Crapsack World/Music: Difference between revisions
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* In the song ''Roses'', not by Outkast, but by Nik Kershaw, tells what of happens later after a wasteful society turns the world into this trope later on.
* Battery City and The Zones, the setting of [[My Chemical Romance]]'s post-apocalyptic concept record ''[[Danger Days]]: The True Lives of The Fabulous Killjoys''. "The Zones" are basically the dry, scorching hot, desert wasteland California becomes after the tragic events of 2012
* Hunger City, the setting of the [[David Bowie]] [[Concept Album]] ''Diamond Dogs'' (a work that rose from the ashes of an unrealized musical version of ''[[Nineteen Eighty
* The subject of [[
* The [[Mega Man (
* The Underworld in [[Hadestown]]
* The entire setting of the concept album Deltron 3030 but specifically Turbulence, a song describing the setting in detail.
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Crapsack World]]
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Latest revision as of 02:04, 9 April 2014
- In a humorously ironic subversion of this trope, Scatman John's Scatman's World partially takes place in a Utopian society called... Scatland. You know, like crap.
- In the song Roses, not by Outkast, but by Nik Kershaw, tells what of happens later after a wasteful society turns the world into this trope later on.
- Battery City and The Zones, the setting of My Chemical Romance's post-apocalyptic concept record Danger Days: The True Lives of The Fabulous Killjoys. "The Zones" are basically the dry, scorching hot, desert wasteland California becomes after the tragic events of 2012
- Hunger City, the setting of the David Bowie Concept Album Diamond Dogs (a work that rose from the ashes of an unrealized musical version of 1984) -- after an undescribed catastrophe, what's left of humanity here splits up into decadent, scavenging tribes, bringing on The Apunkalypse.
- The subject of Black Sabbath's "Wicked World".
- The Mega Man-inspired songs of The Protomen.
- The Underworld in Hadestown
- The entire setting of the concept album Deltron 3030 but specifically Turbulence, a song describing the setting in detail.
- Weird Al's Happy Birthday is a song about how you should enjoy the crappy party for the fleeting moments it offers as a distraction to the fact that the world is going straight to hell.
- Mad World by Tears of Fear.
- Many Bruce Springsteen songs, such as Youngstown or Born in the USA deal with this theme.
- This trope is the overlying theme of his 1982 album Nebraska.
- The lyrics to Linkin Park's Forgotten seem to describe this.