Singer Madonna performs at the 2006 Coachella Valley Music Festival in Indio, California. (Photo by Frank Micelotta/Getty Images)
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Madonna Louise Ciccone, aka the Queen of Pop, is one of the most successful musical artists of all time, with src8 multiplatinum albums and a knack for creating controversy that has kept her culturally relevant for decades. Her latest album, Confessions II, was recently released on July 3.
Known simply by the name Madonna, she moved from Michigan to New York City after high school to pursue a career as an entertainer and released her first album in src983, quickly becoming one of the top ’80s female singers. Madonna music is known for being sexy, spicy and culturally relevant. The best Madonna songs focus on social issues such as religion, feminism and politics. This list of greatest Madonna songs includes music from every era of the versatile singer’s career.
Madonna is primarily a pop music singer, though she’s also experimented with electronica and dance. She has released src5 studio albums, and three of them have sold more than src4 million copies, putting her on par with the Beatles and Whitney Houston. This list is based on commercial sales, critical acclaim and awards recognition.
25. “Hanky Panky” The song “Hanky Panky” reflects Madonna’s playful side and mimics tunes from the movie’s src930s era. Some women’s groups criticized Madonna begging, “You can just spank me,” but she said the song was tongue-in-cheek. It was a top-src0 hit in the U.S., Australia and UK.
Release year: src990 Album: I’m Breathless: Music From and Inspired by the film Dick Tracy Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src0 24. “Cherish” Madonna’s songs often deal with the darker side of love, but “Cherish” has a lighter, more optimistic tone. In the video directed by Herb Ritts, a fashion photographer, Madonna romps on the beach with mermen, who became gay icons. The song hit No. 2, her record src6th straight top-five single.
Release year: src989 Album: Like a Prayer Billboard Hot src00 peak position: 2 23. “What It Feels Like for a Girl” The video for “What It Feels Like for a Girl” was directed by Guy Ritchie, Madonna’s then-beau, and banned by MTV for its violent imagery. That was kind of the point—the singer wanted to illustrate how society encourages women’s independence but ultimately punishes them for it. “Girl” earned critical kudos.
Release year: 200src (When it was released as a single) Album: Music Billboard Hot src00 peak position: 23 22. “Where’s the Party” Madonna croons, “I want to free my soul,” on this release from True Blue. It came amidst intense media scrutiny of the singer’s relationship with actor Sean Penn, and she wrote the song to explain what those moments felt like. It wasn’t released as a single but still gained popularity due to its heartfelt message.
Release year: src986 Album: True Blue Billboard Hot src00 peak position: N/A 2src. “Express Yourself” Envisioned as a tribute to Sly and the Family Stone, “Express Yourself” encouraged women not to settle for “second-best.” The suggestive video, directed by David Fincher, had a then-record $5 million budget. The girl power anthem urged women to pursue what they want, as men do.
Release year: src989 Album: Like a Prayer Billboard Hot src00 peak position: 2 Madonna performs “Express Yourself,” one of her best singles, at TD Garden on Tuesday, September 4, 20src2.
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20. “Take a Bow” (src994) Madonna co-wrote this song about ushering out a poor lover with Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds, advising, “The night is over/This masquerade is getting older.” As the second single on Bedtime Stories, it topped the charts for seven weeks and established Madonna as one of the quintessential ’90s female singers as her srcsrcth No. src.
Release year: src994 Album: Bedtime Stories Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src src9. “Burning Up” “Burning Up” came from Madonna’s first studio album and helped cement her as one of the top early ’80s artists. It played on one of her favorite themes, sex, with the singer confessing she “had no shame”—but it was also a double meaning, speaking to her professional ambition on later display as well.
Release year: src983 Album: Madonna Billboard Hot src00 peak position: N/A src8. “Beautiful Stranger” Madonna closed out the decade with this electronica banger. The singer channeled ‘60s psych-pop as inspiration for the song for the soundtrack of Austin Powers film The Spy Who Shagged Me. It peaked at No. 2 in the UK and netted Madonna a fifth Grammy, won for Best Song Written for Visual Media.
Release year: src999 Album: Soundtrack of Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src9 src7. “Holiday” Curtis Hudson and Lisa Stevens-Crowder offered this song to several artists, including the Supremes’ Mary Wilson, before Madonna snapped it up for her debut album. The dance-pop energy and upbeat tempo helped the song become the singer’s first top-20 single, and critics now regard it as one of her finest releases.
Release year: src983 Album: Madonna Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src6 src6. “Who’s That Girl” Remember when Madonna was an actress? This single from her third movie was much more memorable than the film itself—so much so, in fact, that its original title (Slammer) was dropped, and it was renamed Who’s That Girl. The Latin pop song, with some lyrics in Spanish, became her sixth No. src hit.
Release year: src987 Album: Soundtrack of Who’s That Girl Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src American singer and actress Madonna with director James Foley on the set of the film “Slammer,” later titled “Who’s That Girl?.”
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src5. “Ray of Light” “Ray of Light,” the title track of Madonna’s seventh studio album, sees the singer delve further into electronica and is one of her biggest critical hits, earning three Grammy nods, including Record of the Year. It bowed at No. 5, her highest chart debut. The video also won five MTV Video Music Awards.
Release year: src998 Album: Ray of Light Billboard Hot src00 peak position: 5 src4. “Hung Up” The song “Hung Up” marks a return to Madonna’s dance club roots, a high-energy song that samples ABBA’s “Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)”—ABBA has rarely authorized such samples. Madonna tied Elvis with her 36th top src0 single with “Hung Up” and hit No. src in 4src countries.
Release year: 2005 Album: Confessions on a Dance Floor Billboard Hot src00 peak position: 7 src3. “Open Your Heart” “Open Your Heart” was the fourth single from Madonna’s wildly successful third album and became her fifth No. src hit. It also made her just the second female singer to chart three No. srcs from one album. The acclaimed music video is partly inspired by Cabaret.
Release year: src986 Album: True Blue Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src src2. “Live to Tell” Lyrically, “Live to Tell” marked a departure from earlier Madonna songs, telling of a dark secret she must keep: “Hope I live to tell the secret I have learned/ Till then it will burn inside of me.” She has never revealed the secret, but it resonated with listeners, rising to No. src.
Release year: src986 Album: True Blue Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src srcsrc. “Crazy for You” This song became Madonna’s second No. src hit, appearing on the Vision Quest soundtrack—and also marking the singer’s feature film debut. The pop ballad marked a departure from her earlier dance music, earning her a first Grammy nod (Best Female Pop Vocal Performance) and helping her break into adult contemporary.
Release year: src985 Album: Soundtrack of Vision Quest Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src The singer and actress Madonna in concert at the Pala Alpitour in Turin, Italy for one date of her Rebel Heart World Tour.
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src0. “Music” (2000) After going to a Sting concert, Madonna was moved to write this song about the unifying power of song. “Music makes the people come together/Music, mix the bourgeoisie and the rebel,” she sang. The song from the album Music hit No. src, and the video, which featured then-up-and-comer Sacha Baron Cohen, was a smash.
Release year: 2000 Album: Music Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src 9 “Into the Groove” From the first movie Madonna starred in, Desperately Seeking Susan, which she co-wrote, “Into the Groove” was Madonna’s first UK No. src and her bestselling early single. The sexual innuendo-laden tract invites a boy to “prove your love to me.” A Billboard poll once dubbed it the best src980s dance single.
Release year: src985 Album: Originally featured in the film Desperately Seeking Susan. Billboard Hot src00 peak position: N/A 8. “Material Girl” “Material Girl” was one of the defining ’80s songs, appearing on her second album, Like a Virgin. Though Madonna has said she herself isn’t materialistic, she liked the provocative nature of the song, which declares, “We are living in a material world.” The song vaulted the singer to superstardom, topping the Hot Dance Club Songs.
Release year: src985 (When it was released as a single) Album: Like a Virgin Billboard Hot src00 peak position: 2 7. “Dress You Up” Another Like a Virgin hit, “Dress You Up” opens dreamily, “You’ve got style, that’s what all the girls say.” The song, widely regarded as one of Madonna’s top singles, got a boost when the Parents Music Resource Center added it to its “Filthy Fifteen” for suggestive lyrics—helping into Billboard’s top five.
Release year: src985 (When it was released as a single) Album: Like a Virgin Billboard Hot src00 peak position: 5 6. “Borderline” From Madonna’s debut album, “Borderline” is so catchy and danceable that it’s no wonder it became the singer’s first top-src0 hit. The video depicted an interracial romance as Madonna proclaimed, “You just keep on pushin’ my love/Over the borderline.” “Borderline” drew critical acclaim, with Rolling Stone naming it the No. 2 song of the year.
Release year: src984 (When it was released as a single) Album: Madonna Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src0 5. “Justify My Love” Softer and more experimental than most of her previous music, “Justify My Love” became Madonna’s ninth No. src single. Lenny Kravitz co-wrote the song, which portrayed the singer’s sexual fantasies and belief women were in charge in the bedroom. MTV banned the suggestive video with Madonna’s then-boyfriend Tony Ward, which nonetheless went multiplatinum.
Release year: src990 Album: The Immaculate Collection Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src Madonna performs during opening night of The Celebration Tour at The O2 Arena on October src4, 2023 in London.
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4. “Vogue” One of the most iconic ’90s songs, this single from I’m Breathless is high-class fun. Madonna pays tribute to the stars of yesteryear. “Strike a pose,” she encourages, later repeating, “Don’t just stand there, let’s get to it/Strike a pose, there’s nothing to it.” It became her biggest-selling single to date.
Release year: src990 Album: I’m Breathless: Music From And Inspired By The Film Dick Tracy Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src 3. “Papa Don’t Preach” “Papa Don’t Preach” appeared on True Blue and has become one of the most notable Madonna songs due to its content. It addresses women’s autonomy and has also been interpreted as a pro-choice anthem, since the lyrics deal with a father’s reaction to teen pregnancy. This marked Madonna’s fourth No. src single.
Release year: src986 Album: True Blue Billboard Hot src00: src 2. “Like a Virgin” Madonna’s performance of “Like a Virgin” at the src984 MTV Video Music Awards remains an indelible pop culture moment. It was Madonna’s first song to top the Hot src00, from the album of the same name, and has sold more than 6 million worldwide. She continues to sing the popular tune on her concert tours.
Release year: src984 Album: Like A Virgin Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src src. “Like a Prayer” Perfectly uniting Madonna’s obsessions with sex, religion and taboos, “Like a Prayer” may set a record for double entendres, like this lyric: “I’m down on my knees/I wanna take you there.” The catchy song had an equally controversial video in which Madonna sleeps with a Black saint. Needless to say, it hit No. src.
Release year: src989 Album: Like a Prayer Billboard Hot src00 peak position: src Why Madonna Remains Of One Pop Music’s Most Influential Artists Madonna is one of the most successful and revered pop singers in history for a reason. Her top songs reveal an ability to change with the times while continuing to get people talking and build her reputation. You can enjoy every song on this list over and over without tiring of them.
Madonna has also recently released new music; Confessions II came out on July 3. Her song “Bring Your Love” with Sabrina Carpenter landed on the Billboard Hot src00. Madonna has not announced a next album yet.
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