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💥TOP 10 Songs with Swearing and Cursing

  • April 19, 2026
  • 3 replies
  • 25 views

Nina Nebo
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💥WARNING - EXPLICIT CONTENT💥

 

 

 

Swearing in songs is used to amplify emotional intensity, convey raw honesty, and enhance authenticity, acting as a powerful tool for self-expression. It often serves to emphasize feelings like frustration or passion, highlight rebellious attitudes, challenge social norms, and create a sense of conversational intimacy with the listener.

 

 

Here is TOP 10 Sweary Songs :

 

#1
"F*ck the World" (1999) is a midwest hip-hop/horrorcore song by Insane Clown Posse from their album The Amazing Jeckel Brothers. It is characterized by extreme, cathartic anger, with Violent J cursing numerous pop culture figures, locations, and even himself, ultimately highlighting the futility of blind rage.
The word "f*ck" is notoriously used over 90 times in the song, often cited as 93, 95, or even over 100 times including ad-libs.

 


 
#2
"Hot Dog" (2000) is a nu-metal song by Limp Bizkit from the album Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water, notable for being a heavily profane diss track aimed at Nine Inch Nails frontman Trent Reznor. The song features the word "f*ck" 47 times and directly quotes NIN lyrics, forcing Reznor to receive co-writer royalties.

 


#3
"Surfacing" (1999) is a seminal track from Slipknot’s self-titled debut album, acting as a raw anthem of defiance, alienation, and anti-conformity. Known for its aggressive, high-energy metal sound featuring turntables and throat-shredding vocals, the song acts as a "battle cry" against judgment and societal pressures. It is a staple of their live sets.

The track is recognized by its aggressive opening and chorus: "F*ck it all, f*ck this world, f*ck everything that you stand for! Don't belong, don't exist, don't give a shit! Don't ever judge me!".

 


#4
"I Love To Say F*ck" (2002 ) is a punk/horror-punk song by the Murderdolls, released on their album Beyond the Valley of the Murderdolls. Song is known as a ridiculous, high-energy live staple with over 70 uses of the f-word, celebrated for its rebellious, free-for-all nature.
The lyrics are straightforward, focusing entirely on the joy of swearing regardless of who is listening. It is characterized by its fast-paced, irreverent punk sound.

 

 

#5
"Family Reunion" (1999) is a 36-second punk rock song by Blink-182, released on the Short Music for Short People compilation. 
The lyrics are mostly a rapid-fire repetition of vulgarities, notably featuring the lines: "S*it, piss, f*ck, cunt, cocks*cker, motherf*cker. Tits, fart, turd n twat," ending with a shout of "I f*cked your mom!".

 

 

#6
"Stop Snitchin" (2019) album 4REAL 4REAL  by rapper YG  .
The track is known for being highly profane, with YG cursing over 200 times, and features a bouncy, West Coast production style and targeting Tekashi 6ix9ine for cooperating with federal prosecutors. 

 

 

#7
"2 Hard Mutha's" (1988) is a gangsta rap song by Eazy-E featuring MC Ren, released on Eazy-E's debut studio album Eazy-Duz-It. 
The song showcases Eazy-E and MC Ren acting as a "two-man gang," rapping about gangsta lifestyles, violence, and intimidation in Compton. The lyrics are aggressive and boastful, focusing on taking out competition and acting as "hard" figures.

 

 

#8
"Bitches Ain't S*it" (1992) is a iconic G-funk track from Dr. Dre's debut album, The Chronic, featuring Snoop Dogg, Daz Dillinger, Kurupt, and Jewell. Originally a hidden track, it serves as a raw, misogynistic commentary on broken relationships, loyalty, and street-level disputes, famously featuring a verse referencing Eazy-E.

 

 

#9
"F*cking in Heaven" (1998) is a big beat track by Fatboy Slim, known for its repetitive vocal sample "Fatboy Slim is f*cking in heaven". It is featured on the album You've Come a Long Way, Baby .
Norman Cook explained the title isn't about literal sex in heaven, but rather an intensifier, essentially meaning "Fatboy Slim is absolutely in heaven".

 

 

#10
"Bitch Better Have My Money" (2015) is Rihanna’s  a defiant, trap-influenced anthem about financial control, power, and retribution, often linked to her real-life 2012 lawsuit against her former accountant, and its cinematic video acts as a dark revenge fantasy.

 

 

 

What do you think about swearing and cursing in songs?


Does profanity in songs offend you?

 

Maybe you know some other songs with swear words?

3 replies

CharlyMX
Superuser
  • Superuser
  • April 19, 2026

Artistic expression should be free and not censored by the criteria of closed minds.
 

 


Nina Nebo
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  • Author
  • Superuser
  • April 19, 2026

 

D***k, F**k, F***t

by The Treatment

 


awesomemac
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  • Superuser
  • April 19, 2026

I’ll go through my favourites then, as there are only a few tracks marked as “explicit”.