Lyrics by Morgoth

Do you love Morgoth's songs? Here you'll find the lyrics to Morgoth's songs so you can sing them at the top of your lungs, make your own versions, or simply understand them properly.

Find here the lyrics to your favorite songs by Morgoth.

  1. A New Start
  2. Body Count
  3. Burnt Identity
  4. Cash...
  5. Curiosity
  6. Cursed
  7. Darkness
  8. Dictated Deliverance
  9. Drowning Sun
  10. Eternal Sanctity
  11. Exit to Temptation
  12. Female Infanticide
  13. Forgotten Days
  14. Golden Age
  15. Graceland
  16. Isolated
  17. Last Laugh
  18. Lies Of Distrust
  19. Odium
  20. Opportunity Is Gone
  21. Pits Of Utumno
  22. Resistance
  23. Selected Killing
  24. Sold Baptism
  25. Souls On A pleasuretrip
  26. Submission
  27. Suffer Life
  28. The Art Of Sinking
  29. This Fantastic Decade
  30. Travel
  31. Under The Surface
  32. Unreal Imagination
  33. War Inside
  34. Watch The Fortune Wheel
  35. White Gallery

Morgoth Bauglir ([ˈmɔrɡɔθ ˈbau̯ɡlir]; originally Melkor [ˈmɛlkor]) is a character, one of the godlike Valar, from Tolkien's legendarium. He is the primary antagonist of Tolkien's legendarium, the mythic epic published in parts as The Silmarillion, The Children of Húrin, Beren and Lúthien, and The Fall of Gondolin. Melkor is the most powerful of the Valar but he turns to darkness and is renamed Morgoth, the primary antagonist of Arda. All evil in the world of Middle-earth ultimately stems from him. One of the Maiar of Aulë betrays his kind and becomes Morgoth's principal lieutenant and successor, Sauron. Melkor has been interpreted as analogous to Satan, once the greatest of all God's angels, Lucifer, but fallen through pride; he rebels against his creator. Morgoth has been likened, too, to John Milton's fallen angel in Paradise Lost, again a Satan-figure. Tom Shippey has written that The Silmarillion maps the Book of Genesis with its creation and its fall, even Melkor having begun with good intentions. Marjorie Burns has commented that Tolkien used the Norse god Odin to create aspects of several characters, the wizard Gandalf getting some of his good characteristics, while Morgoth gets his destructiveness, malevolence, and deceit. Verlyn Flieger writes that the central temptation is the desire to possess, something that ironically afflicts two of the greatest figures in the legendarium, Melkor and Fëanor.

The lyrics of Morgoth's songs often follow certain patterns that you can discover if you pay close attention. Are you up for finding out what they are?

To discover the patterns in Morgoth's songs, you just have to read their lyrics carefully, paying attention not just to what they say, but how they are constructed.

Analyzing the lyrics of Morgoth's songs can be a lot of fun and if you enjoy composing, it can help you find formulas to create your own compositions.