Music calling for violence against Israel, Israelis, and Jews in general is readily available on major music platforms.
Amazon, Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube host multiple remixes of punk rap duo Bob Vlyan's chants for "death, death to the IDF" that they performed at the June Glastonbury festival. Album art for many of these depicts the inverted red triangle used in Hamas propaganda to denote a target. Some of the songs have tens of thousands of listens.
Other songs call for the bombing of Tel Aviv, such as white nationalist Lucas Gage's Boom, Boom Tel Aviv, whose title also serves as the chorus.
"This is what you get for all your evil deeds. You were mocking dead kids, but now you're getting hit. Iranian missiles have your entire skyline lit," read the lyrics of the song. "And you cry victim and say you didn't start this, but the whole world sees that your lies are retarded. Now you feel terror like the Palestinians. How does it feel to have bombs drop on your civilians? Yo, you could have avoided all this if you wanted to, but humanity never expected good behavior from you Jews."
Variations of the song are available on Spotify, Amazon, and Apple Music. Different versions on YouTube have racked up millions of views.
'LGBT: Let's Go Bomb Tel Aviv,' still available on most platforms
Another song by United, "LGBT (Let's Go Bomb Tel Aviv)," raised ire among Jewish organizations in 2024 after footage of a performance in Madrid circulated online. The song is available on Spotify, YouTube and Apple Music.
"Straight people united. With gays, trans people, and everyone else. We will bomb Tel Aviv," read the lyrics. "Straight people united. With trans people, everyone, no fascists, no Hamas. We will retake Jerusalem."
Intifada is another popular subject on Spotify, Amazon, and Apple Music. On Amazon, “Globalize the Intifada” by Zenoe, amid chants of the same slogan as the song's name, calls for "the Zionists' destruction."
"You should be very afraid for all the kids that you put in the grave, for all the people that you done betrayed, the punishment coming right now is delayed," sings Samer in his song “Intifada.” "In due time you're going to be crushed."
Across many music platforms, violent music is the norm behind explicit labels. Amazon's seller policies on offensive products apply to all products except books, music, video, and DVD. Spotify and YouTube have policies against content that incites violence or hatred towards an individual or group.