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We never want to hear these 10 songs again: Do you agree?

We never want to hear these 10 songs again: Do you agree?

Daniel BukszpanSun, April 12, 2026 at 1:56 PM UTC

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10 Overplayed Songs

There’s a unique kind of heartbreak in a great song ruined by relentless overexposure. Think of classics like ā€œJumping Jack Flashā€ or ā€œWho Are Youā€ā€”once vibrant and exciting, now grating after countless radio spins.

We bear some responsibility, of course. Radio stations respond to demand, and we, the listeners, created that demand. But at a certain point, blame becomes irrelevant. We just want the sonic assault to stop.

Here are 10 songs so overplayed, we’d rather risk a high-speed exit than endure another note.

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

1. ā€˜Hey Jude’ by the Beatles (1968)

If ā€œHey Judeā€ was just the ā€œsongā€ that stopped at the 3:09 mark, we probably would have fewer problems with it. Sadly, that obvious point at which they could have ended the song – literally on a high note – is immediately followed by a single chord progression and singalong non-lyrics that go on for four minutes, making the ending longer than the actual song. By the time they’re two minutes into the ending, you may wish for a two-minute coma to overtake you so you don’t have to hear the rest.

Image Credit: Wikipedia.

2. ā€˜Sweet Child o’ Mine’ by Guns N’ Roses (1987)

Guns N’ Roses achieved superstardom and chart success thanks to this ballad from their ā€œAppetite for Destructionā€ album. It is impossible to overstate how often innocent ears were subjected to it daily during its heyday, and there was nowhere you could go to get away from it. It blasted from passing cars, and even people who didn’t like heavy metal or hard rock would play it if they got a few drinks in them. Luckily for this piece of music, much worse songs came along in the ensuing years, so it now seems brilliant in comparison.

Image Credit: Amazon.

3. ā€˜Don’t Stop Believin’’ by Journey (1981)

We know we bring up this song a lot, but we would be shirking our journalistic duties if we did not include Journey’s ā€œDon’t Stop Believinā€™ā€ on our list of overplayed songs. The song was already overplayed when it came out over 40 years ago, and to people of a certain age, seeing it resurface with a vengeance in the 2000s was akin to witnessing a long-dead, hated relative claw its way out of a grave to terrorize townsfolk and feast upon their warm flesh.

Image Credit: YouTube/Oasis.

4. ā€˜Wonderwall’ by Oasis (1995)

Maybe we’re old-fashioned, but we’ve always believed that if a song becomes a big radio hit played ad infinitum, it would be nice if the singer could sing. Sadly, when ā€œWonderwallā€ came out and became a massive hit, it was sung by Liam Gallagher, the reason we’re glad they invented autotune. His off-key nasal voice makes you sick of the song a lot faster than you usually would if it were sung by someone tolerable.

Image Credit: Fantasy Records / Wikimedia Commons.

5. ā€˜Proud Mary’ by Creedence Clearwater Revival (1969)

If you want to pick overplayed songs by Creedence Clearwater Revival, there is no shortage of choices, and we could make an entire 20-item list of overplayed songs just by them alone. For this list, we’re going with ā€œProud Mary,ā€ a massive seller that charted internationally. These factors may have led radio programmers to believe that 54 years later, we still yearn to hear it several times daily. We don’t. Do yourself a favor and check out the vastly superior version recorded by the late Tina Turner instead.

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Image Credit: Weatherman90 / Wiki Commons.

6. ā€˜Don’t Stop’ by Fleetwood Mac (1977)

Just like Creedence Clearwater Revival, Fleetwood Mac has to its credit a seemingly bottomless supply of overplayed songs, making it a challenge to isolate just one for this list. We’re going with ā€œDon’t Stop,ā€ an inexcusably trite song full of ā€œMe Decadeā€ toxic positivity that suggests that tomorrow will miraculously be better than today, solely by virtue of it happening in the future. We will take the song’s advice and await a tomorrow in which we never have to hear this song again.

Image Credit: Amazon.

7. ā€˜Smells Like Teen Spirit’ by Nirvana (1991)

When the grunge genre hit, it was supposed to replace the outdated idealism of generations past and embrace a more world-weary view. In reality, it just became the next source of overplayed songs, none of which got more overplayed than this. Critics at the time said that the song expressed the feelings of the era’s teenagers, but when you look at the lyric sheet, it’s just a bunch of nonsensical rhyming words strung together haphazardly. Also, shouldn’t the band be #canceled for using a very un-PC description of a person of mixed race?

Image Credit: DepositPhotos.com.

8. ā€˜Umbrella’ by Rihanna (ft. Jay-Z) (2007)

It pains us to include Rihanna on this list because she’s a gifted singer who’s produced a lot of really enjoyable music. She even wows Super Bowl audiences while pregnant! Having said that, how many times do you need to hear the last two syllables of the word ā€œumbrellaā€ before you need the men in white coats to come after you with butterfly nets? That’s a rhetorical question, of course, but the song was ruinously overplayed, and over 15 years later, we’re still in recovery.

Image Credit: Amazon.

9. ā€˜Love Shack’ by the B-52s (1989)

If the mere mention of this song’s title fills you with mortal terror, congratulations. That means you’ve been alive at some point since 1989 and have personally been on hand to see this throwaway novelty song turn into an instrument of torture. The B-52s had been turning out unique and entertaining music for most of the 1980s, so it’s a shame that their worst song (yes, it’s their worst song) became what they’re best known for. Luckily, they never overplayed ā€œRock Lobster,ā€ so we can still hang on to that and remember what once was.

Image Credit: YouTube/ DisneyMusicVEVO.

10. ā€˜Let It Go’ by Idina Menzel (2014)

If you are unable or unwilling to bear children, you might have escaped the 2010s without hearing Idina Menzel’s ā€œLet It Goā€ on the regular. For the rest of us who had kids around the time the movie ā€œFrozenā€ came out, this song was a permanent fixture in our daily lives, like humidity or termites. Children, it seems, like to hear the same song over and over again, and you’d better believe we heard this one all the time. At the same time, no one forced us to take our kids to see ā€œFrozenā€ in the first place, so maybe this one is on us.

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