Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • American Songwriter

    7 Classic Rock Songs for Each of the Seven Deadly Sins

    By Jacob Uitti,

    1 day ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0x5qFW_0uvHFk9k00

    For those who have seen the hit movie Seven, the concept of the “seven deadly sins” is familiar. But for those who have not seen the Brad Pitt-Morgan Freeman classic, the idea is pretty simple. According to the Bible, there are seven major vices that a human being can succumb to: pride, greed, wrath, envy, lust, gluttony and sloth.

    But to illustrate the concept more clearly, we thought it would be interesting to pair each of the deadly sins with a classic rock song. Since so many used to claim that rock and roll was “the devil’s music,” why not lean into the trope a little bit and showcase just how devilish a song can get. Here below are seven classic rock songs for each of the deadly sins.

    Videos by American Songwriter

    [RELATED: No Skips: 4 Classic Rock Albums You’ll Never Have to Fast-Forward]

    Pride: “Ava Adore” by Smashing Pumpkins

    First of all, this industrial rock song just sounds like it should be in the dreary, bleak 1995 film Seven. But more than that, this track exemplifies the negative connotation of pride—not the idea of appreciation for self or community, but the narcissistic side of the concept. In it, the singer puts down the subject, telling her We must never be apart and And I’ll pull your crooked teeth / You’ll be perfect just like me. It’s a gross and grotesque form of love. One exemplified well by the vampiric Billy Corgan.

    Greed: “Money” by Pink Floyd

    One of the best songs on one of the best classic rock albums ever (The Dark Side of the Moon), this song, which is bolstered by the sounds of cash registers and paper receipts tearing, highlights modern society’s lust and fetishization over cold, hard cash. On the track David Gilmour sings,

    Money

    It’s a crime

    Share it fairly, but don’t take a slice of my pie

    Money

    So they say

    Is the root of all evil today

    But if you ask for a rise

    It’s no surprise that they’re giving none away

    Away, away, away

    Away, away, away

    Wrath: “Hey Joe” by Jimi Hendrix

    A traditional blues song performed and recorded by one of the greatest guitar players ever in Jimi Hendrix, this song is about getting bloody revenge. The singer, Joe, takes up a gun and is set to kill his longtime romantic partner because he caught her cheating. On the track, Hendrix sings about that anger and murder plot,

    Hey Joe, where you goin’ with that gun of your hand?

    Hey Joe, I said, where you goin’ with that gun in your hand? Oh

    I’m goin’ down to shoot my old lady

    You know I caught her messin’ ’round with another man, yeah

    I’m goin’ down to shoot my old lady

    You know I caught her messin’ ’round with another man

    Envy: “You Oughta Know” by Alanis Morissette

    Another song about a jilted lover, this 1990s hit rocker from Alanis Morissette seems to imply the singer is OK with her breakup and her man moving on to another, but the reality is she is still filled with range over it. She is envious of the new woman and tells the man he could never have it as good with the other as he did with her. Sings a blistering Morissette,

    ‘Cause the love that you gave that we made

    Wasn’t able to make it enough for you to be open wide

    No, and every time you speak her name

    Does she know how you told

    Me you’d hold me until you died?

    ‘Til you died, but you’re still alive

    And I’m here, to remind you

    Of the mess you left when you went away

    It’s not fair, to deny me

    Of the cross I bear that you gave to me

    You, you, you oughta know

    Lust: “Rocket Queen” by Guns N’ Roses

    Brace yourself, but this song from the band’s debut studio album Appetite for Destruction includes actual moans from a woman (Adriana Smith). Her intimate sounds were recorded while she was having sex with Guns N’ Roses lead singer Axl Rose. And if that doesn’t, well, scream lust, nothing does! Said Rose in a 1988 interview with Hit Parader, “For [this] song there was also something I tried to work out with various people—a recorded sex act. It was somewhat spontaneous but premeditated; something I wanted to put on the record.”

    Gluttony: “Peaches” by Presidents of the United States of America

    The singer in this classic 1990s alternative rock song just can’t get enough peaches. They’re on his mind constantly, all he wants to do is bury his face in the fruit and chomp away. Such is the behavior of a glutton. And on the song, lead singer Chris Ballew says,

    Movin’ to the country,

    Gonna eat a lot of peaches

    I’m movin’ to the country,

    I’m gonna eat me a lot of peaches

    Movin’ to the country,

    Gonna eat a lot of peaches

    Movin’ to the country,

    I’m gonna eat a lot of peaches

    And he adds,

    If I had my little way,

    I’d eat peaches every day

    Sloth: “Lazy” by Deep Purple

    This song, which is perhaps the most obvious of the bunch on the list of seven deadly sin songs given the title, is all about inability. It’s about not doing, as opposed to doing. About lack instead of abundance. It’s about being, well, just totally lazy. Sings lead vocalist Ian Gillan,

    You’re lazy just stay in bed

    You’re lazy just stay in bed

    You don’t want no money

    You don’t want no bread

    If you’re drowning you don’t clutch no straw

    If you’re drowning you don’t clutch no straw

    You don’t want to live you don’t want to cry no more

    Well my trying ain’t done no good

    I said my trying ain’t done no good

    You don’t make no effort no not like you should

    When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.

    Photo by Marc S Canter/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Most Popular newsMost Popular
    societyofrock.com27 days ago
    Singersroom22 days ago
    Capital Chronicles3 days ago

    Comments / 0