It’s impossible to talk about the 90s without the sound of a distorted guitar. When Nirvana’s hit the airwaves in 1991, it didn't just change the charts; it ended the reign of hair metal overnight. It is almost universally the #1 seed on any Top 100 list, and for good reason.
Here is the definitive countdown of the — a journey through alternative rock, golden-age hip-hop, Eurodance, and everything in between. top 100 nineties songs
But the rock spectrum was wide. You had the brooding darkness of , the optimistic jangle of R.E.M. ("Losing My Religion") , and the genre-bending chaos of Red Hot Chili Peppers ("Under the Bridge") . And let’s not forget the titans of Britpop—Oasis and Blur—proving that rock and roll wasn't just an American pastime. It’s impossible to talk about the 90s without
What makes a "Top 100" list so difficult is that the 90s didn't have just one sound. It was a decade of contradictions: angry rock vs. sugary pop, gangsta rap vs. singer-songwriter folk. Here is the definitive countdown of the —