnam War? ›

A new book explores the way Americans who served in the Vietnam War turned to music to cope. They listened to the radio, or on cassette desks or reel-to-reel tape players. They loved Hendrix and Nancy Sinatra, and especially songs that had anything to do with going home, because that was their main goal.

Which Beatles songs were about Vietnam War? ›

The song “Revolution” by the Beatles is a song written by Lennon and McCartney in 1968 to protest the violent protests happening in response to the Vietnam War. Many American college students and citizens were responding to the violence of the war with violent protests, which the Beatles disapproved of.

Was Paint It Black about Vietnam? ›

What is the relationship between Paint It Black by Rolling Stones and the Vietnam War? The song had nothing to do with the Vietnam War. It was a song about depression. But to a young GI serving in Vietnam in 1966, a song about a bleak, hopeless existence may have seemed very relevant.

What is the most powerful song in songs of war? ›

Aggressium Prime

This song is also the most powerful of Prime Songs. It grants the user all the powers of the Aggressium category namely: Aggrobeam.

What did US soldiers listen to in Vietnam? ›

A new book explores the way Americans who served in the Vietnam War turned to music to cope. They listened to the radio, or on cassette desks or reel-to-reel tape players. They loved Hendrix and Nancy Sinatra, and especially songs that had anything to do with going home, because that was their main goal.

What was the number one song during ww2? ›

The song that ruled the airwaves during the Second World War

Without any doubt the most popular song of the Second World War was 'Lili Marlene'.

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