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Every Lorde Song Ranked

From ‘Pure Heroine’ classics to brand new ‘Virgin’ releases, here is the very best of Lorde’s discography

Collage of Lorde images

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Since she was 16, Lorde has given us everything. The New Zealand-born pop star seemed to arrive out of thin air in 2013, her first single “Royals” becoming one of the year’s biggest and most beloved hits. Her debut Pure Heroine was even stronger: a sparse electro-pop masterpiece that made it clear she already knew who she was, lightyears ahead of artists twice as old as her.

Each album after has expanded upon that vision, with Lorde sharpening her tools as a bold pop writer while continuing to experiment with her sound. Whether it’s the arena-pop of Melodrama or the indie folk of Solar Power, Lorde is still herself through and through. Ahead of her fourth album Virgin, we’ve ranked every song Lorde has released or appeared on (excluding remixes of her songs and live recordings). Take a look at how the singles, deep cuts, features and covers stack up against one another.

11

‘Writer in the Dark’ (2017)

On this sparse piano ballad, Lorde channels her inner Stevie Nicks as she haunts her lover while realizing she needs to move on. Her voice traverses its full range, from chilling falsettos to a pulsating bass, as she realizes that while she’ll always love her ex she will be happier and more centered without him. It’s “Silver Springs” by way of Kate Bush, icy then warm and overall transcendent. —B.S.

10

‘What Was That’ (2025)

In the same vein as “Green Light,” Lorde reintroduces herself in the wake of heartbreak. “What Was That” has a sharper edge to it, a little more sliced open than she’s ever been before. She plants herself firmly in her new home, New York City, setting the scene for her musical birth everywhere from her home to Baby’s All Right. In the sadness is the type of euphoria she probably felt taking “MDMA in the backyard” as she sings on the chorus. —B.S.

9

‘Hard Feelings/Loveless’ (2017)

With the first half of “Hard Feelings/Loveless,” Lorde offers one of the best meditations on heartbreak of all time. The singer recalls all the aching details of her first love into a poem trickling with so many profoundly personal glimpses, each one cuts deeper than the last until Lorde delivers the suckerpunch to the gut: “When you’ve outgrown a lover, the whole world knows but you.” Meanwhile, the second half of the song is a bombastic juxtaposition that finds Lorde leaning into the callous tendencies of modern love affairs. It’s the best kind of melodramatic whiplash. —M.G.

8

‘Stoned at the Nail Salon’ (2021)

On this sweet and understated Solar Power cut, Lorde proves that it still feels so scary getting old. She ruminates on her choices so far, wondering if she’s made the wrong ones and if there’s still time to change. She’s ready to slow things down, and does so beautifully with the simply, folky arrangement that soundtracks a delicate, intimate vocal performances from her. She’s still wise beyond her years, ultimately wondering if these big, poetic thoughts are real or just a product of being, as the title indicates, stoned at the nail salon. —B.S.

7

‘The Louvre’ (2017)

No song encapsulated the daring sonic rush of Melodrama like this journey through new love so great it deserved to be hung up in the storied Paris museum. Lorde wrote the song to encapsulate “the big sun-soaked dumbness of falling in love,” she said in an interview. “It’s like your whole head is like glue, it’s amazing.” —J.A.B.

6

‘Bravado’ (2012)

Lorde started her first EP with “Bravado,” a dark, stewing cut that captures everything she’s good: aching vocals, moody production, slow, dramatic build-ups. The lyrics feel almost sharply juxtaposed to the musical brilliance in the song as Lorde sings about finding confidence as an artist: “I want the applause, the approval, the things that make me go ‘oh,’” she declares. Luckily, with an arsenal of tracks as good as “Bravado,” she earned all that and more. —J.L.

5

‘Green Light’ (2017)

he four year wait between Lorde’s debut and her sophomore album were more arduous than any other four year wait between albums for the singer. But she delivered something masterful with “Green Light,” the lead single off Melodrama. The bold dance-pop cut was a mature, exhilarating and maximalist return from singer. After scenes from her youth in New Zealand, Lorde was now revealing the intimate realities of dealing with heartbreak while at the top. She teamed with Jack Antonoff this time, still early in his pop production career. The result is bold and cathartic, a breakup post-mortem that celebrates the pain as equally as the release when you finally move on. —B.S.

4

‘Buzzcut Season’ (2013)

Lorde’s memories retain an excess of detail when they find themselves being reformatted into these brief sonic capsules. “Buzzcut Season” is one of her most viscerally vivid. She describes flames leaving kisses on a scorched scalp, frayed hair prime to be buzzed away. The record is vivid, too, in its account of how music and technology offered a great escape for a generation watching its future disintegrate, slowly at first, and then with a quickening speed. ”Explosions on TV/And all the girls with heads inside a dream/So now we live beside the pool/Where everything is good,” she sings, a childlike curiosity in her voice. “The men up on the news/They try to tell us all that we will lose/But it’s so easy in this blue/Where everything is good.” —L.P.