List of songs about London
This is a list of songs about London. Instrumental pieces are tagged with an uppercase "[I]", or a lowercase "[i]" for quasi-instrumental including non-lyrics voice samples.
Included are:
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- Songs titled after London, or a location or feature of the city.
- Songs whose lyrics are set in London.
Excluded are:
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- Songs where London is simply name-checked along with various other cities (such as "New York, London, Paris, Munich", lyrics of "Pop Muzik" by M).
0-9
A
B
C
- "Calling a Friend" by A Friend In London
- "Camberwell Skies" by Basement Jaxx
- "Camden Town" by Suggs
- "Camden Town Rain" by Mary Lou Lord
- "The Camera Eye" by Rush (which is also in the NYC list)
- "Can't Stop The Pirates" by Dica & Ben Intellect(about 'Hackney, East London')
- "Capital Radio" by The Clash
- "Carnaby Street" by Booker T. & The MG's
- "Carnaby Street" by The Jam
- "Carnaby St. Hussars" by Little Singers Of St Peter
- "Casualty" by Visage (references The Tube)
- "Carrion" by British Sea Power
- "Caxton Hall Swing" by Louis Bellson and his Big Band
- "Cemeteries of London" by Coldplay
- "Chalk Farm to Camberwell Green" by Lionel Monckton
- "Champagne Charlie" by Alfred Lee ('From Coffee and from Supper Rooms, from Poplar to Pall Mall')
- "Changing of the Guard" by The Marquis of Kensington
- "Chant No 1 (I Don't Need This Pressure On)" by Spandau Ballet ('Greek Street. Le Beat Route')
- "Chapel Street Market 9AM" by Sabres of Paradise
- "Charlotte Street" by Lloyd Cole and the Commotions
- "The Charlton Song" by the Gonads
- "Charlton Boys" by the Gonads
- "Charlton Tel's Stag Weekend" by the Gonads
- "Chase Side Shoot-Up" by Brian Bennett (Chase Side is in Enfield)
- "Cheam" by the Exits
- "Chelsea" by Mike & Bernie Winters
- "Chelsea" by Stamford Bridge
- "Chelsea 1977" by the Maniacs
- "Chelsea Boots" by The Embers
- "Chelsea Bridge" jazz standard by Billy Strayhorn
- "Chelsea Bun" by Nigel Hopkins
- "Chelsea Dagger" by The Fratellis
- "Chelsea Girl" by Ride
- "Chelsea Girl" by Simple Minds
- "Chelsea Guitar" by Blueboy
- "Chelsea Kids" by Heavy Metal Kids
- "Chelsea Monday" by Marillion
- "Chelsea Nightclub" by The Members
- "Chelsea Reach" by John Ireland (from 'Three London Pieces')
- "Chelsea Set" by the Musicians
- "The Chelsea Walk" by Ocean Colour Scene
- "A Child's London - Six Pieces for Piano" (I) by Richard Edward Wilson
- "Christmas Time In London Town" by Nina & Frederik
- "Christopher Robin At Buckingham Palace" (Children's Song)
- "Circle Line" by Carmel
- "Cities" by Talking Heads
- "The City" by Ed Sheeran
- "City of Blinding Lights" by U2[2]
- "City of London" by the Mekons
- "Clark Gable" by The Postal Service
- "Clerkenwell Polka" by Madness
- "Clubland" by Elvis Costello
- "The Co-Communists" by Noel Coward
- "Cockaigne (in London Town)" by Edward Elgar
- "Cockfosters" by Pablo Gargano
- "The Cockney Amorist" by John Betjeman
- "Cockney Kids are Innocent" by Sham 69
- "A Cockney's Life For Me" by George Grossmith
- "The Cockney Lover (Lambeth Walk)" by Albert Ketelbey
- "Cockney Rhythm" by Rebel MC
- "The Cockney Tragedian" by Ed Jones
- "Cockney Translation" by Smiley Culture
- "Cold Kilburn Rain" by Nick Saloman
- "Columbia" by Oasis (about the Columbia hotel in London)
- "Come Back to Camden" by Morrissey
- "Coming To America" by the System ('Hyde Park')
- "Common People" by Pulp
- "Contact London" by Lab 4
- "Control" by DJ Cue Tips & MC Dashy D (Trafalgar Square, the Hippodrome nightclub etc.)
- "Conversation Off Floral Street" by the Zombies
- "Cooksferry Queen" by Richard Thompson
- "Cool For Cats" by Squeeze (Heathrow,Wandsworth (prison), etc.)
- "Cooperman (Sooper) Cooperman" - The Almost Legendary "Funky" Lol Ross, about a Leyton Orient player, begins, 'There's a man at Brisbane Road...'
- "Coster Joe" by Edward Kent ('On Sunday, strolling out at Kew')
- "The Coster's Serenade" by Albert Chevalier and John Crook ('Down at the Welsh 'Arp, which is 'Endon way')
- "Cosy Cafe" by Saint Etienne (about a cafe in Lee Valley, East London)
- "The Council Schools Are Good Enough for Me" by Percy Morris and Malcolm Ives
- "Country Living" by [[Sandra Cross)
- "The Countryman's Bill of Charges" - composer unknown ('A countryman to London came')
- "Covent Garden" by Eric Coates (from 'London Suite')
- "Crack Away on the Arsenal Beano" by Arsenal FC
- "Crawling Up A Hill" by John Mayall
- "Cricklewood" by Grehan Sisters
- "Croydon" by Captain Sensible
- "Cross Eyed Mary" Jethro Tull
- "Crushed Bones" by Why? ('In London, where the sirens yelp like a helpless dog')
- "Cruel Murder of Edward V and the Duke of York in the Tower" - composer unknown
- "Cunt London" by Sleeper
D
- "Dagenham Dave" by Morrissey
- "Dagenham Dave" by The Stranglers
- "Damn Good Show" by Noel Coward ('Everyone in London likes a damn good show')
- "Dans les rues de Londres" (In the streets of London, in French) by Mylène Farmer
- "Dark Streets of London" by The Pogues
- "Davy" by Danny Wilson
- "Day by Day" by Generation X about the Circle Line
- "Day on the Town" by Madness ('Summer in London')
- "Dead London" by Jeff Wayne's War of the Worlds
- "Dead End Street" by The Kinks - about a bedsit in Kentish Town
- "Dear River Thames" by Richard Digance
- "Debris" by The Faces
- "Dedicated Follower of Fashion" by The Kinks
- "Deer Park" by The Fall, starts with the line 'I took a walk down West 11'
- "Denmark Street" by The Kinks
- "Deptford Broadway Boogie" by Jools Holland
- "Deptford Days" by David Knopfler
- "Dettwork Southeast" by Blak Twang (mentions besides London:Brixton, Clapham, Hackney, West Ealing, Seven Sisters, SE8)
- "Diamonds in the Dark" by Mystery Jets, includes the line 'We would live on Delancey Street', a road in Camden
- "Dick-a-Dum-Dum (King's Road)" by Jim Dale
- "Did You Go Down Lambeth Way?" by Noel Gay
- "Dilly Boys" by The Libertines
- "The Directoire Girl" by J. P. Harrington and Orlando Powell ('I stopped the traffic all down Piccadilly')
- "Dirty Water" by The Inmates, originally about the River Charles and Boston, USA, this version is about the Thames and London
- "Disgusted E7" by The Wolfhounds
- "Districts" by Clifford Grey and A. W. Parry (references Maida Vale, Hammersmith, Battersea etc.)
- "Do the Strand" by Roxy Music
- "Do You Come Here Often?" by the Tornadoes ('see you down the 'Dilly')
- "Do You Really Like It?" by DJ Pied Piper and the Masters of Ceremonies
- "Don't Go Back to Dalston" by Razorlight
- "Don't Make Fun of the Festival" by Noel Coward - 1951 Festival of Britain on the South Bank
- "Dopamine Clouds Over Craven Cottage" by Stars of the Lid
- "Down at the Old Bull and Bush" by Hunting, Krone, Stirling and Von Tilzer
- "Down At The Vortex" by Yellow Dog
- "Down Below" by Sydney Carter ('It isn't hard to tell, down below, if it's Bow or Clerkenwell, down below')
- "Down in Drury Lane" by Paddy Roberts
- "Down in the Tube Station at Midnight" by The Jam
- "Down The Lane" by Lionel Bart(about Petticoat Lane)
- "Down to London" by Joe Jackson
- "Downing Street Kindling" by Larrikin Love
- "Down With the Whole Darn Lot" by Noel Coward ('Down with the Garrick Club and Kensington Museum')
- "Dreadnought Seamen's Hospital" by Billy Jenkins
- "Dream" by Dizzee Rascal
- "Dress you Up" by Madonna ('suits from London')
- "Driving In My Car" by Mike Barson of Madness ('I drive up to Muswell Hill')
- "Drummed Out" by Edward Kent
- "The Drummer And the Cook (Cockney Air)" by Harry Belafonte
- "Drums Over London" by Disco Zombies
- "Du Cane Road" by Topper Headon
- "Duchess Of Duke Steet" by Alexander Faris(Duke Street is in Marylebone)
- "Duffer St. George" by The Fiery Furnaces
- "Duke of Earlsfield" by Sabres of Paradise
- "The Duke of Seven Dials" by George Grossmith
- "Dungeon Town" by The Brotherhood
E
- "Earlies" by Trashcan Sinatras
- "Earls Court Breakdown Alan Tunbridge/Wizz Jones
- "Eastbound Train" by Dire Straits (New Cross Station, Mile End Road, Central Line etc.)
- "East End" by Cockney Rejects
- "East End Girl" by Cock Sparrer
- "East London Yodel" by the Wagon Tales
- "Easy Street, SE17" by Nine Below Zero
- "EC 4" by The Flies
- "Eight Miles High" by The Byrds, includes the line 'Rain gray town known for its sound, in places Small Faces abound'
- "Electric Avenue" by Eddy Grant about a street in Brixton
- "Elegy (Thoughts on Passing the Cenotaph)" by Albert Ketelbey
- "Elephants And Castles" by George Martin
- "Elvaston Place" by Al Stewart
- "Emit Remmus" by Red Hot Chili Peppers
- "England 2 Columbia 0" by Kirsty MacColl, references drinking 'in a pub in Belsize Park'
- "England's Glory" by Max Wall and Ian Dury
- "Ernie (The Fastest Milkman in the West]] by Benny Hill (references Teddington)
- "England Swings" by Roger Miller (mentions Bobbies, Westminster Abbey, and Big Ben)
- "Euston Station" by Barbara Ruskin
- "Euston Station" by The Oyster Band
- "Every Little Movement" by Karl Hoschna and Otto Harbach ('Up to the West End, right in the Best End, straight from the country came Miss Maudie Brown')
- "Everybody Salsa" by Modern Romance ('Now this ain't Puerto Rico, this is London E18')
- "Everything Eventually" by Appleton ('Let's go fly a kite on Primrose Hill'/'In the city feeling pretty')
- "Everything's Changed(Since You've Been To London)" by Kingmaker
- "Experience" by Alan Moore and Tim Perkins in Angel Passage - Blake's life in London [3]
- "Eyeless In Holloway" by Johnny Flynn
F
G
H
I
- "I Am What I Am (Battersea Tramp)" by Bill & Buster
- "Ice Cold In Fulham" by the Tigers
- "Idiot Child" by Madness ("Spunky little kid from North West Five")
- "I'd Never Know" by Noel Coward ('Why is the Springtime giving London this lovely glow?')
- "The Idol of the Day" by The Great Vance and Alfred Lee ('St. James's I've my chambers in')
- "I Don't Want to Go to Chelsea" by Elvis Costello
- "I Feel Good All Over" by Bang The Party("I wanna dedicate this to London, young turned on London" from the London Acid House scene)
- "If I Can't Get to London" by David Craig Simpson
- "If I Could" by David Essex ('Canning Town' etc.)
- "If Looks Could Kill" by Garry Johnson
- "If It Wasn't for the Houses in Between" by Edgar Bateman and George Le Brunn, 1894, sung by Gus Elen ('With a ladder and some glasses you can see to Hackney Marshes')
- "I'm Alright Jack" by Tom Robinson Band(Hampstead)
- "I Like London" by Lionel Monckton and Arthur Wimperis (from The Arcadians, 1909)
- "I Like London in the Rain" by Blossom Dearie
- "I Live in Camberwell" by Basement Jaxx
- "I Live in Trafalgar Square" by Clarence Wainwright Murphy
- "I Love London" by Crystal Fighters
- "I Love London" by Lorraine Bowen
- "I Luv U" by Dizzee Rascal
- "I'm Going to Get Lit Up When the Lights Go Up in London" by Hubert Gregg - end of the WW2 blackout
- "I'm Old Fashioned" by Noel Coward and Johnny Mercer ('Those nightingales in Berkeley Square')
- "I'm One Of The Whitehall Warriors" by Phil Park
- "I'm the Face" by The High Numbers
- "I'm Riffin'(English Rasta)" by MC Duke
- "I'm Trying to Make London My Home" by Sonny Boy Williamson
- "In London So Fair" (traditional)
- "Innocence" by Alan Moore and Tim Perkins in Angel Passage about William Blake's life in London http://web.archive.org/web/20041124170141/http://www.nthposition.com/angelpassage.php]
- "In Old Kent Road" by Arthur Seldon
- "Initials BB" by Serge Gainsbourg [5]
- "Interlude - London Massive" by Aphrodite
- "In the Strand" by E. W. Mackney
- "Isabel Makes Love Upon National Monuments" by Jake Thackray ('With style and enthusiasm and anyone at all, Isabel makes love in the Royal Albert Hall')
- "Isle of Clerkenwell" by Harry H Corbett
- "Itchycoo Park" by the Small Faces about Little Ilford Park
- "It Ain't Necessarily Bird Avenue" by Spanky and Our Gang
- "It Could Be You" by Blur
- "It Gets Me Talked About" by Albert Chevalier and Alfred H. West ('Playin' 'ind legs of the helephant in East End pantomime')
- "It's Fun Finding Out About London" by Billie Anthony
- "It's a Great Big Shame" by Gus Elen
- "It's a Jolly Fine Game Played Slow!" by J.P. Harrington and George Le Brunn ('We just hired a cab and drove through St. James's Park')
- "It's a London Thing" by Scott Garcia 1997 Scott Garcia
- "It's a London Thing" by Mark Williams 2005
- "It's a London Thing" by S.A.S.
- "It's a Long Way to Tipperary" by Jack Judge and Harry Williams
- "It's Lovely To Be Back In London" by Judy Garland
- "It's Only Me" by Noel Coward ('Once I knew a kid, she used to live down Poplar way')
- "It Takes a Very Strong Imagination" by Edward Kent ('I trots her to the Opera or the Drury pantomime')
- "I've Never Lost My Last Train Yet" by George Le Brunn and George Rollit ('And I've joined with one and all in a Covent Garden ball')
- "Ivor" by Anonymous ('They yanked our sport, under police escort, to the London Bow Street sessions' - Ivor Novello was jailed for misuse of petrol coupons during World War Two)
- "I Was Born and Raised in Croxley Green" by Wilf Weston
- "I Was There (At the Coronation)" by Young Tiger
J
K
L
- See List of songs about London (L)
M
- "Mack The Knife" by Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill (John Willett's translation references the Strand, Embankment and Soho)
- "Mad Not Mad" by Madness ("Dancing over Big Ben
- "A Maid in Bedlam" {traditional}
- "Maids of Bond Street" by David Bowie
- "Maid of Primrose Hill" by Anonymous (18th century)
- "Maid of Tottenham" (traditional) At the time Tottenham was a village outside of London
- "Man I Hate Your Band" by Little Man Tate
- "Man Out of Time" by Elvis Costello (references Knightsbridge and Traitor's Gate)
- "Marcie Dreams of Deptford" by Saint Etienne
- "Marybone [Marylebone] Fair" by G. Smart
- "Mario's Cafe" by Saint Etienne (a cafe in Kentish town)
- "The Masher King of Piccadilly" by Richard Corney Grain
- "Mash It Up Harry" by Ian Dury(Wembley, Wembley Way, Harold Hill etc.)
- "The Masquerade" by I. Oakman ('None but the great can conveniently go to the Grand Masquerade most superb at Soho')
- "Maudie Golightly" by Noel Coward ('Though she had a flat in Albemarle Street')
- "Maybe It's Because I'm a Londoner, (That I Love London So)" by Hubert Gregg
- "Mayfair" by Eric Coates (from 'London Again Suite')
- "Mayfair" by Nick Drake
- "Mayfair" by the Quireboys
- "Me, Certainly Me" by A.D. River and James Moody ('I came up to London and walked down the Strand')
- "Meet Me in Battersea Park" by Petula Clark
- "Memories Of 3rd Base" by Skream (about the 3rd Base nightclub in central London)
- "Memory of a Free Festival" by David Bowie (about a festival in South London)
- "Men About Town" by Noel Coward ('As we stroll down Piccadilly in the bright morning air')
- "Mercy I Cry City" by The Incredible String Band - the reference to the "choky tube" make clear it's about London
- "The Merry Hostess" - composer unknown ('A lovely hostess fine that lives in London city')
- "A Merry Jest of John Tomson" - composer unknown ('If I but go to Islington')
- "Metroland" by Mark Knopfler
- "Midnight in Chelsea" by Jon Bon Jovi (about the Chelsea neighbourhood – lyrics include "I've seen a lone Sloane Ranger drive/Seems her chauffeur took a dive/And sold her secrets to The Sun")
- "Mile End" by Pulp
- "Mile End Boulevard" by Position Normal
- "Milk Bottle Symphony" by Saint Etienne(about Turnpike House tower block, Goswell Road, Islington)
- "Mill Hill Self Hate Club" by Edward Ball
- "Millwall" by Millwall FC
- "Mincing Lane" by Mike Mercado
- "Missing You" by Jimmy McCarthy - made popular by Christy Moore, about the Irish emigrant homeless in London
- "Mission From Hell" by Madness (references to Number 10 Downing Street)
- "Misty Morning Albert Bridge" by The Pogues
- "Nice Man Jack (Mitre Square)" by John Miles
- "Modern Art" by Art Brut ("so I'm in the Tate and I'm looking at a Hockney")
- "Moon Over Archway" by Cath Carroll
- "Moonhop In London" by Hot Rod All-Stars
- "Morden" by Good Shoes
- "Mouse In A Hole" by Heavy Stereo
- "Mornington Crescent" by Belle & Sebastian
- "Mother Goose" by Jethro Tull
- "The Mountains of Mourne" by Don McLean
- "The Mountains of Mourne" by William Percy French
- "Move On Now" by Hard-Fi (References Heathrow Airport)
- "Mr Brown Of London Town" by Reginald Arkell & Noel Gay
- "Mr Speaker (Gets the Word)" by Madness (about Speaker's Corner; "Making space from Colney Hatch Lane")
- "Much Too Much" by Les Incompétents
- "Mudchute Song" by Con Maloney
- "Museum" by Donovan and Herman's Hermits ("meet me under the whale in the Natural History Museum")
- "Musical Address to the Town" by Thomas Lowe (reopening of Marylebone Gardens in 1763)
- "Muswell Hillbillies" by The Kinks
- "My Gal from London Town" by Fred Godfrey and Billy Williams
- "My Kitten Went to London" by Kid 606
- "My London" by Chuck Stevens
- "My London Country Lane" by Alec Hurley (i.e. Drury Lane)
- "My Love Went to London" by John Wallowitch
- "My Lucy Liza from Bermondsey" by Medley Barrett
- "My Old Man" by Ian Dury(Victoria, Heathrow etc.)
- "My Old Man's a Dustman" by Lonnie Donegan, features Cockney rhyming slang
- "My Old Man (Said Follow the Van)" by Marie Lloyd, written by Charles Collins and Fred W Leigh
- "My Tom of Bedlam" by Bedlam Boys
- "M1" by Ted Taylor Four (the M1 starts in London)
- "M4 Movements" by London Groove (the M4 starts in London)
- "M25" by DJ Choci
N
- "Nan I Am London" by Wiley
- "Narcissist" by The Libertines
- "Neasden" by Willie Rushton
- "Neasden Melody" by Jungle Jim
- "Nelson's Column" by Haydn Wood(from 'London Landmarks Suite)
- "Never See London Again" by Lincoln
- "Never Try The Hippodrome" by DJ Phantasy(the Hippodrome was a London nightclub in the 80s)
- "Next Plane to London" by Rose Garden
- "New Amsterdam" by Elvis Costello (Rotherhithe)
- "New Crass Massahkah" by Linton Kwesi Johnson
- "New Cross" By Part Chimp
- "New Thing From London Town" by Sharpe and Numan
- "New Tunbridge Wells at Islington" by John Lockman
- "Newgate Hornpipe" (traditional folk tune)
- "Nice One Cyril" by the Cockerel Chorus ('Tottenham the pride of North London')
- "Night Bus To Dalston" by Bad Manners
- "Night Flight To London" by Sol Raye
- "The Night I Appeared as Macbeth" ('They made me a present of Mornington Crescent, they threw it a brick at a time') by William Hargreaves
- "Night Terror" by Laura Marling ('I woke up on a bench on Shepherds Bush Green')
- "Night Train To Surbiton" by Norman and the Invaders
- "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square" by Eric Maschwitz and Manning Sherwin sung by Vera Lynn
- "Nine out of Ten" by Caetano Veloso (Walk down Portobello Road...)
- "No.1 With A Bullet" by Alan Moore and Tim Perkins in The Highbury Working- each song about a time of Highbury [4]
- "Nodnol" by the Spectrum
- "Non-Stop London" by Johnny Dankworth
- "North London" by Wiley
- "North London Boy" by Incognito
- "North London Trash" by Razorlight
- "No More" by Noel Coward ('No more binges at the Piccadilly; Cafe Royal and Ritz, goodbye')
- "No Place Like London" by Stephen Sondheim
- "No Trees In Brixton Prison" by Bob Manton
- "North Weezie" by BMD A slang term for the area of northwest London in particular the neighbourhoods with the famous NW10 postal code
- "North West Three" by Fatboy Slim
- "Northern Line" by Jamie T
- "Northern Line" by Yeti
- "Not Dark Yet" by Bob Dylan ('Well I been to London, and I been to gay Paree')
- "Nothing Can Save Us London" by Starpower
- "Notting Hill" by Trevor Jones
- "Notting Hill Eviction Blues" by Ram John Holder
- "Notting Hill Gate" by Quintessence
- "Now You're Down In London" by Me & Him
- "NW3" by The Pogues
- "NW5" by Madness
- "NW10" by JC Carroll
- "NyLon Woman" By Holestar
O
- "The Oak and the Ash" (North Country Maid) (traditional)
- "Ode in Honour of the London Military Association" by O'Brien
- "The Official Arsenal March" by Highbury Marchers
- "Oh! 'Ampstead" by Albert Chevalier and John Crook ('The day you spent at 'Ampstead 'Eath you never will forget')
- "Oh Baby Won't Come Back Home To Croydon Where Everyone Beedle's And Bo's" by Brian Auger* "Oh! Mr. Porter" by George LeBrunn ('Came up to see wond'rous sights of famous London Town')
- "Old Compton Street Blues" by Al Stewart
- "The Old Main Drag" by The Pogues
- "Old Father Thames (Keep Rolling Along)" by Raymond Wallace
- "Old Portobello Road" by Babs Nielsen
- "Old River Thames" by Automatics
- "Old Smokey" by Linda Lewis
- "Old Whitehall Number" by Sadie's Expression
- "Oliver's Army" by Elvis Costello
- "On a Mission" by The Rakes
- "On Bagnigge Wells" by Thomas Chapman and George Kirshaw - Bagnigge Wells was an 18th century spa in the King's Cross area
- "On London Bridge" by Jo Stafford
- "On Primrose Hill" by Suzanne Chawner
- "On the Day We Went to See the Coronation" by Gwen Lewis (Coronation of Elizabeth II, 1953)
- "On the Steps of Old St Pauls" by Billy Cotton
- "(One Afternoon On)Carnaby Street" by Tapestry
- "One For John Gee" by Jethro Tull - John Gee being manager of London's Marquee Club.
- "One Hundred Punks Rule" by Generation X
- "One Man Band" by Leo Sayer ('Everyone knows you in Ladbroke Grove')
- "The Only Living Boy in New Cross" by Carter USM
- "Open Wimbledon" by Lance Lumsden and the Calypso Raqueteers
- "Operation Blade" by Public Domain ('Bass in the place London')
- "Opium Nights" by Alan Moore and Tim Perkins in The Highbury Working- each song about a time of Highbury [4]
- "Oranges and Lemons" (Bells of St. Clements) (traditional)
- "An Ordinary Copper" by Jeff Darnell and Jack Warner ('I'm an ordinary copper who's patrolling his beat, around Dock Green')
- "Original London Style" by London Posse
- "Orion" by Jethro Tull ('darkest Chelsea')
- "Ossie's Dream (Spurs on our Their Way To Wembley)" by Chas & Dave
- "Over The Flats" by T Rex
- "Oxford Street" by Everything But The Girl
- "Oxford Street in the Blackout" by David Heavenor
- "Oxford Street March" by Eric Coates
- "Oxford St, W1" by Television Personalities
- "One Night in Hackney" by Dynamo City
P
R
S
- "Sad Mona Lisa" by Television Personalities
- "St James Infirmary Blues" (famous Blues/Jazz song based on English folk song with St James hospital having been in London)
- "St James Park in Spring" by Haydn Wood
- "St Pauls Suite" by Gustav Holst
- "Sal and Methuselam" by F.C. Sansom, probably 1866, sung by William H. Lingard
- "Sale of the Century" by Sleeper
- "Sam Hall" (composer unknown) performed by W.G. Ross ('I goes up Holborn Hill in a cart')
- "Sam's Town" by The Killers
- "Santa Ain't Commin Down to Brixton Town" by Jackie Robinson
- "Satellite" by Sex Pistols
- "Saturday Gigs" by Mott the Hoople
- "Saturday In The Kings Road" by Harry Robinson and his Orchestra
- "Saturday Night Beneath the Plastic Palm Trees" by The Leyton Buzzards ('I discovered heaven in the Seven Sisters Road also 'Crews from Balham and Golders Green and loads of places I've never been'...)
- "Saturday Nite" by Earth, Wind & Fire
- "Save Piccadilly" by Abednego and the Piccadilly Street Choir
- "Save The World, Get The Girl by The King Blues
- "Scarlet Begonias" by Grateful Dead (As I was walking 'round Grosvenor Square...)
- "SE18" by The Visitors, 2003
- "Second Floor Croydon" by Burnin'Red
- "Second Hand" by Wilfred Bramble (a sweet little song from 1962 that namechecks London locations and is sung as if by Steptoe senior)
- "See My Friends" by The Kinks ('They'll cross the river...' Thames)
- "Serjeant Sharp of Lincoln's Inn" by Walter Greenaway and Alfred Lee
- "Serpentine Gallery" by Alternative TV
- "Seven Sisters Road" by Dan Reed Network
- "Seven Sisters Road" by Alien Stash Tin (About a bus ride down the road mentioned in the title')
- "The Sewers Of the Strand" by Spike Milligan
- "Shad Thames" by Saint Etienne
- "Sheila" by Jamie T
- "She Was Poor But She Was Honest" by R.P. Weston and Bert Lee ('Then she ran away to London to hide her grief and shame')
- "Shouting for the Gunners" by Arsenal FC and Tippa Irie
- "Shut 'em Down In London Town" by the Majority
- "Sid's Song" by Inner City Unit ('In London town where I was born')
- "Sights and Sounds of London Town" by Richard Thompson
- "Signs" by Music Legends Snoop Dogg & Justin Timberlake
- "Sing A Song Of London" by Stanley Holloway
- "Singers Hampstead Home" by Microdisney
- "Sir Keith at Lambeth" by Mount Vernon Arts Lab
- "Sirens Of Acre Lane" by Genaside II('Acre Lane' is in Brixton)
- "Ska Night Bus to Dalston" by Bad Manners
- "Skeleton Horse" by Alan Moore and Tim Perkins in The Highbury Working- each song about a time of Highbury [4]
- "Slaughter at Primrose Hill" (I) by Frank Popp
- "Slim Slow Slider," by Van Morrison ('Saw you walking down by Ladbroke Grove this morning...')
- "Slow Down at the Castle" by Saint Etienne
- "The Smart Walking Jockey" by Mr. Cob and Wm. Shield ('Wherever I go from Mile End to Soho')
- "Small Town Girl" by Good Shoes (References Reynes Park High School, Raynes Park)
- "Smashing Time" by Television Personalities
- "Soho" by Bert Jansch & John Renbourn
- "Soho" by Brand X
- "Soho" by DJ Bountyhunter
- "Soho" by I Marc 4
- "Soho" by Light of the World
- "Soho" by Milt Sealey Trio
- "Soho" by Pop Instrumental De France
- "Soho" by Run 229
- "Soho" by Smart Alec
- "Soho" by the Soul Brothers
- "Soho A Go Go" by the Members
- "Soho Cab Ride" by Ballistic Brothers
- "Soho Fair" by Bert Weedon
- "Soho Forenoons" by John Ireland (from 'Three London Pieces')
- "Soho Jack" by Paul Brett
- "Soho Mojo" by Spyro Gyra
- "Soho (Needless to say)" Al Stewart
- "Soho Phaze" by Elixia
- "Soho Sad Show" by Bobby Henry
- "Soho Square" by Kirsty Maccoll
- "Soho St Ives Tangier" by the Focus Group
- "Soho Strut" by Secret Affair
- "Solitary Confinement" by The Members
- "Solo in Soho" by Phil Lynott
- "Someone in London" by Godsmack [i]
- "Song for Clay (Disappear Here)" by Bloc Party
- "Song for Ruth Ellis" by Adam and the Ants ('Violence in Hampstead')
- "So Rotton" by Blak Twang(London - West, East, South, North and NW)
- "Sorted for E's and Wizz" by Pulp
- "So So" by Gary Go
- "South London Boroughs" by Burial
- "Sound Bwoy Burial" by Gant(South, North, East and West London)
- "Sound of the Suburbs" by The Members
- "South of the River" by Mica Paris
- "South London Aggro Girl" by the Gonads
- "Southern Belles in London Sing" by The Faint
- "Southside" by the Southside Allstars (A Grime song about South London)
- "Souvenir of London" by Procol Harum
- "Space Cakes" by Kaotic Chemistry ('North London posse in the place')
- "Spirit" by Razorlight
- "Spring-Heel'd Jack(The Terror of London)" by the Gonads
- "The Spurs Song" by the Totnamites
- "Stagger" by Underworld
- "Stand Up Tall" by Dizzee Rascal
- "Stanwell" by Action Pact
- "Stardom in Acton" by Pete Townshend
- "A State Procession (Buckingham Palace)" by Albert Ketelbey
- "Statuesque" by Sleeper
- "Stay Free" by The Clash
- "A Story of a Musical Box" by Edward Kent ('They drove him in the van to Pentonville')
- "Strange Town" by The Jam
- "Streatham Hippodrome" by Cuppa T
- "Street Fighting Man" by The Rolling Stones
- "Streets of London" by Ralph McTell Blackmore's Night
- Streets of London by Red, White & Blue
- Streets of Whitechapel by JC Carroll
- "Street Tuff" by Rebel MC
- "Strolling Down the Strand" by Fred Godfrey and Leslie Sarony
- "Strolling in the Burlington" by Alfred Lee and Frank Green (Burlington Arcade, Piccadilly)
- "Stukas Uber Shoreditch" by Johnny Throttle
- "Sugarhouse Lane" by Saint Etienne
- "Sugar & Spice" by Madness ("We bought a flat in Golders Green, A second-hand fridge and a washing machine)
- "Suicide on Downing Street" by Tim Finn
- "Sultans of Swing" by Dire Straits
- "Sunday" by Bloc Party
- "Sunday Street" by Squeeze
- "Sunday Afternoon In Belgrave Square" by Trevor Bilmuss
- "Sunny Goodge Street" by Donovan
- "Sunny South Kensington" by Donovan
- "Supreme" by Robbie Williams ('All the lonely hearts in London caught a plane and flew away')
- "Suspicious Eyes" by The Rakes
- "Suzy" by Benny Hill ('Now I wandered down into Soho')
- "Suzy Was A Girl From Greenford" by Johnny G
- "SW5" by Mike Silver
- "Swan Wharf" by Saint Etienne
- "Swedish Sin" by Billie the Vision and the Dancers
- "Sweet London Lady" by Lou Christie
- "The Sweet Salutation on Primrose Hill" by Anonymous (17th century)
- "Sweet Thames Flow Softly" by Ewan MacColl
- "Sweet Thames Flow Softly" by Planxty
- "Sweet Thing" by Van Morrison
- "Swingin Beefeater" by The Tornadoes
- "Swinging London" by Barbara Windsor
- "Swinging London" by London
- "Swinging London" by The Magnetic Fields
- "Swinging London Town" by Girls Aloud
- "Swinging London" by The Pretenders
- "Swiss Cottage Manoeuvres" by Al Stewart
- "Symphony No 2 A London Symphony" by Ralph Vaughan Williams(includes 'Hampstead Heath on a August Bank Holiday Sunday' and 'Bloomsbury Square on a November Afternoon')
- "Symphony No 104 in D Major (London)" by Joseph Haydn
T
- "Take It Easy (Lights Out Over London)" by Little Bo Bitch
- "Take Me Back to Dear Old Blighty" by Florrie Forde
- "Take me in a Taxi, Joe" by Bennett Scott
- "Taking After Dear Old Dad" by Noel Coward ('Later on I meet a pal and stroll with him along the Mall')
- "Taste of Aggro" by The Barron Knights ('We're from Catford etc.')
- "The Tears Shed in London Tonight" by R.P. Weston and Bert Lee
- "Techno Fan" by the Wombats
- "Telephone Language" by Frank Leo ('Gwendoline Earle was a telephone girl and employed at a London exchange')
- "Tell Them You're A Londoner" by Fred Godfrey and Billy Williams
- "Tell Me When The Whistle Blows" by Elton John
- "Ten Downing Street" by The Nerve
- "Terrible Accident on the Ice in Regent's Park" by Anonymous (19th century)
- "Thames Walk" by Don Rendell
- "That Awful Joke" by Edward Kent ('Hi! Conductor, put me down at Holborn Viaduct')
- "That'll Be Very Useful Later On" by Noel Coward ('Mary had them watched from Charing Cross to Golders Green')
- "That's What I Like" by Chas & Dave
- "The Arsenal" by Blak Twang
- "The Ballad of Climie Fisher" by Half Man Half Biscuit
- "The Cally Road" by The Big Skies
- "The Dead Girls Of London" by Frank Zappa
- "The Laughing Gnome" by David Bowie
- "The Liberty Of Norton Folgate" by Madness (references Spitalfields, Whitechapel, Tower Hamlets and Bow as well as the historicallly independent district of Norton Folgate
- "The Old Lady Of Threadneedle Street" by Carol Ventura
- "The Smile" by David Essex ('Sloane Street', 'Sloane Square')
- "The Streets of London" by The Challengers - The B-side to "The Man From U.N.C.L.E."
- "The Taking of Peckham" by Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine
- "The Thames" by Starsailor
- "The Theatre" by Pet Shop Boys
- "The Picadilly Trot" sung by Marie Lloyd, an old music hall number
- "The Westminster Walk" by Russ Conway
- "They're changing guard at Buckingham Palace" Harold Fraser-Simson
- "There's Nothing To Be Had Without Money" - composer unknown ('All parts of London I have tried')
- "There's No Place Like London" by Shirley Bassey
- "They're Changing Guards at Buckingham Palace" by A. A. Milne
- "This Is London" by Don McGlashan
- "This Is London" by Akala
- "This Is London" by The Times
- "This World Over" by XTC
- "Three Juvenile Delinquents" by Noel Coward ('Once we pinched a Cadillac and drove her from the Marble Arch to Kew')
- "Three White Feathers" by Noel Coward (Ealing girl makes good)
- "Tied Up Too Tight" by Hard-Fi (references the Great West Road)
- "Till the Lights of London Shine Again" by Tommie Connor and Edward Pola
- "A Tiny Flat in Soho Square" performed by Cicely Courtneidge and Harold French
- "Tired of England" by Dirty Pretty Things
- "To Wimbledon With Love" by the Wombles
- "Today London, Tomorrow The World" by London Funk Allstars
- "Tomorrow Night" by The Front Lawn
- "Tonite Let's All Make Love In London" by Carrington featuring Lisa McQuillanll
- "Tooting Bec Wrecked" by Hanoi Rocks
- "Too Much Brandy" by The Streets (mentions a tube train and the Dog Star pub, Brixton)
- "Top of the Morning" by Noel Coward ('London is shiny and free, that is, as free as a Democracy can be')
- "Torn On The Platform" by Jack Peñate
- "The Tottenham Toreador" by Edward Kent
- "Total Confusion" by A Homeboy, A Hippie And A Funki Dredd
- "Tottenham Tottenham" by Tottenham Hotspur FC
- "Tower Hill" by Haydn Wood (from 'London Landmarks Suite')
- "Tower of London" by ABC
- "Tower Block Rock (W1)" by Twenty Flight Rockers
- "Tower Bridge" by Spike Milligan
- "Towers of London" by XTC
- "Trafalgar Square" by Charles Deane, an old music hall number
- "Trafalgar Square" by the Good Time Losers
- "Trafalgar Square" by I Marc 4
- "Traffic In Fleet Street" by Nick Heyward
- "Trams of Old London" by Robyn Hitchcock
- "Transmetropolitan" by The Pogues
- "Trinity Wharf" by Saint Etienne
- "Tropical London" by Rancid
- "Turned Away" by Audio Bullys
- "Turpin Hero" by Anonymous - 1790 (Dick Turpin: 'Hounslow Heath as I rode o'er')
- "Twenty-Four Minutes from Tulse Hill" by Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine
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See also
References
External links
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This is an incomplete list of songs, which may never be able to satisfy certain standards for completeness.