This is a music trope for the (usually) one song by an artist that everyone knows. It doesn't matter how people know the song — maybe it was all over the radio, maybe it was used in a movie, maybe it was used in a TV show, maybe it was used for an ad that got played over and over and over again — but people know it.
These songs tend to be songs with an Epic Riff; they can also be Black Sheep Hits. It's also possible for an artist to have more than one Signature Song, especially one for two or more distinct phases of their career. Whatever the case, these songs are very likely to be awesome.
Some of the more rabid members of the artist's fandom may accuse one of not being a true fan for disliking the artist's Signature Song, even if said person may like every other song that the artist has recorded — or, inversely, liking the Signature Song more than what Fanon considers the artist's "real best work".
Sometimes the signature song isn't the artist's biggest hit (see Chart Displacement). It also doesn't necessarily run in line with their Signature Style (see Black Sheep Hit).
The song can also be famous due to its inclusion in a certain work. The songs that are potholed are examples of these.
If they made an appearance in Guitar Hero or Rock Band, it's probably this song. If the artist was a composer of Classical Music, the song is probably a Standard Snippet now.
In earlier times, such as the 1930s and 1940s, it was not uncommon for a band or singer to open their set with their signature song or at least a few bars of it, especially when they appeared on radio. With the advent of television talk shows, it also became common for the studio band to play a few bars from the artist's signature song as he or she walked onstage.
To stop people from leaving at gigs after they've heard the song,note these songs are normally played live either at the end of the main set or during the encore. Not performing it at all may result in an Iconic Song Request. Some artists or bands will actually avert playing their signature at all. Be it because they consider it an Old Shame, a target of Misaimed Fandom, because they would rather try out some deep cuts on that tour, or any other reason.
Some musicians arguably avert this by having several equally famous hit songs; The Beatles, Eminem, Michael Jackson and Elvis Presley being prominent examples. As such, if they'd left off one of their hits from a show it wouldn't have been such an obvious oversight. That said, certainly some of their songs are more identified with them than others. A Black Sheep Hit is somewhat more likely to fall victim to this, for obvious reasons.
Occasionally, an artist can have a signature song that is eventually usurped by another song (although this could be temporary). It's also possible for an artist to have different signature songs in different countries. Additionally, one could have different signatures songs for different audiences. Though a rare occurrence, it's possible for two different artists to have the same signature song.
Signature songs may be slightly different from region to region, as well.
See One-Hit Wonder for an extreme case of this trope. Not to be confused with Leitmotif or Character Signature Song, which is about signature songs sang by fictional characters. Related to Song Association.
Example Subpages:
Examples:
- Six Flags — Vengaboys' "We Like to Party" has become synonymous with the franchise due to its usage in the memorable and highly memetic "It's Playtime" commercial from 2004.
- JoJo's Bizarre Adventure has two choices for songs most strongly associated with the series: Yes' "Roundabout", the Real Song Theme Tune for the first season, and "il vento d'oro", the Theme Music Power-Up from Part 5. Both became huge memes, making them extremely memorable to anyone with any amount of familiarity with JoJo.
- Macross:
- Super Dimension Fortress Macross: Lynn Minmay — "Do You Remember Love", which not only shares its name with the movie and features heavily in the climax, but has gone on to become of the most iconic songs in the entire franchise. Not only does it play a major role in the climax of the anime version of Macross Frontier, it was also re-recorded by the casts of Frontier and Delta for the 40th Anniversary album.
- Macross Frontier:
- Sheryl Nome — "Diamond Crevasse", which she sings during a major Music for Courage moment in the anime and the first Compilation Movie and has become iconic among fans for marking a major shift in Sheryl's character development.
- Ranka Lee — "Seikan Hikou" has become memetic for its prominent usage of Ranka's Kira pose. It has become popular enough that many Nico Nico Douga mashups will feature it. Many people have gone on to Watch It for the Meme because of this song and the gesture, and referencing both has become a common Stock Shout-Out to the franchise in Japanese media.
- "Diamond Crevasse" and "Seikan Hikou" are so iconic of their respective singers that not only did JUNNA and Minori Suzuki (the singing voices for Mikumo and Freyja in Macross Delta) cover them (the latter song even being sung by a young Freyja in a flashback), but they also got the chance to duet them with both May'n and Megumi Nakajima respectively when they guest starred in one of Walkure's concerts.
- For both of the Idol Singers — "Lion", the second opening, has become iconic for its usage in the various fight scenes in the anime and Compilation Movies. Like the aforementioned "Seikan Hikou", it features in many different Nico Nico Douga mashups.
- Macross Delta:
- Freyja Wion — "Rune ga Pikatto Hikattara", the first ED, which debuted near the top of the Oricon charts and for a brief time was the number one song on the Japanese iTunes store. One might even argue it can be viewed as the Signature Song for Walkure as a whole, as its resemblance to Earth, Wind & Fire's "September" has not lead to several different mashups on YouTube, but has led many people around the internet to Watch It for the Meme.
- Mikumo Guynemer — "Ikenai Borderline", which is another iconic song from Walkure that plays during prominent moments in the series, but is more associated with Mikumo due to it matching her mature and alluring nature.
- Ichiro Mizuki: Despite his 50 year long career and a discography of over 1,200 songs, up until his passing of December of 2022 his most famous hit was the the opening of Mazinger Z, the one that catapulted him to fame. He would often begin or end a concert with Mazinger Z, and it wasn't unusual for him to begin with it and then sing it again at the end as an encore.
- Neon Genesis Evangelion has two contenders: "A Cruel Angel's Thesis" (the series' theme song), or any cover version of "Fly Me to the Moon").
- While Pokémon the Series has had several theme songs over the years, two in particular are easily the most iconic, "Mezase Pokémon Master" from the original Japanese version, and the aptly named "Pokémon Theme" from the English dub. Both were the first theme songs used for their respective versions, and both have received more covers, both official and unofficial, then any other song.
- Pleasant Goat and Big Big Wolf has had a lot of different theme songs over its run, but the original theme from season 1 is still the most popular song from the show. The original theme song is still associated with Pleasant Goat several years after the show began using different theme songs. This might be because the original theme song is still used here and there, just in the closing instead of the opening.
- Batman — The Title Theme Tune from the 1960s TV show and Danny Elfman's composition from the 1989 film are equally cherished among the fandom. And while Hans Zimmer's composition for The Dark Knight Trilogy and Junkie XL's compositions for the DC Extended Universe have their fans, the two aforementioned themes are the most ingrained in pop culture.
- The Addams Family — the theme song
from the 1960s series is so notoriously catchy that it has been used as the theme song of pretty much every adaptation of the comic.
- Peanuts — "Linus and Lucy", the Bootstrapped Theme of the animated specials. Its two most famous uses are in the opening scene to It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown (where Linus and Lucy take the pumpkin home from the pumpkin patch) and the oft-parodied dancing scene in A Charlie Brown Christmas.
- SOSchip:
- "Don't Look Back in Anger.". It's used as prominent Background Music in many episodes of the series, is sung in the episode "Hype Derailed", and in the original fanfic the song is performed multiple times. Several other contenders are "Yonen wa Shinu", Nine Inch Nails' "The Four of Us Are Dying" With Lyrics — and most notably "La Mer", also by Nine Inch Nails.
- "Let It Go" is invariably associated with Frozen (2013) over its other songs, being from the film's most beloved and parodied scene; its official YouTube uploads have amassed millions, if not billions of views.
- "It's Our House Now" is by far the most remembered thing from the House of Mouse straight to video movie Mickey's House of Villains, which features all the animated Disney Villains singing as they take over the titular club.
- Across both Rio and its sequel, no song is more well known then "Hot Wings (I Wanna Party)" due to the fun and catchy lyrics, the scene in question being very enjoyable to watch and it being the first point in the movie where Blu and Jewel's feelings for each other truly become obvious.
- Jennifer Saunders's cover of "Holding Out for a Hero" is the most iconic song from Shrek 2, from the film's most iconic scene. It's more associated with this film than its original artist.
- The Super Mario Bros. Movie at one point features a scene where Bowser sings a Villain Love Song called "Peaches", about his crush Princess Peach. The song quickly became regarded as a highlight of the film, with many "'Peaches', but every time he says 'Peaches', X happens" memes being made out of it shortly after the film released.
- The Transformers: The Movie: "The Touch" by Stan Bush is this for punctuating two of the coolest scenes in a film filled with them. For many fans it serves as the Signature Song for the entire franchise.
- Among the many songs featured in the Trolls movies, Justin Timberlake's "Can't Stop The Feeling" is considered the most iconic, having amassed over one billion views on YouTube in the years following the release of the first film. It also topped the Billboard Hot 100 charts the year it came out, further cementing it as the song of the franchise. Timberlake and Anna Kendrick's cover of "True Colors" is a close second, though, due to being what is regarded as the most emotionally charged scene in the feature.
- For Turning Red, FINNEAS and Billie Eilish wrote "U Know What’s Up" to be this for 4*Town. The producer, Lindsey Collins describes it as being written to be, In-Universe, "a hit song that everybody knows".
- For Up, "Married Life" is the song that is stuck in everyone's heads due to it tied to the emotional prologue. If you want someone to start crying, play the first few notes of the song and watch the fireworks.
- The Crow: Even on a soundtrack packed with bangers from alt-rock, industrial and goth icons, it’s Burn by The Cure that became the movie’s defining track. The song plays over Eric Draven’s transformation into the Crow, with Robert Smith’s anguished vocals and the track’s eerie layering fusing with the film’s dark, tragic atmosphere. Despite never being released as a single, it’s now considered one of The Cure’s most iconic deep cuts and is forever bound to the film’s cult legacy.
- "Arrival to Earth" is the most enjoyed track from the Transformers Film Series, and one of the few parts of the series that is universally agreed to be amazing. Fans were very happy when a portion of it was heard during the climax of Transformers: Rise of the Beasts.
- Linkin Park's songs, meanwhile, have become iconic components of the films, often associated with the emotional tone and endings of the trilogy’s major installments.
- What I’ve Done played during the ending credits of Transformers and Optimus Prime’s closing monologue, this track became the anthem of the Bayverse. It’s so bound to the franchise that it resurfaced as a nostalgic meme in 2022, spoofing its iconic credits roll.
- New Divide was written for Revenge of the Fallen and this song’s heavy riffs and haunting synths were even worked into the score itself. It plays during the Shanghai prologue, Optimus’s rescue of Sam, and the film’s credits—becoming forever tied to imagery of the desert battle, the pyramids, and Prime’s death.
- Iridescent, served as the credits theme for Dark of the Moon. This more melancholic track lent a somber farewell tone to the trilogy’s original cast. Its use in trailers and credits cemented it as the franchise’s emotional epilogue.
- Linkin Park's songs, meanwhile, have become iconic components of the films, often associated with the emotional tone and endings of the trilogy’s major installments.
- Star Wars: John Williams’s work on Star Wars produced some of the most recognizable compositions in cinema.
- "Binary Sunset": Played when Luke gazes at Tatooine’s twin suns, this track embodies longing, destiny, and the mythic scope of the saga. It became the Force’s musical calling card, reprised in pivotal moments throughout the trilogy (and later films).
- "The Imperial March": Debuting in The Empire Strikes Back, this dark, martial theme became synonymous with Darth Vader, the Galactic Empire, and menace itself. Even people who’ve never watched Star Wars know it as “Darth Vader’s Theme.”
- "Battle of Hoth": The sweeping, desperate, militaristic composition during the opening battle of Empire is so memorable that even without visuals, fans recognize the rhythm of AT-ATs bearing down. It set the tone for “hopeless but heroic” fights across the saga.
- "Cantina Band" : This playful, jazzy number introduced the idea of “diegetic music” in Star Wars and has become a pop-culture shorthand for “alien bar music.”
- "The Emperor’s Theme": Haunting, minimalistic, and ominous, it defined Emperor Palpatine’s sinister presence in Return of the Jedi. Its chanting chorus and sinister harmony cemented him as the ultimate manipulative evil.
- "Duel of the Fates": The undisputed anthem of the prequels. Its pounding chorus and epic orchestration turned every lightsaber clash into a mythic battle. It’s so iconic that Lucasfilm kept reusing it in trailers, TV spots, and later material. Even people who despise the prequels agree this track is an all-timer.
- "Across the Stars": The sweeping, tragic love theme for Anakin and Padmé. It became the leitmotif for their relationship — both romantic and doomed.
- "Battle of the Heroes": The tragic counterpart to “Duel of the Fates,” this theme underscores Anakin and Obi-Wan’s fateful duel on Mustafar. It mixes epic scope with heartbreaking inevitability, making it one of the saga’s most emotional pieces.
- "Order 66 Theme" / "Anakin’s Betrayal" : Somber strings and choral voices accompany the fall of the Jedi. It’s not as bombastic as the dueling tracks, but for many fans, this haunting piece is forever tied to the franchise’s most devastating turning point.
- "Augie’s Great Municipal Band": A clever subversion — it sounds triumphant and joyful at the film’s end celebration, but it’s a brighter reworking of the Emperor’s Theme, hinting at the darkness to come.
- A.N.T. Farm: "Calling All The Monsters" remains far and away the most well known song from the series, due to it becoming an unofficial Halloween anthem, leading to Disney still using it in promotions for Halloween well after the series ended.
- Inai Inai Baa!:
- "Guruguru Dokkan!", the 2003-2011 exercise song, is by far the most popular song of that type on the show. It was so popular that several post-2011 Inai Inai Baa!-related media have included the song.
- The most popular U-Tan Puppet Show song is "Toire de su", the toilet-training song. Toys that play it have been made, and it was one of the few U-Tan Puppet Show songs to be used in the Live on Stage! shows.
- "Tonton Tomato Chan" is the most popular song segment that doesn't fall into a particular category. Its' popularity among the target audience of the show lead to a sequel song, a short segment that played during the show itself and even a book adaptation.
- Okaasan to Issho:
- "Dango San Kyoudai" was this in the 1990's era, to the point where the CD single became one of the top-selling singles of all time in Japan. There was also a ton of merchandise based on the song as well as a short based on it that played during episodes of the show.
- Despite first appearing on the show in 2006, "Boyoyon Koushin Kyouku" has become the most popular song from Okaasan To Issho, spawning many unoffical and official covers. It's also one of the few non-exercise songs on the show to have an extended version.
- The Sopranos: Alabama 3's "Woke Up This Morning" wasn’t written for The Sopranos, but you’d be forgiven for thinking it was. Used as the show’s iconic opening theme, its gritty, bluesy trip-hop sound and dark, rebellious lyrics capture the tone. The intro—Tony Soprano driving through New Jersey, cigar in mouth, heading home to his suburban kingdom—syncs so well with the song that it becomes impossible to separate the track from the character. So iconic, in fact, that many fans were thrilled to hear it again over the ending of The Many Saints of Newark, a nod that helped soften the blow of that film’s more divisive reception. It was a musical homecoming that reminded everyone what made the original show so unforgettable.
- Victorious: "Take a Hint" is the most well-known and referenced song from the show, due to being one of the few times Tori and Jade team-up, being considered the best beat in the show, and for coming at the end of the very popular "Tori & Jade's Play Date" episode.
- WandaVision has plenty of musical themes, but the most notable one is "Agatha All Along" since it is the only song from the show to top the iTunes charts as well as the fact that the song has received a large amount of Memetic Mutation.
- 12 Stones — "We Are One" or "Broken"; however, the most famous song that lead singer Paul McCoy was ever involved in by far is "Bring Me to Life"
- 3OH!3 — "Don't Trust Me" could be considered and their single "Starstrukk" with Katy Perry was also a massive hit.
- 50 Cent — "In Da Club" or "Candy Shop" are always associated as the first songs you think of.
- AC/DC — "It's a Long Way to the Top (If You Wanna Rock 'n' Roll)" was the song typically associated with Bon Scott, and the band retired the song after his death in 1980. It's also regarded as the band's signature song in their native Australia. Outside of Australia, the signature song of the Scott era is likely "Highway to Hell" or "TNT", which are very popular also thanks to Brian Johnson who continues to perform them. For Johnson's songs it's either "Back in Black", "Thunderstruck" or "You Shook Me All Night Long". They have many very popular songs, though.
- Afrojack — "Take Over Control" was his highest-charting hit as a lead artist, but "Can't Stop Me" is also remembered due to its success in dance clubs.
- a-ha — "Take on Me" may very well be the most successful pop song ever recorded by a Norwegian act. In the U.S., they are still commonly considered one-hit wonders.
- Alanis Morissette — "Ironic" is probably her best-known song, with "You Oughta Know" also right up there.
- Alicia Keys — "Fallin'" from her first album. She's also well-known for "No One", "Girl On Fire", and "Empire State of Mind" with Jay-Z.
- Alien Ant Farm — Most famous for their Cover Version of Michael Jackson's "Smooth Criminal".
- Alter Bridge — "Rise Today", which is even acknowledged by the band themselves because it usually is their closer during concerts. Also up there is "Metalingus", which while never an actual single is best known for being the long-time entrance song to legendary professional wrestler Edge.
- American Authors: "Best Day of My Life" is their only hit, due to it being used in all sorts of commercials and movies in the mid-2010s.
- Andy Williams: His cover of "Moon River" from Breakfast at Tiffany's.
- Aqua — "Barbie Girl", which was one of the songs that defined The '90s and their biggest hit by far. Some go so far as to label them a One-Hit Wonder, though they did have other songs that charted.
- Aretha Franklin — "Respect" is considered the ultimate empowerment anthem; the chorus where the title is spelled out continued to be one of the most iconic lines in musical history.
- Ashnikko — Her breakthrough hit, "STUPID" blew up on TikTok.
- Avenged Sevenfold — "Bat Country", their Breakthrough Hit, remains the band’s best known song to this day, though its follow-up "Beast and the Harlot" is not far behind.
- Bachman-Turner Overdrive — "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" and "Takin' Care of Business" are their most well known hits.
- Backstreet Boys — "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)" is a popular party song. "I Want It That Way" could also qualify as their most popular ballad.
- Bananarama — "Venus" or "Cruel Summer"; while the former was a bigger hit in its heyday, its status as a Cover Version could give the latter, which was their original song, the advantage.
- Barry White — "You're the First, the Last, My Everything" and "Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe", his top two songs on Spotify.
- The Beatles — The band has so many iconic songs that it is impossible to single out just one as their signature (though "Hey Jude", "Yesterday", "Here Comes The Sun", "Let It Be", "All You Need is Love", "Blackbird", "While My Guitar Gently Weeps", "In My Life" and "Come Together" would probably be the first picks), but during the peak of Beatlemania in The '60s, "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and "She Loves You" would've held the title.
- However, there's no denying that the signature song of John Lennon's solo career is "Imagine", the quintessential anthem of World Peace.
- For George Harrison instead, it's "My Sweet Lord", probably the most famous song ever that fuses rock and gospel, and it's also worth mentioning that its parent album All Things Must Pass is the best-selling album by a solo Beatle.
- For Sir Paul McCartney's solo career (not including Wings), it's easily "Maybe I'm Amazed", with "No More Lonely Nights" coming second. For Wings, it's either "Band on the Run", "Live and Let Die", or "Silly Love Songs".
- Ringo Starr's most iconic solo song is probably "Photograph".
- The Bee Gees — "Stayin' Alive" from the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack, which made the group the face of disco music around the world, and becoming the unofficial Signature Song of the entire genre.
- Beyoncé — "Crazy in Love", "Irreplaceable", "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)", "Halo", "Run the World (Girls)", "Drunk in Love", "Sorry", and "Formation" are probably her most popular to date, but depending on the time period, it could really be any of her singles.
- Big Time Rush is an interesting case. While the show was on their most popular songs were either the show's theme song or "Boyfriend" but in the years since it comes down to either "Worldwide" or "Paralyzed"
- Billie Eilish — "Bad Guy" was the song that turned her from cult favorite to worldwide superstar, becoming her first #1 hit and was essential to her sweeping the "big four" Grammy categories in 2020.
- Billy Joel: "Piano Man" takes the cake, but "Uptown Girl", "We Didn't Start the Fire", "Just the Way You Are" and "She's Always a Woman" definitely count as well, and "Vienna" has pretty much become his quintessential album track.
- Bing Crosby — He used "Where the Blue of the Night Meets the Gold of the Day" as his 'official' signature tune. In one Bob Hope movie, Crosby's surprise cameo appearance at the very end was accompanied by an orchestra version of the opening bars of this song. Nowadays, Crosby's signature song is likely "White Christmas", which remains the best-selling single of all time.
- Blackfoot — "Highway Song" and "Train, Train" (both from Strikes) are their most notable songs, being their top two on Spotify and none of the rest of their songs are even close.
- blink-182 — "All The Small Things" and "I Miss You", arguably down to Tom DeLonge's unique vocals. ("All The Small Things" is arguably helped by the NHL's Colorado Avalanche adopting it as a victory song and riding that momentum to a 2022 Stanley Cup, for which blink-182 would congratulate them.)
- Blur: Their grunge parody Song 2, which is ironically one of the most iconic grunge songs, but their Britpop classics like Country House, Girls & Boys, Parklife, There's No Other Way, and Coffee & TV aren't far behind.
- Bob Dylan — Many songs qualify, given his long and incredibly influential career, with "Like a Rolling Stone", the counterculture anthems "Blowin' in the Wind" and "The Times They Are a-Changin", "Knockin' on Heaven's Door" and "Hurricane" all being frontrunners for the title in that regard.
- Bob Seger: "Old Time Rock and Roll". It was only a moderate hit initially, but became his signature due to its famous use in Risky Business. "Night Moves" is likely the closest contender, with "Turn the Page", "Mainstreet", "Against the Wind", his cover of "Little Drummer Boy", and "Like a Rock" (which was very popular in the 1990s and early 2000s thanks to its use in Chevrolet truck commercials) also being up there.
- Bon Jovi — "Livin' on a Prayer", full stop. "You Give Love a Bad Name", "Wanted Dead or Alive", "It's My Life" and "Always" are runner-up songs, but "Prayer" remains their best known song overall.
- Bruce Springsteen — "The Boss" has had many iconic songs, but two songs of his in particular were "born" for this status: his 1975 Breakthrough Hit "Born to Run" and his 1984 song "Born in the U.S.A.", which has become appropriated as a symbol of American patriotism (despite actually being anything but).
- Although by far less representative of his songwriting, "Dancing in the Dark" is technically Springsteen's biggest international hit, and easily his most streamed song on the internet. There's also "I'm on Fire," which is one of his biggest hits and one of his most streamed and popular songs; strangely enough, most compilations lack the song.
- Bruno Mars — He had several huge hits since his career first took off in 2010, but his signature song is likely one he was not officially the lead artist for: "Uptown Funk!" was released with producer Mark Ronson as the lead artist, with Mars as a guest. However, it became a 14-week chart-topper, won the Record of the Year Grammy, and was named the biggest hit of the 2010s by Billboard Magazine. "When I Was Your Man" could also count.
- Caravan Palace is known for "Lone Digger". Not only is it one of the most prominent songs of the brief 2010s electro swing revival, the lyrics, energy, and awesome vocals make it stand out. Also, its infamous music video, which is sexual and gory despite starring Funny Animals and being animated.
- Coldplay — "Yellow" from the earlier career. "Paradise" is also massively popular, and opened the band to pop audiences. Also counting are "Viva la Vida", "The Scientist", "In My Place", "Every Teardrop Is a Waterfall"... Just to mention a few, since they have quite a lot of very popular tracks.
- Corey Hart — "Sunglasses at Night". It even named a trope.
- The Cranberries — "Zombie", "Linger" or "Dreams." Of those three, "Zombie" (which is also a Black Sheep Hit) was the first to get over a billion views on YouTube.
- Cream — A highly beloved band among fans of classic rock, but "Sunshine of Your Love" and their cover of "Crossroads" stand out above the rest. The former is famous for its iconic riff, and the latter is a staple of Eric Clapton during his solo career.
- Creedence Clearwater Revival — A tough call since they had many widely popular hitsnote , but two of them narrowly beat out the rest: "Fortunate Son" - largely due to it being used in many Vietnam War themed memes and movies, and easily being their most popular song in America - and "Have You Ever Seen the Rain" - often used in commercials, their most streamed song on the internet (though "Fortunate Son" is close behind) and easily their most popular song in Europe, as well as among pop audiences who may not be familiar with the band.
- HEALTH — "Crimewave" is their most well-known song in part due to the Crystal Castles remix. However, their cover of the Units' "High Pressure Days", known as "High Pressure Dave", has easily become a contender thanks to its appearance in Grand Theft Auto V.
- Cults — "Always Forever" and "Gilded Lily", both having blown up on TikTok over the past four years.
- Cyndi Lauper — "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" is the female empowerment anthem of the 1980s and her most streamed song on Spotify. "Time After Time" and "True Colors" are close behind however, being her second and third most streamed songs on Spotify.
- David Bowie — As his first hit, "Space Oddity" is usually regarded as this, since the range of his career and resultant arguments over his best era make it hard to settle the question otherwise. However, songs such as "Life on Mars?", "Rebel Rebel", "Starman", "Let's Dance", and especially "'Heroes'" have become competitors for the title in recent years. While relatively early in his canon, "Changes" kinda pokes fun at this, and (ironically) became another one of his signature tunes.
- Bowling for Soup — "1985" is easily their most streamed song and spawned more covers than the rest of their work.
- Deep Purple — The band has many beloved songs, but without a doubt, "Smoke on the Water" is their most recognizable, especially among entry-level guitar players.
- Def Leppard — "Pour Some Sugar On Me", followed closely by "Hysteria", "Photograph", "Animal" and "Love Bites" on Spotify.
- Depeche Mode — "Enjoy the Silence" is their most covered and most famous song, with "Personal Jesus", "Never Let Me Down Again", and "Everything Counts" all trailing behind in recognizability and notability. "Just Can't Get Enough" is this for Vince Clarke's brief stint with the band, while "Walking In My Shoes" and "It's No Good" are the signature songs for their mid-nineties albums. For their post-Turn of the Millennium work, "Precious" is this by far.
- Disturbed — "Down with the Sickness" was considered their signature song, and for all intents and purposes it is, considering the band ends almost every live show with it as their encore. However, as of 2015's album "Immortalized", the band has also become synonymous with their rendition of Simon and Garfunkel's signature song "Sound of Silence", becoming their sole mainstream music hit.
- Duran Duran — "Hungry Like the Wolf" is their overall most famous song, being their Breakout Hit in the US, one of the most iconic new wave hits of the '80s, and remains their most enduring song among a discography of numerous pop hits. Other close contenders would be "Rio", "Save a Prayer", "The Reflex", "A View to a Kill", and for their '90s comeback, "Come Undone" and "Ordinary World".
- Dusty Springfield — "Son of a Preacher Man", "I Only Want to Be with You" and "Wishin' and Hopin'" receive far more airplay and recognition than any of her other songs.
- Eagles — "Hotel California", the title track to their 1976 album, is the one song everyone knows by them, even people who weren't even born when the song was released. Second place is their debut hit "Take It Easy".
- Eminem — A few examples.
- "Lose Yourself" from 8 Mile is his biggest song to date, as it charted at number one on 24 national charts worldwide, including US Billboard Hot 100. It's also the third oldest song to be in the top 100 songs streamed on Spotify.
- "My Name Is" his Breakout Hit and Black Sheep Hit. The "chkka-chkka" disc scratch sound effect used in the song is used throughout the rest of Eminem's discography as a Leitmotif for his Slim Shady character, long after other rappers had stopped using disc scratching.
- "The Real Slim Shady", which codified Slim's character as The Gadfly, and an actual threat to society via being an Anti-Role Model who his fans were emulating anyway.
- "Stan", a Murder Ballad that was initially never meant to be a single, is Eminem's most critically celebrated song and led to the word 'stan' getting added to the dictionary to mean a Loony Fan.
- "'Till I Collapse" was not a hit when first released (it was not a single), but had a Revival by Commercialization in the early 2010s and, on Spotify, is not only his second most-streamed song, behind the aforementioned "Lose Yourself", but it's also the platform's most-streamed non-single.
- "Rap God" is the signature song of his post-overdose career, due to its lyrics wryly summing up the course of his career and its outrageous level of technical aptitude. Unlike the other entries, it's a favourite among people who rap themselves - it was the #1 most viewed lyrics page on Genius for a good half-decade (it is currently #2, replaced by Justin Bieber, Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee's "Despacito", a megahit in Spanish that led many people Googling for a translation).
- "Killshot" is also notable for being a second Career Resurrection for Eminem after his apologetic, responsible Recovered Addict persona was really making people turn on him, going back to his older style of dropping obliterating insults on white rappers and popstars he hates to make what is currently the highest charting Diss Track of all time.
- "Venom" has stuck around due to its highly catchy chorus making it an internet meme favourite.
- Enrique Iglesias — "Hero" is one of the most famous ballads of the early 2000s.
- Europe — During their prime, this was arguably "Carrie", their Black Sheep Hit ballad from the album The Final Countdown. Nowadays, however, it's without a doubt the title track.
- Evanescence — "Bring Me to Life" is not only their biggest hit, but quite possibly the most recognizable female-led rock song of the entire 21st Century.
- Fall Out Boy — "Thnks Fr Th Mmrs", "Sugar, We're Going Down", and "Dance, Dance" are all tied for their 2000's output. From their 2010s output, the Signature Song is either "My Songs Know What You Did In The Dark (Light 'em Up)" or "Centuries".
- The Foundations — "Build Me Up Buttercup" with nothing else even coming close.
- George Michael — "Careless Whisper" is George's most famous solo song along with "Faith" and "Freedom".
- Godspeed You! Black Emperor — "The Dead Flag Blues" is their most famous song by a margin, but "East Hastings" and "Sleep" could also qualify (The former notably being featured in the film 28 Days Later). However, "Storm" is their most popular song on several streaming services, which might just be because its the first song on their most famous album.
- Good Kid — "Mimi's Delivery Service", after it got an influx of covers on TikTok in mid-2023. This also lead to a ton of fanart of Mimi herself, due to her cute character design and personality, which Good Kid asked for and highlighted in a video featuring the song.
- Gorillaz — "Clint Eastwood" introduced them to the world. while "Feel Good Inc", "DARE" and "Rhinestone Eyes" may also qualify.
- Green Day — A few candidates: "Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)" is probably their best-known song of their 1990s output (due to extensive use in soundtracks and for being a staple of graduation ceremonies) along with "Basket Case", which is easily their most streamed song on the internet of that period. Not far behind are "Longview", "When I Come Around" and "Welcome to Paradise", all from their breakout album Dookie. "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" from American Idiot is their most popular song of their 2000s work and their most commercially successful song to date, with three other Idiot songs — "Wake Me Up When September Ends", "Holiday", and the title track — also in the running. Then, there's also "21 Guns". "Going To Pasalacqua" was, pre-Dookie, their most popular song by some distance, and still gets a good crowd reaction. They've made a lot of well-known songs, though.
- Haken's most popular song is "Cockroach King", thanks to a combination of being Awesome Music and having a humorous video in which a Muppet version of the band does a Bohemian Parody. In response to its popularity, Haken would go on to create two whole albums based on the Cockroach King, Vector and Virus.
- Harry Styles — "Watermelon Sugar" became popular thanks to TikTok. But, "As It Was" has likely usurped it, given it spent fifteen weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100 in 2022.
- Heart — In the 70s, "Barracuda". In the 80s, either "What About Love?", "Never", "These Dreams", or "Alone". Overall, "Barracuda" could claim the throne.
- Idina Menzel — "Let It Go" from Frozen is her best-known song, and she closes her live concerts with it. A close second is "Defying Gravity" from Wicked, though that's technically a duet with Kristin Chenoweth.
- "Wytches" by Inkubus Sukkubus is their most iconic song, summing up the main themes of the band's music. In the 2016 concert at Blackfriar's Priory, lead singer Candia outright states its the song that they can't really get away from, for better or worse, right before they perform it as the closing number of the show.
- Inner Circle — "Bad Boys", due to it being the theme song of the long-running series COPS.
- Jhariah:
- "Flight of the Crows", for its emotional lyrics and tone. Special mention goes to the spectacular, theatrical finish in the final 30 seconds.
- "DEBT COLLECTOR" has become popular for its uniquely fast-paced, high-energy tone, awesome lyrics, and use of synth and drums.
- John Barrowman — "You're So Vain"; the orchestral arrangement makes it immediately recognizable from Carly Simon's version.
- Josh Turner — "Your Man" is his absolute best-seller, being certified 3x Platinum, and is perhaps the best showcase of his characteristic bass voice.
- Journey — More than forty years after its release, pretty much everyone in the world will instantly recognize "Don't Stop Believin'". It memorably was used in the final episode of The Sopranos and was the first song ever covered on Glee.
- Keane — "Somewhere Only We Know", which is by far his most streamed song, especially on Spotify.
- Justin Timberlake — After leaving *NSYNC, his most famous solo songs include "Sexyback", "Cry Me A River", and "Rock Your Body" from the early 2000's, and "Mirrors" and "Can't Stop The Feeling!" from the mid-2010's.
- Kanye West — The songs that are contending for that title are "All Falls Down", "Jesus Walks", "Gold Digger", "Stronger", "Heartless", "Power", or "All of the Lights", but depending on the time period, it could really be any of his songs.
- Katy Perry — "I Kissed a Girl" made her very popular, but "Firework" is widely agreed to be the song that shot her to superstardom and still used for many different occasions.
- Kendrick Lamar — While "Swimming Pools" was his first mainstream success, "Alright" won him a Grammy for Best Rap Song and later on became a Black Lives Matter anthem. However, "HUMBLE." seemed to have won the title overall... until the feud with Drake spawned the incredibly catchy "Not Like Us", which catapulted its way into number one, became a cultural icon, and netted Lamar five Grammys.
- Kenny Loggins: "Footloose" or "Danger Zone". For the record, the former is Loggins' only #1 song on the Billboard Hot 100; the latter only peaked at #2 but has been referenced more often in pop culture, being a bombastic rock song associated with fighter jets, whereas "Footloose" may be seen by some as just another catchy pop-dance song in a decade filled with catchy pop-dance songs. "I'm Alright" is probably up there as well due to the popularity of Caddyshack.
- Kings of Leon — "Use Somebody" and "Sex on Fire" were incredibly popular and are their most well-known singles.
- Kool G Rap — "Fast Life" for most Hip-Hop music fans, particularly for his duet with none other than Nas. However, for those who are not too familiar with Hip-Hop, most will know Kool G Rap from "Road to the Riches", one of the most memorable songs from the Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas soundtrack.
- Korn — There's really only two candidates, and it's the traditional bookends to their live shows: "Freak On A Leash" for being the most popular of their songs, decades after the fact, and "Blind"; the opening track of their debut album, known for its crowd-spurring intro: "Are... you... READY?!"
- Lady Gaga — Usually comes down to a tie between "Just Dance", "Poker Face", and "Bad Romance".
- Led Zeppelin — "Stairway to Heaven" is pretty much the quintessential classic rock album track, and is known for its iconic guitar riff. They have several contenders, though ("Immigrant Song", "Whole Lotta Love", "Kashmir", "Ramble on", "Going to California", just to name a few...).
- In addition, during their prime years each of the band's instrumentalists had a song heavily associated with them, with the musician being given an extended solo to show off during the song. "Dazed and Confused" for Jimmy Page, "Moby Dick" for John Bonham, and "No Quarter" for John Paul Jones.
- Lene Marlin — Still most strongly associated with the two breakout hits from her first album, "Unforgivable Sinner" and "Sitting Down Here".
- Lil Nas X — The two biggest candidates are "Old Town Road", which topped the Hot 100 for a record 19 weeks, and "MONTERO (Call Me By Your Name)", which had a controversial yet wildly popular music video and had him be much more open about his queerness.
- Linkin Park — Given their vast discography, it’s no surprise they have several contenders for the title.
- In the End: One of the band’s most recognizable tracks worldwide. Even non-fans can recite the lyrics by heart, and the late Chester Bennington himself called it a live-show staple. For many, this is the definitive Linkin Park song — the perfect fusion of their rap–rock and emotional styles.
- Numb: Another major contender, bolstered by its haunting melody and massive online presence. Thanks to Memetic Mutation (through countless remixes, mashups, and emotional edits), “Numb” remains one of their most enduring and recognized songs.
- What I’ve Done, New Divide, and Iridescent: All three owe their place in pop-culture memory to the Transformers movies (see the Film folder). They became inseparable from the series’ high-stakes, end-credits energy, making them the Bayverse’s emotional soundtrack.
- Burn It Down: Marked the band’s continued evolution into more electronic sounds, while still retaining their signature intensity and became one of their defining tracks of the 2010s.
- The Emptiness Machine: From the band’s post-Chester era with Emily Armstrong on vocals. This number emerged as the standout anthem of Linkin Park's rebirth in the 2020s, resonating with both longtime fans and newcomers as a powerful statement of rebirth and continuation.
- Fort Minor — Originally this title belonged to "Where'd You Go", the only hit song off of the project. Over time, however, this would become its follow-up "Remember the Name", which, while performing poorly on most charts, continued to be prominent as a sports anthem and a staple of movie trailers.
- Little Big Town — Tough call between "Pontoon" or "Girl Crush". The former was their biggest hit on country radio and their most popular song amongst their core demographic. The latter, on the other hand, is their biggest hit on the Hot 100 and their most widely known and beloved song to general audiences.
- Living Colour — "Cult of Personality", which was by far their biggest chart hit in the US and only major pop crossover. Especially re-enforced via Song Association with pro-wrestling superstar CM Punk.
- Loreen — Both of her winning Eurovision songs could be considered; "Euphoria" or "Tattoo".
- Lovebites — Usually conclude their concerts with "We the United" and/or "Under the Red Sky"
- Lynyrd Skynyrd comes down to a two-way tie between "Sweet Home Alabama", their iconic anthem of Southern Pride which is their best known song to the greater public, and "Free Bird", a classic rock radio mainstay that inspired the Iconic Song Request and is the more popular song with their core demographic. Close behind is also "Simple Man", a quintessential album track in rock history.
- Madonna is nicknamed the "Material Girl" for a reason. "Like a Virgin", "Like a Prayer", "Vogue", and "Hung Up" are also contenders.
- Måneskin — Hard to pinpoint exactly which one it would be. Some would say it's their cover of "Beggin'", some would say it's "I Wanna Be Your Slave" while Eurovision fans would most likely associate them with their winning song "Zitti e Buoni".
- Mariah Carey — "All I Want For Christmas Is You" is universally (in)-famous and one of the most played songs during the festive period. "Fantasy", "Emotions" and "Without You" are very popular for showing her incredible voice.
- Marilyn Manson — "The Beautiful People", "The Dope Show", and their Darker and Edgier cover of Eurythmics' "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)" are probably the first songs that come to your mind whenever you think of them. Other contenders are "Rock Is Dead", "Disposable Teens", or "Long Hard Road Out of Hell".
- McFly
- Since the band's attempt to break into America ultimately failed not helped by being tied to the movie Just My Luck, some of the few people who got into the band from the movie best know them from the movie's climax song "I've Got You"
- MC Hammer — "U Can't Touch This", his 1990 Breakthrough Hit, has been credited with making Pop Rap viable in the mainstream. Ironically enough, it was not his highest charting song due to its limited availability as a commercial single, but it's the only song of his with any modern day presence in pop culture.
- Meat Loaf — "I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)", largely due to the mass confusion over what "that" is (even though the verses spell it out). "Bat Out of Hell", "Paradise by the Dashboard Light", "Two Out of Three Ain't Bad" and "You Took the Words Right Out of My Mouth (Hot Summer Night)" are also strong contenders.
- Megan Thee Stallion — "Body" is her biggest hit to date or her (in)famous duet with "Cardi B", "WAP".
- Metallica — While many of their songs are iconic, "Master of Puppets", "One", and "Enter Sandman" are the clear frontrunners.
- Michael Crawford — In the wake of the international acclaim he received as the title character in the original West End and Broadway productions of Andrew Lloyd Webber's The Phantom of the Opera, the show's Villain Love Song "The Music of the Night" became the signature song of his recording and concert career.
- Michael Jackson — The "big three" of the Thriller album take the cake here. "Billie Jean" is considered the song that brought about his coronation as the King of Pop and introduced the world to his signature "moonwalk" dance. "Beat It" was a clash of pop and rock titans thanks to Eddie Van Halen's guitar playing. And the title track, while only peaking at #4, has arguably the most famous music video of all time and remains a Halloween staple. His best-known non-Thriller song is probably "Smooth Criminal" from Bad, as its video featured one of Jackson's most iconic outfits in his white suit, and led to the most famous cover version of any of his songs — its 2001 Nu Metal remake by Alien Ant Farm.
- Miguel — Was initally “Sure Thing” before “Adorn” eclipsed it in popularity, but seems to be reverting to the former thanks to TikTok.
- Miike Snow — "Animal" at first, but now most definitely "Genghis Khan", though the former is back to being this for them in the UK due to the remix being used as the theme tune of Friday Night Dinner.
- Miracle Musical: "The Mind Electric" is the most popular song on Hawaii: Part II, for its intense story and heavy use in fan projects.
- Molly Hatchet — "Flirtin' With Disaster" is by far their most popular song, spending ten weeks on the top 100, being their most streamed song on Spotify (and the rest aren't even close) and appearing in numerous films and TV shows.
- The Monkees — "Daydream Believer" and "I'm a Believer" are more or less tied for the top spot and are their top two most streamed songs on Spotify, with "Last Train to Clarksville" being a close third.
- Moon Walker — Initially his debut single "Devil", which remains his most streamed song on Spotify, but his newer material "New God", "Monopoly Money", and "HAPPY FACE" have seen much more success. Honourable mentions include "I'm Afraid I'll Go To Heaven", "The TV Made Me Do It", and "Regular People".
- LeaF — "MopeMope" is easily one of her most infamous songs due to posing as a cute and innocent song featuring smiling flowers in the music video...that proceed to turn into horrific Botanical Abominations as the song turns into a hardcore remix of itself.
- My Chemical Romance — "Welcome to the Black Parade", famous for its instantly-recognisable piano intro and "When I was...a young boy...", in an example of a verse being more iconic than the chorus (although the chorus's "We'll carry on, we'll carry on!" is rather recognisable as well). To a lesser extent, "I'm Not Okay (I Promise)" and "Helena" (aka "So Long, and Goodnight").
- Nancy Sinatra — "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'," her very first US hit and a landmark of the Swinging Sixties.
- Ne-Yo — "So Sick" was a massive hit and has since been sampled by many other artists. "Miss Independent" and "Closer" are the two closest contenders.
- Nickelback — "How You Remind Me" was their biggest hit and most streamed song, though "Photograph" and "Rockstar" are also very popular through usage in memes.
- Nicki Minaj — "Starships" is her most well-known song.
- Nicola Roberts — A weird example. "Beat of My Drum" is technically her most commercially successful song, but her unofficially released single "Sticks + Stones" is widely considered as her best song (to date) and is an Ensemble Dark Horse track on her debut album.
- Nirvana — "Smells Like Teen Spirit" from Nevermind is the band's biggest hit, and quite possibly the defining song of The '90s, being responsible in part for bringing both Grunge and Alternative Rock music to a mainstream audience and ending the dominance of Hair Metal.
- Noah — "Separuh Aku" is their biggest hit after the name-change from Peterpan and is still the song that will likely to be brought up when talking about "Noah's song". Peterpan, on the other hand, had more songs that still remain in Indonesian public consciousness ("Mimpi Yang Sempurna", "Semua Tentang Kita", "Ada Apa Denganmu", "Mungkin Nanti", "Menghapus Jejakmu").
- LP - "Lost on You", while it debuted in 2015, it got notoriety when appearing in "Orange Is the New Black" the next year and became her most popular song.
- Orleans — "Dance With Me" and "Still the One" are their only widely-known songs, being their top two on Spotify and the others aren't even close.
- For Otava Yo, the iconic track is Финская полька
, Finnish Pol;ka, that allows the band members to sign off and which closes every gig.
- Owl City — "Fireflies" without question. Chances off, if one brings up the band, this will be the first song to come to everyone's head.
- Panic! at the Disco — "I Write Sins, Not Tragedies", although the 2018 hit "High Hopes" has also become well-known in recent times.
- Passion Pit: "Sleepyhead" was certified double platinum in the US, and was used as the launch trailer theme for LittleBigPlanet 2.
- Peter Gabriel is mainly known for "Sledgehammer" due to its iconic Music Video.
- Phil Collins — "In the Air Tonight" is no doubt his most popular song as a solo artist and most streamed song on Spotify. Runners-up would be "Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now), his cover of The Supremes' "You Can't Hurry Love" and "Another Day in Paradise.
- Phoenix — "1901" and "Lizstomania" are by far their most famous songs.
- Pink Floyd — While they have several popular songs, but "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2" from The Wall probably takes the cake here, being their only #1 hit and having a very distinctive theme railing against the education system. The other song which would take the cake and is the most representative contender is easily "Wish You Were Here", although it wasn't even released as a single at first. Also in the running are "Money", the biggest hit from The Dark Side of the Moon, and "Comfortably Numb", also from The Wall.
- The Pointer Sisters — "I'm So Excited" is their most streamed song on Spotify and is frequently used in film and TV. The closest contender is "Jump (For My Love)".
- The Proclaimers — "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)" is by far their best-known song, within the UK and internationally. "Sunshine On Leith" is a strong contender, particularly in Scotland for its association with Scottish football* - that's the song their Jukebox Musical is named after, not "500 Miles".
- PSY — "Gangnam Style" was the song that broke down the barrier for K-pop music to succeed outside South Korea. It was, for a long time, the most viewed music video on YouTube and the first to ever hit the one-billion view mark.
- Pusha T — "The Story of Adidon", a diss track aimed at Drake, is by far his most notorious.
- Pussycat Dolls — "Don't Cha" put them in the mainstream spotlight. "Buttons" became popular recently despite being relatively older in their discography thanks to TikTok.
- Queen has many, many, hugely iconic songs, but even then, one song stands above all: "Bohemian Rhapsody", to the point that it gave its title to Freddie Mercury's biopic. Serious contenders are also "We Will Rock You/We Are the Champions", "Don't Stop Me Now" and "Another One Bites the Dust".
- Rev Theory — "Voices" is undoubtedly their best known song despite never being an actual single that was promoted to radio. This is because it is the longtime theme music for iconic professional wrestler Randy Orton. Technically, it isn’t even an actual Rev Theory song, but rather a solo song by frontman Rich Luzzi (although credited to the band as a whole).
- Randy Travis — "Forever and Ever Amen" is a staple of classic country music.
- Reba McEntire's signature song would either be her cover of Bobby Gentry's "Fancy" (which made the Top Ten on Billboard's Hot Country Hits in 1991.) or her cover of Vicki Lawrence's "The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia" (made number 12 on the Hot Country Songs chart and is her most frequently played song on radio). Both are also her top two most streamed songs on Spotify. Other candidates include "I'm a Survivor", which was also the theme song of her self-titled sitcom (albeit shortened and with the lyrics rearranged), or "Consider me Gone", her fourth most streamed song on Spotify, among her later work.
- Redbone — "Come and Get Your Love" full stop. None of their other songs have received even a fraction of the recognition.
- Rick Astley — "Never Gonna Give You Up", thanks in part for the music video becoming the basis for one of the most well-known memes on the Internet, the Rickroll. In his heyday, "Together Forever" could rival it though.
- Robbie Williams — Celebrated a very successful solo career after leaving Take That! in the mid-90s. His most popular song would be "Angels" but "Let Me Entertain You" and "Rock DJ" could also be considered, especially with the controversial video for the latter.
- The Rolling Stones — "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" was the band's biggest chart hit and is considered the song that made them The Beatles' main rivals. The role is shared nowadays by "Paint it Black", their most streamed song on the internet and one of their biggest hits as well. Of course, there are two non-singles that are particularly iconic, as it often happens in rock music: "Gimme Shelter" and "Sympathy for the Devil". "Start Me Up" is also very well-known, and their biggest hit ever on Mainstream Rock.
- Rush — "Tom Sawyer" is by far their most famous song, but "2112", "Limelight", "The Spirit of Radio", and "Fly by Night" are all favorites among audiences as well.
- Saint Motel: "My Type" and "Cold Cold Man" are some of their most played songs and are staples of their concert line-up, for being unconventional love songs that still have a genuine sentiment behind them. The songs are even more popular in Europe, where "My Type" was certified platinum and is frequently used in TV commercials.
- Sam Smith — "Unholy" was incredibly popular after blowing up on TikTok. Before then, "Stay With Me".
- Scott Helman: "Sweet Tooth", mainly due to it being incredibly high-energy and catchy.
- Seether — On pop radio, "Broken" was the band’s only hit and thus their signature song to that format. On their home rock format, "Fake It" is definitely their most recognizable song. Runners-up include "Remedy", their first song to top any rock chart, and "Country Song", easily their most successful 2010s song.
- Set It Off (Band): "Partners in Crime" is one of their most streamed songs, for its awesome story, excellent duet vocals, and Twist Ending. It also lends itself pretty well to Fan Vids.
- Shaggy — "Boombastic", "Angel", and "It Wasn't Me" are his most iconic songs. Since the latter two are duets with other singers providing the lead vocals (Rayvon and Rickardo "RikRok" Ducent respectively), one could argue that "Boombastic" is Shaggy's true signature, especially thanks to its famous use during the "Biggie Cheese" musical number in Barnyard, which reached meme status around 2016. Not to mention Mr. Bean dancing to it.
- Shinedown — "Second Chance", as among their many #1 hits on mainstream rock radio, it was their sole pop crossover.
- Simple Minds — In the United States, "Don't You (Forget About Me)", as it was their only song to top the charts there, tied to one of the most iconic films of the 1980s. Otherwise, of the songs written by the band, their best-known is "Alive and Kicking".
- Smash Mouth — "All Star" obviously counts as this due to being their highest-charting hit on the Billboard Hot 100 at #4, and being featured in a wildly successful animated movie which certainly helped it garner Memetic Mutation. Kids of The New '10s are most likely to only know the band because of the memes that song spawned, to the point where the band is assumed to be a One-Hit Wonder.
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor: "Murder on the Dance Floor", especially with its resurgence in 2024 because of its usage in Saltburn, introducing a new generation to her. It became her first hit on the Top 100, and her music video for "Freedom of the Night" that same year directly takes inspiration from the video for "Murder on the Dance Floor".
- Spice Girls — "Wannabe", "Spice Up Your Life" and "2 Become 1" would all be synonymous with them.
- Stampeders — "Sweet City Woman" is by far their largest hit, especially outside their native Canada.
- Status Quo — "Whatever You Want" if you count the material written by any of the band members; "In the Army Now" and "Rockin' All Over the World" if you consider the material they Covered Up; "Pictures of Matchstick Men" in the USA.
- Stevie Ray Vaughan — "Pride and Joy" is his most streamed song on Spotify and most frequently played on radio stations.
- Survivor — "Eye of the Tiger" remains one of the most iconic songs of the 1980s thanks to its use in Rocky III and continued presence as a sports stadium anthem.
- Talking Heads — "Psycho Killer" is probably their overall best-known song and most streamed track on the internet, but also "Once in a Lifetime" continues to be one of the band's best-known songs and one of the most famous tracks of the 80s thanks to its iconic Surreal Music Video and the many, many parodies it received over the years. The song so thoroughly eclipses the rest of the band's output that a Greatest Hits Album and a retrospective Boxed Set were both named after it, and it remains a staple of frontman David Byrne's live performances as a solo act. The other song that comes close to it is "Burning Down the House", which was their biggest chart hit.
- Tally Hall:
- Starting in the early 2020s, "Ruler of Everything" became more and more well known, as it became a staple of several meme edits. Even besides that, it's the multiple tone shifts the song goes through, and the memorable lyrics.
- "The Bidding" has over 220 million streams on Spotify and is their second-most streamed song (behind "Hidden in the Sand"), thanks to it blowing up on TikTok and its lyrics undergoing Memetic Mutation (it's most known for "I've been sleeping in a cardboard box").
- From Good & Evil, there's "Turn the Lights Off," known for being incredibly catchy in addition to having a dark and vague story. It's become a popular choice for Fan Vids.
- For Rob Cantor as a solo artist, there's "Shia LaBeouf" Live, thanks to the memes surrounding the song (including involvement from Shia LaBeouf himself).
- Taylor Swift — "Tim McGraw", "Teardrops On My Guitar" and "Our Song" put her on the map, with her later well-known singles including "Shake It Off", "Love Story" and "Bad Blood".
- Tears for Fears — "Shout" and "Everybody Wants to Rule the World" are undoubtably this, being two of the most recognizable songs from The '80s. To younger generations it's easily the latter, which dwarfs the former on Spotify. "Mad World" could be considered this, but it's usually overshadowed by the Gary Jules cover from Donnie Darko, while "Head Over Heels" and "Sowing the Seeds of Love" are both fairly popular in their own right.
- The Doors — "Light My Fire", "The End" - notably being featured in Apocalypse Now, "Riders on the Storm", "Break on Through (To the Other Side)", "L.A. Woman", and "People are Strange" are all easily well known even decades after Jim Morrison's passing.
- Thin Lizzy — "The Boys Are Back in Town" is their most recognizable song by far, receiving ample airplay and being streamed more than any other song in their discography.
- Tina Turner — "What's Love Got to Do with It" is easily the signature of her solo career and her entire singing career as a whole. It was even the title of her 1993 biopic. "The Best" could be considered the strongest contender. Her signature song from when she was still paired with her ex-husband Ike is either their cover of Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Proud Mary", "Nutbush City Limits" or "River Deep, Mountain High"note .
- TLC — "Waterfalls" and "No Scrubs". "Waterfalls" is widely considered to be their quintessential 90s R&B song, although "No Scrubs" can also be argued as this too.
- Tom Cardy: "Red Flags", the duet about a man going on an awkward date with a woman who has a disturbing obsession with The Human Centipede. The song led to plenty of Fan Vids of people using their own favorite couples, and it's seemingly for this reason that a Gender Flip version was recorded, with the lyrics staying mostly the same (mainly changing gendered terms like "best man") but sung by the opposite person.
- Tony Bennett — "I Left My Heart in San Francisco", "I Wanna Be Around", "The Good Life" are the answers amongst Tony's fans, but for the general public his most iconic song is "Rags to Riches" due to its association with GoodFellas.
- TWICE has several contenders. These are the biggest ones: "Cheer Up" was the group's Breakthrough Hit, the Ho Yay-heavy "What Is Love?" is their most-viewed video, "Fancy" is their most-streamed song on Spotify and is well-known for transitioning the group into a more mature sound that "Feel Special" solidified, and first original English single "The Feels" cemented Twice as one of the most popular K-pop girl groups in the West.
- Twin Tribes — "Fantasmas" is the breakthrough hit that is most associated with them, which the duo even acknowledge. They say it was somewhat expected since the song sticks out in the Ceremony album for being more energetic and intense, with its Spanish chorus being easier to connect to, especially amongst those who speak in two languages since they live in a border town.
- Twisted Sister is best known for two songs: "We're Not Gonna Take It" and "I Wanna Rock", thought the latter is probably more well-known for the SpongeBob parody version "Goofy Goober Rock".
- U2 — A lot of candidates, but "With or Without You," "One" and "Beautiful Day" and "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For" are probably the leads, and the latter is a high contender also thanks to being their most covered song. "Sunday Bloody Sunday", "Pride (In the Name of Love)", "Where the Streets Have No Name," "Mysterious Ways", "Desire" and "Vertigo" are also very popular and recognizable songs, and are their most played live songs, along with "I Will Follow", which can be considered as their first classic overall. They have many popular songs overall.
- UB40 — Their cover of Neil Diamond'snote "Red Red Wine", followed closely by their cover of Elvis Presley's "(I Can't Help) Falling In Love With You"
- Utada Hikaru — "First Love". Also "Simple And Clean", especially in America, due to its association with Kingdom Hearts I.
- Van Halen — "Jump" was their only #1 hit on the 100, while "Panama", "You Really Got Me" (which Covered Up the original version by The Kinks), "Running with the Devil", "Ain't Talking 'Bout Love" and "Hot for Teacher" aren't too far behind.
- Van Morrison — "Brown-Eyed Girl" is his overall biggest hit, and the most popular song of his career among average audiences. Among the most popular classics of Morrison's career, although they weren't all big hits on the charts, are also the Moondance signatures (the Title Track, "Into the Mystic", "Crazy Love" and "And It Stoned Me"), "Have I Told You Lately", "Bright Side of the Road", "Domino", "Days Like This" and the classic he penned with his early career band Them, "Gloria".
- Vaughn Monroe — "Racing with the Moon", the song was even used on the advertisements he recorded for RCA Victor.
- Village People — "YMCA" has appeared in countless shows, movies and ads and is frequently subject to parody. "Macho Man" is the closest second, however.
- Vladimir Vysotsky — He was and still is beloved in Russian-speaking countries, and "Koni Privredlivye" (Fastidious Horses) is probably his most famous song, and if anyone outside of those areas has heard any of his work, it's probably that one in particular because of its use in movies like Atomic Blonde and White Nights. Otherwise, songs like "Wolf Hunt" and "The Song About a Friend" are also staples.
- Vocaloid producers:
- For Kanaria, it would undoubtedly be "KING," thanks in no small part to just how many people have covered the song without it ever truly being Covered Up. The image of GUMI enthroned, crown in her lap, is practically a visual Mad Libs Catchphrase - the creator of the cover will replace GUMI with the character of their choice, or if they're a Virtual YouTuber, with their own avatar.
- Supercell has three: the early Miku hit "Melt," the classic "World Is Mine," and the downright legendary "Black Rock Shooter."
- The late Wowaka is well known for the likes of "Ura-Omote Lovers," "World's End Dancehall" and "Unknown Mother Goose," but the most famous of all (and indeed one of the most famous Hatsune Miku songs, period) would have to be "Rolling Girl."
- For Pinocchio-P, it would be "God-ish". This is also thanks in no small part to the number of people covering the song without it being Covered Up. It has its own visualized Mad Libs Catchphrase of Miku as a nun holding a cigarette in her right hand.
- Balloon has "Charles", once again with its own visual Mad Libs Catchphrase of a street as overlooked from a balcony with buildings on the side, rendered in red and sepia.
- SAWTOWNE has "M@GICAL☆CURE! LOVE ♥ SHOT!", which was his winning entry of the Miku Expo 10th Anniversary Song Contest.
- Waterparks: "Stupid for You," "I Miss Having Sex But At Least I Don't Wanna Die Anymore," and "Turbulent" are their three most streamed songs by far, due to their popularity on TikTok.
- The Weeknd — For some time, it was "Can't Feel My Face" (with "Earned It", "The Hills", "Starboy" and "I Feel It Coming" not far behind), but "Blinding Lights" has usurped it, spending 90 weeks on the Hot 100, including four weeks on top, on its way to being the Billboard #1 song of 2020, and becoming the single most streamed song on Spotify.
- Westlife — They were very popular for their ballads, mostly "Flying Without Wings" or "You Raise Me Up". They also released a popular cover of Billy Joel's "Uptown Girl".
- We The Kings would be either their breakthrough "Check Yes, Juliet" or their duet with Demi Lovato "We'll Be A Dream"
- Whitesnake — "Here I Go Again", in particular the 1987 re-recording. Their only other songs that come close are "Is This Love" and "Still of the Night".
- Whitney Houston's cover of Dolly Parton's "I Will Always Love You", performed with such Grammy-conscious gusto, became so big of a hit that she considered it her signature song, so much to the extent that she filed a lawsuit banning anyone else — even Parton herself — from performing it.
- The Who — The theme songs to the three core CSI-verse television series ("Who Are You", "Won't Get Fooled Again", and "Baba O'Riley") are generally considered the frontrunners for this status along with "My Generation" and "Behind Blue Eyes" (which are their most streamed songs behind "Baba O'Riley" and very iconic songs in rock history — and in the case of the latter, for being [in]famously covered by Limp Bizkit). Other contenders include "I Can See for Miles" (their biggest commercial hit in the US and the theme song to the relatively forgotten fourth CSI show), and, even more, "Pinball Wizard" (the signature song of the seminal rock opera Tommy, as well as one of their most popular and streamed songs and very often played live).
- Will Wood:
- "I / Me / Myself" has the most streams of any song from The Normal Album for its satirical look at gender identity and general applicability in The New '20s.
- "The Main Character" has become the breakout on "In case I make it". Despite the song being intentionally narcissistic and tone-deaf, it's a lot of fun to sing along to and is undeniably catchy. Many have been quick to associate it with their favorite fictional characters, particularly those of the Evil Is Cool variety.
- Wiz Khalifa — While he is mainly known for his purely rap works, it is the pop rap ballad "See You Again" from Furious 7 that he is most famous for in the public eye, due to it being a tribute to the franchise's late star Paul Walker and becoming a popular anthem for high school and college graduations.
- YOASOBI has "Yoru ni Kakeru/Into the Night" as their top song, with "Gunjou/Blue" and "Tabun/Probably" being close contenders. It helps that Yoru ni Kakeru has a visual Mad Libs Catchphrase of its own, with the main character's eyes being obscured by pink marker scribbles.
- ZZ Top — "La Grange" is their most streamed song online. Though "Sharp Dressed Man", "Gimme All Your Lovin'", "Tush" and "Legs" are all close contenders.
- The music from The Cheetahmen is by far the best-known thing about Action 52, thanks to it being one of the few things about the compilation that is remotely competent.
- Battle Garegga: "Stab and Stomp!", the stoic and bass-heavy theme for aerial boss fights. It's most synonymous with the Stage 5 boss, Black Heart, who is regarded as the most iconic boss in the game, and representing a paradigm shift from the four prior bosses.
- CookieRun: Kingdom: "When the Snow is Warm" is the most well-known songs as it is synonymous to "The Frost Queen and the Lantern in the Storm", itself one of the most bittersweet stories in the game with both an acoustic and lyric version that can make even the most stoic of hearts break.
- The Devil May Cry series has "Devils Never Cry"
from Devil May Cry 3: Dante's Awakening, "Devil Trigger"
from Devil May Cry 5, and "Bury the Light"
from Devil May Cry 5: Special Edition. Fittingly, these are all the main themes of the series' three main characters; Dante, Nero, and Vergil respectively.
- Donkey Kong Country has "Stickerbush Symphony
" from Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest, a soothing techno piece that serves as the foremost example of the surprisingly beautiful music the series is known for. It was popular enough to receive a more fast-paced remix in Super Smash Bros. Brawl followed by it reappearing in Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze.
- The Moon theme
from Duck Tales is without a doubt not only a Signature Song for the game, but also for the entire NES library and even the entire DuckTales franchise. The theme proved to be so popular and iconic that when the animated series received a reboot, the song was featured as a lullaby.
- Final Fantasy has been renowned for its music for thirty-five years, and so it's accrued numerous songs recognizable among the gaming community:
- For the series as a whole, the "Prelude
", "Main Theme
", and "Victory Fanfare
" are constants of the series and have appeared in most of its many installments, as well as outside of them. The Main Theme was even played at the 2020 Summer Olympics Parade of Nations in Tokyo, alongside other video game songs.
- Final Fantasy IV's "Battle 2
", originally played during boss encounters in that game, has gone onto to be featured in both Final Fantasy XIV and Super Mario RPG, and has been rearranged in the Dissidia Final Fantasy spinoff titles, making it one of the most well-known themes from the game.
- Final Fantasy V's most well-known song is, by far and away, "Battle on the Big Bridge
". The theme music of recurring Superboss Gilgamesh, it has followed him across most of his appearances in other games in the series, always playing whenever the heroes of whichever game confront him.
- Final Fantasy VI has three possible choices: "Terra's Theme
", the theme of main character Terra Branford that plays as the Overworld music and is rearranged throughout the game at various points; "Aria Di Mezzo Carratere
", which plays both during the Operahouse scene where Celes disguises herself as a famous opera singer and later on when she awakens in the World of Ruin; and "Dancing Mad
", the eleven-minute Final Boss theme of the game that has become Kefka Palazzo's theme song whenever he appears in other titles.
- The Compilation of Final Fantasy VII has "One-Winged Angel", the Final Boss theme of the original Final Fantasy VII game and the Bootstrapped Leitmotif for the Big Bad of VII, Sephiroth. It has become one of the most recognizable songs in all of gaming, with its first few notes being near-instantly recognizable (as many reaction videos of Sephiroth getting into Super Smash Bros. Ultimate can testify). Outside of that, "Aerith's Theme
" is another incredibly recognizable song that plays during one of the biggest Tear Jerker scenes in video game history, and "the Overworld theme
" is usually rearranged at various points throughout VII and its spinoffs.
- Final Fantasy VIII's two most famous songs are "Liberi Fatali
", the stunning operatic theme that plays during the game's opening movie, and "The Man With the Machine Gun
", the theme that plays during the flashbacks with Laguna Loire. Both of these songs tend to be the ones that even the game's detractors find themselves liking, and are associated with some of the game's most iconic moments.
- Final Fantasy IX's main vocal theme, "Melodies of Life
", is featured extensively throughout the game at both critical points in the game's story and through its many rearrangements and variations. Beyond that, "You Are Not Alone
" is well-remembered for the emotional gameplay sequence it plays during at the game's climax, not being interrupted by the standard battle theme or the victory fanfare.
- Final Fantasy X has the iconic "To Zanarkand
", a simple but beautiful piano piece that plays during the game's intro and receives multiple variations thereof throughout the game; "Otherworld
", which plays during the game's opening movie and its Final Boss fight, which became the Bootstrapped Leitmotif of Jecht in spinoff titles; and "Suteki Da Ne
", the main vocal theme of X which plays during Tidus and Yuna's time together as Macalania Spring and was released as a single on its own.
- Final Fantasy XII has the "Esper Battle
" theme, which is considered a highlight by XII's fans and has been remixed in the Dissidia series, thus solidifying it as one of the main music tracks associated with the game.
- Final Fantasy XIII's two main battle themes "Blinded by Light
" and "Saber's Edge
" are favorites among both fans of the game and its detractors, the former for its heavy usage of violins and the latter for its epic sound. Both songs have gone onto appear in spinoff titles, and are generally the most well-known songs for people outside of XIII's fanbase.
- Final Fantasy XV's "Apocalypse Noctis
" was featured heavily in promotion for the game, as well as the credits for Kingsglaive: Final Fantasy XV, and received a brand-new remix in Tekken 7 to accompany Noctis' Guest Fighter appearance in that game, essentially making it the Bootstrapped Leitmotif of Noctis.
- Final Fantasy XVI has "Away
", an operatic orchestral track which serves as the theme of the Phoenix, and plays during the fight between the Phoenix and Ifrit in the game's opening as well as the Phoenix's segment of the Bahamut boss fight, while also being rearranged throughout the game. "Find the Flame
" is another, being a similarly-operatic track but more intense, which serves as the main theme song of Clive Rosfield and accompanies him in spinoff appearances like Final Fantasy XIV and Final Fantasy Brave Exvius, and also receives a Triumphant Reprise titled "All As One
" during XVI's Final Boss fight. Both "Find the Flame" and "Away" were used heavily in promotional material for XVI, and both serve as the respective themes of the Rosfield brothers, Clive and Joshua. Beyond their themes, ''Ascension
" became well-remembered for its usage during the sprawling boss fight against Bahamut, which is often pointed to as a Signature Scene for the game itself.
- For the series as a whole, the "Prelude
- The infamous song "El Sonidito" from the Mexican band "Los Hechizeros Band" became this during taxi rides in Grand Theft Auto V thanks to its constant beeping sound and a voice saying UN. DOS. TRES. CUATRO.
- The signature song for the Guitar Hero franchise is "Through the Fire and Flames
" by DragonForce from Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock. The song became legendary for being the hardest track in the entire series, to the point that it cracked the Billboard Hot 100 and got a little airplay on rock radio.
- Halo: Few game soundtracks are as recognizable as the Halo Theme. The opening Gregorian-style chanting and swelling orchestral build have become synonymous not with the franchise, but with epic video game music in general. Even people who’ve never picked up an XBox controller can identify it. The theme has recurred in almost every mainline installment, remixed, reorchestrated, and performed in symphonies worldwide. For fans, those first few notes are enough to summon images of Master Chief, ringworlds, and humanity’s last stand against impossible odds.
- When you think The King of Fighters, pretty much any mix of either "ESAKA"
or "Stormy Saxophone"
note (appropriately enough, being the main themes of Kyo Kusanagi and Iori Yagami, respectively, the two faces of the franchise) will definitely come to mind. The most iconic iterations of each track originate in, coincidentally, KOF '96, the third entry in the series — being "ESAKA?"
note and "Stormy Saxophone 2"
in particular.
- The Legend of Zelda: Some games in the series are associated with a song (or melody) in particular. Twilight Princess has Midna's theme incorporated in several of its songs (most notably the overworld theme) while Skyward Sword is pretty much synonymous with the Ballad of the Goddess.
- Like a Dragon, thanks to sharing a publisher with a certain blue hedgehog (mentioned below), has a lot of iconic tracks, whether we're going by the regular battle themes (e.g., "Funk Goes On"
or "Outlaw's Lullaby"
), boss themes (there's "Fly"
, "Assassination of Boddhisattva"
, and "Pledge of Demon"
), or karaoke tracks (e.g., "Baka Mitai"
and "24-Hour Cinderella"
), or perhaps "Receive You"
note , it's hard to narrow it down to just one theme.
- Live A Live: "MEGALOMANIA" (original
and remake
) is the most well-remembered song of Live A Live, playing at the end of each chapter against the various forms of the Big Bad, Odio. It has also appeared outside Live A Live in the Theatrhythm Final Fantasy games, and was the direct inspiration for Toby Fox's iconic "MEGALOVANIA", to the point where it eclipsed the original song.
- Mega Man: The most well-known piece of music in the series is the theme of Wily's fortress stages 1 & 2
from Mega Man 2. It's one of gaming's most iconic level themes in general, and it's been remixed and covered more times that you can count.
- Metal Gear:
- The credit songs of each numbered installment are usually this for respective entries, namely "The Best is Yet To Come
" for Metal Gear Solid and Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty's "Can't Say Goodbye to Yesterday
".
- Two other songs from Metal Gear Solid that count are "Encounter
" and "Metal Gear Solid Main Theme
", both of which have received countless remixes and rearrangements across the series over the years, and in the case of "Encounter", is Snake's Leitmotif in Super Smash Bros..
- "Snake Eater
", from Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater, is this not just for its game of origin, but also for the series as a whole. The song is a Bond-style vocal tune encompassing the core themes of Snake Eater, with an instrumental version acting as the Final Boss theme of the game, and the song itself reappearing during Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots' Final Boss.
- Without exaggeration, the entire soundtrack to Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance can be an easy contender. But if we're going by Memetic Mutation, "Rules of Nature"
and "It Has To Be This Way"
(the themes for Metal Gear RAY and Senator Armstrong, respectively) are the most well-remembered ones.
- The credit songs of each numbered installment are usually this for respective entries, namely "The Best is Yet To Come
- Techno Syndrome, aka the theme to Mortal Kombat, is quite often the first thing fans and even non-fans think of when they hear the name, thanks to the song being a hit after its use in the 1995 movie, even making the top 10 in the Billboard 200 charts, and for its iconic Title Scream of "MORTAL KOMBAAAAT!"
- Kirby:
- Kirby Super Star has Gourmet Race
, which is one of the most well-known tracks in the series and has recieved several remixes in following games. It's also been the subject of plenty of Memetic Mutation, particually with the version from
Super Smash Bros..
- Kirby Super Star has Gourmet Race
- Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon: Even thought it only plays in one level, the Library Piano
theme became very iconic. It even plays over half the trailer that announced the HD remaster of the game, despite barely being used at all in announcements for the original release.
- Madden NFL 2003 was the first game in the series to include licensed music under the name "EA Trax". The song "Party Hard" by Andrew W.K., which was the first song that played when players opened the main menu, became so associated with the franchise.
- "Tick Tick Boom" by The Hives is also highly associated with Madden NFL, having appeared in the menus of 08, 11 and 25 (2024).
- Of all the music in the Rhythm Heaven series, Remix 10 from Fever is the best-known one due to containing snippets from every song in the game, which led to it being frequently used in memes where the game's graphics are replaced to fit a theme.
- Piglet's Big Game has "Foreboding 1"
, which is played after defeating your first Heffalump in Pooh's dream, both for how sounds more melancholic and foreboding than what the game implies but also because of how it sounds similar to a track from Silent Hill 2.
- Out of all the many songs from Shake II, "Give Me!" by F.K.
is most well known of them thanks to the Colbert Bump given by the custom Team Fortress 2 map, "wacky_races_v2", which uses this song as its Background Music.
- Sonic the Hedgehog:
- The series has a lot of awesome tracks, though there are two that seem to define the entire series. The first, understandably enough, is Green Hill Zone
from the first game, the first level in the entire series and the level most likely to get an homage in later games. The second is "Live & Learn"
from Sonic Adventure 2, the franchise's 10th anniversary title, which doubles as both the game's main theme and final boss theme and codified how vocal themes would be handled in subsequent 3D games. The latter is so iconic that it was used as Sonic's theme when he finally made his debut in the Super Smash Bros. series, and the song was even used in Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (2024) (making it one of the few game songs that the film series used).
- While the game's unorthodox use of Europop music and the soulful vocals of TJ Davis elevated the entire soundtrack of Sonic R to wider recognition (and appreciation) among the fanbase in the years following its release, there are two standouts: "Can You Feel the Sunshine?"
(the theme of Resort Island) and "Super Sonic Racing"
(the theme of Radiant Emerald when playing as Super Sonic). While the first can be chalked up to a combination of Level 1 Music Represents and Memetic Mutation involving the Tails Doll, both songs have gone on see mileage in not only other spin-offs (Sonic & Sega All-Stars Racing, Team Sonic Racing), but actual mainline entries (most notably the series' 20th anniversary title), being some of the few times a main installment has acknowledged music from spin-off titles. If that wasn't enough, "Can You Feel the Sunshine?" received an official remix
from Sega's sound team in 2019, "Super Sonic Racing" has had the honor of being used in an official series anthem capacity once or twice, and both songs (along with "Number One" from the same game) were selected to be included in an OST that came with the Japan-only Birthday Pack edition of Sonic Adventure 2.
- From Sonic Frontiers in particular (the series' intended 30th anniversary title), there's "Undefeatable"
, the theme for the first boss in the game, which in itself is one of that game's Signature Scenes. Being performed by Kellin Quinn of Sleeping with Sirens fame certainly helps.
- The infamous "countdown"/"drowning music", and not for good reasons.
- The series has a lot of awesome tracks, though there are two that seem to define the entire series. The first, understandably enough, is Green Hill Zone
- Street Fighter:
- The series has no shortage of memorable tunes from each installment, but across the entire series, Ryu's
and Guile's
(because it goes with everything) Street Fighter II themes are among the most remembered, with the former being so iconic that the only mainline games where it didn't receive a remix were Street Fighter Alpha 3 (which ditched the longstanding Leitmotifs for new themes), Street Fighter III (where he's completely absent) and Street Fighter 6 (which, much like Alpha 3 and the III series before it, gave completely new themes to its returning characters). And mind you, that's not even getting into the many, many crossovers that Street Fighter has had over its long run.
- Street Fighter II additionally has the opening theme
, which is typically used as "the theme" whenever the series is being represented in crossovers. Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes actually used it as Ryu's theme over the usual Suzaku Castle BGM. Even the 90s cartoon, for all its faults, saw it fit to give the tune a hard rock arrangement to serve as its credits music. And thanks to the magic of Capcom Sequel Stagnation, the version
of the opening theme from Super Street Fighter II: The New Challengers has been similarly immortalized.
- Street Fighter IV has the theme
of the Volcanic Rim stage, notable in that it effectively became the de facto theme of the entire series from that point on much like the aforementioned SFII intro BGM, particularly with its use in both Street Fighter X Tekken and Project × Zone to represent the associated Street Fighters.
- The series has no shortage of memorable tunes from each installment, but across the entire series, Ryu's
- Super Mario Bros.:
- Due to it playing in the first level of a widely-played game when it first came out, the Ground Theme
from Super Mario Bros. 1 is one of the most recognized songs not just in the Super Mario Bros. series and its spinoffs, but in video game history as well.
- For Super Mario Galaxy, easily the most well-remembered track is Gusty Garden Galaxy
, to the point of it becoming the unofficial theme song for the Galaxy games as a whole despite both already having their own official theme songs. Gusty Garden is also used as the music for Champion's Road in Super Mario 3D World.
- Due to it playing in the first level of a widely-played game when it first came out, the Ground Theme
- Tekken, being around the same age as KOF above, also has had plenty of memorable music throughout its long lifespan. Across the entire series, the most remembered themes are "Black Winter Night Sky"
and "Emotionless Passion"
from Tekken 2, Jin's Tekken 3 theme
, the opening theme
from Tekken Tag Tournamentnote , "Sparking!"
from Tekken 5, "Karma"
from Tekken 6, and "Heat Haze Shadow"
from Tekken 7. Just to name a few.
- While the series has had many memorable songs over its time, the Tony Hawk's Pro Skater series is most often associated with the song "Superman
" by Goldfinger, to the point where it's even sometimes referred to as "The Tony Hawk Song" despite over a dozen sequels, each with a dozen or so tracks of its own, coming afterwards. The song returned for the first remake "Pro Skater HD", which the developers said was a must to include. It ended up coming to a head in the 2020 remake THPS 1+2, where the song is used on the game's title screen as an official acknowledgement of the song's status among the THPS community.
- Total Distortion is almost exclusively known as "that game that sings 'You are dead, dead, dead!
' when you lose." It's very unlikely that anyone nowadays hasn't heard about this game because of the game over song.
- It's safe to say that "MEGALOVANIA"
is this for game developer and composer Toby Fox. Initially composed for The Halloween Hack, it was also used in Homestuck and, most famously, Undertale. The last one
is particularly notable, as it's also considered a Signature Song of that game, where it's undergone so much Memetic Mutation that there are probably more people who know about the spoileriffic situation where it's played note than there are people who've actually played Undertale, let alone heard it in-game. Any time a Rhythm Game has a collaboration with Undertale, you can expect "MEGALOVANIA" to be part of the song lineup, with That One Boss-grade charts to boot.
- The Trails Series has "Silver Will
", a boss theme (later turned Leitmotif for the most iconic boss it plays for) from the first game. With the series itself, and its first arc especially, remaining niche, it's often joked that Silver Will is more popular than the game it comes from.
- "Into the Wilderness" is this for the first Wild ARMs 1 game. Its main melody (the part with the whistling) is not only used in the opening, but also in "Courage" (used in Memory Temple, Lolithia's Tomb and most other dungeons with a Temple of Doom theme), "The Power that Supports the World" (The Guardians' theme) and even in other Wild Arms games. It's practically the theme song for the entire series.
- Battle for Dream Island — "New Friendly
" by Kevin MacLeod is the most commonly associated song with the series. It was first used in the very first episode of season 1 and has been used throughout the next season, and remembered fondly by its fanbase. This has gotten to the point where it's been condemned as the signature song for Object Shows in general by the community.
- Homestar Runner — "Trogdor" is the most well-known song to come from the series; helps that it was a bonus track in Guitar Hero II.
- Homestuck — While there's a song literally called "Homestuck Anthem", "Sburban Jungle" is arguably more emblematic of the series as a whole, since it's the theme for the in-universe video game the plot revolves around, and it's used as an element in numerous other songs.
- The Doomsday Zone theme from Sonic 3 & Knuckles is primarily associated with the Party Crashers, due to the song often playing whenever one of them hits their Rage Breaking Point.
- The Fairly OddParents!: Not counting the Expository Theme Tune, the most popular song from the show is "My Shiny Teeth and Me" by Chip Skylark, with the other two Chip Skylark songs, "Icky Vicky" and "Find Your Voice", not far behind.
- Hazbin Hotel:
- Prior to the show's release, the fanmade turned official song "ADDICT" was the most popular song in the show's fandom, gaining more than a 100 million views, thanks to its exploration of abuse in the porn industry, unhealthy coping, and for just being insanely catchy.
- "Poison" is technically the show's most successful song by the numbers, the biggest hit on both charts and internet streaming, and is frequently considered the breakout signature hit of Season 1. The song explores Angel Dust's cycle of trauma and his toxic relationship with his boss, Valentino, being also a Character Signature Song.
- "Loser, Baby" has gained its status as the most acclaimed song in the first season's already phenomenal soundtrack, with many fans falling in love with Keith David and Blake Roman's voices. It's simultaneously vulgar, funny, and heartwarming which to many fans means the song perfectly encapsulates everything that makes Hazbin Hotel so enjoyable to watch. Even people who do not like the show or the rest of the soundtrack generally enjoy this song.
- Among Season 2's soundtrack of even greater diversity of styles, "Gravity" stands out both for its popularity and its reception. Notably released before the second season even premiered, as well as growing a cult following by being one of the songs featured in the infamous second season leaks, the song skyrocketed into notoriety. Besides that, the song is also one of, it not the, most lauded songs in the second season's soundtrack, earning praise for its modern rock style, anthemic chorus, and Jessica Vosk's powerful vocals. It also stands out for being praised by even non-fans who otherwise either do not care for the show or even outright hate it.
- Tweety Pie from Looney Tunes has a little ditty he often sings while swinging in his bird cage:
I'm a tweet wittow bird in a dilded tage,
Tweety'th my name, but I don't know my age.
I don't hafta wowwy an' dat... ith dat,
I'm tafe in hewe fwom dat ol' puddy tat. - The Loud House: Besides the Expository Theme Tune, the signature song from the series is easily "Play It Loud", the rock song that Luna writes in "Really Loud Music" and the winner of The Loud House Mega Music Countdown.
- Phineas and Ferb — "Gitchee Gitchee Goo" easily. Not only was it the winner of the first ever Cliptastic Countdown, it also was the song that gave the show its identity, as the higher up hearing it for the first time is what caused them to request that all future episodes have at least one song, resulting in the show developing its reputation for banger music.
- The most popular song from The Ren & Stimpy Show, no contest, is "Happy Happy Joy Joy" by Stinky Wizzleteats, from the widely acclaimed episode "Stimpy's Invention". The scene of Ren and Stimpy dancing to the song is considered one of the funniest moments of the entire series.
- SpongeBob SquarePants: Not counting the Expository Theme Tune, "Sweet Victory" from "Band Geeks" is heavily associated with the series, despite being originally performed by David Glen Eisley. For original songs, "Best Day Ever" easily comes to mind, followed by either "Ripped Pants", "The F.U.N. Song", or "The Campfire Song Song".
