


Eugene Raymond (adapted) “Pop Goes the Weasel” (1852).Stephen Foster (m/w) “ The Old Folks at Home (Swanee River)” (1851).Stephen Foster (m/w) “Camptown Races (Gwine to Run All Night)” (1850).Edmund Hamilton Sears (w) and Richard Storrs Willis (m) “It Came Upon a Midnight Clear” (1850)
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writer(s) unknown “Greensleeves” (1580).You can navigate quickly to different points on this list by clicking on any of the below: Prior to 1890 and the pre-recorded music era, songs are listed by songwriters (m=music, w=words) and publishing years. Each year from 1890 to present has been listed with the top 1% songs first and then the top 2% songs after that. Originally these were listed as two separate posts, but now they’ve been consolidated into one page. Note: this was originally a top 1000 list, but has been expanded to two categories – the top 1% and top 2% – each with more than 1000 songs. Click on a song title to see its DMDB page with more details such as general information about the song, videos, lyrics, links to buy songs, chart stats, sales figures, and awards. Songs are listed in chronological order dates in parentheses are for the song’s first chart appearance unless noted otherwise. Still, that’s a much wider swath than most supposedly “best of all time” lists cover. It’s primarily a list of the top songs in the history of recorded music: from 1890 to the present. To call this “the top songs of all time” is a bit of a misnomer. While individual lists have idiosyncrasies because of the publiciations or institutions behind them, this list aims to represent as many genres and eras as possible in the history of recorded music.

It has been created by aggregating hundreds of best-of song lists alongside chart figures, radio and video airplay, sales data, and various honors and awards.
