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Every Harry Styles Song Ranked

He’s built one of the wildest, weirdest songbooks of modern times — from Seventies raunch to epic folk beauty to glam grandeur

Harry Styles photo collage

RICH FURY/GETTY IMAGES FOR SPOTIFY; ANTHONY PHAM VIA GETTY IMAGES; FRED DUFOUR/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

Harry Styles dropped his debut solo single, “Sign of the Times,” in 2017. Since then, he’s built one of the wildest, weirdest songbooks of modern times. A brilliant body of work, from a genius singer, songwriter, and performer. And it’s just about to get bigger, since he’s also an evil angel of chaos who never gets tired of wreaking havoc on our lives.

What a songbook: 53 songs, all of them great, from an artist who already rates with the all-time legends. So let’s break it down: Every Harry Styles songs ever, ranked and reviewed. No duds here, just gems from bottom to top, so it’s a tribute to every single song. 

Every fan would pick a different list — that’s the whole fun of it. So your list is guaranteed to be different — hell, our list would change from hour to hour, because as with most fans, our favorite tends to be the one we’re listening to right now. So obviously, don’t sweat the order they’re in — these are all songs to celebrate. The words are the point here, not the numbers.

Let’s face it, there are lots of Harries. He’s a pop star. An actor. A scholar of music history. A fashion icon. A dangerous madman who finds his pleasure in getting under our skin and trashing our expectations and dancing on our madness. And honestly, bless him for that. He’s all of these things, but as these songs prove, the realest, truest Harry is the one who puts his heart and soul into this music. 

The list includes everything from all three of his solo albums, right up to Harry’s House. We’re also counting songs he’s made a crucial part of his tours, even if they’re not officially released. Sure, this is totally cheating, but otherwise we’d have to leave “Medicine” off the list, which would be a tragedy.

No One Direction tunes — that would be a totally different list. As the old song says, we don’t want a shadow holding us hostage, right?

So let’s make some noise for all 53 of these songs, and the man who brought them into the world. And here’s to the music he’s got in store for the future. Step into the light.

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18

“Golden”

The beatific opener for Fine Line, with wave upon wave of Seventies AM-radio mellow gold. But under all the sunshine, there’s a sense of loss, as Harry begs, “I don’t wanna be alone.” “Golden” was the first song written for the album, on the second day of the sessions. As he said, “That was just always going to be Track One.” “Golden” has one of the most exhilarating climaxes in his music: The perfect moment when everything stops dead, Harry declares “I know that you’re scared because I’m so open,” and it rips into that pleading guitar break. —R.S. Best line: “I’m hopeless, broken, so you wait for me in the sky.”

17

‘American Girls’

Styles’ bellow recalls fellow British pop megastar Chris Martin’s trips to the club on this midtempo cut, which pairs his cocked-eyebrow observations on his pals’ romantic proclivities with crystalline pianos and massive atmospherics. Its spike-synth breakdown feels beamed in from a dimension where distinctions like “American” pale in comparison to interplanetary differences—an ideal location for Styles’ next multi-night mega-residency.Best line: “Time will show/ That you should try it”

16

‘Lights Up’

“Lights Up” was the first taste of the Fine Line era — a sashay into the pop future, going for head-spinning disco late-night bliss. On one level, it’s a love song to his fans and how they helped him find his way after the demise of 1D. But “Lights Up” captures the moment when you step into the light and finally recognize your true self, even if the light is just coming from the glittering mirror ball in your heart. “I think ‘Lights Up’ came at the end of a long period of self-reflection, self-acceptance,” he told Rolling Stone. “I just had the conversations with myself that you don’t always have. And I just feel more comfortable being myself.” “Lights Up” is full of doubt and fear, yet it’s also an exuberant pop celebration. —R.S.Best line: “Lights up and they know who you are/Do you know who you are?”

15

‘Fine Line’

The epic finale of his second album, building over six minutes, from folky strums to horns and strings. “Fine Line” has the introspective power of the final scene of Fleabag, where Phoebe Waller-Bridge takes one last look before taking off on her long, cold solitary walk home in the dark. (A fan did a brilliant video syncing the scene with this song — it keeps getting pulled off YouTube, but try it.) —R.S.Best line: “I don’t wanna fight you and I don’t wanna sleep in the dirt.”

14

‘Pop’

Charged with the thrill of transgressing one’s fresh-faced image, this Kiss All The Time cut has a skip-step beat and a possible callback to the Harry’s House cut “Cinema.” On that funk-lite offering, Styles noted, “You pop when we get intimate,” while here, he revels in being “just me, on my knees/ Squeaky clean fantasy/ It’s meant to be, ‘pop.’” Styles’ personal slang for le petit mort aside, “Pop” has the hazy vibe of an initial trip to some other side, with a chorus that does, indeed, pop in a “leap from the speakers” kind of way.Best line: “I wanted to behave/ But I know I’ll do it again”

13

‘Cinema’

One of those songs that illustrates the ways carnal pleasures summon wild front-of-mind utterances, “Cinema” is a sinuous pop-funk cut with lyrics that balance the sublime and the ridiculous. “I just think you’re cool/I dig your cinema,” an abashed Styles wails on the chorus, an admission of his facade being shattered that almost — almost! — excuses the rhyming of “cinema” and “intimate” on the song’s spaced-out chorus. —M.J.  Best line: “Do you think I’m cool, too?/Or am I too into you?”

12

‘Medicine’

Harry at his lustiest, glammiest, raunchiest, and just plain best. “Medicine” has been one of his most fiercely beloved fan faves since his early shows — a depraved, sex-crazed Stones-y rock & roll strut. But somehow he’s never released it officially. So “Medicine” is a song that fans light candles and pray for. When he pulled it out of his clown suit at the HarryWeen bash in New York last October, for the first time in years, the crowd exploded at just the sound of drum goddess Sarah Jones counting in. The climactic hook is when he yells: “The boys and the girls are in/I mess around with them/And I’m OK with it!” The official lyric is “them,” but most ears hear it as “him,” including mine, and obviously he relishes the ambiguity, so nobody’s wrong — may the debate rage forever. A great way to see the song evolve: this fan-made mastercut of every time Harry sang the line “And I’m OK with it” on tour. —R.S.Best line: “I had a few, got drunk on you, and now I’m wasted/And when I sleep I’m gonna dream of how you tasted!”

11

‘She’

Love — the most psychedelic of drugs. “She” is a deranged six-minute space-sex trip that feels like Prince jamming with Pink Floyd. It’s Harry and his crew at their most unhinged — which is probably why he loves this song so much. The highlight: Mitch Rowland steps out into the stratosphere for a cosmic guitar voyage. Fun fact: Mitch invented guitar solos.“Mitch played that guitar when he was a little, ah, influenced,” Styles said. “Well, he was on mushrooms, we all were.” They forgot about “She” until they went back to the tapes later. “But Mitch had no idea what he did on guitar that night, so he had to learn it all over from the track.” “She” is the kind of fucked-up beauty you can only get from making music with trusted friends — Kid Harpoon, Tyler Johnson, Jeff Bhasker, Rowland — instead of hired guns. And throwing the rulebook out the damn window. —R.S.Best line: “A woman who’s just in his head/And she sleeps in his bed/While he plays pretend.”

10

‘Are You Listening Yet?’

Styles cited New York dance-punk royalty LCD Soundsystem as one of Kiss All The Time’s bigger influences, and this chugging dance cut is the one that most channels James Murphy’s “Losing My Edge” era—at least on the verses, where Styles takes on modern-day ails with rancor (“You’ve had your tummy tucked, are you listening yet?”) and pleading (“Don’t blink or mix the medium, you’re smarter than that”). The chorus is catchy, if a bit muted given its lyrics’ urgency, but the wordless vocal breakdown near the track’s end aptly captures the reasons people escape to the dancefloor.  Best line: “You keep forgetting your mantra, which thoughts you had on your own/ Ignoring all your friends at the end of their rope”

9

‘Falling’

Harry, you’re no good alone. “Falling” is the gorgeously bereft piano ballad from Fine Line, chronicling the afterlife of a broken relationship, asking, “What am I now? What if I’m someone I don’t want around?” He returns to places haunted by memories — “The coffee’s out at the Beechwood Cafe” — but it’s not the same. If this song doesn’t make a mess out of you, are you even there? —R.S.Best line: “I’m well aware I write too many songs about you.”

8

‘Keep Driving’

A gentle comedown that arrives on Harry’s House after the all-night bacchanal of “Daydreaming,” this brief interlude finds the thrill of romance in the details, with Styles recounting memory fragments — including blissful moments of connection and silly party happenings — over smoothly percolating synths. —M.J..  Best line: “Maple syrup, coffee/Pancakes for two/Hash brown, egg yolk/ I will always love you”

7

‘Satellite’

“Satellite” starts off terse, as Styles recounts an awkward encounter with a figure from his past over spectral keyboards and adamant guitars; with each successive chorus where Styles sings of “Waiting for ya/To pull me in,” though, the song builds, until it reaches a frenzy of longing that peaks on a fireworks-worthy bridge full of careening drums and space-borne synths. —M.J.    Best line: “I’m in an L.A. mood/I don’t wanna talk to you”

6

‘Kiwi’

Harry’s got a taste for soul-searching, reflective tunes. This is not one of them. “Kiwi” is a glam-punk body-slam guitar blast from his debut, inspired by a chic actress who’s “hard liquor mixed with a bit of intellect.” It’s driven by sex, adrenaline, pounding guitars, and the ridiculous chorus “I’m having your baby/It’s none of your business!” When Harry busts out “Kiwi” at the end of a live show, it always brings down the walls of Jericho. Let’s just say the Merriam-Webster Dictionary has used this moment as the definition of “euphoria.”  —R.S. Best line: “New York, baby, always jacked up/Holland Tunnel for a nose, it’s always backed up.”

5

‘Coming Up Roses’

This lovely, string-accented ballad is a showcase for Styles’ tender side, with his velvet-lined voice trembling as he realizes his longing for another. His out-of-the-spotlight vulnerability shines through as he admits his nerves, with the orchestra surrounding him providing a gorgeously arranged—and meaningful — contrast to the rest of the beat-forward Kiss All The Time. Away from the dancefloor, Styles and his paramour can truly connect: “It’s only me and you,” he vows one last time before embarking on a wordless melody with the sort of guilelessness that emerges in the most intimate moments.  Best line: “Just for tonight, let’s go hangover chasing/ And I’ll talk your ear off about why it’s safe”

4

‘Cherry’

The most powerful moment on Fine Line, a raw confession of grief and jealousy after a broken romance. Harry tells the story with dry wit, aiming his barbs at himself, even when the pain is real. (“I can tell that you are at your best/I’m selfish so I’m hating it” is really twisting the knife.) In the studio, engineer Sammy Witte was playing an acoustic guitar riff that Harry overheard and loved — so close to John Lennon on the White Album — resulting in this song. “Cherry” ends with a voice note of his ex-girlfriend, Camille Rowe, speaking French on the phone. A heart-wrenching song that nonetheless soars to the sun. —R.S.Best line: “I still miss your accent and your friends/Did you know I still talk to them?”