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The 250 Greatest Songs of the 21st Century So Far

25 years of classic hits from all over the musical map and every corner of the globe

250 greatest songs of the 21st century so far illustration

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If there’s anything that defines music in the 21st century, it’s constant change. We live in an era when your next favorite song could come from anywhere — all over the stylistic map, all over the world.  The whole experience of being a music fan keeps mutating all of the time. Back in Y2K, when ‘NSync dropped “Bye Bye Bye,” it was the peak for the era of buying CDs, until that era went bye-bye-bye. Napster happened; so did MySpace and the iPod. Streaming arrived; vinyl came back. New sounds keep getting invented, with the air full of eclectic and experimental songs. If you’re a music fan these days, you’ve got a whole planet of sound at your fingertips.

That’s the spirit behind our list of the 21st century’s 250 greatest songs so far. Like our list of the century’s greatest albums, it’s a wide-ranging mix of different styles, different beats, different voices. Some of these songs are universally beloved hits; others are influential cult classics. But this list sets out to capture the full chaotic glory of 21st-century music, one song at a time.

These tunes come from all over the map. In our Top Ten alone, we go from Stockholm to Compton, from Nashville’s Music Row to New York’s sleazy punk-rock bars. These songs range from Seoul to Spain to San Juan, from Vegas to Veracruz to Versailles, from Nigeria to Mexico to Colombia. There’s reggaeton and K-pop and drill and crunk, country and Afrobeats and emo and sirrieño. But the criterion for this list isn’t popularity or airplay — strictly musical brilliance and originality. Wherever these songs come from, they remind you that we’re living in a time of wide-open possibilities and nonstop innovation. Some of the most famous megastars of our moment — Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, Kendrick Lamar — are also the most adventurous.

Some of these songs come from legendary artists who managed to stay vital across the decades, like David Bowie, Mary J. Blige, Madonna, or Bob Dylan. Others come from teenage dirtbags. We have “Anthems for a 17-Year-Old Girl”; we also have “Drivers License,” an anthem from a 17-year-old girl. We have the ancient country grit of Johnny Cash, who signed off the year Olivia Rodrigo was born. We’ve got one-hit wonders, plus entire genres that came and went overnight. (Take a bow, Christian nu metal.) There’s tortured poetry and raw confessions. There’s also the one that goes, “Baby, you a song.”

We had plenty of arguments while putting this list together — and we enjoyed every minute. It’s a list of songs, not artists, so we mostly avoided repeating multiple tunes by the same performer. But some musical masterminds just had too many classics to deny. (If the universe wants to give Lorde both “Ribs” and “Green Light” in the same career, you can’t tell it not to.) Every fan would compile a different list — that’s the point. But this list sums up an era when there are no rules to follow, no playbooks to obey. Nobody made this list by playing it safe. Read on, turn up the music, explore — and get ur freak on.

You can listen to the whole list here, and to hear an in-depth interview with Missy Elliott about the making of our top pick, 2001’s “Get Ur Freak On,” go here for the podcast provider of your choice, listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or just press play above.

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From Rolling Stone US

11

Bad Bunny, Ñengo Flow, and Jowell and Randy, ‘Safaera’

In 2020, Bad Bunny proved he was an unstoppable force with the release of his second studio album, Yo Hago Lo Que Me da La Gana. But with its standout track “Safaera,” the Puerto Rican musician went even further, cementing himself as the ultimate innovator of Latin music. On the surface, the song is a sticky Caribbean bash about twerking and all-out hedonism, but each dembow blow hits harder, deepening the track’s historical impact. Here, blunt in hand, Bad Bunny ushers in the new, party-hungry musical generation with an artistic feat that spins through decades of references, including a well-timed sample of Missy Elliott’s “Get Ur Freak On,” 10 different rap flows, and bombastic bars from reggaeton legends like Ñengo Flow and Jowell and Randy. —M.G.

10

Frank Ocean, ‘Thinkin Bout You’

It can be easy to forget how shocking it was in 2012 to press play on Channel Orange and, after a short intro, crash into this instant-classic love song. Most people at the time knew Frank Ocean as the most melodic member of the fast-rising Odd Future crew; some might have heard about his experience writing for Beyoncé and Justin Bieber, or tuned into the sample-jacking, genre-surfing buzz around his 2011 mixtape Nostalgia, Ultra. But no one was ready for what he did on “Thinkin Bout You,” cooing sweet romantic metaphors on the verse before unleashing his generationally smooth falsetto on the hook: “Or do you not think so far ahead?/’Cause I been thinkin’ ’bout forever.…” A simple melody, delivered unforgettably — sometimes that’s all it takes. By the time the song was done, Ocean was firmly established at the forefront of both R&B and pop. And while he’s often seemed uninterested in new music in recent years, this song is brilliant enough to keep him in the canon forever, just like he said. —S.V.L. 

9

Britney Spears, ‘Toxic’

All hail the pop queen: It’s Britney, bitch. Britney Jean Spears was the teen-spirit supernova of the Y2K era, the country girl who blew out of Kenwood, Louisiana, to lead a youth explosion on MTV’s Total Request Live. The experts predicted she would fizzle out fast, but she’s spent her career proving them wrong. “Toxic” is the ultimate Britney classic — she never sounded so brash, so confident, so herself. Swedish producers Bloodshy and Avant build her a sonic glam-disco fun house, all spy-movie strings and surf-guitar twang, while she sings in her sly drawl about slipping under an erotic spell. “It’s basically about a girl addicted to a guy,” Britney told MTV. “This villain girl, she’ll do anything to get what she wants.” But when she sings “a taste of a poison paradise,” she could be describing this song. “Toxic” became her signature hit, the one that sums up her legacy as one of pop history’s all-time-great hitmakers. She’s dangerous — and she’s loving it. —R.S.

8

Radiohead, ‘Idioteque’

After they found massive success with their 1997 breakthrough album, OK Computer, Radiohead could have repeated the formula. Instead, they went as far away from conventional rock as they possibly could — to the bunker, to the ice age, to the land of glitchy electronica — for their masterpiece, Kid A. Its peak is “Idioteque,” the propulsive, magnetizing centerpiece about global warming and the fall of society (casual stuff). Guitarist-mastermind Jonny Greenwood cooked up 50 minutes of synth improvisation, and Thom Yorke took just 40 seconds of it, including a stellar sample of Paul Lansky’s 1976 composition “Mild und Leise” that Greenwood discovered off a compilation. “The others didn’t know what to contribute,” Yorke later said. “When you’re working with a synthesizer, it’s like there’s no connection. You’re not in a room with other people. I made everyone’s life almost impossible.” But it was worth it: “Idioteque” became a live staple for the band, and remains a defining moment in its career. Impending doom never sounded so cool. —A.M.

7

Kendrick Lamar, ‘Alright’

The major rap figures of the Nineties and 2000s had been imperiously cool hustlers like the Notorious B.I.G. and Jay-Z, for the most part. Kendrick Lamar became a superstar of the 2010s by leaving every emission, contradiction, and conflicting personal impulse all the way out there. His 2015 album, To Pimp a Butterfly, was a sweeping, jazz-steeped self-interrogation, and its Pharrell-produced centerpiece anthem, “Alright,” reached out for connection and community in a moment of darkness. Fittingly, its call-to-action refrain, “We gon’ be all right,” became a slogan at Black Lives Matter protests the nation over — making the song itself a new-look “We Shall Overcome” for an urgent new wave of activism. “You might not have heard it on the radio all day,” Lamar said in an interview, “but you’re seeing it in the streets, you’re seeing it on the news, and you’re seeing it in communities, and people felt it.” —J.D.

6

Robyn, ‘Dancing on My Own’

Swedish singer Robyn had been making records since the 1990s, but she touched an enormous nerve with “Dancing on My Own,” a sparkling ode to the feeling of carving out your own little world in a corner of the club. Working with fellow Swede writer-producer Patrik Berger, the singer combined isolation and sadness that was tinged with resilience, a sense of using the track’s swirling synths and pulsing groove as a means to push through the romantic betrayal and emotional chaos she sang about in the song’s strikingly unguarded lyrics. “Dancing on My Own” became a pop-culture totem (deployed by Lena Dunham in a pivotal scene in the HBO show Girls), an LGBTQ+ anthem (“Because we get to dance our pain away,” said Sam Smith), and a blueprint for pop artists looking to turn their real experiences and feelings into the stuff of universal pop catharsis. Robyn superfan Lorde summed it up in one word: “Perfect.” —J.D.

5

Taylor Swift, ‘All Too Well’

Taylor Swift’s toughest, rawest, most passionate heartbreak anthem. “All Too Well” began as a five-minute steamroller on Red, a pained love story summed up by the lost scarf her ex still keeps in his drawer, after she left it at his sister’s house. It became a fan favorite, but never a hit or even a single. For years, she wouldn’t even sing it. “It was about something very personal to me,” Swift said. “It was very hard to perform it live.” She thought she’d finished telling this story. But nearly a decade later, she reworked it for Red (Taylor’s Version), digging up the lost verses from her original 10-minute draft — tearing up her own masterpiece to create something new. “All Too Well (10 Minute Version)” became a massive phenomenon, the longest Number One hit in history. (It broke the record set by “American Pie.”) On her Eras Tour, it made stadiums around the world scream “Fuck the patriarchy!” on cue every night. If you’re picking one song to capture the genius of Swift, you can’t top “All Too Well” — whichever version you choose, it’s a classic. —R.S.

4

The White Stripes, ‘Seven Nation Army’

Just when we thought the big, overpowering rock riff was a thing of classic-rock past, Jack White resplendently brought it back from the dead. Famously conceived during a soundcheck during a White Stripes show, “Seven Nation Army” returned raw simplicity and mystery to rock & roll. The title was a reference to the way White would mistakenly refer to the Salvation Army when he was a kid, and the spew of imagery in the lyrics alluded to the scrutiny White and his musical and one-time personal partner Meg were suddenly receiving. “At the time I took some inspiration about some people I knew gossiping,” White said later. But there was nothing cryptic about the power of that riff (played on guitar but sounding like a bass), the tension it builds before the track explodes, White’s elf-in-heat delivery, and a lead guitar that recalled Clapton’s Cream era. As an added bonus, White gave college and high school marching bands the repertoire upgrade they all desperately needed after years of playing Chicago hits. —D.B.

3

Beyoncé feat. Jay Z, ‘Crazy in Love’

From the moment those opening horns explode open the track, it’s clear that “Crazy in Love” is more than just a single: It was a warning to the rest of the pop world that Beyoncé the solo star had officially arrived. Like much of the artist’s work, the song bridges the relationship between the past and the present, with Beyoncé delivering a modernly funky R&B cut. Rich Harrison produced the track, which led off the rollout of the star’s first solo album, Dangerously in Love, and perfectly placed a Chi-Lites sample that gives the track enough of a retro touch to feel like an instant classic. Beyoncé herself sounds effortless: A natural, convincing confidence made her stand out while in Destiny’s Child, and carries the buoyant, catchy anthem. Paired with an instantly memorable verse from Jay-Z, “Crazy in Love” was destined for greatness from the jump, influencing a generation of pop stars in its wake. —B.S.

2

Yeah Yeah Yeahs, ‘Maps’

Though New York art-punk trio Yeah Yeah Yeahs are often celebrated for their off-the-wall energy, it’s a quieter moment that became the band’s most-enduring song. There’s a specific beauty to the stark, bare-naked humanity of Karen O’s performance over Nick Zinner’s quavering guitar: Though Karen often feels like a living firework blazing through the Yeah Yeah Yeah’s most explosive eruptions, she’s suddenly disarmed and unguarded on “Maps,” wielding nothing but a tremble in her voice and the sheer honesty of a heartfelt message. The lore is that the song was about her then-boyfriend Angus Andrew of the band Liars — the title is rumored to be an acronym for “My Angus Please Stay,” a detail that a tear-stained music video seems to confirm — but the real story is almost secondary. What remains in “Maps” is pure feeling, so much so that the song has reappeared as musical inspiration for artists from Kelly Clarkson to Beyoncé over the years. Still, the original has held out strongest through the decades, speaking to anyone who has understood whispered pleas in the face of cruel timing and inevitable goodbyes — and what it means to hold on even when it hurts. —J.L.

1

Missy Elliott, ‘Get Ur Freak On’

Missy Elliott dropped “Get Ur Freak On” just in time to rule the radio in the long, hot summer of 2001 — and nothing was ever the same. It was more than just the latest mind-bending Missy smash — it was a challenge, a dare, the sound of Miss E and Timbaland defying everyone else to keep up with the future or get left behind. The dynamic duo from Portsmouth, Virginia, were music’s most radically innovative team, ever since they flipped hip-hop upside down with their 1997 debut hit, “The Rain (Supa Dupa Fly).”But “Get Ur Freak On” was one step beyond, riding a crazed space-bhangra beat. Timbaland warps a tabla hook into head-spinning Dirty South avant-funk, playing the six-note motif on the tumbi, a one-string Punjabi guitar, while the party people go off in Japanese and Hindi. Missy yells her epic “Hollaaaaa!,” commands all freaks to the dance floor, hocks a loogie, and boasts, “I know you dig the way I sw-sw-switch my style!” It was a nonstop freak manifesto that made the musical future sound limitless. And after more than two decades, “Get Ur Freak On” still sounds like the future — everything vibrant and inventive and cool about 21st-century pop is in here somewhere. Holla, forever. —R.S.