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The 50 Best One-Hit Wonders of the 2000s

Dancehall, R&B, power ballads, nu-metal, crunk, and…Hoobastank!

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Popular music experienced a massive upheaval during the ‘00s, when the high record sales of the Nineties crash-landed, record-store chains closed en masse, and tech companies started beckoning listeners away from their Walkmen and toward digital-music players. But chaos can bring unexpected moments of wonder, and the combination of online distribution (via song sales, YouTube streams, and MySpace presences), audience fragmentation, TV singing competitions, and the usual cultural evolutions — not to mention MTV, which had the pulse-measuring TRL on its schedule until the end of 2008 — led to a bunch of shooting stars becoming visible. Fifty of them, representing the best one-hit wonders of the decade, are listed below.

The common definition of “one-hit wonder” can be a bit malleable, so it’s worth noting that some of the artists who’ve been given that title actually made it big with multiple tracks. The quasi-sapphic Russian duo t.A.T.u. had one of the best singles of the decade with “All The Things She Said,” which reached Number 20 on Billboard’s Hot 100 in March 2003; they followed it up with the speedy “Not Gonna Get Us,” which didn’t make the Hot 100 but was a smash in the clubs and on MTV. Mississippi MC Afroman’s chilled-out stoner chronicle “Because I Got High” was a Y2K smash, reaching Number 13, and while its followup “Crazy Rap” didn’t make that chart, it did reach the top 10 in the UK and elsewhere. (It’s since become a streaming sensation, and it was certified triple platinum in 2023.) Ontario rockers Finger Eleven’s 2007 cut “Paralyzer,” which amped up the jock-jam quotient of Franz Ferdinand’s “Take Me Out,” reached Number 6 on the Hot 100; four years prior, their strummily sincere ballad “One Thing” hit Number 16. And so on.

Here are the best fifty one-hit wonders of the 2000s, including neo-power ballads and slinky dancehall cuts, nu metal, dancehall, and crunk, proto-viral cult classics and from-nowhere chart-toppers.

5

Hoobastank, ‘The Reason’

Known as a funk-metal act, the California band Hoobastank reached Number Two on the Billboard Hot 100 in June 2004 with “The Reason,” a neo-power ballad that was as apologetic as it was self-lacerating. “I’m not a perfect person,” “I’m sorry that I hurt you” — those are lines one gives when one is about to break up with someone. But Hoobastank flip the script with “The Reason,” on which lead singer Doug Robb bellows his promises to work harder and be better — the sort of on-my-knees posturing that makes for the most-satisfying rock weepers.  

4

J Kwon, ‘Tipsy’

St. Louis-born MC J-Kwon hit it out of the park with his lead single, a “We Will Rock You”-sampling salute to “everybody drunk out on the dance floor.” Riding the synchronized hand claps of Queen’s stadium-rattling hit, some well-placed keyboard mashing, and the way J-Kwon bent the first syllables of the word “everybody” into a roar, “Tipsy” reached Number Two on the Billboard Hot 100 in April 2004. He might have hit the chart’s top spot were it not for the cultural domination of Usher’s thematically simpatico “Yeah!,” but justice came two decades later, when the “Tipsy”-interpolating “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” by the country charmer Shaboozey reached Number One in the U.S. and around the world.

3

Willa Ford, ‘I Wanna Be Bad’

Channeling the glittery grooves of late-Nineties R&B through Samantha Fox’s assertion that naughty girls need love, too, the debut single from pop singer Willa Ford is both of its time and reminiscent of other pop eras. Ford delivers her coquettish come-ons, which are targeted toward an already-committed prospect, with lip-licking determination, while her ad-libs only add to the overheated atmosphere. “I Wanna Be Bad” reached Number 22 on the Billboard Hot 100 in August 2001, but Ford parlayed its success — and her undeniable gumption — into hosting gigs and a role as Anna Nicole Smith in a 2007 biopic.

2

Lil Mama, ‘Lip Gloss’

A bare-bones boast — its backing track is made up only of claps and stomps — about proper makeup application, Lil Mama’s 2007 debut single, “Lip Gloss,” was a cross-generational banger: Even though the Brooklyn-born MC was throwing down verses about owning her schoolmates, the sentiment of deriving confidence from a well-chosen cosmetic was widely relatable. “Lip Gloss” made it to Number 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 in June 2007, but its no-nonsense production helps it still sound as fresh as a just-applied coat decades after its release.

1

Wheatus, ‘Teenage Dirtbag’

Where to start with the Long Island band Wheatus’ perfectly pitched anthem for the world’s crushed-out heshers, which frontman Brendan Brown wrote as a belated fuck-you to Satanic Panicking types? Its quiet-loud-quiet verse-chorus-verse structure reveals the furtive emotions roiling underneath metalheads’ Slayer T-shirts; its protagonist’s offering of “two tickets to Iron Maiden, baby,” to his object of affection shows that he’s savvily bringing her to a full-on arena spectacle, and not just a scuzzy club show. Somehow, “Teenage Dirtbag” didn’t make the Billboard Hot 100 after its release in 2000 — a fact that radio programmers should hang their heads in shame over, as it not only made but reached Number One or Number Two on charts everywhere else in the world. It still has “hit” written all over it and the staying power to prove it even a quarter-century after its release. One Direction covered it on their Take Me Home tour, the Aussie pop futurist Peach PRC gave it a hyperpop makeover in 2022, and it’s become a TikTok perennial. As sweet as it is defiant, “Teenage Dirtbag” makes its louder moments land like a falling amp; and its chorus is infectious enough to even get buttoned-up preppies singing along — and maybe even headbanging — in unison.