Rock

4 Diss Tracks From Rock Music That Are Still Unforgettable

Rap and hip-hop are the main genres that mastered the art of the diss track. However, plenty of other genres through the years have featured a diss track or two, including rock music. Letโ€™s take a look at four diss tracks from rock historyโ€™s past! You might be familiar with two of these unforgettable diss tracks, but a couple of them might just be new to you.

1. โ€œCall Me When Youโ€™re Soberโ€ by Evanescence

This Evanescence song is a fan favorite. However, few might know that โ€œCall Me When Youโ€™re Soberโ€ is a diss track of sorts. Specifically, this dramatic piece of work features very specific lyrics targeted at none other than Amy Leeโ€™s ex, Shaun Morgan of Seether. The track, more or less eloquently, is all about Morganโ€™s struggles with sobriety and the tumultuous breakup of the two rock icons. Seether would later release the song โ€œFake Itโ€ as a response to Leeโ€™s breakup song.

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2. โ€œStarsuckers, Inc.โ€ by Nine Inch Nails

Nine Inch Nails had a hand in making industrial goth mainstream-level popular in the 1990s. In that same vein, controversial artist Marilyn Manson also had a hand in popularizing a darker, more sinister type of alternative rock in the 1990s and 2000s.

This track from Trent Reznor is a diss track about Manson that satirizes his particular brand of rock star lifestyle. Some fans believe the song is also about Courtney Love. Reznor later confirmed that Manson was โ€œdefinitely one of the peopleโ€ he had in mind when writing the song.

3. โ€œToo Many Peopleโ€ by Paul McCartney

This Paul McCartney classic has to be one of the most unforgettable diss tracks in rock music history. McCartney and John Lennon were no strangers to writing songs about each other. However, โ€œToo Many Peopleโ€ was particularly pointed. McCartney makes jabs at everything form Lennonโ€™s romantic entanglements to his โ€œpreaching practicesโ€.

4. โ€œHow Do You Sleep?โ€ by John Lennon

โ€œHow Do You Sleep?โ€ by John Lennon is a response of sorts to McCartneyโ€™s โ€œToo Many Peopleโ€. But on this track, Lennon is a bit more venomous in his lyricism than McCartney was. This Imagine track takes jabs at McCartneyโ€™s musical ability, among other things. Fortunately, the two were able to at least begin to reconcile their differences before Lennonโ€™s untimely death in 1980.

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