Warrior Soul Lyrics — by Popularity
108 songs · Page 1 of 3
| 1 | The Wasteland |
| 2 | The Losers |
| 3 | Jump For Joy |
| 4 | Drugs, God & The New Republic |
| 5 | We Cry Out |
| 6 | Lullaby |
| 7 | Hero |
| 8 | Man Must Live As One |
| 9 | Trippin' On Ecstasy |
| 10 | Rotten Soul |
| 11 | I See The Ruins |
| 12 | Interzone |
| 13 | Rocket 88 |
| 14 | The Answer |
| 15 | Blown Away |
| 16 | Love Destruction |
| 17 | Ghetto Nation |
| 18 | My Time |
| 19 | Charlie's Out Of Prison |
| 20 | Intro |
| 21 | In Conclusion |
| 22 | Ha Ha Ha |
| 23 | Song In Your Mind |
| 24 | Can't Fix Your Broken Heart |
| 25 | Punk And Belligerent |
| 26 | Real Thing |
| 27 | I Wanna Get Some |
| 28 | Children Of The Winter |
| 29 | I Love You |
| 30 | The Party |
| 31 | Look At You |
| 32 | Dimension |
| 33 | No No No |
| 34 | Four More Years |
| 35 | Let's Get Wasted |
| 36 | The Golden Shore |
| 37 | Shine Like It |
| 38 | The Image |
| 39 | Cargos Of Doom |
| 40 | Downtown |
| 41 | The Drug |
| 42 | The Fallen |
| 43 | Fightin' The War |
| 44 | Generation Graveyard |
| 45 | The Pretty Faces |
| 46 | Trip Rider |
| 47 | Blown |
| 48 | Concrete Frontier |
| 49 | Intro (Live) |
| 50 | Star Ride |
Warrior Soul Albums
About Warrior Soul
Warrior Soul is an American rock band formed in New York in 1987 who delivered a gritty blend of hard rock, punk attitude, and socially conscious lyrics that captured the urban decay and political disillusionment of their era. Led by vocalist Kory Clarke, their breakthrough album "The Space Age Playboys" and anthems like "The Losers" and "Drugs, God & The New Republic" combined heavy riffs with street-level storytelling about addiction, poverty, and societal breakdown. Their raw, uncompromising sound influenced the alternative metal scene while albums like "Salutations from the Ghetto Nation" established them as voice for the disenfranchised. Though never achieving mainstream success, Warrior Soul's fearless political commentary and blue-collar metal helped bridge the gap between 80s hard rock and 90s grunge, maintaining their rebellious edge across more than three decades.