History of Popular Music from the 1960s to Today
History of Popular Music
from the 1960s to Today
Complete Encyclopedic Guide — Seven decades of creation, revolutions and masterpieces, from the Beatles to Kendrick Lamar, from Bossa Nova to Afrobeats
General introduction
The history of popular music from 1960 to 2026 is one of the most fascinating intellectual, artistic and human adventures the modern world has produced. In the space of sixty-six years — less than a single human lifetime — music has undergone more transformation than during the two centuries that preceded it. It has changed in nature, in its tools, in its channels, in its audiences and in its ambitions. It has traversed every conceivable technological revolution, from the vinyl record to algorithmic streaming, by way of the cassette, the CD, the MP3 and digital downloads. It has reflected every major political and social upheaval of the contemporary era, from civil rights to #MeToo, from the Vietnam War to the Covid-19 pandemic.
This encyclopedic guide covers the entirety of this period across seven distinct decades, each the subject of an in-depth article accessible via the links scattered throughout this text. Far from being a mere list of commercial hits, this is the story of women and men who dared to invent, to provoke, to console, to revolt, to unite — and in so doing left an indelible mark on the collective memory of humanity. It is also, at its core, the story of the democratisation of musical creation: in 1960, recording an album required a professional studio and a contract with a major label; in 2026, a teenager’s bedroom, a computer and an internet connection are enough to reach millions of listeners.
Popular music is also the most immediate, most universal and most emotionally powerful mirror of its era. No other art form circulates as quickly, crosses linguistic and cultural frontiers as effortlessly, or embeds itself as deeply in the emotional memory of individuals. A song heard at fifteen resurfaces sixty years later, intact, capable of reviving in an instant the emotions, the places and the faces of a bygone age. It is this unique and irreducible power that these pages strive to document, to contextualise and to celebrate.
The 1960s: the founding decade
No decade laid foundations as deep and as enduring as the 1960s. It is the ground zero of everything that followed: rock, pop, soul, protest folk, psychedelia, modern French chanson — all find in the sixties either their official birth certificate or their definitive consecration.
The British Invasion, carried by the Beatles and their historic television landing in the United States on 9 February 1964 on the Ed Sullivan Show, reshuffled the cards of world music within a matter of weeks. For the first time, American rock’n’roll returned to its country of origin dressed in a Liverpool accent and a tenfold artistic ambition. John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr did not merely conquer the charts: they redefined what popular music could aspire to be, from She Loves You (1963) to the conceptual monument of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967).
Simultaneously, Black America produced its purest masterpieces with Berry Gordy’s Motown in Detroit — Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, the Supremes, the Temptations — and the southern soul music of Stax Records with Otis Redding and Aretha Franklin, whose Respect (1967) became the anthem of the civil rights movement. Meanwhile, Bob Dylan transformed folk song into committed poetry of a literary ambition unprecedented in popular music, opening a path that generations of artists would follow after him.
📖 Full article: Music of the 1960s
Discover the detailed analysis of the British Invasion, Motown, the folk revival, psychedelia, French yéyé chanson and the Woodstock Festival in our encyclopedic article dedicated to the 1960s, with the top 50 France, worldwide, world music and the 30 most significant historic performances.
In France, the 1960s represent one of the absolute golden ages of French chanson. Jacques Brel raised the French language to the heights of tragedy and beauty with Ne me quitte pas, Amsterdam and Les Bourgeois. Serge Gainsbourg provoked and invented, Françoise Hardy brooded and captivated, Johnny Hallyday electrified crowds and France Gall won Eurovision 1965 with Gainsbourg’s deadpan lyrics. This generation created a songwriting heritage of such richness that the whole world continues to admire it.
The decade closed on the absolute symbol of an entire generation: the Woodstock festival (15–18 August 1969), where 400,000 people gathered on a farm in upstate New York to live a moment of music, peace and collective utopia that history has never managed to reproduce. Jimi Hendrix performed The Star-Spangled Banner at dawn on the final day — one of the most powerful moments in the entire history of music.
The 1970s: the age of creative diversity
Heirs to the sixties and their partially disappointed utopias, the 1970s were a decade of prodigious creative diversity. Rock fragmented into a galaxy of sub-genres: the hard rock and nascent heavy metal of Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath and Deep Purple; the progressive rock of Pink Floyd, Genesis and Yes; the glam rock of David Bowie alias Ziggy Stardust and of T. Rex; the devastating punk of the Sex Pistols and the Clash as a reaction against everything that had come before.
Disco invaded dancefloors across the world, carried by the Bee Gees and the Saturday Night Fever (1977) soundtrack, by Donna Summer and Gloria Gaynor (I Will Survive, 1978), by the Casablanca label and the mirrored walls of nightclubs. Simultaneously, Stevie Wonder produced between 1972 and 1976 the most astonishing run of albums ever achieved by a single artist: Talking Book, Innervisions, Fulfillingness’ First Finale and Songs in the Key of Life.
ABBA literally conquered the planet from Sweden, Queen invented arena rock and the collective anthem with Bohemian Rhapsody (1975), and in Jamaica, Bob Marley brought reggae and Rastafarian philosophy to global audiences who would be permanently transformed by it.
📖 Full article: Music of the 1970s
Hard rock, disco, punk, soul, progressive rock, Bossa Nova, Bob Marley’s reggae and great French chanson: it’s all in our encyclopedic article on the 1970s, with the top 50 France, worldwide, world music and the 30 most notable clips and performances.
In France, the 1970s saw a new generation emerge: Michel Sardou, Francis Cabrel, Alain Souchon, Maxime Le Forestier and the group Téléphone established a French rock and singer-songwriter pop that reconciled artistic ambition with popular success. Claude François and Cerrone brought made-in-France disco to heights of invention and elegance.
The 1980s: the electronic and visual revolution
The 1980s were a decade of twin revolution: technological first, with the rise of the digital synthesiser, the drum machine and the sampler radically reconfiguring the tools of musical creation; then visual, with the launch of MTV on 1 August 1981, which elevated the music video to a fully-fledged art form and transformed an artist’s look into an essential component of their commercial identity.
Michael Jackson reigned over the decade as no artist had ever reigned over the global music scene. His album Thriller (1982) remains the best-selling record of all time; its eponymous video, directed by John Landis on a budget of $500,000, redefined the standards of music video for the three following decades. Madonna revolutionised feminine pop, Prince fused every genre with breathtaking virtuosity, and Whitney Houston established vocal power as the benchmark of mainstream success.
📖 Full article: Music of the 1980s
Synthpop, new wave, hard rock, nascent hip-hop, disco, French Touch and the MTV era: discover everything in our encyclopedic article on the 1980s, with the top 50 France, worldwide, world music and the 30 most iconic music videos.
The decade also saw hip-hop emerge as a global commercial phenomenon with Run-D.M.C., the Beastie Boys and Public Enemy. New wave and synthpop — Depeche Mode, New Order, Duran Duran, Tears for Fears, a-ha — defined a cool, electronic and melancholic aesthetic that continues to influence contemporary music production. And in France, Mylène Farmer, Indochine and Jeanne Mas brought a new generation of French pop of remarkable ambition and singularity.
The Live Aid concert (13 July 1985), organised simultaneously in London and Philadelphia to fight famine in Ethiopia, drew three billion television viewers worldwide and stands as the greatest concert in history. Queen‘s performance that evening is universally regarded as the finest stage performance ever filmed.
The 1990s: grunge, hip-hop and globalisation
The 1990s opened with a cultural detonation: the release of Nirvana‘s Nevermind (September 1991) and its single Smells Like Teen Spirit sounded the death knell for hair metal and the synthetic pop of the eighties, propelling Seattle grunge to the top of the world. Kurt Cobain became, despite himself, the icon of a generation — before his tragic death in April 1994 at the age of 27, which plunged the world into a collective grief unseen since Lennon.
Meanwhile, hip-hop entered what specialists unanimously call its golden age. The rivalry between The Notorious B.I.G. (East Coast) and Tupac Shakur (West Coast) both structured and tragedised the decade. Nas published Illmatic (1994), Lauryn Hill won five Grammy Awards in 1999 with The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, and in France, IAM, NTM and MC Solaar brought Francophone rap to an unprecedented level of international recognition.
📖 Full article: Music of the 1990s
Grunge, Britpop, hip-hop’s golden age, R&B, French Touch, techno, house and the Napster revolution: it’s all in our encyclopedic article on the 1990s, with the top 50 France, worldwide, world music and the 30 most notable clips.
Britpop answered American grunge with the arrogance and melody of Oasis, the sophistication of Blur and the social irony of Pulp. Electronic music exploded through European rave culture, carried by Daft Punk and French Touch, Massive Attack and Bristol trip-hop, The Chemical Brothers and London big beat. And at the very end of the decade, Napster — launched in June 1999 by a 19-year-old student — triggered the free music-sharing revolution that would transform the music industry for ever.
The 2000s: the era of emerging digital
The 2000s were marked by the twin signs of crisis and creativity. Crisis first: the collapse in physical record sales — precipitated by illegal downloading and then by Apple’s iTunes Music Store (2003) — structurally weakened an industry that had not experienced turbulence as profound since the invention of the phonograph. Then creativity: never before had so many artists from such diverse backgrounds coexisted with such vigour in the global charts.
Eminem dominated the decade through his technical virtuosity and astronomical sales figures. Beyoncé established herself as the new queen of global pop, Amy Winehouse revolutionised British soul with Back to Black (2006), and Kanye West reinvented hip-hop production with a trilogy of albums of exceptional artistic ambition. Coldplay, Arctic Monkeys and The Strokes kept the flame of British and American alternative rock alive with renewed vigour and freshness.
📖 Full article: Music of the 2000s
iPod, iTunes, YouTube, Star Academy, reggaeton, Daft Punk, dominant hip-hop and the explosion of Latin music: find the full story of this decade in our encyclopedic article on the 2000s, with the top 50 France, worldwide, world music and the 30 most notable music videos.
The decade also saw the global explosion of reggaeton with Daddy Yankee and his Gasolina (2004), the first signal of a dominance of Spanish-language music that would grow with each passing decade. YouTube, launched in 2005 and acquired by Google a year later, began to reshape the landscape of global music distribution, foreshadowing the streaming world that would impose itself in the 2010s.
The 2010s: the triumph of streaming
The 2010s confirmed the definitive victory of streaming over all other forms of music consumption. Spotify, launched in the United States in 2011, established itself as the world’s leading platform with more than 230 million users by the end of the decade. Music became accessible in its entirety, instantly, everywhere, for the price of a modest monthly subscription.
Adele broke every sales record with disarming sincerity — 21 (2011) and 25 (2015) rank among the best-selling albums of the century. Kendrick Lamar elevated hip-hop to an unprecedented literary dignity, rewarded by the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 2018 for the album DAMN. (2017) — an absolute first for an artist from popular music. Beyoncé redefined the album as a total political and artistic act with Lemonade (2016). And Stromae, from Belgium, established French as a language of global pop.
📖 Full article: Music of the 2010s
Streaming, K-pop, nascent Afrobeats, Taylor Swift, trap, EDM, Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories and the rise of TikTok: it’s all in our encyclopedic article on the 2010s, with the top 50 France, worldwide, world music and the 30 most notable clips.
The decade also witnessed the worldwide explosion of K-pop with BTS and Blackpink, the assertion of Nigerian Afrobeats with Wizkid and Burna Boy, and the definitive victory of reggaeton with Despacito (2017) by Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee — the most-streamed track in YouTube history. In France, Aya Nakamura became the world’s foremost Francophone artist, Orelsan confirmed his status as a total artist and PNL invented a form of melancholic, poetic trap unique in the world.
The 2020s: global music and AI
The 2020s opened on a global tragedy: the COVID-19 pandemic closed concert venues, cancelled tours and deprived millions of musicians of their income. But it simultaneously unleashed extraordinary creative energies: Taylor Swift recorded folklore (2020) and evermore (2020) remotely, two masterpieces of contemplative indie folk that confirmed her capacity for permanent reinvention.
The decade consecrated Bad Bunny as the world’s most-streamed artist for three consecutive years, singing almost exclusively in Spanish — an unprecedented occurrence in the history of the global charts. Afrobeats completed its planetary conquest with Burna Boy, Wizkid and Tems. And the feud between Kendrick Lamar and Drake (spring 2024) gave hip-hop one of its most dramatic moments since the Tupac-Biggie rivalry of the nineties.
📖 Full article: Music of the 2020s
COVID-19, TikTok, Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, Kendrick vs Drake, global Afrobeats, Bad Bunny, Karol G, Rosalía, Aya Nakamura at the Paris 2024 Olympics and the irruption of artificial intelligence: it’s all in our encyclopedic article on the 2020s, with the top 50 France, worldwide, world music and the 30 most notable clips.
The horizon of the end of the decade is defined by the irruption of generative artificial intelligence into musical creation. Tools such as Suno and Udio enable any user to generate a complete song within seconds. This revolution — the most profound since the invention of the record — raises fundamental questions about the nature of art, the value of authenticity and the remuneration of human creators that the current decade is far from having resolved.
Major cross-cutting themes
🎸 From guitar to synthesiser to laptop
The instrumental history of the past sixty years follows a fascinating trajectory: the electric guitar reigned over the sixties and seventies as the totemic instrument of rock and soul; the eighties saw the digital synthesiser — notably the Yamaha DX7 and the Roland TR-808 — reshape the landscape of music production; the nineties consecrated the sampler and the sequencer as the central tools of hip-hop and electronic music; the 2000s and 2010s saw the laptop and Digital Audio Workstations democratise production to the point where a teenager’s bedroom could replicate the conditions of a professional studio. By 2024, AI had begun composing on its own — a revolution whose consequences remain entirely unwritten.
🌍 The end of Anglophone dominance
One of the great structural changes of these sixty years is the gradual retreat, and then the end, of the exclusive dominance of English-language music in the global charts. In 1960, a non-English-language song had almost no chance of breaking through beyond its national borders. In 2026, Bad Bunny dominates Spotify in Spanish, BTS in Korean, Burna Boy in Yoruba and Pidgin, Aya Nakamura in French — and all of them reach considerable worldwide audiences. This linguistic and cultural plurality is one of the most positive and most enduring legacies of the streaming revolution.
🎤 The female voice as a force for cultural transformation
From Aretha Franklin demanding respect in 1967 to Beyoncé transforming the album into a feminist manifesto in 2016, by way of Janis Joplin, Madonna, Whitney Houston, Lauryn Hill, Adele and Taylor Swift, women have been the most creative and the most innovative forces in popular music over the past sixty years. The #MeToo movement (2017) gave a new political and collective resonance to this heritage of emancipation and power that female songwriting had been carrying since the earliest grooves. See our articles on the 1960s, 1980s and 2010s to gauge the full extent of this female presence across the decades.
📺 From the transistor to the smartphone: a history of listening formats
The way we listen to music has changed as much as music itself. The transistor radio of the sixties gave music its first popular portability. Sony’s Walkman (1979) made it nomadic and intimate. The CD (1982) gave it new quality and durability. The MP3 and the digital players of the 2000s — then Apple’s iPod — dematerialised it. The smartphone of the 2010s made it omnipresent and permanent. Streaming transformed it into an infinite on-demand flow. Each of these revolutions radically altered the relationship between the listener and music, between the artist and their audience, between the work and its consumption.
France in world music history
France occupies a singular place in the world music history of these six decades. Few countries have produced, across so many different genres, artists of such international stature. This presence is analysed in detail in each of our dedicated articles, but it is worth tracing its broad chronological outline here.
The 1960s gave France Jacques Brel, Georges Brassens, Barbara, Serge Gainsbourg and the entire yéyé generation. The 1970s saw the emergence of Michel Sardou, Francis Cabrel, Alain Souchon and the birth of French disco with Claude François and Cerrone. The 1980s consecrated Mylène Farmer, Indochine, Jeanne Mas and Daniel Balavoine. The 1990s belonged to French rap with IAM, NTM and MC Solaar, but also to Céline Dion — Quebec-born but universally perceived as Francophone — and to the electronic revolution of Daft Punk.
The 2000s saw Diam’s produce the best-selling French album of the decade, Grand Corps Malade invent popular poetic slam and David Guetta become one of the most famous DJs in the world. The 2010s belonged to Stromae and his Papaoutai, which travelled the globe, to Orelsan and to Aya Nakamura — whose track Djadja (2018) became the most-streamed Francophone song of all time. And the 2020s confirmed Aya Nakamura’s presence on the Olympic stage at the Paris 2024 Games, before three billion television viewers — a powerful symbol of a musically diverse, vibrant and outward-looking France.
World music: from the margins to the mainstream
One of the most profound shifts of these six decades is the gradual recognition, and then the dominance, of world music in the global charts. In the 1960s, Brazilian Bossa Nova — with João Gilberto, Astrud Gilberto and Garota de Ipanema — represented the first great breakthrough of a non-English-language music into the Western charts. Congolese rumba, Jamaican ska and the Indian music of Ravi Shankar reached limited but passionate audiences.
In the 1970s, Bob Marley‘s reggae finally broke through Jamaica’s borders, carrying with it the messages of Rastafarian philosophy. The 1980s saw the official coining of the term world music (1987) and the integration of Youssou N’Dour, Salif Keita and the Gipsy Kings into the catalogues of Western major labels. The 1990s saw Algerian raï by Khaled, Caribbean zouk and Latin American cumbia conquer ever-growing global audiences.
But it was in the 2000s and 2010s that the revolution was truly accomplished: reggaeton became a global genre with Daddy Yankee, Korean K-pop conquered every continent with BTS and Blackpink, Nigerian Afrobeats rose to the top of the charts with Wizkid, Burna Boy and Davido. And in the 2020s, Bad Bunny, Karol G and Rosalía demonstrated that Spanish is now the language of global pop on a par with English — if not more so.
The music video: an art form of the 20th and 21st centuries
The history of the music video is inseparable from the history of mass media audiovisual technologies. In the 1960s, the format did not yet exist: the Beatles invented the promotional film with their short films for Strawberry Fields Forever and Penny Lane (1967), the direct ancestors of the modern music video. Filmed concerts — Woodstock (1969), D.A. Pennebaker’s film about Dylan — constitute the most precious audiovisual archive of the era.
The 1970s saw Queen create, with Bohemian Rhapsody (1975), the first cinematic clip to have a major television impact, broadcast on Top of the Pops in lieu of a live performance. Then on 1 August 1981, MTV launched its broadcasts by airing Video Killed the Radio Star by the Buggles: a total revolution began.
In the 1980s, the music video became a major art form: Michael Jackson’s Thriller (14 minutes, directed by John Landis, $500,000 budget) redefined the standards of the genre for a generation. The 1990s represented the golden age of the music video as an artistic form, with directors such as Spike Jonze, Michel Gondry, Mark Romanek and Hype Williams signing works of absolute inventiveness. The 2000s saw YouTube progressively replace MTV as the primary distribution space. And in the 2010s and 2020s, the music video reinvented itself between TikTok’s short formats, Beyoncé’s ambitious visual films and concert-events filmed with the finest cinematic means available.
Review: sixty years of popular music
At the end of this encyclopedic journey through seven decades of global musical creation, a few certainties emerge. The first is that popular music has been, from 1960 to 2026, the most universal, most democratic and most politically powerful art form that humanity has produced. No other form of expression has touched as many people, so different from one another, so simultaneously.
The second certainty is that every decade has produced works whose artistic value stands perfectly the test of time. Sgt. Pepper’s by the Beatles, Songs in the Key of Life by Stevie Wonder, Thriller by Michael Jackson, Nevermind by Nirvana, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, Random Access Memories by Daft Punk, To Pimp a Butterfly by Kendrick Lamar, Un Verano Sin Ti by Bad Bunny — all are milestones that attest to an uninterrupted creative vitality, from one generation to the next.
The third and final certainty is that history goes on. The music of the 2020s is not the end of a cycle but the beginning of a new revolution, of which we can still see only the first signals. Artificial intelligence, immersive reality, algorithmically generated music, holographic concerts — possibilities that sketch a musical landscape of 2030 that remains largely unpredictable, but certainly just as rich and just as moving as the sixty years that precede it.
To explore each decade in greater depth, see our detailed articles: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, 2000s, 2010s and 2020s.
🇫🇷 Top 100 — The most popular songs in France (1960–2026)
A composite ranking compiled from record sales, SNEP certifications, streaming data, radio airplay and lasting cultural impact on the French public over the full period.
| # | Title | Artist | Decade | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ne me quitte pas | Jacques Brel | 1960s | French chanson |
| 2 | Je l’aime à mourir | Francis Cabrel | 1979 / 1990s | French Pop / Folk |
| 3 | Que je t’aime | Johnny Hallyday | 1960s | French Rock / Pop |
| 4 | Alexandrie Alexandra | Claude François | 1970s | French Disco / Pop |
| 5 | L’Été indien | Joe Dassin | 1970s | French Pop |
| 6 | Djadja | Aya Nakamura | 2010s | French Afropop / R&B |
| 7 | Désenchantée | Mylène Farmer | 1990s | French Pop / Synthpop |
| 8 | Papaoutai | Stromae | 2010s | Electro Pop |
| 9 | My Heart Will Go On | Céline Dion | 1990s | Pop / Ballad |
| 10 | Amsterdam | Jacques Brel | 1960s | French chanson |
| 11 | Foule sentimentale | Alain Souchon | 1990s | French chanson |
| 12 | Tous les garçons et les filles | Françoise Hardy | 1960s | Yéyé / French Pop |
| 13 | La Maladie d’amour | Michel Sardou | 1970s | French chanson |
| 14 | Mistral Gagnant | Renaud | 1980s | French chanson |
| 15 | SOS d’un terrien en détresse | Daniel Balavoine | 1980s | French Pop Rock |
| 16 | L’Aziza | Daniel Balavoine | 1980s | French Pop |
| 17 | Quelque chose de Tennessee | Johnny Hallyday | 1980s | French Rock / Pop |
| 18 | Voyage Voyage | Desireless | 1980s | Synthpop / Eurodance |
| 19 | Joe le taxi | Vanessa Paradis | 1980s | French Pop |
| 20 | La Tribu de Dana | Manau | 1990s | French Rap / Celtic |
| 21 | Bouge de là | MC Solaar | 1990s | French Hip-Hop |
| 22 | Je danse le Mia | IAM | 1990s | French Rap |
| 23 | Les Champs-Élysées | Joe Dassin | 1970s | French Pop |
| 24 | Poupée de cire, poupée de son | France Gall | 1960s | Yéyé (Eurovision 1965) |
| 25 | Ella, elle l’a | France Gall | 1980s | French Pop |
| 26 | Résiste | France Gall | 1980s | French Pop |
| 27 | La Ballade des gens heureux | Gérard Lenorman | 1970s | French chanson |
| 28 | Libertine | Mylène Farmer | 1980s | French Pop / Synthpop |
| 29 | Pourvu qu’elles soient douces | Mylène Farmer | 1980s | French Pop / Synthpop |
| 30 | Dans ma bulle | Diam’s | 2000s | French Rap |
| 31 | L’Aventurier | Indochine | 1980s | French New Wave |
| 32 | Et moi, et moi, et moi | Jacques Dutronc | 1960s | Yéyé / French Pop |
| 33 | Je t’aime… moi non plus | Gainsbourg & Birkin | 1960s | French Pop |
| 34 | San Francisco | Maxime Le Forestier | 1970s | Folk / French chanson |
| 35 | Alors on danse | Stromae | 2010s | Belgian Electro Pop |
| 36 | Formidable | Stromae | 2010s | Belgian Electro Pop |
| 37 | La Grenade | Clara Luciani | 2020s | French Pop |
| 38 | La Fête est finie | Orelsan | 2010s | French Rap |
| 39 | L’enfer | Stromae | 2020s | Belgian Electro Pop |
| 40 | Les Copains d’abord | Georges Brassens | 1960s | French chanson |
| 41 | Nantes | Barbara | 1960s | French chanson |
| 42 | Laisse-moi danser | Dalida | 1970s | Disco / French Pop |
| 43 | Gigi l’Amoroso | Dalida | 1970s | French / Italian Pop |
| 44 | Supernature | Cerrone | 1970s | Disco / Electronic |
| 45 | Anna | Téléphone | 1970s | French Rock |
| 46 | La Lambada | Kaoma | 1980s | Lambada / Zouk |
| 47 | Toute première fois | Jeanne Mas | 1980s | French Pop |
| 48 | Besoin de rien, envie de toi | Peter & Sloane | 1980s | French Pop |
| 49 | Pour que tu m’aimes encore | Céline Dion | 1990s | French Pop |
| 50 | Haïku | Grand Corps Malade | 2000s | French Slam |
| 51 | Lili | Alizée | 2000s | French Pop |
| 52 | Il est cinq heures, Paris s’éveille | Jacques Dutronc | 1960s | French Pop |
| 53 | Bamboleo | Gipsy Kings | 1980s | Flamenco Pop |
| 54 | Le Temps de l’amour | Françoise Hardy | 1960s | Yéyé / French Pop |
| 55 | Je vais t’aimer | Michel Sardou | 1970s | French chanson |
| 56 | Belles, belles, belles | Claude François | 1960s | Yéyé / French Pop |
| 57 | Ta fête | Christophe Maé | 2000s | French Pop / Folk |
| 58 | Fais-moi signe | Vianney | 2010s | French Pop Folk |
| 59 | Bébé | Vitaa & Slimane | 2010s | French Pop R&B |
| 60 | Partir un jour | Indochine | 1990s | French New Wave / Rock |
| 61 | En rouge et noir | Jeanne Mas | 1980s | French Pop |
| 62 | Quelques mots d’amour | Michel Sardou | 1990s | French chanson |
| 63 | Vianney — Je m’en vais | Vianney | 2010s | French Pop Folk |
| 64 | Trop beau | Lomepal | 2020s | French Rap / Pop |
| 65 | À peu près | Pomme | 2020s | French Pop Folk |
| 66 | Angela | Hatik | 2020s | French Rap / Pop |
| 67 | Chanter | Florent Pagny | 1990s | French Pop |
| 68 | Turn Down for What | DJ Snake & Lil Jon | 2010s | French Electro / Trap |
| 69 | Lean On | Major Lazer ft. DJ Snake & MØ | 2010s | Electro / World |
| 70 | Get Lucky | Daft Punk ft. Pharrell & Nile Rodgers | 2010s | French Touch / Disco |
| 71 | One Dance | Drake ft. Wizkid | 2010s | Afrobeats / Pop |
| 72 | Shape of You | Ed Sheeran | 2010s | Pop |
| 73 | Rolling in the Deep | Adele | 2010s | Pop / Soul |
| 74 | Blinding Lights | The Weeknd | 2020s | Synth-pop / R&B |
| 75 | Anti-Hero | Taylor Swift | 2020s | Pop |
| 76 | drivers license | Olivia Rodrigo | 2020s | Pop / Indie |
| 77 | Espresso | Sabrina Carpenter | 2020s | Pop |
| 78 | Flowers | Miley Cyrus | 2020s | Pop |
| 79 | Despacito (remix) | Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee ft. Bieber | 2010s | Reggaeton / Pop |
| 80 | Macarena | Los Del Rio | 1990s | Latin Pop / Dance |
| 81 | Smells Like Teen Spirit | Nirvana | 1990s | Grunge / Alternative |
| 82 | Killing Me Softly | Fugees | 1990s | Hip-Hop / R&B |
| 83 | Around the World | Daft Punk | 1990s | French Touch / Electro |
| 84 | Wannabe | Spice Girls | 1990s | Pop |
| 85 | I Will Always Love You | Whitney Houston | 1990s | Pop / R&B |
| 86 | Careless Whisper | George Michael | 1980s | Pop / R&B |
| 87 | Billie Jean | Michael Jackson | 1980s | Pop / R&B |
| 88 | Take On Me | a-ha | 1980s | Synthpop |
| 89 | 99 Luftballons | Nena | 1980s | New Wave |
| 90 | Don’t You (Forget About Me) | Simple Minds | 1980s | New Wave |
| 91 | Gangnam Style | Psy | 2010s | K-pop / Dance |
| 92 | Happy | Pharrell Williams | 2010s | Pop / Funk |
| 93 | Calm Down | Rema & Selena Gomez | 2020s | Afrobeats / Pop |
| 94 | Running Up That Hill | Kate Bush (re-release) | 1980s / viral 2020s | Art Pop |
| 95 | Hey Jude | The Beatles | 1960s | Pop / Rock |
| 96 | Michelle | The Beatles | 1960s | Pop / Beat |
| 97 | Satisfaction (I Can’t Get No) | Rolling Stones | 1960s | Rock |
| 98 | Bohemian Rhapsody | Queen | 1970s | Rock / Art Pop |
| 99 | Stayin’ Alive | Bee Gees | 1970s | Disco |
| 100 | Die With a Smile | Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars | 2020s | Pop / Soul |
🎵 Top 100 — The most popular songs worldwide (1960–2026)
A composite ranking compiled from certified global sales (RIAA and IFPI), global streaming data, international radio airplay and lasting cultural impact over the full period.
| # | Title | Artist | Decade | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hey Jude 🏆 Emblem | The Beatles | 1960s | Pop / Rock |
| 2 | Bohemian Rhapsody | Queen | 1970s | Rock / Art Pop |
| 3 | Billie Jean | Michael Jackson | 1980s | Pop / R&B |
| 4 | Smells Like Teen Spirit | Nirvana | 1990s | Grunge / Alternative |
| 5 | Like a Rolling Stone | Bob Dylan | 1960s | Folk Rock |
| 6 | Respect | Aretha Franklin | 1960s | Soul / R&B |
| 7 | Shape of You | Ed Sheeran | 2010s | Pop |
| 8 | Blinding Lights | The Weeknd | 2020s | Synth-pop / R&B |
| 9 | Satisfaction (I Can’t Get No) | Rolling Stones | 1960s | Rock |
| 10 | Stairway to Heaven | Led Zeppelin | 1970s | Hard Rock / Folk |
| 11 | Imagine | John Lennon | 1970s | Pop / Rock |
| 12 | Hotel California | Eagles | 1970s | Rock |
| 13 | Thriller | Michael Jackson | 1980s | Pop / Funk |
| 14 | Like a Virgin | Madonna | 1980s | Pop / Dance |
| 15 | I Will Always Love You | Whitney Houston | 1990s | Pop / R&B |
| 16 | Despacito (remix) | Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee ft. Bieber | 2010s | Reggaeton / Pop |
| 17 | Stayin’ Alive | Bee Gees | 1970s | Disco |
| 18 | Dancing Queen | ABBA | 1970s | Pop / Disco |
| 19 | Good Vibrations | The Beach Boys | 1960s | Pop / Psychedelic |
| 20 | Purple Haze | Jimi Hendrix Experience | 1960s | Psychedelic / Rock |
| 21 | I Will Survive | Gloria Gaynor | 1970s | Disco / Soul |
| 22 | Every Breath You Take | The Police | 1980s | Rock / Pop |
| 23 | Sweet Child O’ Mine | Guns N’ Roses | 1980s | Hard Rock |
| 24 | Take On Me | a-ha | 1980s | Synthpop |
| 25 | Losing My Religion | R.E.M. | 1990s | Alternative Rock |
| 26 | Wonderwall | Oasis | 1990s | Britpop |
| 27 | Bitter Sweet Symphony | The Verve | 1990s | Alternative Rock |
| 28 | Killing Me Softly | Fugees | 1990s | Hip-Hop / R&B |
| 29 | Crazy in Love | Beyoncé ft. Jay-Z | 2000s | R&B / Hip-Hop |
| 30 | Lose Yourself | Eminem | 2000s | Hip-Hop |
| 31 | Rolling in the Deep | Adele | 2010s | Pop / Soul |
| 32 | Someone Like You | Adele | 2010s | Pop / Soul |
| 33 | Gangnam Style | Psy | 2010s | K-pop / Dance |
| 34 | Uptown Funk | Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars | 2010s | Pop / Funk |
| 35 | Happy | Pharrell Williams | 2010s | Pop / Funk |
| 36 | Get Lucky | Daft Punk ft. Pharrell & Nile Rodgers | 2010s | French Touch / Disco |
| 37 | Anti-Hero | Taylor Swift | 2020s | Pop |
| 38 | Flowers | Miley Cyrus | 2020s | Pop |
| 39 | As It Was | Harry Styles | 2020s | Pop / Indie |
| 40 | Espresso | Sabrina Carpenter | 2020s | Pop |
| 41 | Superstition | Stevie Wonder | 1970s | Funk / Soul |
| 42 | What’s Going On | Marvin Gaye | 1970s | Soul |
| 43 | I Got You (I Feel Good) | James Brown | 1960s | Funk / Soul |
| 44 | Blowin’ in the Wind | Bob Dylan | 1960s | Folk / Protest |
| 45 | Mrs. Robinson | Simon & Garfunkel | 1960s | Folk / Pop |
| 46 | American Pie | Don McLean | 1970s | Folk Rock |
| 47 | Born to Run | Bruce Springsteen | 1970s | Rock |
| 48 | My Girl | The Temptations | 1960s | Soul / Motown |
| 49 | Light My Fire | The Doors | 1960s | Psychedelic / Rock |
| 50 | House of the Rising Sun | The Animals | 1960s | Folk Rock / R&B |
| 51 | Dreams | Fleetwood Mac | 1970s | Rock / Pop |
| 52 | Don’t Stop Believin’ | Journey | 1980s | Arena Rock |
| 53 | Livin’ on a Prayer | Bon Jovi | 1980s | Hard Rock |
| 54 | Purple Rain | Prince | 1980s | Pop / Rock / R&B |
| 55 | Don’t You (Forget About Me) | Simple Minds | 1980s | New Wave |
| 56 | With or Without You | U2 | 1980s | Rock |
| 57 | Girls Just Want to Have Fun | Cyndi Lauper | 1980s | Pop / New Wave |
| 58 | Total Eclipse of the Heart | Bonnie Tyler | 1980s | Power Ballad |
| 59 | Africa | Toto | 1980s | Pop / Rock |
| 60 | True Colors | Cyndi Lauper | 1980s | Pop / Ballad |
| 61 | One Sweet Day | Mariah Carey & Boyz II Men | 1990s | R&B / Pop |
| 62 | Dreams (Cranberries) | The Cranberries | 1990s | Alternative Rock |
| 63 | Nothing Compares 2 U | Sinéad O’Connor | 1990s | Pop / Soul |
| 64 | Wannabe | Spice Girls | 1990s | Pop |
| 65 | My Heart Will Go On | Céline Dion | 1990s | Pop / Ballad |
| 66 | Macarena | Los Del Rio | 1990s | Latin Pop / Dance |
| 67 | Beautiful Day | U2 | 2000s | Rock / Pop |
| 68 | Hips Don’t Lie | Shakira ft. Wyclef Jean | 2000s | Latin Pop |
| 69 | Umbrella | Rihanna ft. Jay-Z | 2000s | Pop / R&B |
| 70 | Rehab | Amy Winehouse | 2000s | Soul / Jazz |
| 71 | Gold Digger | Kanye West ft. Jamie Foxx | 2000s | Hip-Hop |
| 72 | Royals | Lorde | 2010s | Indie Pop |
| 73 | Chandelier | Sia | 2010s | Pop / Dance |
| 74 | Shake It Off | Taylor Swift | 2010s | Pop |
| 75 | HUMBLE. | Kendrick Lamar | 2010s | Hip-Hop |
| 76 | One Dance | Drake ft. Wizkid | 2010s | Afrobeats / Pop |
| 77 | Lean On | Major Lazer ft. MØ & DJ Snake | 2010s | Electro Pop / World |
| 78 | Bad Guy | Billie Eilish | 2010s | Dark Pop |
| 79 | drivers license | Olivia Rodrigo | 2020s | Pop / Indie |
| 80 | Levitating | Dua Lipa | 2020s | Pop / Disco |
| 81 | Not Like Us | Kendrick Lamar | 2020s | Hip-Hop |
| 82 | Calm Down | Rema & Selena Gomez | 2020s | Afrobeats / Pop |
| 83 | APT. | ROSÉ & Bruno Mars | 2020s | K-pop / Pop |
| 84 | Die With a Smile | Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars | 2020s | Pop / Soul |
| 85 | In My Life | The Beatles | 1960s | Pop / Rock |
| 86 | Yesterday | The Beatles | 1960s | Pop / Ballad |
| 87 | Paint It Black | Rolling Stones | 1960s | Rock / Psychedelic |
| 88 | Waterloo Sunset | The Kinks | 1960s | British Pop / Rock |
| 89 | Georgia on My Mind | Ray Charles | 1960s | Soul / Jazz |
| 90 | Dock of the Bay | Otis Redding | 1960s | Soul |
| 91 | Piano Man | Billy Joel | 1970s | Pop / Rock |
| 92 | Smoke on the Water | Deep Purple | 1970s | Hard Rock |
| 93 | Le Freak | Chic | 1970s | Disco / Funk |
| 94 | Eye of the Tiger | Survivor | 1980s | Hard Rock |
| 95 | We Are the World | USA for Africa | 1980s | Pop / Charity |
| 96 | Everybody Wants to Rule the World | Tears for Fears | 1980s | New Wave / Synthpop |
| 97 | Waterfalls | TLC | 1990s | R&B / Hip-Hop |
| 98 | Gasolina | Daddy Yankee | 2000s | Reggaeton |
| 99 | Radioactive | Imagine Dragons | 2010s | Pop / Rock |
| 100 | Old Town Road | Lil Nas X ft. Billy Ray Cyrus | 2010s | Country Trap |
🌍 Top 100 — World Music (1960–2026)
An international selection covering all the world’s musical regions over six decades — Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, Asia, the Middle East, non-English-speaking Europe — bearing witness to the infinite richness of global musical creation.
| # | Title | Artist | Country / Region | Decade | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Garota de Ipanema (The Girl from Ipanema) 🌍 | João Gilberto & Astrud Gilberto | Brazil | 1960s | Bossa Nova |
| 2 | No Woman, No Cry | Bob Marley & The Wailers | Jamaica | 1970s | Reggae |
| 3 | Despacito | Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee ft. Bieber | Puerto Rico | 2010s | Reggaeton |
| 4 | Gangnam Style | Psy | South Korea | 2010s | K-pop |
| 5 | Stayin’ Alive | Bee Gees | Australia / UK | 1970s | Disco |
| 6 | Waterloo | ABBA | Sweden | 1970s | Pop (Eurovision) |
| 7 | Ne me quitte pas | Jacques Brel | Belgium / France | 1960s | French chanson |
| 8 | Me Porto Bonito | Bad Bunny & Chencho Corleone | Puerto Rico | 2020s | Reggaeton |
| 9 | Essence | Wizkid ft. Tems | Nigeria | 2020s | Afrobeats |
| 10 | Guantanamera | Joseíto Fernández / Pete Seeger | Cuba | 1960s | Son cubano |
| 11 | La Bamba | Ritchie Valens / Los Lobos | Mexico / USA | 1960s / 1980s | Rock / Ranchera |
| 12 | 7 Seconds | Youssou N’Dour & Neneh Cherry | Senegal / Sweden | 1990s | Mbalax / Pop |
| 13 | I Will Survive | Gloria Gaynor | USA | 1970s | Disco / Soul |
| 14 | Aïcha | Khaled | Algeria | 1990s | Raï |
| 15 | Killing Me Softly | Fugees | USA / Haiti | 1990s | Hip-Hop / R&B |
| 16 | Zouk la sé sèl médikaman nou ni | Kassav’ | Caribbean | 1980s | Zouk |
| 17 | Pata Pata | Miriam Makeba | South Africa | 1960s | Township / World |
| 18 | Didi | Khaled | Algeria | 1990s | Raï |
| 19 | Bamboleo | Gipsy Kings | France / Spain | 1980s | Flamenco Pop |
| 20 | Volare (Nel Blu Dipinto di Blu) | Domenico Modugno | Italy | 1960s | Canzone italiana |
| 21 | Pedro Navaja | Rubén Blades | Panama / USA | 1970s | Salsa |
| 22 | Corcovado | Antônio Carlos Jobim & Astrud Gilberto | Brazil | 1960s | Bossa Nova |
| 23 | Lambada | Kaoma | Brazil / France | 1980s | Lambada / Zouk |
| 24 | One Dance | Drake ft. Wizkid | USA / Nigeria | 2010s | Afrobeats / Pop |
| 25 | Redemption Song | Bob Marley | Jamaica | 1970s | Reggae / Folk |
| 26 | Mas que Nada | Sérgio Mendes & Brasil ’66 | Brazil | 1960s | Bossa Nova / Samba |
| 27 | Orinoco Flow | Enya | Ireland | 1980s | New Age / Celtic |
| 28 | Rivers of Babylon | Boney M. | Germany / Jamaica | 1970s | Disco / Reggae |
| 29 | Rasputin | Boney M. | Germany | 1970s | Disco / Pop |
| 30 | Papaoutai | Stromae | Belgium | 2010s | Electro Pop / World |
| 31 | Djadja | Aya Nakamura | France (Mali) | 2010s | Afropop / R&B |
| 32 | Sukiyaki (Ue o Muite Arukō) | Kyu Sakamoto | Japan | 1960s | Japanese Pop |
| 33 | Zombie | Fela Kuti | Nigeria | 1970s | Afrobeat |
| 34 | Yeke Yeke | Mory Kanté | Guinea | 1980s | Mande / Dance |
| 35 | Macarena | Los Del Rio | Spain | 1990s | Latin Pop |
| 36 | Chantaje | Shakira ft. Maluma | Colombia | 2010s | Reggaeton / Latin Pop |
| 37 | La Tortura | Shakira ft. Alejandro Sanz | Colombia / Spain | 2000s | Latin Pop |
| 38 | Bichota | Karol G | Colombia | 2020s | Reggaeton |
| 39 | Dakiti | Bad Bunny & Jhay Cortez | Puerto Rico | 2020s | Latin Trap |
| 40 | Despechá | Rosalía | Spain | 2020s | Flamenco Pop / Dance |
| 41 | DNA | BTS | South Korea | 2010s | K-pop |
| 42 | Kill This Love | Blackpink | South Korea | 2010s | K-pop |
| 43 | Hype Boy | NewJeans | South Korea | 2020s | K-pop |
| 44 | Jerusalema | Master KG ft. Nomcebo Zikode | South Africa | 2020s | Afropop / Gospel |
| 45 | African Queen | 2face Idibia | Nigeria | 2000s | Afropop |
| 46 | Ye | Burna Boy | Nigeria | 2010s | Afrobeats |
| 47 | Last Last | Burna Boy | Nigeria | 2020s | Afrobeats |
| 48 | Calm Down | Rema & Selena Gomez | Nigeria / USA | 2020s | Afrobeats / Pop |
| 49 | Amor Prohibido | Selena | USA / Mexico | 1990s | Tejano / Cumbia |
| 50 | Livin’ la Vida Loca | Ricky Martin | Puerto Rico | 1990s | Latin Pop |
| 51 | Gasolina | Daddy Yankee | Puerto Rico | 2000s | Reggaeton |
| 52 | Mi Gente | J Balvin & Willy William | Colombia / France | 2010s | Reggaeton |
| 53 | Jai Ho | A.R. Rahman (Slumdog Millionaire) | India | 2000s | Bollywood / World |
| 54 | Tum Hi Ho | Arijit Singh | India | 2010s | Bollywood |
| 55 | Ai Se Eu Te Pego | Michel Teló | Brazil | 2010s | Sertanejo / Forró |
| 56 | BZRP Music Sessions #53 — Shakira | Shakira & Bizarrap | Colombia / Argentina | 2020s | Latin Pop / Electronic |
| 57 | Dragostea Din Tei | O-Zone | Moldova / Romania | 2000s | Euro Pop |
| 58 | Voyage Voyage | Desireless | France | 1980s | Synthpop |
| 59 | Azzurro | Adriano Celentano | Italy | 1960s | Canzone italiana |
| 60 | Zorba’s Dance | Mikis Theodorakis | Greece | 1960s | Sirtaki / Film |
| 61 | The Harder They Come | Jimmy Cliff | Jamaica | 1970s | Reggae |
| 62 | Senza una donna | Zucchero & Paul Young | Italy / UK | 1990s | Pop / Blues |
| 63 | My Boy Lollipop | Millie Small | Jamaica | 1960s | Ska Pop |
| 64 | Domingo de Manhã | Elis Regina | Brazil | 1970s | MPB / Samba |
| 65 | Tigresa | Caetano Veloso | Brazil | 1970s | MPB / Tropicália |
| 66 | Feeling Good | Nina Simone | USA | 1960s | Soul / Jazz |
| 67 | Stand by Me | Ben E. King | USA | 1960s | Soul / R&B |
| 68 | El Rey | Vicente Fernández | Mexico | 1970s | Ranchera |
| 69 | Oye Como Va | Tito Puente / Santana | USA / Puerto Rico | 1960s / 1970s | Latin Jazz |
| 70 | Ma Baker | Boney M. | Germany / Caribbean | 1970s | Disco / Reggae |
| 71 | Wombo Lombo | Angélique Kidjo | Benin | 1990s | Afropop |
| 72 | Abdel Kader | Khaled, Rachid Taha, Faudel | Algeria / France | 1990s | Raï |
| 73 | Hot Hot Hot | Arrow | Montserrat | 1980s | Soca / Calypso |
| 74 | Tattoo (Eurovision) | Loreen | Sweden | 2020s | European Pop |
| 75 | Smooth | Santana ft. Rob Thomas | USA / Mexico | 1990s | Latin Rock |
| 76 | Clandestino | Shakira & Maluma | Colombia | 2010s | Latin Pop |
| 77 | Danza Kuduro | Don Omar & Lucenzo | Puerto Rico / Portugal | 2010s | Reggaeton / Kuduro |
| 78 | LM3ALLEM | Saad Lamjarred | Morocco | 2010s | Arabic Pop |
| 79 | Shosholoza | Ladysmith Black Mambazo | South Africa | 1990s | Zulu / World |
| 80 | Bésame Mucho | Trio Los Panchos / various | Mexico | 1960s | Bolero |
| 81 | El Condor Pasa | Los Calchakis / Simon & Garfunkel | Peru | 1960s | Andean Folk |
| 82 | Summertime | Janis Joplin / Nina Simone | USA | 1960s | Blues / Jazz |
| 83 | Soco | Wizkid | Nigeria | 2010s | Afrobeats |
| 84 | African Giant | Burna Boy | Nigeria | 2010s | Afrobeats |
| 85 | Love Nwantiti | CKay | Nigeria | 2020s | Afropop / R&B |
| 86 | Bésame | Sasha Lopez | Romania | 2010s | Euro Dance / Latin |
| 87 | Vida de Rico | Camilo | Colombia | 2020s | Latin Pop |
| 88 | Peru | Fireboy DML ft. Ed Sheeran | Nigeria / UK | 2020s | Afropop / Pop |
| 89 | Seven | Jung Kook ft. Latto | South Korea / USA | 2020s | K-pop / Pop |
| 90 | Quimbara | Celia Cruz | Cuba / USA | 1970s | Salsa |
| 91 | Kaini Sisi | Franco & TPOK Jazz | Congo | 1970s | Congolese Rumba |
| 92 | Malaika | Miriam Makeba | South Africa | 1960s | World |
| 93 | Quando Quando Quando | Tony Renis | Italy | 1960s | Canzone italiana |
| 94 | Mbube (Wimoweh) | Solomon Linda / The Tokens | South Africa | 1960s | Isicathamiya / Pop |
| 95 | Sungba | Asake ft. Burna Boy | Nigeria | 2020s | Afrobeats / Street-hop |
| 96 | Calambre | Nathy Peluso | Argentina / Spain | 2020s | Latin Pop / Funk |
| 97 | L’enfer | Stromae | Belgium | 2020s | Electro Pop / World |
| 98 | Maelezo | Diamond Platnumz | Tanzania | 2010s | Bongo Flava |
| 99 | Raga Bhairava | Ravi Shankar | India | 1960s | Hindustani classical music |
| 100 | APT. | ROSÉ & Bruno Mars | South Korea / USA | 2020s | K-pop / Pop |
🎬 Top 50 — Music videos and historic performances (1960–2026)
This ranking covers seven decades of musical audiovisual history, from the pioneering television performances of the sixties to YouTube clips accumulating billions of views in the 2020s. For the full decade-by-decade details, see our dedicated articles: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, 2000s, 2010s and 2020s.
| # | Video / Performance / Title | Artist | Year | Context and notable features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Beatles — Ed Sullivan Show 🏆 Historic | The Beatles | 1964 | 73 million US viewers — the most-watched television performance of the 20th century |
| 2 | Jimi Hendrix — Star-Spangled Banner (Woodstock) | Jimi Hendrix | 1969 | 400,000 people at dawn — one of the most powerful moments in the entire history of music |
| 3 | Thriller | Michael Jackson | 1983 | John Landis — 14 minutes, $500,000, the video that redefined the format’s standards for ever |
| 4 | Bohemian Rhapsody (promo film) | Queen | 1975 | Bruce Gowers — the first cinematic clip with major TV impact, direct ancestor of the modern format |
| 5 | Live Aid — Queen’s performance | Queen | 1985 | 3 billion television viewers — universally regarded as the greatest stage performance ever filmed |
| 6 | Smells Like Teen Spirit | Nirvana | 1991 | Samuel Bayer — anarchic gymnasium, the video that signalled the end of a musical era |
| 7 | Despacito | Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee ft. Bieber | 2017 | Carlos Pérez — 7+ billion views, the most-watched video in YouTube history at the time of release |
| 8 | Nothing Compares 2 U | Sinéad O’Connor | 1990 | John Maybury — 4-minute close-up, real tears, one of the most moving videos ever filmed |
| 9 | Scream | Michael Jackson & Janet Jackson | 1995 | Mark Romanek — $7 million, the most expensive music video ever made |
| 10 | Bob Dylan — Newport Folk Festival (electric concert) | Bob Dylan | 1965 | Dylan’s first electric concert, a pivotal moment in the folk/rock split |
| 11 | Take On Me | a-ha | 1985 | Steve Barron — rotoscope animation / live action, a masterpiece of formal invention |
| 12 | Around the World | Daft Punk | 1997 | Michel Gondry — synchronised minimalist choreography, a conceptual masterpiece |
| 13 | Virtual Insanity | Jamiroquai | 1996 | Jonathan Glazer — moving set, perfect optical illusion, MTV VMA 1997 |
| 14 | Strawberry Fields Forever (promo film) | The Beatles | 1967 | Peter Goldman — reversed sequences, experimental colour grading, forerunner of the auteur video |
| 15 | Lemonade (visual album) | Beyoncé | 2016 | Multiple directors — one-hour film on HBO, a revolution in the album-film as an artistic form |
| 16 | Formation | Beyoncé | 2016 | Melina Matsoukas — post-Katrina Louisiana, the decade’s defining political and aesthetic video |
| 17 | HUMBLE. | Kendrick Lamar | 2017 | Dave Meyers — Baroque references, hip-hop as total art aesthetic |
| 18 | Gangnam Style | Psy | 2012 | Cho Soo-hyun — the first video to pass 1 billion YouTube views |
| 19 | Like a Prayer | Madonna | 1989 | Mary Lambert — religion, race and sexuality, the most controversial video of the 1980s |
| 20 | Sledgehammer | Peter Gabriel | 1986 | Stephen Johnson — pioneering stop-motion techniques, MTV VMA 1987 |
| 21 | Montero (Call Me By Your Name) | Lil Nas X | 2021 | Tanu Muino — flamboyant mythological Hell, an LGBTQ+ revolution in hip-hop |
| 22 | Not Like Us | Kendrick Lamar | 2024 | Dave Free — community gathering in Compton, a manifesto video from the feud with Drake |
| 23 | Losing My Religion | R.E.M. | 1991 | Tarsem Singh — Baroque iconography, MTV VMA 1991, a masterpiece of art direction |
| 24 | Don’t Look Back (documentary film) | Bob Dylan | 1967 | D.A. Pennebaker — opening scene with cue cards prefiguring the modern music video |
| 25 | Jacques Brel — Olympia 1964 | Jacques Brel | 1964 | Recording of the legendary concert — Amsterdam, Ne me quitte pas live, the pinnacle of French chanson |
| 26 | This Is America | Childish Gambino | 2018 | Hiro Murai — political satire of American violence, the most discussed video of 2018 |
| 27 | Sabotage | Beastie Boys | 1994 | Spike Jonze — parody of 1970s cop shows, an absurdly comic masterpiece |
| 28 | Everybody Hurts | R.E.M. | 1993 | Jake Scott — motorway traffic jam, anti-suicide message universally acclaimed |
| 29 | Chandelier | Sia | 2014 | Sia & Daniel Pearl — Maddie Ziegler alone, contemporary dance of rare intensity |
| 30 | L’enfer (TV news performance) | Stromae | 2022 | Live performance on TF1’s evening news bulletin — a unique and deeply moving television moment |
| 31 | Shape of You | Ed Sheeran | 2017 | Jason Koenig — 5+ billion views, the most-streamed track in Spotify’s history |
| 32 | Blinding Lights (Super Bowl LV) | The Weeknd | 2021 | The Weeknd production — halftime show with 200 masked dancers, a universally acclaimed performance |
| 33 | Papaoutai | Stromae | 2013 | Julien Soulier — articulated dolls and a child searching for his father, a globally award-winning video |
| 34 | Get Lucky | Daft Punk ft. Pharrell & Nile Rodgers | 2013 | Warren Fu — golden robots, elegant restraint, French Touch at its finest |
| 35 | Woodstock (film) | Multiple artists | 1970 | Michael Wadleigh — Academy Award for Best Documentary, an irreplaceable testament to 400,000 people |
| 36 | Penny Lane (promo film) | The Beatles | 1967 | Peter Goldman — broadcast in lieu of a live performance, the consecration of the promotional format |
| 37 | All Too Well (10 Minute Version) | Taylor Swift | 2021 | Taylor Swift (director) — 15-minute short film, a break-up filmed with Dylan O’Brien |
| 38 | California Love | Tupac ft. Dr. Dre | 1995 | Hype Williams — Mad Max aesthetic, the emblematic video of West Coast rap |
| 39 | Espresso | Sabrina Carpenter | 2024 | Bardia Zeinali — Côte d’Azur, the most virally shared video on TikTok in 2024 |
| 40 | Monterey Pop Festival (film) | Joplin, Hendrix, The Who | 1967 | D.A. Pennebaker — the global revelation of Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin |
| 41 | God’s Plan | Drake | 2018 | Karena Evans — $1 million distributed to people in need in Miami |
| 42 | Hungry Like the Wolf | Duran Duran | 1982 | Russell Mulcahy — filmed in Sri Lanka, pioneering cinematic production |
| 43 | Telephone | Lady Gaga ft. Beyoncé | 2010 | Jonas Åkerlund — 9-minute short film inspired by Tarantino, an iconic collaboration |
| 44 | Reach Out I’ll Be There (Shindig! TV) | The Four Tops | 1966 | ABC-TV show — opening American prime time to Black Motown artists |
| 45 | Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus | Rolling Stones, Lennon, The Who | 1968 | Michael Lindsay-Hogg — unreleased for 28 years, the hidden masterpiece of the decade |
| 46 | Lean On | Major Lazer ft. MØ & DJ Snake | 2015 | Tim Erem — Rajasthan, India, a world music video of breathtaking beauty |
| 47 | Bit Bitter Symphony | The Verve | 1997 | Walter Stern — single unbroken shot, Richard Ashcroft walking imperturbably |
| 48 | Nirvana — MTV Unplugged in New York | Nirvana | 1993 | Beth McCarthy — live acoustic concert, one of the most moving recordings in rock history |
| 49 | DNA | BTS | 2017 | YG Production — viewing record for a Korean group, K-pop at its global peak |
| 50 | Eras Tour (concert film) | Taylor Swift | 2023 | Sam Wrench — 152 concerts, 10 million attendees, $2 billion in revenue, an absolute record |