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35 Essential LGBTQ Pride Songs

From Sylvester to Pansy Divsion to Lil Nas X, from disco to punk to pop

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Is there an LGBTQ sensibility? What was it 50 years ago, before much of today’s language for gender and sexual identities even existed? Or, much more simply: Which songs best evoke the sex, drama, heartache, struggle, liberation, and mindfucks of queer lives then and now?

What follows is not a completely comprehensive (or ranked) list, but one that follows the story from post-Stonewall disco parties to the gender-queer rock, R&B, and pop of today. Here are 25 essential pride songs from the 1970s to today.

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Troye Sivan, ‘One of Your Girls’ (2023)

Sivan was inspired to write this melancholic synthpop cut from 2023’s Something To Give Each Other by, he told Song Exploder, men who’d been flirting with him despite never having been with a man before—and how he would sometimes take those men in. The “deep longing” he felt afterwards, he said, inspired him to write. “What was really interesting to me,” he said, “was, ‘Why do I keep putting myself in this situation? How does this keep happening?’ And that was the starting point of the song.” Sivan handles his longing with grace and elliptical compliments like “you should insure that waist,” while the moody synths and gently strummed guitar give the song a lonely-night glow.–M.J.

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Isaiah Rashad, ‘Act Normal’ (2026)

While much of popular music has opened to queer voices, albeit sometimes grudgingly, rap remains a “boys’ club,” as Megan Thee Stallion once called it, a place where men freely deploy homophobic language while lyrically dominate women. That makes Isaiah Rashad’s admission to having sex with men and women on “Act Normal” an extraordinary development. It’s rendered in a hypnotically blurry groove typical of Rashad’s work as he depicts his sexuality as a source of angst yet something he ultimately can’t control, resulting in him being “at war with yourself” and unable to trust anyone. It may seem unlikely that other closeted mainstream rappers will follow his bracing honesty. But liberation needs to start somewhere.–M.R.