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ATL’s Official Top Ten Law Songs

music.jpgThere was a fierce battle for #1 law song between The Clash’s “I Fought the Law” and Warren Zevon’s “Lawyers, Guns, and Money.” The Clash took home the prize. See poll results here.

There was some bellyaching about who should get credit for songs: the original creator or the performer. We think how you sing it matters. Bobby Fuller 4 pleasantly fight the law, while the Clash punk-rock the law, earning them the top spot. The song was originally written by Sonny Curtis and The Crickets. If you’ve actually listened to that version, kudos to you. You’re a true music connoisseur, even if you don’t rock.

Thanks to everyone who voted. Here’s the official ATL Top Ten Law Song list:

1. I Fought The Law - The Clash [ LyricsYouTube ]
2. Lawyers, Guns, and Money - Warren Zevon [ LyricsYouTube ]
3. 99 Problems - Jay-Z [ LyricsYouTube ]
4. Folsom Prison Blues - Johnny Cash [ LyricsYouTube ]
5. We’re All Winners, as arranged by Nixon Peabody [ Explanation]
6. Law and Order theme song [ YouTube │Dance Remix ]
7. Hurricane - Bob Dylan [ LyricsYouTube ]
8. Alice’s Restaurant - Arlo Guthrie [ LyricsYouTube ]
9. I Fought The Law - Bobby Fuller 4 [ LyricsYouTube ]
10. The Road Goes on Forever - Robert Earl Keen [ LyricsYouTube ]

A little background on the songs appears after the jump. Warning: This is Above The Law, not Rolling Stone, so set your expectations for music analysis accordingly.

We’ll expound a bit on our top ten songs, as voted in by ATL readers. For a bunch of lawyers, you all were surprisingly sympathetic to songs told from the perspective of those on the wrong side of the law.

1 (and 9) - With its catchy riff and easily-remembered chorus, “I Fought The Law” is the song most people think of when one says “law song.” A prison convict laments the heavy hand of the law having its way with him. The beauty of the lyrics is in the simple but powerful line” “I fought the law and the law won.”

2 - “Lawyers, Guns, and Money” is also told from the perspective of a man on the wrong side of the law, who’s gotten caught up in crimes across the border and is hiding out in Honduras. He asks his dad to send lawyers, guns, and money, to get him out of the mess. Lawyers and money always help, but we think guns may just get him into more trouble.

3 - The only hip hop song to make the cut out of the many nominated, “99 Problems” recounts a brush with the law in the form of a traffic stop. Jay-Z refuses the cop’s request to search the car, saying he needs a warrant, explaining “Nah I ain’t pass the bar but I know a little bit, Enough that you won’t illegally search my s**t.”

4 - Johnny Cash has many a song about brushes with the law. “Folsom Prison Blues” was the one to make the top ten list, probably because “I hear that train a-comin” is one of the most famous song intros ever written. A murderer stuck in California’s Folsom prison thinks about life on the trains that he hears passing outside his cell. The song has the famous line, “I shot a man in Reno, just to watch him die.” If that’s what he said during the trial, it’s no surprise he wasn’t acquitted.

5 - Nixon Peabody commissioned “We’re All Winners” after being recognized by Fortune Magazine as one of the 100 Best Places to Work. The lyrics include such gems as “Everyone’s a winner at Nixon Peabody” (the chorus) and “It’s all about the team, it’s all about respect, it all revolves around integri-tee yeah.” There was a lot of controversy when ATL shared the song with the world. And that’s all we have to say about that.

6 - You hear the Law and Order theme song, and it screams LAW. It arguably could have been number one on the list. Except it’s not really musically awesome. We kind of like the dance remix though.

7 - Bob Dylan’s famous protest song “Hurricane” recounts the wrongful imprisonment of boxer Rubin “Hurricane” Carter. Dylan was inspired to write the song after reading Carter’s autobiography about racism leading to an unfair trial and conviction of an innocent man. The song is chockful of the law, and there’s also a little more law behind it: lawyers for Columbia Records had Dylan rewrite the lyrics and rerecord the song, leaving out the names of two eyewitnesses to the crime, to avoid defamation charges.

8 - “Alice’s Restaurant” is another protest song based on a true story. Arlo Guthrie’s protest against the Vietnam war draft centers around Guthrie being arrested for illegally dumping garbage for the restaurant on Thanksgiving Day in 1965. He is convicted and fined. Turned out to be a good thing for him. When he was called up for the draft, he’s rejected because of his criminal record. Sometimes being on the wrong side of the law can be a good thing.

9 - See above.

10 - In “The Road Goes on Forever,” guy rescues girl. Guy and girl go to Miami and get mixed up with Cuban refugees and contraband goods. The “law comes bustin’ in.” Girl shoots cop. Guy takes blame. Guy gets convicted and sent to the electric chair. Girl buys Mercedes-Benz. It’s a heart-warming tale.

Earlier: The Ears of the Law: ATL’s Top Ten Law Songs

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