Creepy Songs Download ##BEST##

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Quirino Rico

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Jan 25, 2024, 8:23:54 AM1/25/24
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Arguably not even a song, but definitely creepy as fuck. The most is disturbing thing is how many unanswered questions this piece leaves the listener with. The nosy neighbour narrator is potentially even creepier than the unnamed subject.

Nearly every Nick Cave song is scary; few artists have dedicated themselves to the grim and macabre like the Australian Bad Seeds leader. In the mid Nineties he tasked himself with writing and recording the self-explanatory album Murder Ballads, whose songs claimed the lives of dozens upon dozens of hapless fictional victims. Its lugubrious lead track, originally planned as a sequel to Cave's Milton-inspired soundtrack fave "Red Right Hand," tells the unflinching story of a man who meets a "sweet and happy" girl named Joy, whom he eventually married, only to discover her one day after she "had been bound with electrical tape, in her mouth a gag/She'd been stabbed repeatedly and stuffed into a sleeping bag." The killer also claimed the lives of the narrator's three other daughters; by the end of the song it seems the narrator may know more than he lets on. "They never caught the man," Cave sings. "He's still on the loose."

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It's october and I need my yearly dose of spookyness. Both slightly spooky and actually frightening songs are welcome as is everything inbetween the two. Every genre is accepted: I personally like certain types of metal and of electronic music.

Scroll through below to see some 15 rock songs that we find surprisingly creepy. They might have you thinking twice about the lyrics the next time you hear a seemingly untroubled rock number that subtly points to a more distressing account within.

One of the more creepy moments in the movie Insidious is when the record the mom puts on suddenly changes to Tiny Tim's Tip Toe Through the Tulips, and even out of context of a horror film that song is creepy as fuck. Here is how it was effectively used in Insidous.

It really is spooky how some songs come back time and again with their haunting refrains. This tune, originally an instrumental by saxophonist Mike Sharpe, became a huge U.S. hit for Classics IV in 1968. Members of that group arose from the chart grave to revive it with Atlanta Rhythm Section in 1979. Our Halloween treatment is from the unearthly talent of Dusty Springfield.

Second, I think in a lot of cases an "aspect" of music like it being "creepy" or "heroic" are cultural conditionings. Thus there's not always one single aspect that makes something sound creepy, but it might actually be some hidden cultural connection that makes the listener equate it with some creepy experience, thereby making it sound creepy.

Lastly, I remembered seeing a list of creepy video game music a few years back. I checked out some of the pieces, and most of them used extended slow glissandi in various instruments (typically strings). To me that can easily be equated to human screams or even something like scratching one's fingers down a chalkboard. (One piece I listened to actually has outright sobbing in the music.) In any event, both of these are cultural connections, and I think that's probably what really makes something sound creepy.

It's true that octatonic music, especially to the uninitiated, sounds really "off-kilter" and as if there's always one note just slightly off. But it terms of "creepy," I think these are really cultural issues.

My 2 cents.....you can combine the chords that fit any particular mode and indeed make some really "creepy" music. I listened to the OP's links. The Spongebob tune was pretty stupid and not creepy at all....the Grizzly bear tune was just crappy pop music. If you want a good example of "creepy" then listen to what I composed using the "Prometheus scale". Alexander Scriabin, a Russian composer created this synthetic scale for his "Poem of fire".......I was intrigued by this and made my own composition....it's just an unsettling and "creepy" ominous tune. But I think this has to be in the top 100 creepy tunes......click the link>>>>
Pleroma II

Consistently every night at around 12am the SLEEP playlist (which I have never listened to in my life) starts playing while the app isn't even open. I turn the music off but after a few minutes the music begins again. It chooses creepy music and almost renders the app unusable. I do not have a compromised account and I have taken measures to ensure that. I have the current version of the app and only just installed it to my brand new phone. Please can this be fixed as it comes on at really inconvenient times and plays unsettling sounds.

Written by Stan Jones, this song about a ghostly vision of cowboys past has been recorded by countless artists over the years (Burl Ives was the first, but the list includes Marty Robbins, Sons and the Pioneers, Peggy Lee, and Bing Crosby). It's as kitschy as it is creepy, but don't blame us if wake up after a night of spooky dreams involving "red eyed cows" with "hooves of steel" and "black and shiny" horns.

Written by Leon Payne (the songwriter responsible for such classics as "Lost Highway" and "I Love You Because"), this little ditty about a serial killer first saw the light of day thanks to Texas honky-tonker Eddie Noack, before being covered by Elvis Costello and others. It's weird, it's a bit wacky, and it's absolutely creepy.

Charlie Daniels has a handful of good, creepy songs in his repertoire. There's "The Devil Went Down to Georgia," about a fiddle duel between a guy named Johnny and Satan himself. A certain swampy scariness seeps as well from songs like "Simple Man," with its lyrics about backwoods justice ("put 'em on their knees and tie 'em to a stump"). But "Wooley Swamp" involves actual ghosts--that sort that will keep even the bravest of souls from creeping around any Southern swamps after midnight.

There are actually quite a few Johnny Paycheck songs from his early recordings that fit the definition of 'creepy,' among them "(Like Me) You'll Recover in Time" (where he's locked in an institution, imagining his ex in the next cell) and "The Cave" (about a nuclear holocaust). But this song takes the cake. It's about two guys at a bar, with one telling the other (in deceptively polite language) his tale of heartbreak and how, once he finishes his drink, he's got a job to do--namely, go home and kill his wife, her lover, and himself. It'll make you think twice about starting up conversations with random strangers in bars.

This article was published Oct 21, 2020 at 1:40 pm and lastupdated Oct 27, 2020 at 9:36 pm Tags: Fall,Halloween,Halloween music,Halloween playlist,Halloween songs,October,Spooky scary skeletonsCommentsLeave a Reply Cancel replyYou must be logged in to post a comment.

We looked at individual moods like anguished, distraught, eerie, harsh, menacing, spooky, tense, anxious and volatile, and the list is a representation of songs that scored the highest on this subset of moods.

WHAT SONG COMES IN AT 11, AND WERE THERE OTHER SONGS THAT ALMOST MADE THE CUT AND THAT MAYBE THE TEAM HAD TO "FIGHT" OVER?
SCHMIDT
When compiling the top songs, we took the highest percentage by each artist so we'd have a diverse list. The 11th unique artist and song would be "Reflect the Storm" by In Flames. Interestingly, if we grouped this list by artist, you'd find that Nine Inch Nails had a greater number of songs that scored highest according to our metric.

We talked with our curators about including the "Halloween Theme" by John Carpenter and "Superbeast" by Rob Zombie, because both are are strongly associated with scary vibes. However, both of the songs were further down the calculated list, so ultimately, we decided to go with the machine's analysis.

Gosh next time i see this sound ingame or in some stream i will record it with my phone, often times i have heard this is in creepy areas or in raids or dungeons and it comes really randomly mixed between other wow tracks,

There's love ... and then there's obsessive love. This song by the Band Perry borders on the latter, and not only does it have an incredibly catchy chorus, if you look at it closely, it's actually pretty creepy: "It won't be whiskey, it won't be meth / It'll be your name on my last breath / If divorce or death ever do us part / The coroner will call it a broken heart," sings Kimberly Perry. Plus, the music video, complete with a gravedigger, gives an eerie visual to this perfect-for-Halloween song.

Released in 1992, Jackson's "Midnight in Montgomery" is still creepy as ever, especially if you believe in ghosts -- specifically, the ghost of country legend Hank Williams. The tune tells the tale of meeting Williams' ghost on the anniversary of his death, with Jackson singing, "Then a drunk man in a cowboy hat took me by surprise / Wearing shiny boots, a Nudi suit and haunting haunted eyes." But the part that gives us chills is at the end of the chorus: "Then the wind picked up, he was gone, was he ever really there?"

An electric chair. A mournful mama. A cheating husband. All of these components combine into Lynn's "Women's Prison." Sung from the point of view of a woman convicted of gunning down her husband, the song chronicles her journey to the electric chair, the sounds of her mama's cries punctuating the creepy factor. Toward the end, a torrent of electric guitars and drums goes into an all-out frenzy, making the electric chair an experience of the senses.

Country singer Noack is best known for his 1968 cover of Leon Payne's serial killer song "Psycho," and we guarantee you'll remember it after listening. He delivers one of the most disturbing songs you'll ever hear. In the first verse, a crying baby has unhinged our narrator, so you know there's trouble ahead. He goes on a killing rampage, and by the time the song is over, an ex-girlfriend, her new beau, a puppy, a little girl and his own mama all fall victim to this sicko.

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