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Songs About Charles Whitman, The Infamous Tower Sniper features songs by Kinky Friedman, Insane Clown Posse & Macabre.
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Charles Whitman (1941 – 1966) was an unlikely mass murderer with his clean-cut, All-American looks. Nonetheless, the former marine sharpshooter was indeed a mass murderer. Whitman is infamously known for the hellish killing spree atop the tower at the University of Texas in 1966. Nearly 40 years after the Bath School Massacre (perpetrated by Andrew Kehoe in 1927), and more than 30 years prior to The Columbine Massacre (Eric Harris/Dylan Klebold, 1999), Whitman inflicted his own terror.
Songs have been inspired and penned about a number of horrific events throughout history. The UT shooting of 1966 is no exception. While fewer musical selections arrive compared to the likes of Jeffrey Dahmer, Ted Bundy, or Columbine in general, Whitman’s shameful actions have yielded some chilling musical tales. SONGS ABOUT CHARLES WHITMAN, THE INFAMOUS TOWER SNIPER features music courtesy of Kinky Friedman, Insane Clown Posse, Harry Chapin, Macabre, Deathday, and Church of Misery.
1. Kinky Friedman, “The Ballad of Charles Whitman”
Sold American • Vanguard • 1973
For Friedman’s first appearance on a The Musical Hype true crime playlist, he arrives with a B-A-N-G. What better way to commence this brief playlist about the infamous University of Texas tower sniper than with a murder ballad? Just in case you were unaware, a murder ballad is a ballad that depicts with dark subject murder – crime and murder – and narrativizes it. That’s exactly what Friedman does on his classic murder ballad, “The Ballad of Charles Whitman,” which originally appears on his album, Sold American (1973).
As the excerpted lyrics from the first verse suggest, Friedman narrativizes the infamous shootings by Charles Whitman. With each verse, the listener is given another portion of the story. On the second verse, Friedman sings, “He picked up his guns and went to school / … They’d never seen an Eagle Scout so cruel.” On the third verse, he sings, “He put on a bold and brassy show / The Chancellor cried, ‘it’s adolescent / And of course, it’s most unpleasant / But I gotta admit, it’s a lovely way to go.’” Wow!
Among the most notable verses are four and seven. On the fourth verse, Friedman references Whitman’s brain tumor, as well as his .36 magnum gun. The brain tumor has naturally raised questions, best stated by the title of the embedded article: How Responsible are Killers with Brain Damage. Obviously, it is a complex matter, something that Micah Johnson explores superbly in the 2018 Scientific American article:
…Understanding of free will allows us to ask more sophisticated questions about the connection between the brain and criminal behavior when evaluating cases like Charles Whitman’s. Instead of just pointing to the obvious fact that an action had a neural cause (every action does!), we can ask whether a person’s specific neurologic injury impaired the psychological capacities necessary for free will…
Returning back to the contents of Friedman’s murder ballad, the seventh verse depicts the actions occurring in the midst of the impending hellacious affair:
“Some were dying, some were weepin’ Some were studying, some were sleepin’ Some were shouting, ‘Texas, number one,’ Some were running, some were fallin’ Some were screaming, some were bawlin’ Some thought the revolution had begun.”
2. Insane Clown Posse, “The Tower”
The Tempest • Psychopathic • 2015
“…I barricaded the tower doors, safe this place ain’t Up to the top, I can see the whole planet it would seem The sun is beatin’ on my head as I’m living my horror dream Upchucked a couple times then I finally took aim The man is chattin’ on his cell phone, I splattered his brain.”
Obviously, there weren’t cell phones back in 1966… Again, one must remember that this is a record that is INSPIRED by the event, not a blow-by-blow depiction. But just as a reminder, the real life, former military sniper took the lives of 16 innocent victims.
“I’m finally at war again, only I ain’t takin’ orders 200 yards below, I’m taggin’ targets small as quarters Marksman, sniper, military precision Spotlight on the tower, tryin’ to nullify my vision…”
3. Harry Chapin, “Sniper”
Sniper and Other Love Songs • Atlantic • 1972
“He laid out the rifles, he loaded the shotgun He stacked up the cartridges along the wall He knew he would need them for his conversation If it went as it, he planned, then he might use them all… Bill Whedon was questioned as stepped from his car Tom Scott ran across the street but he never got that far The police were there in minutes, they set up barricades He spoke right on over them in a half-mile circle In a dumb struck city his pointed questions were sprayed...”
4. Macabre, “Sniper in the Sky / Charles Whitman”
Sinister Slaughter / Behind the Walls of Sleep • Nuclear Blast • 2000
“At the school observatory, he went to the top And killed sixteen people before he could be stopped.”
Macabre, like the other musicians on this list, remind us of the details of the infamous happenings of August 1, 1966.
“Charles Whitman was the school tower hitman Charles Whitman shot at people and hit them Charles Whitman had a brain tumor in his head Charles Whitman was the cause of eighteen people… He kept on shooting people, the police they tried and tried To kill Charles Whitman, the sniper in the sky They finally snuck up on him, surprised him at the top Then Charles Whitman was gunned down by a cop.”
5. Deathday, “Charles Joseph Whitman”
Deathday (EP) • desire / Deathday • 2013
“Running up with guns to the top of the tower When the skies rained steel on a summer day Skies were clear, the sun shed tears Blood spoiled on the floor And they shot him.”
That pretty much sums things up. Whitman’s name isn’t dropped explicitly, besides the song title itself, but this is clearly about his poor choices. Of course, fittingly, Deathday makes it clear he was shot. Not only did Whitman kill others on August 1, 1966 (including his wife and mother), he died that day too.
“And they shot him Again! And Again!”
6. Church of Misery, “Road to Ruin (Charles Whitman)”
Early Works Compilation • Emetic • 2010
The rare song at hand, “Road to Ruin (Charles Whitman),” appears on the band’s compilation, Early Works Compilation, reissued stateside in 2010. Like many Church of Misery songs, there are clips involving the respective crime. In this case, a news anchor prefaces the sung vocals about the most insensitive deviant. After that, the music, set in a minor key, captures the horrible acts of Mr. Whitman, much like the aforementioned and undermentioned lyrical excerpt.
“My final day of summer With my rifle, up to the tower Take a look down to the ground To searching for my target 15 people had died Here, there, and everywhere No reason to kill someone I just pull the trigger.”
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