To compile a "Top 100" for 1990 is to open a time capsule that smells like Aqua Net, cheap beer, and optimism. Based on Billboard Hot 100 performance, cultural impact, and pure nostalgic serotonin, here is the definitive list of the songs that defined the year. These are the songs that weren't just hits; they were inescapable anthems.
Madonna was already a star, but "Vogue" made her a living art exhibit. Inspired by the underground ballroom scene of Harlem, she took gay club culture and put it in the center of the mall. The video is black-and-white perfection. Strike a pose.
The unofficial graduation anthem of 1990. Those harmonies (the daughters of The Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson and John Phillips of The Mamas & the Papas) were like harmonic Valium. "Someday somebody's gonna love you" is a promise we are still waiting on. top 100 songs from 1990
If you lived through 1990, you remember the specific, electric static of the radio dial. It was a year of limbo and genius. The 80s were coughing up their last clouds of hairspray and synth-pads, but the 90s hadn't quite found its grunge flannel yet. Instead, 1990 was a glorious, chaotic buffet of sound: , diva-powered power ballads, the rise of hip-hop’s golden age, and the last great gasp of arena rock.
Was it Mariah’s high note, Hammer’s pants, or Sinéad’s tear? Let us know in the comments below. To compile a "Top 100" for 1990 is
If you play these 100 songs in a row, you don't just hear music. You hear a world getting ready for the internet, for grunge, for the end of the Cold War. You hear the sound of teenagers borrowing their parents' cars, driving to the mall, and turning up the radio.
Love it or loathe it, it was the first hip-hop song to top the Billboard Hot 100. The bass line (stolen from Queen/David Bowie’s “Under Pressure”) is law. The lyrics are nonsense. But when he says "Stop. Collaborate and listen," you stop. You listen. Madonna was already a star, but "Vogue" made
The anti-Hammer. Where Hammer was noise, Sinéad was silence. Her shaved head, the single tear rolling down her cheek in the video, and Prince’s haunting lyrics turned this into a requiem for heartbreak. It is flawless, sad, and utterly timeless.