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13 Totally Locked Up, Prison Songs 🎧 features music courtesy of Akon, Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Miley Cyrus, TOOL & The Weeknd.
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PRISON. JAIL. LOCKED UP. INCARCERATION. Ask yourself, do any of those four words have a positive connotation? Generally, no, and yes, I know you can spin “locked up” into positive context when it comes to sports, but this isn’t basketball or football her ladies and gentlemen. No, we’re talking about SOLITARY CONFINEMENT… well… musically… Our 56th playlist of 2021 on The Musical Hype is a good one. Well, they’re all good, but 🎧 13 Totally Locked Up, Prison Songs is particularly G-O-O-D!
🎧 13 Totally Locked Up, Prison Songs features music courtesy of 🎙 Akon, 🎙 Elvis Presley, 🎙 Johnny Cash, 🎙 Miley Cyrus, 🎙 TOOL, and 🎙 The Weeknd among others. No handcuffs needed to partake of this ‘locked up’ list! Just grab some ‘phones, a Bluetooth speaker, or a full-fledged stereo if you wish, and check out these jailed gems!
1. Miley Cyrus, “Prisoner”
Ft. Dua Lipa
💿 Plastic Hearts • 🏷 RCA • 🗓 2020
“Prisoner, prisoner, locked up Can’t get you off my mind, off my mind Lord knows I tried a million times, million times, oh-woah Why can’t you, why can’t you just let me go?”
Besides strong, passionate vocals (“I tasted Heaven, now I can’t live without it / I can’t forget you and your love is the loudest”), Cyrus and Lipa get sweet production work courtesy of 🎛 The Monsters & Strangerz and 🎛 watt. Ultimately, Cyrus and Lipa ‘do the damn thing.’ Add passionate lyrics, a minor key, and excellent production and “Prisoner” is a certified bop.
Also appears on 🔽:
🔗 🎧 Awesome Songs That Tickled My Fancy: November 2020
🔗 🎧 Prison: 5ive Songs No. 68 (2021)
2. Raphael Saadiq, “Rikers Island”
💿 Jimmy Lee • 🏷 Columbia • 🗓 2019
Saadiq begins an entirely new conversation on “Riker’s Island,” and it’s not merely limited to the infamy of Rikers Island itself. The big takeaway is the statement that Saadiq makes about the number of black men that are incarcerated. Yes, Rikers Island is a universally panned correctional facility, but the theme transcends beyond it. It’s amazing that this record with disturbing, hurtful subject matter for black families that is also the funkiest joint of the album. One upping that, it ranks among the very best songs of 2019.
Also appears on 🔽:
🔗 🎧 11 Awesome Songs That Tickled My Fancy in September 2019
🔗 🎧 17 Songs Characterized by Their Place.
🔗 🎧 51 Best Songs of 2019: Year in Review
3. Elvis Presley, “Jailhouse Rock”
💿 Elvis 30 #1 Hits • 🏷 Sony Music Entertainment • 📅 2002
“Jailhouse Rock” was penned and produced by the heavyweight team of 🎼 ✍ 🎛 Jerry Lieber and 🎼 ✍ 🎛 Mike Stoller. Lyrically, it’s tongue-n-cheek (“You shoulda heard those knocked out jailbirds sing”), but that’s part of the novel charm. Of course, it makes sense that there’s outlandish, absurd stories given it’s the title track of Presley’s movie, 🎦 Jailhouse Rock. Also, it was the 1950s, a starkly different time.
“Number forty-seven said to number three ‘You the cutest jailbird I ever did see I sure would be delighted with your company Come on and do the ‘Jailhouse Rock’ with me.’”
Still, decades after this groovy juggernaut was born, it remains timeless, led by the charismatic, gifted Elvis.
4. Miranda Lambert, “Way Too Pretty for Prison”
Ft. Maren Morris
💿 Wildcard • 🏷 Vanner / Sony • 📅 2019
“Way Too Pretty for Prison” is a successful record thanks to the pronounced twang and outlandish, southern, countrified lyrics and story line. Lambert handles the first verse and the first pre-chorus, while Morris makes her first appearance on the chorus alongside Lambert. Of course, on the second verse, Morris kicks things off with a bang singing about “Antifreeze and Gatorade / Arsenic in his lemonade…” Whoa! Morris sings the second pre-chorus before the remainder of the song, including the bridge, finds the two jailbirds, I mean, naughty ladies, singing jointly.
“...And I don’t want to talk about The way those jumpsuits wash us out We're way too pretty for prison.”
5. Akon, “Locked Up”
💿 Trouble • 🏷 2004 • 📅 UMG Recordings Inc.
As the aforementioned lyrics made clear, Akon was doing stuff he had no business doing, hence he goes in the slammer. The chorus, the crown jewel of “Locked Up” confirms his incarceration, hence, “They won’t let me out.” The second verse, with Akon singing in his distinct tone, finds him hustling. Of course, “As I sold the last bag / Fucked around and got locked up.” He had it coming? Cue up 🎵 “Cell Block Tango” or maybe, 🎵 “Cell Block Django” if you want a little parody! In all seriousness though, “Locked Up” definitely marked one of the most successful parts of Akon’s career.
6. Alec Benjamin, “Mind is a Prison”
💿 These Two Windows • 🏷 Alec Benjamin • 📅 2020
Alec nails it on the chorus, setting up mental imprisonment perfectly. He also does swell on the verses setting up mental anguish. He cleverly sings, on the first verse, “I don’t live in California, I’ll inform you, that’s not where I reside / I’m just a tenant, paying rent inside this body and I.” On the second verse, he specifically addresses his state of mind, singing, “I’m a prisoner, a visitor inside my brain.”
Also appears on 🔽:
🔗 🎧 Prison: 5ive Songs No. 68 (2021)
7. The Weeknd, “Prisoner”
Ft. Lana Del Rey
💿 Beauty Behind the Madness • 🏷 Republic • 📅 2015
“Prisoner” is another ‘sweet’ moment from Beauty Behind the Madness, even if it ends up being overshadowed by the aforementioned hits. The Weeknd and Lana Del Rey end up having great chemistry, hence why it’s unsurprising they’ve collaborated since (“Lust for Life” in 2017). On this sleeky produced (The Weeknd and 🎛 Illangelo), moody number, both are/have been imprisoned to unhealthy things. This is best showcased on the chorus, which they sing together:
“I’m a prisoner to my addiction I’m addicted to a life that’s so empty and so cold I’m a prisoner to my decisions Woooo, woooo, woooo.”
The outro, by Del Rey, is particularly intriguing as she asserts, “I get so wrapped up in a world where nothing’s as it seems / And real life is stranger than my dreams.” That’s quite telling for sure.
8. Bastille, “Four Walls (The Ballad of Perry Smith)”
💿 Wild World • 🏷 Virgin • 🗓 2016
“And now we’re faced with two wrongs… / I don’t know, oh, I don’t know.” Perry Smith was a mass murderer who was executed by hanging. Dan denounces the mass murder’s actions but argues against execution and capital punishment as atonement.
“We could be born to anything and now what, now what? What you have done is terrible, and now you, and now you Now you carry it with you You carry it with you You carry it with you.”
Also appears on 🔽:
🔗 🎧 33 Great, If Disturbing Songs About Serial Killers
🔗 🎧 12 Intriguing Songs That Reference Walls
9. Matt Berninger, “Serpentine Prison”
💿 Serpentine Prison • 🏷 Concord • 📅 2020
Here, Berninger totally compels with his cool baritone vocals. He never gets too high during his performance, keeping things casual, delivering the poetic lyrics with ease. Speaking about the song’s conception, Berninger asserts, via the YouTube video description, “The title is from a twisting sewer pipe that drains into the ocean near LAX. There’s a cage on the pipe to keep people from climbing out to sea.”
Also appears on 🔽:
🔗 🎧 Prison: 5ive Songs No. 68 (2021)
10. TOOL, “Prison Sex”
💿 Undertow • 🏷 Tool Dissectional / Volcano Entertainment II • 📅 1993
“My lamb and martyr, you look so precious Won’t you, won’t you come on a bit closer Close enough so I can smell you I need you to feel this I can’t stand to burn too long Release in sodomy For one sweet moment I am whole.”
What the actual ‘fizzuck?’ If you couldn’t tell, “Prison Sex” tackles the sickening, troubling subject matter of sexual abuse, specifically child sexual abuse. YUCK! Besides the disturbing tone of the song, the music video, which uses stop motion, might be more disturbing than the song itself. Of course, there was censorship in given cases even using stop motion to depict a, um, unsettling situation and cycle. That cycle of events is perfectly captured in the aforementioned lyrics, as well as the chilling closing lyrics, “My lamb and martyr, this will be over soon / You look so precious, you look so precious.” 🎙 Maynard James Keenan – always one of a kind.
11. Devin Dawson, “Prison”
💿 Dark Horse • 🏷 Warner Music Nashville • 📅 2018
That’s right! This lady has totally imprisoned him and his days of committing crimes are done. You’ve got to love the dramatic nature of the production during the imprisoned chorus, where Dawson rises to the occasion and the country gets a dash of rock. “You’ve got me locked up / Go on and throw away the key,” he sings, later adding, “I ain’t ever gonna break this prison / … Your love is like a prison.”
Also appears on 🔽:
🔗 🎧 Prison: 5ive Songs No. 68 (2021)
12. Ryan Adams, “Prisoner”
💿 Prisoner • 🏷 PaxAmericana / Blue Note • 📅 2017
Adams sums up these feelings on the simple, yet memorable refrain:
“I know our love is wrong I am a criminal Mmm, I am a prisoner Mmm, I am a prisoner For your love.”
Well produced, “Prisoner” embodies the spirt of rock and singer/songwriter. The dash of harmonica is like the cherry on top.
Also appears on 🔽:
🔗 🎧 Prison: 5ive Songs No. 68 (2021)
13. Johnny Cash, “Folsom Prison Blues”
💿 At Folsom Prison • 🏷 Sony Entertainment • 📅 1968
“Folsom Prison Blues” fittingly commences the live album, capturing a narrative of how the protagonist ends up in prison. Was Johnny Cash really incarcerated in Folsom Prison? No, but his imaginative narrative is incredible – #ICONIC! The second verse might be my favorite:
“When I was just a baby, my mama told me, ‘Son Always be a good boy, don’t ever play with guns’ But I shot a man in Reno, just to watch him die When I heard that whistle blowing, I hang my head and cry.”
Of course, he couldn’t get away with murder… well, it happens, but it shouldn’t. On that note, we conclude this compendium!
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