ooh good call, put a 3 on that. xpost re journey
― the worst breed of fong (some dude), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:17 (seventeen years ago)
"Bohemian Rhapsody" held a sales record in the UK for almost a decade and was Queen's first US top 10. I would say songs that establish a band on that level count as one of their biggest hits whether there are higher charting songs or not.
― the worst breed of fong (some dude), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:19 (seventeen years ago)
Bohemian Rhapsody was always Queen's biggest hit surely
Not in the U.S., where No. 1 hits "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" (!) and "Another One Bites The Dust" both charted higher. (So did "We Are The Champions," at first, but then "Rhapsody" came back in 1992 and hit No. 2 off of Wayne's World; it had only hit No. 9 on its original release.)
The Romantics' legacy song is almost certainly "What I Like About You" (big jock-rock hit, right?), though in their lifetime "Talking In Your Sleep" charted way higher (No. 3, compared to No. 49.)
― xhuxk, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:20 (seventeen years ago)
what about "Sweet Caroline" by Neil Diamond....again, i'm a lil ignorant of his history but wiki says "Song Sung Blue" was a bigger chart hit
― stank pony (M@tt He1ges0n), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:20 (seventeen years ago)
yeah that's really interesting, i don't think i've ever even heard "Talking In Your Sleep" but I've heard "Like" a million times. xpost
― the worst breed of fong (some dude), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:21 (seventeen years ago)
this icon should be next to all these songs in the iTunes store: http://www.soulstrut.com/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/badassbuddy_com-slowburner.gif
― the worst breed of fong (some dude), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:23 (seventeen years ago)
I think I've heard those 2 about an equal # of times--but I guess "Like" is more of a party song.
― President Keyes, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:23 (seventeen years ago)
Yeah, I think "Sweet Caroline" and "Cherry Cherry" are both more famous today than "Song Sung Blue" or "Cracklin' Rosie" -- but they were all in the top 5.
― Bianca Jagger (jaymc), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:24 (seventeen years ago)
Freebird? That's certainly Skynyrd's legacy song, but probably not their biggest iTunes seller (Sweet Home Alabama?).
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:26 (seventeen years ago)
(Meant to add "Song Sung Blue" and "Cracklin' Rosie" were his only two solo #1s.)
― Bianca Jagger (jaymc), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:27 (seventeen years ago)
oh wow here's the ultimate one:
according to wiki, "Dancing With Myself" by Billy Idol only reached 102 on the U.S. charts and FAILED to chart in the U.K.
― stank pony (M@tt He1ges0n), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:27 (seventeen years ago)
usually a soundtrack or placement in a television show will raise a song out of the bands "hits" into a totally different demographic
― cutty, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:27 (seventeen years ago)
Peter Gabriel - In Your Eyes (wasn't even a single from So)
This was released as a single off of the "Say Anything" soundtrack and received massive amounts of radio play.
― BADGES DON'T GIVE YOU THE RIGHT TO WALTZ OFF WITH A BABY (HI DERE), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:27 (seventeen years ago)
― stank pony (M@tt He1ges0n), Friday, March 27, 2009 1:27 PM (1 minute ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
yeah but "Rebel Yell" and "White Wedding" are both bigger iTunes sellers
― the worst breed of fong (some dude), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:30 (seventeen years ago)
i mean this could very easily turn into "early hits that established a band's identity but didn't chart as high as later singles when they were more famous" list and get away from the original idea
― the worst breed of fong (some dude), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:31 (seventeen years ago)
yeah that's true
― stank pony (M@tt He1ges0n), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:31 (seventeen years ago)
i was more just shocked that that hadn't even charted at the time, being how catchy it was and all
― stank pony (M@tt He1ges0n), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:32 (seventeen years ago)
"Should I Stay or Should I Go?"
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:33 (seventeen years ago)
...
"In Your Eyes" was released as a US single, peaking at #26 Billboard Hot 100 and #1 Billboard Mainstream Rock in 1986.
Say Anything gave "In Your Eyes" a second chart run in 1989, but it peaked at #41. No Top 40 for you!
...and became PG's first certified Gold single in 2005 lol
― butt-rock miyagi (rogermexico.), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:35 (seventeen years ago)
"Only You" did marginally better than "Situation" on the US charts (67 vs. 73) and much better on the UK charts (2 vs. wasn't even released), but "Situation" seems much more like Yaz's legacy song.
― Bianca Jagger (jaymc), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:36 (seventeen years ago)
"Born to Run!" Peaked at #23.
(Well, technically it's outsold by "Radio Nowhere" on iTunes, but I think that was thanks to some "Magic" promotion)
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:38 (seventeen years ago)
yeah acts with recent singles kinda skew this, but i think it's safe to assume "Born To Run" ultimately sells more than "Radio Nowhere"
― the worst breed of fong (some dude), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:39 (seventeen years ago)
Oh oh oh!
"American Girl" was the second single off Tom Petty's debut album, after "Breakdown," but did not even chart.
― Bianca Jagger (jaymc), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:41 (seventeen years ago)
Radiohead. Creep is their biggest hit, but probably not their "signature" song. NOt sure what is, though.
Bruce's biggest chart hit is Dancing In The Dark
― kornrulez6969, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:45 (seventeen years ago)
"Creep" is Radiohead's legacy song to millions of non-Radiohead fans
― the worst breed of fong (some dude), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:45 (seventeen years ago)
I'm not sure what Bob Marley's legacy song is, but I have a feeling that "Roots, Rock, Reggae" (his only U.S. Hot 100 hit, peaking at # 51) isn't it. It might not even be in the Top 10.
― xhuxk, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:47 (seventeen years ago)
(Well, Marley has lots of Legacy songs, obviously. Or at least an album full of them.)
― xhuxk, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:48 (seventeen years ago)
Cheap Trick's only #1 is "The Flame." ("I Want You to Want Me" was #7, "Surrender" #62.)
― Bianca Jagger (jaymc), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:48 (seventeen years ago)
What about remixes doing this with a song? Because Run DMC's It's Like That was just a b-side until it became like their biggest song (v. walk this way obv.)
Also presumably this must have happened by tunes that were sampled a bunch, although none come to mind immediately.
― there's a big metaphor going on in which pussy is medicine (a hoy hoy), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:49 (seventeen years ago)
'Hallelujah' wins this thread, surely?
― James Mitchell, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:50 (seventeen years ago)
Run DMC's It's Like That was just a b-side
Not really. It was on side one of the 12-inch, and came before "Sucker MCs"; ditto with the instrumentals on side two:
http://www.discogs.com/viewimages?release=257372
― xhuxk, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:53 (seventeen years ago)
How do I find out Itunes sales numbers? Is there some page for them?
― Tuomas, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:54 (seventeen years ago)
Talking Heads. Their biggest charting US single is Wild Wild Life. Biggest in UK is Road To Nowhere. Their signature/legacy song is clearly Once In A Lifetime, which never even charted.
― kornrulez6969, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:55 (seventeen years ago)
I tried to a search for a specific tune on the Itunes store, but when I click on the song name, I'm thrown back to the Apple store home page.
― Tuomas, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:56 (seventeen years ago)
Anyway, I suspect "Oh Yeah" by Yello is their biggest download seller, even though it wasn't their biggest hit.
― Tuomas, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:58 (seventeen years ago)
Which of course is due to it being used in that movie.
― Tuomas, Friday, 27 March 2009 17:59 (seventeen years ago)
i dunno how iTunes store works in your country, but here every artist page has their top songs listed. but what i've been doing is just googling "(artist name) top itunes sales" and going to the browser cache of the store page since i don't have iTunes on my work computer.
― the worst breed of fong (some dude), Friday, 27 March 2009 17:59 (seventeen years ago)
I'm pretty sure "Radio Nowhere" was also the iTunes Free Single of the Week when it was released, and that iTunes counts free downloads as sales. (Or at least as volume for measuring popularity.)
― lolling through my bagel (Pancakes Hackman), Friday, 27 March 2009 18:00 (seventeen years ago)
One problem is that, with lots of these artists (Neil Diamond, Skynyrd, Billy Idol, Springsteen, Petty, Talking Heads, Peter Gabriel, Radiohead), it's a real stretch to say they "clearly" have just one legacy song. (So with them, the formulation only really works if their biggest hit has been totally lost in the dustbin of history. "Wild Wild Life" might actually come close to that, though. "Sweet Home Alabama" and "Creep" definitely don't. Chuck Berry's only #1 "My Ding-A-Ling" probably does.)
― xhuxk, Friday, 27 March 2009 18:01 (seventeen years ago)
I tried to search "Yello", but the Itunes home page doesn't even allow me to click the band name, so I don't know how to see the artist page.
― Tuomas, Friday, 27 March 2009 18:01 (seventeen years ago)
(xx-post)
fwiw, "Oh Yeah" (at #51) was the only Yello song ever to chart in the U.S. No idea about the rest of the world, where I assume they were bigger. ("Bostich" will always be their legacy song in my house.)
― xhuxk, Friday, 27 March 2009 18:04 (seventeen years ago)
Likewise, Boney M's only U.S. hit was "Rivers of Babylon," but the rest of the planet would presumably disagree.
I think in Europe at least "The Race" and "Bostich" were bigger hits than "Oh Yeah", maybe some others too.
― Tuomas, Friday, 27 March 2009 18:05 (seventeen years ago)
My bad, I thought Sucker MCs was Side A.
― there's a big metaphor going on in which pussy is medicine (a hoy hoy), Friday, 27 March 2009 18:06 (seventeen years ago)
..just googling "(artist name) top itunes sales" and going to the browser cache of the store page since i don't have iTunes on my work computer.
Talking Heads top 5 appear to be: Once In A Lifetime, Burning Down The House, And She Was, Psycho Killer, Take Me To The River
― kornrulez6969, Friday, 27 March 2009 18:07 (seventeen years ago)
I don't look at iTunes but I would assume Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah?
― Matt DC, Friday, 27 March 2009 18:08 (seventeen years ago)
I saw the Prodigy last night and was surprised to find out that the biggest reaction wasn't for "Breathe" or "Firestarter" or "Poison", but for "Smack My Bitch Up." I checked on iTunes and it's their biggest selling track! Sometime in the last 10 years it became their legacy track.
i am pretty sure that every single person in the world except for you was aware of this.
and the title of this thread is confounding...if a track is their legacy song and their best seller period (i will assume that the iTunes best seller is generally the overall best seller) then doesn't that make said song their biggest hit by default? do you mean songs that were someone's biggest hits but didn't necessarily peak as high as others (like Wonderwall, as referenced above)? because that list would go on forever. or songs that were totally unknown at the time and later came out of nowhere (like Hallelujah)?
― lil waynes babymama (musically), Friday, 27 March 2009 18:11 (seventeen years ago)
But what was Leonard Cohen's bigger hit?
― President Keyes, Friday, 27 March 2009 18:11 (seventeen years ago)
He never had a real "hit" in the U.S., but I would assume "Suzanne," right?
― xhuxk, Friday, 27 March 2009 18:13 (seventeen years ago)
I should note that "Why Can't I Be You" reached #54 in the States, an impressive peak considering how "Inbetween Days" scraped the 90s a year and a half earlier.
― The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 30 January 2026 13:05 (four months ago)
At high school parties "Boys Don't Cry" was already enough of a standard that generic teen cover bands played it.
Some of this may also be that it was easier for 4 kids starting out to make a decent hash of this then say... Plainsong or Close To Me (not that we didn't try).
― mr.raffles, Friday, 30 January 2026 13:25 (four months ago)
Well, I'm talking 1989 and 1990!
― The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 30 January 2026 13:44 (four months ago)
The "Sssss!"s in the review there seems to indicate phonetical transcription of the reaction of a guest reviewer? Might it be Shane McGowan by any chance, known for that kind of laugh?
if you have a 45 7" copy of "come on eileen" with a large center hole, put it on your turntable slightly off center, pitch down as far as you can (or just play at 33⅓ if you can't), and that will give you an idea of what dexys playing pornography might have sounded like.
That is beautiful. An old 33-to-45 counterpart I remember, was play Rain Dogs (maybe it was primarily "Rain Dogs") at 45 and hear Edith Piaf had she been allowed to live a few more decades.
― anatol_merklich, Friday, 30 January 2026 20:16 (four months ago)
The Smiths’ number 1 streaming song is There Is A Light That Never Goes Out, a UK hit on its reissue in 1992, it went to number 25. There were fourteen higher chart placings in the years previous for various singles. Today it hit 1B plays on Spotify.
― piscesx, Friday, 30 January 2026 23:06 (four months ago)
Where I'm from (Québec), "Inbetween Days", "Close To Me", and "Boys Don't Cry 86" were even bigger hits than WCIBY and JLH. I think the US caught on The Cure an album later (aside from college radios).
― LeRooLeRoo, Saturday, 31 January 2026 05:18 (four months ago)
^ That's my sense for AUS too. Looking up the numbers, "Lovecats" and "Let's Go to Bed" had even primed them for such levels, chart-wise, already. (And those were definitely radio fixtures when I was basically an infant.)
― Heavy, downy baby goose (Nag! Nag! Nag!), Saturday, 31 January 2026 05:59 (four months ago)
Growing up on KROQ, they actually played "Primary" a bit. "Lovecats" exploded then "The Walk" and "Let's Go To Bed" was even bigger than those two combined. They didn't play anything from The Top but then all singles including "A Man Inside My Mouth" from the '85 era. That title of the song confused people.
― Bee OK, Saturday, 31 January 2026 06:06 (four months ago)
"Boys Don't Cry" was not played until the '86 release but they played the original then and afterwards.
― Bee OK, Saturday, 31 January 2026 06:23 (four months ago)
The Smiths one doesn't really surprise me as TIALTNGO often tops Best Smiths' songs articles etc and even won our poll iirc
― groovypanda, Saturday, 31 January 2026 06:40 (four months ago)
Might it be Shane McGowan by any chance, known for that kind of laugh?
Yes, exactly! Smash Hits invited him in as a guest reviewer in one issue, which I can actually remember reading at the time.
― Vast Halo, Saturday, 31 January 2026 11:26 (four months ago)
The real surprising Smiths Spotify ranking is "Back To The Old House" is now their #4 after "There Is A...", "This Charming Man", and "Heaven Knows...".
― Lithium Just Madison (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 31 January 2026 17:11 (four months ago)
That was a Tik Too thing
― groovypanda, Saturday, 31 January 2026 22:09 (four months ago)
*Tik Tok too
― groovypanda, Saturday, 31 January 2026 22:10 (four months ago)
The Cardigans’ second biggest Spotify song after Lovefool; Step on Me. Anyone?
― piscesx, Friday, 6 February 2026 16:19 (four months ago)
read that as a song called "Step On Me, Anyone?" which sounds like a British comedy show that's far less racy than the title suggests.
― Hiphoptimus Rhyme (Doctor Casino), Friday, 6 February 2026 17:34 (four months ago)
who's gonna step on you again, anyone?
― The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 6 February 2026 17:37 (four months ago)
it's odd to me that out of all the tracks on the Genesis album Invisible Touch, "Tonight Tonight Tonight" has the fifth-most streams and it's way down there. it felt like such a ubiquitous song at the time...it was a huge hit and I remembered it was also in a Michelob ad. i'm not saying it was ever going to be their legacy song but it was the one i remembered the most as a kid, more than any of their others. it spoke to that whole mysterious and provocative and life of adults as seen in other artifacts of the time like Graceland, "Don't You Know What the Night Can Do?", maybe some of the moodier power ballads of the time like "Is This Love?", the opening credits of the Carvey/Hartman/Lovitz/etc era SNL, and so on.
― omar little, Tuesday, 3 March 2026 03:35 (three months ago)
I heard it tons on the radio, though not as much as "Land of Confusion" or the title track. My least favorite single, too: when Collins is in bald man stentorian mode I dive under the latest table.
That mysterious adultness (otm) you named I hear in "Throwing It All Away" and "In Too Deep."
― The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 3 March 2026 10:34 (three months ago)
Looking at their UK chart history, was surprised to find that the closest any of the singles from that album got to the Top 10 was #14 (for Land of Confusion)
― groovypanda, Tuesday, 3 March 2026 11:13 (three months ago)
It wasn't the Bald Thriller over there...
― Lithium Just Madison (C. Grisso/McCain), Tuesday, 3 March 2026 13:01 (three months ago)
― The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn)
those as well, yeah. this is kind of an interesting subgenre, obv all songs by adults aimed at adults try to create the cinematic out of the mundane, but this is even more specific i think, where the effect is on a younger audience who is already perplexed by grownups, and it makes them wonder what the hell is going on in the big city at night. and for me it was always these adult contemporary hits which hinted at maybe something dark occasionally, In the Air Tonight, but also it could be fun like idk most of Can't Slow Down.
― omar little, Tuesday, 3 March 2026 18:14 (three months ago)
When Invisible Touch was released, I was 7 or so, and I remember running around the living room, dramatically acting out songs even though I didn't understand what the lyrics meant. Usually, I imagined myself wrapped up in some kind of G.I. Joe/James Bond business. T,T,T was a superb backdrop, in that regard.
― peace, man, Tuesday, 3 March 2026 18:36 (three months ago)
I was thinking about Men At Work, but it turns out an early version of "Down Under" was the b-side of their first single. The a-side is song I've never heard.
― Who's going to stop 200 balloons? Nobody! (President Keyes), Tuesday, 3 March 2026 18:46 (three months ago)
How in heavens is a 2007 vintage cover of "Bette Davis Eyes" by faaar Missing Persons biggest track? 120M+ vs 15M for "Destination Unknown" and 10M for "Words".
Had me wondering if the Kim Carnes version wasn't on streaming, but nope, there it is.
Odd.
― mr.raffles, Wednesday, 4 March 2026 13:56 (three months ago)
Must be a playlist thing. Especially weird since it seems like their version came out in 2007?
― Who's going to stop 200 balloons? Nobody! (President Keyes), Wednesday, 4 March 2026 14:44 (three months ago)
x-post Tonight Tonight Tonight is also 9 minutes long on the Invisible Touch album, which likely is why its streaming numbers are lower.
― kornrulez6969, Wednesday, 4 March 2026 15:26 (three months ago)
They Might be Giants were brought up earlier - looks like Istanbul is #1 and Birdhouse #2, but #3 is...a strange deep cut called "Stuff Is Way" which apparently blew up for weird internet reasons. the band's reaction was pretty funny, something like "this song wasn't meant to be anything and now we have to figure out how to play it live"
― frogbs, Wednesday, 4 March 2026 15:42 (three months ago)
TMGB's Spotify streams are interesting-- "Kiss Me, Son of God" more popular than "Don't Let's Start" or "Anna Ng" or even "Particle Man."
― Who's going to stop 200 balloons? Nobody! (President Keyes), Wednesday, 4 March 2026 16:20 (three months ago)
Not sure when it happened, as it looks like "Heroes" was his number as per a post in this thread from two years ago, but according to Spotify, Starman is now David Bowie's most streamed song (not counting Under Pressure).
― MarkoP, Sunday, 10 May 2026 00:13 (four weeks ago)
The Bernie Sanders Bump?
― Ben Gibbard and the Libbard Wibbard (Prefecture), Sunday, 10 May 2026 00:18 (four weeks ago)
It was used in the ads for that Buzz Lightyear movie.
― The Quaker Gurvitz Army (President Keyes), Sunday, 10 May 2026 00:20 (four weeks ago)
Lol
The song was a viral trend on TikTok and YouTube Shorts. Cited to be a tribute to Superman, the trend originated in early 2024. It is often linked to Hopemaxxing;[69] a term that refers to the process of maximizing one's hope and outlook on life. Various clips of heroic actions have been overlaid to the song.
― The Quaker Gurvitz Army (President Keyes), Sunday, 10 May 2026 00:21 (four weeks ago)
It is often linked to Hopemaxxing;[69] a term that refers to the process of maximizing one's hope and outlook on life.
jesus christ
― I? not I! He! He! HIM! (akm), Sunday, 10 May 2026 01:25 (four weeks ago)