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“11 Songs About Painful, Torturous, or Troubling Ways to Die” features music from Aberrant Construct, Madonna, Marilyn Manson & Slayer.
![11 SONGS ABOUT PAINFUL, TORTUROUS, OR TROUBLE WAYS TO DIE [Photo Credits: Brent Faulkner, The Musical Hype, Aberrant Construct, American, Century Media, Entertainment One, Hollywood, Interscope, Metal Blade, Prosthetic, Reprise, Saving Vice, Pixabay]](https://themusicalhype.com/wp-content/plugins/accelerated-mobile-pages/images/SD-default-image.png)
![11 SONGS ABOUT PAINFUL, TORTUROUS, OR TROUBLE WAYS TO DIE [Photo Credits: Brent Faulkner, The Musical Hype, Aberrant Construct, American, Century Media, Entertainment One, Hollywood, Interscope, Metal Blade, Prosthetic, Reprise, Saving Vice, Pixabay]](https://i0.wp.com/themusicalhype.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/11-songs-about-painful-torturous-or-troubling-ways-to-die.jpg?resize=500%2C500&ssl=1)
Cutting straight to the chase, we’ve totally gone to the dark side for this playlist. Fair warning, it’s morbid from here on out on “11 Songs About Painful, Torturous, or Troubling Ways to Die.” Here, we’ve selected some truly unique songs that are associated with unfortunate means of death. These include such horrid things such as dismemberment, parricide, and scaphism. As depressing as it is, perhaps this dark little list will be informative, but also urge you to cherish every second of life. Artists appearing on this quirky list include Aberrant Construct, Madonna, Marilyn Manson, Serj Tankian, and Slayer among others. Seatbelts on!
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1. Aberrant Construct, “Scaphism”
Scaphism • Aberrant Construct • 2018
Method of Death: scaphism; gangrene
Aberrant Construct characterize themselves as a “slamming death core band” from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. OKC isn’t exactly the hotbed for metal compared to say Sweden. Anyways, “Scaphism” serves as the title track and final song on their seven-track, 2018 EP. As expected from a death metal outfit, the songs on the project aren’t optimistic to say the least, with “Ripped in Fucking Half” and “Inconceivable Failure” preceding the morbid title track, sigh.
“Vats from wall to wall with barely walking room between each one of them with screaming victims wishing he would set them free or show them mercy, kill them quickly, stop this pain and suffering. He never stops he never will until the day he diiiiiiiiiiiies. Killing people till the day he dies! …He brought you to his world so he can make you feel his pain; to see the pictures that are seeded fucking deep within his brain; to know the terror that’s inside of him and all that pent-up rage. He knows you’ll never understand that’s why he digs your fucking grave.”
2. Serj Tankian, “Harakiri”
Harakiri • Reprise • 2012
Method of Death: hara-kiri; seppuku
Tankian actually doesn’t get specific about the act of hara-kiri itself on “Harakiri.” He speaks figuratively and metaphorically about a number of the wrongs and questionable beliefs of the human race. He specifically cites the 2010-11 mass animal deaths of drum fish and blackbirds in Arkansas, making a dual statement about how poorly humans treat mother nature, as well as how poor human nature is in general. Expectedly, Tankian also criticizes overzealous religious beliefs.
“The drum fish They bleached themselves in Harakiri The blackbirds They fell in thousands from the sky Their red wings Streaming down from the higher seas Deflected by the ground They crowned the sun.”
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3. Bloodbath, “Eaten”
Nightmares Made Flesh • Century Media • 2005
Method of Death: cannibalism; murder
Swedish death-metal band Bloodbath captures the disturbed Meiwes on “Eaten,” ranked the 34th best metal song of the 21st century by Loudwire. Notably, rather than coming from the perspective of the vorarephile himself, “Eaten” actually comes from the perspective of the victim, Brandes.
“I’ve had one desire since I was born To see my body ripped and torn To see my flesh devoured before my eyes Only for you I volunteer as a human sacrifice.”
Wow. If the desires weren’t captured on the verses and the pre-chorus section, Bloodbath lays it out there on the chorus.
“Eaten My one desire, my only wish is to be Eaten The longer I live the more I’m dying to feel the pain…”
Fittingly, the music is as dark and disturbing as the lyrics.
4. Saving Vice, “Euthanasia”
Ft. Rory Rodriguez
Colder Than Dark (EP) • Saving Vice • 2018
Method of Death: euthanasia; suicide; hanging
“They say that time heals all But now it’s killing everything And now I’m choking on the words That I never got to say.”
Encyclopædia Britannica describes euthanasia (“mercy killing”) as the “act or practice of painlessly putting to death persons suffering from painful and incurable disease… or allowing them to die by withholding treatment or withdrawing artificial life support measures.” Naturally, euthanasia is controversial to the nth degree, with its share of proponents and opponents. Jack Kevorkian was a huge proponent of course… In the context of the song, while the victim seems responsible for suicide outright – “The noose you tied, tighter and tighter / You took your life, and left me paralyzed” – there is some ‘assistance’:
“I dropped the dirt that made you one with the earth Fading myself just to hide how much it hurts.”
5. Shirley Caesar, “Mother Emanuel”
Fill This House • Entertainment One • 2016
Method of Death: hate crime; mass shooting
“Mother Emanuel” references the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal church, nicknamed Mother Emanuel. Why is the South Carolina Church significant beyond its history? It’s where the racially-driven mass shooting occurred in 2015, perpetrated by Dylann Roof, who murdered nine parishioners including pastor (and state senator) Clementa Pinckney. It’s rare to find a gospel song that digs deeper into current events or societal issues specifically. “Mother Emanuel,” hence, has a deeper resonance and significance.
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6. Marilyn Manson, “Lamb of God”
Holy Wood • Interscope • 2000
Method of Death: murder; assassination; crucifixion
Although he went to Catholic school, Marilyn Manson isn’t the least bit Christian. However, he paints society and the media’s perception of notable deaths such as Kennedy and Lennon as god-like – comparable to Jesus Christ himself.
“If you die when there’s no one watching Then your ratings drop and you’re forgotten But if they kill you on their TV You’re a martyr and a lamb of god.”
Manson dedicates the first verse to Kennedy, while the second verse shifts to Lennon. Manson actually names assassin Chapman on the final line of the verse (“We were looking for the lamb of god / We were looking for Mark David”)
7. The Acacia Strain, “The Impaler”
Wormwood • Prosthetic • 2010
Method of Death: impalement
On “The Impaler,” The Acacia Strain paints a grim picture – the callous, cowardly, and purely evil stripping the lives of others.
“We are the wolves who starve close to dying Cling to life for our actions to kill Prey on the weak and we listen for crying This is the closest we bring you to hell.”
At one point in the song, the band offers a smidgen of optimism, before bringing hell back into the picture: “You’ll survive but you won’t want to.” Author Gary Corby (Soho) expounds upon the historical background of anal impalement, stating “it was a popular means of state execution across the middle east. The Hittites, Assyrians, Egyptians and Persians all practiced it.” Obviously, as the name suggests, torturers truly wanted to torture by opting for the anal region for this cruel act. The most famous Impaler of course was none other than Romanian ruler Vlad the Impaler (Vlad III Dracula), partially the basis for the fictional County Dracula.
8. Flotsam & Jetsam, “She Took an Axe”
Doomsday for the Deceiver • Metal Blade • 1986
Method of Death: parricide; patricide; matricide
“A young maiden with a demon in her soul / A twisted mind with secrets to unfold / An innocent face, a deceiving smile / Under no suspicion, servant to Belial.”
An axe was the weapon of choice for Borden, who was acquitted of murdering her parents in 1892. The act of “murdering his or her father, mother, or close relative” is known as parricide. Borden is arguably the ‘flagship’ example of it historically.
“Lizzy Borden took an axe Gave her mother forty whacks When she saw what she had done She gave her father forty-one Now before the jury with a solemn face These legendary murders, she left not a trace Lizzy found it so simple to take their lives Today she walks free with her axe by her side.”
With family-related murders, there are specific terms for each. In the case of Borden, she committed patricide (murdered her father) and matricide (murdered her mother). For example, biblically, Cain committed fratricide when he slew his brother Abel in Genesis 4.
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9. Madonna, “Joan of Arc”
Rebel Heart • Interscope • 2015
Method of Death: execution by burning; burned at the stake
“Joan of Arc” does rightfully earn a spot on this playlist. Expectedly, the record features clever lyrics referencing authentic ‘superhero’ Joan of Arc. Madonna asserts she’s “Not Joan of Arc, not yet.” At least she’s honest. That said, Madge definitely wouldn’t want to die the way Joan did. According to History.com, she was “tried for witchcraft and heresy and burned at the stake in 1431, at the age of 19.” Remember in American Horror Story: Coven when Myrtle Snow (Francis Conroy) was twice burned at the stake (and resurrected once)?
10. Slayer, “Public Display of Dismemberment”
World Painted Blood • American • 2009
Method of Death: dismemberment
Worth noting, there was once a barbaric Chinese torture method, slow slicing (lingchi), that’s now outlawed.
Veteran metal band Slayer tackles dismemberment nonspecifically on “Public Display of Dismemberment.” A brief record that just crosses the two-and-a-half-minute mark, Slayer speaks more about the problems in society as opposed to the physical dismemberment.
“Anarchy, disarray this is the world today Justice is a lie for the followers to get by No peace, only guns, can’t trust anyone Live or die, it’s an eye for an eye... Unrest, marshal law, society decays And it’s safe to say there is no other way With lawless arrogance and savage dissidents Public display of dismemberment.”
11. Breaking Benjamin, “Bury Me Alive”
Dark Before Dawn • Hollywood • 2015
Method of Death: live burial
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