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Every Olivia Rodrigo Song, Ranked

Three albums, all classics. Let’s celebrate a budding rock & roll legend.

Olivia Rodrigo photo illustration

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY GRIFFIN LOTZ. PHOTOGRAPHS IN ILLUSTRATION BY DAVID LIVINGSTON/FILMMAGIC; KEVIN MAZUR/GETTY IMAGES; MATT WINKELMEYER/WIREIMAGE; ADOBE STOCK, 2

Olivia Rodrigo has spent her career making pop history, dropping three of this century’s best albums. She made her mark with her 2021 instant-classic debut Sour, and the even-better 2023 follow-up Guts. But with her brilliant new album, You Seem Pretty Sad For a Girl So In Love, she proves what everybody already knew: Olivia’s an artist with her own voice, not just here to stay, but already hitting the level of the all-time greats. She’s a master of every move whether she’s serving pop-punk bangers or piano-ballad weepers. And she’s already sitting on top of a classic songbook at 23.

So let’s celebrate the music Olivia Rodrigo has made so far: a deep dive into every single song in her amazing catalog. Obviously, this list doesn’t cover High School Musical—that would be a whole other list. (“All I Want” is arguably a special case.) Also, no Bizaardvark, with all due respect to “Blobfish” and “Comeback Song.” It’s got the songs from all three of her albums, with her soundtrack tunes, bonus tracks, cover versions (but only the ones she’s officially released), loosies, and B-sides.

Remember, every fan’s list would be different — that’s the point. The competition for the top is fierce, but this whole list is stacked with bangers from top to bottom. So raise a glass to Olivia, crank up the music, sense the undertones, and sing along loud. Hey, it really is brutal out here.

4

‘Drop Dead’

Fact: Happy love songs are much tougher to pull off than sad ones. But “Drop Dead” is an over-the-top mega-crush anthem unlike anything else in her songbook, proving why Olivia’s playful tunes are every bit as nuanced and complex as her weepers. It’s an intricately crafted gem, as if she’s trying to combine Taylor Swift’s “Enchanted” and Pulp’s “Common People” into the same song. But “Drop Dead” never stops exploding, letting her feminine intuition run wild. (It’s full of callbacks to her 2025 Glastonbury triumph — like the way she was seen in the crowd screaming along with Pulp, not to mention her shirt that teased the line “you know all the words to ‘Just Like Heaven.’”) Hell, even lyrics about astrology can’t ruin it. If you don’t swoon at the final “kiss me and I miiiiight” crescendo, your batteries need a serious recharge.Best line: “Yeah, I’d love it if you walk me home/If you promise we can go real slow/‘Cause I’ve got chewing gum and a bunch of stuff I’d like to know.”

3

‘The Cure’

What a heartbreaker of a song. Olivia calls “The Cure” the “thesis statement of You Look Pretty Sad for a Girl So In Love.” The acoustic guitar beams in from Liz Phair — “Glory,” that’s the one. But the wispy vocal sounds like a Nineties dream where Juliana Hatfield joined the Smashing Pumpkins in 1992, as it ebbs and flows like “Disarm.” It’s a wrenchingly vulnerable ballad where she confides, “I used to play a game in my head when I date a guy.” Some game. Yet despite all her self-doubt, “The Cure” is also full of empathy for her lover’s struggles to ease her pain. (“I’ve got toxins in my bloodstream you tried so hard to suck out” is such a clever callback to the “Vampire” bloodsucker.) Not necessarily a break-up song — just the moment in any relationship when you realize it won’t magically fix your issues, even when you’re both trying.Best line: “Why can’t you come stitch me up?”