Current:Home > ContactIt was a great year for music. Here are our top songs including Olivia Rodrigo and the Beatles -LegacyBuild Academy
It was a great year for music. Here are our top songs including Olivia Rodrigo and the Beatles
View
Date:2025-04-19 09:32:39
A year that saw both The Beatles and the Rolling Stones return in a major way could be classified as unpredictable.
The continued emergence of Mexican music and K-pop meant wider mainstream visibility for Peso Pluma, Eslabon Armado, NewJeans and BTS' Jung Kook, demonstrating the continued evolution of the charts spurred by the smorgasbord provided by streaming services.
But it was also a year speckled with plenty of familiarity given the dominance of Taylor Swift, Morgan Wallen, SZA, Olivia Rodrigo and Miley Cyrus, who commanded large chunks of the No. 1 slots on the Billboard Hot 100 and Billboard 200 album chart.
Despite the usual challenge of whittling a list of myriad songs heard throughout the year, here are 10 we haven't tired of yet.
The Beatles 'Now And Then'
This is it. The last unearthed demo that includes all four Beatles. The story behind the song is already well-trod: John Lennon wrote the piano ballad in the late-‘70s, his widow Yoko Ono handed the demo cassette to Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr in the mid-‘90s but even after some tinkering by the remaining Beatles the sound was too cruddy to salvage. Current audio technology – aided by “Get Back” documentarian Peter Jackson – solved that issue. The addition of an orchestral section, a slide guitar solo from McCartney and woven snippets of other Beatles songs (check out the harmonies from “Because” that swoop in near the end of the solo) culminate in a composition that is both simple and grand, wistful and hopeful and a fitting, emotional farewell.
Zach Bryan featuring Kacey Musgraves 'I Remember Everything'
Though it shares a title with a John Prine song, Bryan’s original ballad spotlights his robust, often wrenching, songwriting. The sparse ballad is a wincing conversation between a couple that, unsurprisingly, offers different perspectives. “Strange words come out of a grown man’s mouth when his mind’s broke,” Bryan laments, which is countered by Musgraves’ “You’re drinking everything to ease your mind, but when the hell are you gonna ease mine?” in her woozy cadence. Accompanied only by acoustic guitars and swelling strings, the duo shudders with intimacy.
Miley Cyrus 'Used to Be Young'
Though her “Endless Summer Vacation” album spawned the empowering “Flowers” and wry “Jaded,” this late addition tacked onto the digital version of the album unbuckles Cyrus’ emotional status with clear-eyed realism. Written at the end of her 20s, the lilting song finds Cyrus accepting that the freedom and naiveté of early adulthood are in the rearview (“you tell me time has done changed me/that’s fine, I’ve had a good run”). And regrets? She’s had a few. But, as she sings “those wasted nights are not wasted/I remember every one,” it’s a reminder that even the most cringe-worthy missteps help shape us.
Billie Eilish 'What Was I Made For?'
Metaphorically, Eilish is singing about the flaxen-haired beauty known as Barbie and the existential crisis she experiences in the “Barbie” film. Does Barbie remain in the utopia of doll world or brave the terrifyingly unknown among the humans? But really, Eilish’s words are directed at anyone trying to find their way. Her soft, whispery vocals are different from the lo-fi mumbling that has become her signature sound. Here, Eilish is not only contemplative, but downright sad (“When did it end? All the enjoyment”) as she winds through a maze of feelings.
Foo Fighters 'Rescued'
Most of the band’s 11th album, “But Here We Are,” thrums with an undercurrent of loss, propelled by the 2022 death of Taylor Hawkins, the band’s drummer and one of frontman Dave Grohl’s closest friends. Singing phrases that emphasize the shock of sudden death (“It came in a flash/it came out of nowhere”), Grohl sets the scene from inside his heart. A swarm of guitar and drums allow for catharsis, but then in typical Foo Fighters style, the song dips into a beautiful melody on its chorus, Grohl’s voice alternating between jagged rock yowling and honeyed singing. It is a tale of sound and fury, signifying everything.
Dua Lipa 'Houdini'
The first single from the British-Albanian superstar's upcoming third album – due in 2024 – is more groove-infested than previous radio hits thanks to a psychedelic pop dusting from co-writer Kevin Parker of Tame Impala. Lipa is flirty and playful as she warns, “catch me or I’ll go Houdini” over cascading synthesizers and an unrelenting beat. The song, she has said, “embodies that 4 a.m. feeling when the night is coming to a close and you’re a bit sweaty, but you don’t want the party to end.” No argument here.
Olivia Rodrigo 'Get Him Back!'
While much of the sophomore album (“Guts”) from the upstart pop princess lasers in on her vulnerability as she navigates massive fame, there is also plenty of snappy sass. As she half-raps about her headache of a relationship over a delectable, stomping beat, Rodrigo grows increasingly and gleefully spiteful. The double meaning in the song’s title – she hopes to reunite with an ex, but also, “I want to meet his mom just to tell her her son sucks” – is an indication of Rodrigo’s continued growth as a clever songwriter.
Shakira 'BZRP Music Sessions #53'
The message is clear: Do. Not. Mess. With. Shakira. The Spanish song, crafted in collaboration with Argentine DJ Bizarrap, is a brutal takedown of Shakira’s ex Gerard Piqué, and a towering manifesto on female empowerment. Confident, brash and funny, Shakira unleashes the hissing lines “a she-wolf like me isn’t for rookies” – a nod both to her 2009 hit, “She Wolf” and Piqué’s former career as a renowned footballer - and “I was out of your league, that’s why you’re with someone just like you.” Shakira gets even more personal when she complains that her ex left her with his mother as her neighbor and “a debt with the Treasury.” Meow.
Taylor Swift featuring Ice Spice 'Karma'
At first listen, “Karma” isn’t the most musically intriguing song on Swift’s gazillion-selling “Midnights” album. But that slinky rhythm eventually intoxicates and, more importantly, Swift’s lyrics are a blissful blend of cutting, ominous and simple. “Karma is a cat purring in my lap because it loves me,” she sings sweetly, but then comes another bullseye of a bridge: “Ask me what I learned from all those years/ask me what I earned from all those tears/ask me why so many fade, but I’m still here,” her voice defiant on the last four words. As Ice Spice reminds us with a knowing wink, “Karma never gets lazy.”
SZA 'Kill Bill'
This year’s potential Grammy darling earned her first No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 with the year’s most titillating song. Over a sultry, head-nodding beat, SZA fantasizes “I might kill my ex, not the best idea” as the song shifts from a loping beat into a singsong chorus. It’s hip-hop meshed with R&B in a gloriously demented illusion that shimmers with cinematic depth.
More:KISS delivers explosive final concert in New York, debuts digital avatars in 'new era'
veryGood! (18)
Related
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Aaron Rodgers' recovery story proves he's as good a self-promoter as he is a QB
- Travis Kelce's Chiefs Teammate Rashee Rice Reacts to His Relationship With Taylor Swift
- New Year, Better Home: Pottery Barn's End of Season Sale Has Deals up to 70% Off
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Cyprus minister says his nation leads EU in repatriations and migrant arrivals are down sharply
- Holocaust past meets Amsterdam present in Steve McQueen’s ‘Occupied City’
- US defense secretary makes unannounced visit to USS Gerald R Ford aircraft carrier defending Israel
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Spain’s leader lauds mended relations with Catalonia. Separatists say it’s time to vote on secession
Ranking
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Kamala Harris to embark on reproductive freedoms tour as Biden campaign makes abortion a central issue
- Live updates | UN aid resolution and diplomatic efforts could yield some relief for Gaza
- Russia’s foreign minister tours North Africa as anger toward the West swells across the region
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- This golden retriever is nursing 3 African painted dog pups at a zoo because their own mother wouldn't care for them
- 'Not suitable' special from 'South Park' spoofs online influencers, Logan Paul and more
- 'The Masked Singer' unveils Season 10 winner: Watch
Recommendation
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
'I'm gonna die broke': Guy Fieri explains how his family could inherit Flavortown
Meet 'Ricardo': NJ Transit sells plush toy inspired by loose bull spotted on train tracks
Ja Morant back in Memphis where his return should help the Grizzlies fill seats
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
Meet 'Ricardo': NJ Transit sells plush toy inspired by loose bull spotted on train tracks
New contract for public school teachers in Nevada’s most populous county after arbitration used
Carson Briere, fellow ex-Mercyhurst athlete get probation in wheelchair incident