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Odysseus and the Sirens by Alexander Bruckmann
And you touch the distant beaches
With tales of brave Ulysses
How his naked ears were tortured
By the sirens sweetly singing
For the sparkling waves are calling you
To kiss their white-laced lips

A hauntingly beautiful song from a siren or otherwise supernatural being that leads people (usually men) to danger or even death. The trope's concept stems from the sirens from The Odyssey whose enchanting songs send men and their ships to a watery doom.

Related to Compelling Voice, which is a trope about supernaturally controlling people with your voice. Compare with Will-o'-the-Wisp, a small, flickering light that lures people into danger and Brown Note, a sensory input that's harmful to whoever sees or hears it.

Subtrope of Luring in Prey. See also Our Sirens Are Different and Our Mermaids Are Different for creatures who are often associated with this ability (which are sometimes depicted as the same creature).


Examples

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    Anime and Manga 
  • Doraemon: Nobita's Great Adventure into the Underworld has Doraemon and gang (including their new friend, Miyoko) traveling to an Alternate Universe populated by demons and assorted monsters, including crossing an ocean filled with sirens whose songs can brainwash anyone within vicinity to throw themselves into the water and be devoured by Sea Monsters. Doraemon gives ear-patches to everyone before making the trip, but the sirens' song is so powerful that it actually penetrates their protection. The gang eventually escapes in the nick of time when Gian somehow got the idea to counter the sirens songs with his own; turns out Gian's singing is so terrible, it actually scares away the sirens.

    Fan Works 
  • Foxfire: The Woman in White is the ghost of a woman who committed suicide through drowning. She lures victims through her beauty and soothing voice and then drowns them.
  • Ice and Fire (Minecraft): A siren's singing will force players to head towards it, but can be negated using earplugs. A flute made using a siren's tear will similarly make hostile creatures temporarily friendly towards the player.
  • Misery Loves Company: After the incident at the cemetery, Gaz is lured to Hecate's house by a mysterious song that seems to come from nowhere, and which she finds herself unable to resist the urge to find the source of. She is then knocked out by a blow from Hecate's flute, allowing the witch to prepare a game of traps for her.

    Films — Animation 
  • The Little Mermaid (1989): Prince Eric is so charmed by his memories of Ariel's voice that he's determined to find the girl who rescued him. Later on, Ursula (disguised as a young human maiden by means of a glamour spell) uses Ariel's voice and her magic to entrance the prince when the latter was ready to propose himself to Ariel. This backfires when the shell holding Ariel's voice shatters, the voice returns to her owner and Eric finally puts two and two together.
  • Mermaid: The rusalka enthralls the apprentice with her beauty and her singing voice, and lures him into the river. She then flips him out of his rowboat and attempts to drown him. The old monk intervenes.
  • Popeyes Voyage The Quest For Pappy: While sailing to find Poopdeck Pappy with his crew, Popeye hears a woman singing in the ocean. It was actually the Sea Hag who wanted to destroy Popeye by hypnotizing him with her Siren song when she changes into a beautiful woman.
  • Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas: One of the hazards that Sinbad and crew must traverse is the Dragon's Teeth, where many ships lie ruined and rotting. The derelict hulls are also home to water nymphs, who are succubi made of water. They sing to Sinbad's crew, and they become lulled by the sound to the point of incapacity. Fortunately, Marina is aboard, and she takes the helm to keep the ship afloat.
  • The Twelve Tasks of Asterix: One of the Tasks Asterix and Obelix must accomplish is resisting to temptation on the Isle of Pleasure. The isle is in the middle of a lake, and when they approach it, they hear the isle's priestesses singing and are instantly enthralled as if it was a spell, which prompts Obelix to row the fastest he can to reach it.

    Films — Live-Action 
  • Black Panther: Wakanda Forever: The Talokani people have a siren song ability — described as a form of sonic hypnosis — that they can use to lure their victims into the water to drown.
  • In Hocus Pocus, this is the specialty of the witch Sarah, singing her song "Come Little Children" to draw children to her and her sisters so that they can drain them of their lifeforce.
  • Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides: The mermaids' hunting strategy involves using their beautiful singing voices to lower the guard of unaware sailors and attack them en masse once they're surrounded.
  • The Jungle Book (2016):Kaa, a snake with the power to hypnotize their prey, is genderswapped in this iteration & played by Scarlett Johansen. Her version of Kaa's song "Trust in Me" is only on the soundtrack but it's far more mesmerizing & eerie than the original.

    Literature 
  • Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire: Shortly before Harry undertakes the Second Trial of the Triwizard Tournament, he's suggested to take a shower in the Prefects' Bathroom with the golden dragon egg he retrieved in the First Trial. When he opens it while holding it underwater, he can hear a beautiful siren voice singing to him what he has to do to clear the upcoming Trial's objective. If the egg is opened outside the water, a very deafening scream is heard instead, suggesting that the sirens' words are only intelligible to humans underwater.
  • Hothouse: The unknown creature that lives within the Black Mouth, which sings a terrible, entrancing song that causes anything that hears it irresistibly run towards the volcano it lives in and hurl itself in.
  • "The Loreley": According to Heinrich Heine's poem, the Loreley is a beautiful fairy lady who appears to skippers sailing on the Rhine sitting on a cliff overlooking the river, combing her hair and singing a song with a "wondrous, powerful melody". Skippers who hear it are "seized with wild woe" and cannot take her eyes off Loreley. Not paying attention to the dangers of the river, they accordingly founder in the waters under Loreley's cliff.
  • The Odyssey, of course. In Book 12, the sirens attempt to lure Odysseus by promising to sing of his glorious deeds in the Trojan War. Resisting the sirens' song is flat-out impossible; all he can do is block up his sailors' ears with wax and have them lash him firmly to the ship's mast so he can tell when they've passed the danger.
  • The second Percy Jackson and the Olympians book, The Sea of Monsters, features Percy and Annabeth going through many of the same events Odysseus went through in The Odyssey (Charybdis and Scylla, Circe's island, Polyphemus the Cyclops, the Sirens, etc.). One of them is going past the island of the Sirens. Percy stuffs his ears up with wax, while Annabeth does Odysseus' role and has Percy tie her to the ship mast so she can hear their voices but not be able to swim towards them. Unfortunately, this fails. Annabeth ends up swimming towards the Sirens, and Percy has to jump out to save her.
  • Trial of Champions: One of the hazards you'll come across the titular Trial is crossing a cavern inhabited by a siren, who'll lure you to enter her pool with her hauntingly beautiful song. You'll need to perform a difficult SKILL test to avoid falling under her spell, and if you fail you'll simply allow yourself to be slain by the Siren's conch dagger.

    Live-Action TV 
  • H₂O: Just Add Water and Mako Mermaids: An H₂O Adventure: Any mermaid can apply magic to her voice and use it to enthrall men, but that's rarely something they actually want to do. Cleo and Sirena both had a bout of sirenism, but neither had any real control over it— Cleo just wanted to be a good singer and hypnotized all the boys in town in the process, while Sirena's attempt to ensnare Zac made David fall in love with Nixie instead. More powerful mermaids can actually infect other mermaids into becoming sirens with their song, and the only cure is to drown out the original song with a less malicious one. All these reasons are why mermaid society forbids siren songs.
  • Siren (2018): The Siren Song is apparently a defense mechanism for the merpeople: it's sung to distract or enthrall humans. Ben equates its lingering effects to an addiction; both he and Decker continue to crave the song long after they hear it for the first time. Decker's autopsy reveals that the Song actually caused him some brain damage. Ben attempts suicide after hearing the song. The Big Bad of season 3 takes this one step further by weaponizing the song and launching a mass-scale attack against humanity.

    Tabletop Games 
  • Dark Heresy: The Lady of the Voids in Creatures Anathema, a Slaaneshi daemon breed that resembles several daemonettes haphazardly fused together at the waist. Manifesting itself by possessing starship astropaths, a Lady of the Voids quickly enslaves the crew using a hypnotic warp-song of primal screams and moans. Fortunately, those affected can be cured by simply covering their ears or silencing the song.
  • Salvage Hidden Treasures: The Siren Song event stops the player who reveals it to move their ships in any direction for their next turn.

    Video Games 
  • In Baldur's Gate III, the party can encounter a group of sirens in the process of luring a child into the shallows toward them so they can eat him. If interrupted they will attack and can keep using their song to force characters to take no action but walking toward them.
  • Dragalia Lost: Subverted with Siren. She loves to sing with her voice being very alluring, but she has no desire to lure people into danger like the rumors about her claim with the dangers that people finding themselves in from following her voice being coincidental. The Halidom puts on a concert for her to dispel the rumors.
  • Dragon Age
    • All Darkspawn hear the Old Gods singing to them. Supposedly, it's the most beautiful song you could hear and after a while makes it impossible to think for yourself. Cutting Darkspawn off from this song has been shown to give them back their sanity and sapience, but it also drives some mad and desperate to hear it again.
    • When a Warden starts to hear this, it signals the beginning of The Calling, and the end of their lifespan. According to in-game lore, the song feels like an "intrusion" at first but becomes gradually louder and more fixed in the mind until the Warden can't live without it, or even remember not hearing it. One journal you find by a long-dead Warden veteran has the Warden's writing constantly digress into gushing its beauty, to the point of resenting being judged for enjoying it in spite of what it represents.
    • During a failed attempt to kill one of the Old Gods before it could be corrupted, the Grey Wardens discovered that the song is audible to anyone close enough to their prisons, and incredibly loud.
  • Fallen London has the drownies—pale, waterlogged corpses of humans who drowned and then recovered and now reside in the Zee. They're explicitly described as siren-like in the way their eerie singing causes Zailors a strong urge to jump from their ships to join their number.
  • The Lemme Fatale enemy in Lemmings Chronicles drives Lemmings who get near her to suicide with her singing.

    Western Animation 
  • Arthur: In "D.W. Tale Spins", four-year-old D.W. Read attempts to tell the story of The Odyssey to Arthur and Buster, with her in the role of Odysseus. When she gets to the part of the story featuring the Sirens, who play music to hypnotize people into crashing their boats on their rocks, the song they play is Crazy Bus, her favorite song. In the story, D.W. is so entranced by the song that she attempts to steer the boat towards the rocks, so her friends have to tie her to the boat's mast until after they pass by the Sirens' song.
  • Lilo & Stitch: Angel (Experiment 624) is a unique alien variant who has a siren song that affects the morality of those (mainly experiments made before her) who listen to it. If she sings it normally, the listener(s) turn(s) to evil; if she sings it backward, the listener(s) turn(s) back to good. Listening to a recording of her song also works. Only experiments made after her, including Reuben (X-625) and Stitch (X-626), are immune (though they still find her voice lovely), unless (according to Stitch!) she sings it in a different voice.
  • The Dazzlings, a.k.a. the Sirens from My Little Pony: Equestria Girls – Rainbow Rocks, have the ability to hypnotize anyone into turning against each other with their singing, and feed on their negative energy to strengthen their power. The only ones not affected are Twilight, Sunset, and the human versions of the Mane Six, as well as DJ PON-3.
  • The Real Ghostbusters: "Banshee Bake a Cherry Pie" gives us Shawna, a banshee turned pop star whose singing can enthrall men and cause calamities, usually at the same time.
  • The Simpsons: Parodied in the episode "Tales from the Public Domain" in a segment summarizing The Odyssey. The siren song is depicted as a glitzy Vegas show tune that lures Odysseus' ship, and when they finally lay eyes on the sirens, they resemble Patty and Selma.
  • Star Trek: The Animated Series: In "The Lorelei Signal", the Enterprise investigates a region of space where ships have mysteriously disappeared. The women on an Earthlike planet can emit a signal that enthralls men but not women. The away team discovers too late that the Lorelei women also drain the life force from the men they lure in, causing the men to age rapidly while rejuvenating the women.
  • Winx Club: Daphne the Nymph softly chants variations of "Bloom, come to me" during Bloom's dreams. Daphne grows increasingly insistent and ominous as the plot progresses, up until their connection is strong enough for Bloom to see her. Bloom then frantically asks her friends and the Headmistress for help to locate Daphne's whereabouts: the Rocalucce Lake. Subverted because once she's there, it's revealed that Daphne is Bloom's older sister and the one who saved her from their planet's destruction. The reason for Daphne's calls is that she just wanted to have a family reunion with Bloom.

 
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Sirenoid

Klaus' partner, Sirenoid, is a mermaid-like Bakugan, whose Anthemusa ability lets her lure her opponents to their doom with a beautiful song.

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