As outrage continues over the January 7, 2026, fatal shooting of Renee Good by ICE agent Jonathan Ross in Minneapolis—as detailed in prior coverage—musicians have released short folk-inspired protest songs online within 48 hours. These tracks mourn her death, condemn state violence, and tie the incident to America's history of musical responses to injustice, amplifying public anger on social media.
The shooting of Renee Good has sparked an immediate musical backlash from artists nationwide, echoing traditions from slave spirituals and civil rights anthems to Black Lives Matter songs by YG and Kendrick Lamar.
All identified tracks are concise folk pieces (under two minutes) optimized for platforms like TikTok, grieving Good while denouncing systemic violence.
Highlights include:
Jesse Welles's "Good vs. Ice," critiquing ICE: "You probably don’t need to shoot someone in the face, to do the thing that you’re calling a job."
Zach Schmidt's "T.T.T.T.M.I.D.S.W.I.S." (They Tried to Tell Me I Didn’t See What I Saw), addressing conflicting narratives around Good's final moments.
Odin Scott Coleman's banjo-driven "A Song for Renee Good," invoking Appalachian ballad traditions: "There can be no justice in our broken country."
Kata's untitled song, noting the proximity to George Floyd's murder site: "She’s less than a mile from where George Floyd laid, it’s by the laptop repair shop and the torn Speedway."
Caitlin Cook's "Renee," honoring Good as poet and mother: "I didn’t know you but you were a poet. Now everybody knows it/They’re screaming your name."
These rapid releases underscore music's role in processing national tragedies, with more anticipated as protests grow.