World Trade Center in music
This is a list of music about the World Trade Center. The list is ordered alphabetically by artist.
A
- "New York, New York" is a song composed and performed by American alt-country musician Ryan Adams. The song's music video shows Adams performing in front of the city's skyline, and features the World Trade Center visible from across the East River in Brooklyn. It was filmed just four days before the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center. Because of this, profits of the video went to a 9/11 charity. A message was written at the end of the video giving tribute to those who lost their lives.
- AC/DC used the World Trade Center in the video for "Shake Your Foundations", and the World Trade Center is visible on the album art for "Big Gun".
- A-ha: The buildings of the World Trade Center was shown from various angles in the clip "You Are the One", 1988.
B
- The towers can be seen at the beginning and end of the 1984 Bananarama video 'Cruel Summer'.
- The cover of the Beastie Boys' sixth studio album, To the 5 Boroughs, is a drawing featuring the Twin Towers in a compressed New York skyline. This album was released in 2004.
- Night-time aerial views of the World Trade Center appear, at the beginning and end, of the music video for Blondie's 1979 #1 song "Heart of Glass."
- The back cover for the album How I Spent My Summer Vacation by The Bouncing Souls shows the Twin Towers, among other buildings, burning and being destroyed.[1] This album was released in May 2001.
- The band Breaking Benjamin filmed their 2009 single "I Will Not Bow" in the World Trade Center Building 7.
- The towers are seen in Brooks & Dunn's music video "Only In America". The song was later featured in the beginning of Oliver Stone's film World Trade Center with the towers in the background.
C
- There are two distorted night-time images of the World Trade Center featured in Jane Child's video for her 1990 hit, "Don't Wanna Fall in Love".
- The towers can be seen in the middle of the 2001 City High video 'Caramel'.
- Eurodance group Corona prominently features the Twin Towers on the cover of their worldwide hit, "The Rhythm of the Night". The Twin Towers are also seen in the background, briefly, in the video for the song as Corona member, Olga Souza's shadow image is seen in the foreground dancing on the opposite of the East River and Brooklyn Bridge.
- Rap group The Coup released an album in late 2001 called Party Music,[2] whose original cover depicts explosions in the towers set off by a detonator. The cover was changed after the 9/11 attacks.
D
- The Dave Matthews Band was set to film a music video for their song "When the World Ends" from the album Everyday. The music video was supposed to feature lead singer Dave Matthews climbing a ladder to the top of a giant tower. The video idea and single were shelved after the 9/11 attacks and replaced by the more uplifting song "Everyday".
- Deep Blue Something's 1995 music video for "Breakfast at Tiffany's" has several day-time views of the World Trade Center looking up from the lower portions of the towers.
- A promotional video for Depeche Mode's song "Enjoy the Silence" features the band performing the song on the observation deck of the South Tower. This video is not the official music video for the song. The Twin Towers can also be seen in the background of the cover of the band's single "In Your Room" and in the official music video for the song "It's No Good".
- The music video for "Worst Comes To Worst" by Dilated Peoples contains a shot with the Twin Towers in the background. The video was filmed before the attacks, but was released afterwards with a disclaimer stating that the artists meant no disrespect by including an image of the World Trade Center.
- The video of Dinosaur Jr.'s "Feel the Pain" was filmed with the World Trade Center as a backdrop.
- The cover for the album The Dirtchamber Sessions Volume One by Liam Howlett of The Prodigy shows a counter with three rows of numbers. Second row is the numbers "0090". Third row is "1101". This album was released in 1999.
- New York based Progressive metal band Dream Theater's song "Sacrificed Sons" from their 2005 album Octavarium is a tribute to the rescue workers who died during and after the attacks. The band's 2001 live album Live Scenes from New York, coincidentally released on September 11, originally featured cover art depicting an alternate version of the "flaming heart" symbol from their album Images and Words, showing the New York City skyline, including the World Trade Center, silhouetted by the flames. The album was subsequently recalled and reissued with a different cover.
- The video of Duran Duran's "Do You Believe Is Shame" has a quick glimpse of WTC appearing in the background soon after the third-minute mark, when the singer is shown outside near the river.
E
- Eminem highlights the World Trade Center attacks in his song "My Dad's Gone Crazy" from the Eminem Show album. The lyrics are "More pain inside of my brain, than in the eyes of a little girl inside of a plane, aimed at the World Trade..."
F
- The World Trade Center can be seen throughout Glenn Frey's music video "You Belong to the City", which was part of the soundtrack for Miami Vice.[3]
- A clip of the North Tower burning on 9/11 is shown in the official music video for the Flo Rida song "I Cry".
G
- Vince Gill's 1995 "When Love Finds You" video had several scenes of the towers.
- They are seen in the background during a scene of the "Paradise City" music video by Guns N' Roses.
H
- The World Trade Center can be clearly seen along with the World Financial Center particularly in the beginning of the Hi-Five video, "She's Playing Hard To Get."
I
- I Am the World Trade Center is a music group active since 1999. After the September 11 attacks, the group briefly went by the name "I Am the World".
J
- Night-time views of the World Trade Center are seen in Janet Jackson's 1987 video for "Let's Wait Awhile".
- The towers appear several times in Janet Jackson's 1995 music video of "Runaway". They appear in the background as Jackson and her backup dancers dance atop the Manhattan Bridge and later when she flies around the towers.
- Rapper Jay-Z pays tribute to the dead of 9/11 attack in album Blueprint 2, features the World Trade Center in his music video "Dead Presidents", and mentions "Long live the World Trade" in his 2009 hit "Empire State of Mind".
- Alan Jackson's 1994 "Gone Country" video had them featured in a flyover scene.
K
- One of the barhops from the pub Hogs and Heifers in downtown Manhattan walks near the globe where the Twin Towers stood in The Kentucky Headhunters' 2001 "Louisiana Coco" video.
L
- The ska punk band Leftover Crack featured the world trade center attacks on their album Fuck World Trade and also refer to their previous album, Mediocre Generica, as "...the tower toppling Mediocre Generica." as it was released on the 11th of September 2001.
- Huey Lewis and the News feature a night-time view of the World Trade Center, from the Manhattan Bridge, at the beginning, of their 1983 video for "The Heart of Rock & Roll" from the album Sports.
- In John Lennon's music video Whatever Gets You Through The Night in the beginning the twin towers are shown in the background.
- Lil' Kim's music video for her 1996 debut single "No Time" features her and P. Diddy riding up and down the World Trade Center escalators while rapping. Kim makes a reference to the video in her 2005 single "Whoa" where she says "...told you I'm the same female dog from the escalator...".
- The group Limp Bizkit feature the World Trade Center in their music video for their 2000 song "Rollin'" . The band is shown on the South Tower, staging portions of the music video on its rooftop observation deck. The end of the video features a gradually distancing helicopter shot of the towers.
- In Linkin Park's 2007 single "What I've Done" the video features many clips of global issues; a brief shot of the Lower Manhattan skyline is shown with the Twin Towers. Scenes of 9/11 are shown later in the video.
M
- The Twin Towers are shown in Madonna's music videos for "Like a Virgin", "Papa Don't Preach", "The Look of Love", and "Ray of Light." At the beginning of the "Look of Love" video, only the South Tower is seen.
- Heavy metal Band, Meshuggah's Album Contradictions Collapse Album art has the World Trade Center on it.
- Martina McBride's "Wild Angels", released in 1995, showed the tower in a wide shot of the video.
- The towers appeared prominently in Neal McCoy's 1994 video "The City Put the Country Back in Me."
- During Megadeth's live concert DVD Rude Awakening, Dave Mustaine dedicates their performance of "A Tout Le Monde" to the lives lost on September 11. The concert was shot in 2001, after the attacks.
- In her 1995 video to the song "Carnival", directed by Melodie McDaniel, Natalie Merchant starts the video with scenes of her taking several photos in front of the plaza of the World Trade Center, then as she walks through Lower Manhattan, Merchant takes more photographs of the people she encounters and several of them have behind them the World Trade Center.
- The song "Open Letter to NYC" includes Mike D referencing to The Twin Towers and pays homage to New York City.
- Rapper Pete Miser wrote a song titled "Might Be" which mentions the events of September 11, 2001. The song is featured on Pete Miser's album Radio Free Brooklyn which was released in 2002.
- In the official video by the English group Muse, "Invincible" they enter in an "It's a Small World" attraction, as the video goes forward, there's scene the Twin Towers appear burning after the planes crash.
- The towers are briefly shown in Music Instructor's video for "Super Sonic".
- The My Chemical Romance song "Skylines and Turnstiles" was written as a tribute to the 9/11 attacks. Gerard Way witnessed the attacks firsthand from a ferry.
N
- The towers make an appearance in Nana's 1998 music video "Remember The Time".
- The song by The Notorious B.I.G., "Juicy", released in 1994, features the lyrics "blow up like the World Trade" in a reference to the bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993. When the verse was sampled for the Jay-Z song "A Dream" in 2002, the words "World Trade" were omitted.
O
- The World Trade Center appears behind and to the left of the Empire State Building on the front cover to the Oasis album Standing on the Shoulder of Giants.
- The towers can be seen at the beginning of Jeffrey Osborne's video, "Stay With Me Tonight".
P
- An extremely quick glimpse of the World Trade Center can be seen in Phil Collins' video, "Take Me Home".[4]
- The towers can be seen at the end of Patti LaBelle and Michael McDonald music video of On My Own.
- The towers are seen at the beginning of the 1990 Iggy Pop and Debbie Harry video for Well, Did You Evah!
R
- The Twin Towers of the World Trade Center briefly appear twice in the music video to R.E.M.'s 1989 single "Stand".
- In Slick Rick's video for his 1988 song, "Teenage Love", the Twin Towers appear multiple times during the night time.
- Quite a few shots of the World Trade Center are found in The Rolling Stones' music video for "Anybody Seen My Baby", the most notable of which is seen right at the start.[5]
- In the Kevin Rudolf song "N.Y.C." Nas raps and mentions the towers: "The illest city on the planet, towers came down, Wall Street barely standing."
- The Twin Towers are shown several times in the background in Reel 2 Real's music video I Like to Move It.
- Artist Mason Ruffner's music video for "Dancin' On Top Of The World" has the band doing exactly that.[6]
- Few shots of Twin Towers are found in Robert Miles' music video - Children.
S
- Sade's music video for "Cherish the Day" features the Twin Towers in the background while she is singing on top of a skyscraper.
- The band, Savage Garden, featured the World Trade Center in their music video, "To The Moon and Back", which appeared as the first track in their self-titled debut album.[7]
- Bob Seger includes a view of the World Trade Center and Lower Manhattan in the music video for "Fire Inside".[8]
- In the opening of Carly Simon's 1988 video for "Let the River Run" from the soundtrack of the 1988 film, Working Girl, there is a prolonged view of the World Trade Center seen behind her left shoulder as she is aboard a ferry on the Hudson River. The World Trade Center can also be seen a little later on in the video up-close.
- Will Smith wrote a song titled "Tell Me Why", which in the first verse of the song mentions him and his son watching the attacks on TV.
- The video for the Spice Girls song "2 Become 1", released in 1996, features numerous night-time shots of the World Trade Center, from differing angles, throughout the duration of the clip.
- In Bruce Springsteen's Song "Darlington County" (Born in the U.S.A. – released 1984) a lyrical reference to the Trade Center is made: "...Our pa's each own one of the World Trade Centers for a kiss and a smile I'll give mine all to you..."
- In the final two minutes of the video for Starship's 1985 #1 song "We Built This City" from the album Knee Deep in the Hoopla the World Trade Center and the Twin Towers can be seen along with several other various famous United States landmark iconic buildings as part of the changing background.
- Rod Stewart's 1975 promotional music video for the song "Sailing" shows two day-time views of the World Trade Center as the ship he is on on the Hudson River goes by them.
- Sting's 1987 music video for the song "Englishman in New York" includes a blurry Manhattan skyline with the towers.
- There is a prolonged night-time view of the World Trade Center (the camera zooms in on the towers from the sky looking towards the east) at the beginning of Barbra Streisand's 1985 video for Somewhere (from West Side Story) from her The Broadway Album.
- Barbra Streisand makes reference to the events of September 11, 2001 specifically mentioning the World Trade Center in the liner notes of her 2001 Compact Disc and album, Christmas Memories.
- In Al B. Sure's music video "Nite and Day", the towers are shown.
- The towers can also be seen in The Statler Brother's music video "You've been like a mother to me".
- On Supertramp's album cover "Breakfast in America", the towers are shown as a pile of white cereal boxes on a huge breakfast tray. Released in 1979, the album was the group's most popular, and sold over 18 million copies.
- On 16 April 1998 Spiritualized played the highest recorded concert in history in the restaurant atop the World Trade Center.
T
- In the 1992 video for 10,000 Maniacs' "These Are Days" there are several views in the distance of the World Trade Center (especially clear is the North Tower) looking from the east to the west from the Chrysler Building as then lead singer, Natalie Merchant, dances and sings on one of the Art Deco designed eagles.
- The song "The Evil Has Landed" by American thrash metal band Testament from their 2008 release The Formation of Damnation was written about the 9/11 attacks. It includes lyrics such as "The towers got hit, a steel bird with wings of destruction".
- Filmed in the NYC area, the video titled "Scenario" by A Tribe Called Quest featuring Leaders of the New School (with Busta Rhymes) briefly shows the Twin Towers in the background. The towers are also seen in their video "Electric Relaxation."
- The towers are featured at the beginning of Tina Turner's 1984 video "What's Love Got To Do With It."
W
- Stevie Wonder's video for his 1985 hit song "Part-Time Lover" shows the Twin Towers in the background at night while he is singing.
Y
- The Yellowcard song "Believe" on the album Ocean Avenue was written as a tribute to the 9/11 attacks.
Z
- The towers can be seen in Zhane's "Vibe" music video.
References
- ↑ The Bouncing Souls (2001). "How I Spent My Summer Vacation". punkcovers.free.fr. Retrieved 2012-07-19.
- ↑ "Party Music: Coup: Music". Amazon.com. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
- ↑ "Glenn Frey – You Belong to the City – HD". Christian Fratini. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
- ↑ "Phil Collins – Take Me Home (Official Music Video)". YouTube. 2009-10-29. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
- ↑ "The Rolling Stones – Anybody Seen My Baby – OFFICIAL PROMO". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
- ↑ "Mason Ruffner – Dancin' On Top Of The World". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
- ↑ "Savage Garden – To The Moon & Back (Extended Version)". YouTube. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
- ↑ "World Trade Center in Music Videos". YouTube. 2012-06-12. Retrieved 2013-03-28.
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