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These Are 2024’s Songs of the Summer

RS staffers give you their picks, from Sabrina to Kendrick to GloRilla, and more

Sabrina Carpenter and GloRilla

NINA WESTERVELT/BILLBOARD VIA GETTY IMAGES; GARY MILLER/GETTY IMAGES

What makes a song of the summer? Is it pop perfection? A sick beat? Radio dominance? Last week, we took a data-driven look at the season’s biggest songs; now, we present the songs the Rolling Stone staff has had on repeat all season, covering everything from sexy drill to crossover country to sad-dude indie rock.

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Lana Del Rey and Quavo, ‘Tough’

Did you know that there’s a tunnel under “Bad and Boujee”? Lana Del Rey and Quavo join forces for “Tough,” a sliver of country-trap Americana celebrating red dirt and blue collars. It’s a perfect American portrait for a summer when this here U.S. of A. seems to keep redefining the Del Reyan concept of Fucking Up Big-Time. Both stars flex with a great video where they play with guitars and shotguns down on the farm. Quavo gets real about grief, mourning the still-raw loss of his Migos comrade and nephew, Takeoff. But it’s a song about how surviving adversity makes you as hard as “nickel-wound strings on your good ol’ Gibson guitar.” — R.S.

Kesha, ‘Joyride’

Bring back the dollar sign … KE$HA is back. What better way for Kesha to celebrate her musical independence (and litigious freedom) than reconnecting with the subversive, cheesy-naughty energy that made her a radio staple in the early 2010s? Without falling into antiquated sounds and lyrical tropes, Kesha found an impressive way to channel “TiK ToK” and “We R Who We R” during the summer of Charli XCX’s Brat. Summer 2024 is about unrestrained fun and poor decisions, and with “Joyride,” Kesha delivers the perfect soundtrack thanks to lyrics like “Rev my engine till you make it purr” and “You want kids? Well, I am Mother.” After a heavy album like last year’s Gag Order, “Joyride” feels fresh and exciting, and welcomes back the messy, sexy, dirty Kesha that we, the pop stans, truly missed. We’re glad you’re back, KE$HA. —T.M.

MJ Lenderman, ‘She’s Leaving You’

Everyone gravitates to their own song of the summer, whether it’s about espresso or perfume or being so attractive you compare yourself to a steamy container of takeout. My own pick, MJ Lenderman’s “She’s Leaving You,” is about a cheating husband having a midlife crisis. To each their own! The Asheville musician and Wednesday guitarist delivers a crunchy, hypnotic riff reminiscent of early Car Seat Headrest, alongside a refrain that will linger in your brain for days. And like Phoebe Bridgers’ “Moon Song,” it contains a sarcastic reference to Eric Clapton — a key ingredient if you’re looking to write a great indie rock song in the 2020s. —A.M.

Billie Eilish, ‘Birds of a Feather’

I read something once that proposed the idea of framing time in terms of summers, rather than years. Thinking about having, for example, four summers of your twenties left — instead of four years — makes the span of time seem so much more fragile, more fleeting. Billie Eilish encapsulates this exact feeling on “Birds of a Feather,” the impassioned fan-favorite from her third studio album, Hit Me Hard and Soft. “Can’t change the weather, might not be forever/But if it’s forever, it’s even better,” she sings. Eilish makes every moment count. There’s not a single note wasted or a lyric delivered without the full catharsis of all-consuming love. Time, she recognizes, passes just as quickly when you’re watching sand drain into the bottom of an hourglass as it does when you’re sinking your feet into those same grains at the beach. It’s better spent living and loving. —L.P.

Zach Bryan feat. Bruce Springsteen, ‘Sandpaper’

Even under cloudless skies and a blazing sun, there’s always room for some ruminative melancholy — “the other side of summer,” as Elvis Costello once called it. “Winter was a drag,” Zach Bryan sings on the appropriately gritty half-love-song “Sandpaper,” over a beat borrowed from Bruce Springsteen’s “I’m on Fire,” “Spring was a friend/I’ll love you ‘til summer comes back again.” Then Springsteen himself arrives to share the vocals, with a delivery that carries the full weight of amassed decades, and the song deepens into a conversation between a wearier older man and his younger counterpart. “They’ve been trying to smooth me out/For 27 seasons now,” they each sing — and you get the sense that even after 70-something seasons, it didn’t work. —B.H.