100 Greatest 90s Songs Today

By mid-decade, the “greatest” lists became impossible to pin down. In 1995, Tupac released California Love (with Dr. Dre), while Oasis and Blur fought the Battle of Britpop. Wonderwall and Song 2 became unavoidable. But the real story was the rise of female artists: Alanis Morissette’s You Oughta Know (1995) turned rage into a commercial juggernaut, and The Spice Girls’ Wannabe (1996) weaponized girl power with a hook that still haunts wedding DJs.

As the decade closed, two seismic shifts occurred. First, Backstreet Boys and *NSYNC perfected the boy-band ballad ( I Want It That Way , 1999), while Britney Spears’ …Baby One More Time (1998) blended teen pop with a Max Martin production that predicted the 2000s. Second, hip-hop went mainstream-mega: Lauryn Hill’s Doo Wop (That Thing) (1998) won five Grammys, and Eminem’s My Name Is (1999) arrived just as the list-makers were finalizing their votes. 100 greatest 90s songs

Then came Macarena (Los del Río, 1995)—a song critics loved to hate, but which spent 14 weeks at #1. Any credible list of the 100 greatest 90s songs must include it, not for artistry, but as a monument to the decade’s love of goofy, unifying dance crazes. By mid-decade, the “greatest” lists became impossible to