The List

4 1990s and 2000s One-Hit Wonders That Deserved More Love

As all one-hit wonders come to find the hard way, scoring a monumentally successful single can be a double-edged sword, and these artists behind some of the most popular cuts in the 1990s and 2000s are certainly no exception to this paradoxical reality. On the one hand, a hit is a hit. On the other hand, it can be disheartening and challenging to get out from under the shadow of a career-defining single in a world that prioritizes commodity and familiarity.

Earning the relatively unlucky title of โ€œone-hit wonderโ€ means that no matter how vast someoneโ€™s musical catalogue becomes, the vast majority of the public will remember them for a single track. Weโ€™d argue that these bands from the 1990s and 2000s deserve far more love for the rest of their discography than theyโ€™ve received.

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Aqua

Ask someone if they know who Aqua is, and thereโ€™s a 50/50 chance youโ€™ll get a no. But ask someone if theyโ€™re at least vaguely familiar with the song โ€œBarbie Girl,โ€ chances are youโ€™re going to get a yes. The 1997 ode to a life in plastic, itโ€™s fantastic, is far and away the most recognizable track in the Danish-Norwegian dance-pop groupโ€™s discography.

But frankly, the entire album that โ€œBarbie Girlโ€ was on, Aquarium, is full of boppy bangers. Aquaโ€™s 1997 debut featured other great cuts like โ€œMy Oh Myโ€ย  and โ€œLollipop (Candyman).โ€ They even had slow, thoughtful ballads like โ€œTurn Back Time,โ€ proving their range went far beyond their incredibly catchy one-hit wonder.

Jet

Australian rock band Jetโ€™s best-selling single is โ€œAre You Gonna Be My Girlโ€ from their 2003 album, Get Born. The straightforward rock โ€˜nโ€™ roller landed multiple popular video game soundtrack slots on Madden 2004, Guitar Hero: On Tour, and Rock Band shortly thereafter. Jet enjoyed slightly milder success for other tracks like โ€œRollover DJ.โ€ But their status as a one-hit wonder is a shame, considering how great of an album Get Born is from start to finish.

If the general public were to remember Jet for any one song, weโ€™d argue that โ€œCold Hard B****,โ€ โ€œGet What You Need,โ€ or the slow burner โ€œLook What Youโ€™ve Doneโ€ are just as deserving of a spot as their 2000s one-hit wonder, โ€œAre You Gonna Be My Girl.โ€

Fiona Apple

Despite her prolific and varied musical career, Fiona Appleโ€™s musical legacy is largely dominated by her 1997 hit track, โ€œCriminal.โ€ Apple released the iconic song as her third single from her debut, Tidal. While she would maintain a prolific and varied musical career in the following years, none of her music reached the same level of ubiquity and chart-topping success as the Grammy Award-winning โ€œCriminal.โ€

However, to pigeonhole Fiona Apple as a 1990s and 2000s one-hit wonder would be to ignore a treasure trove of other tracks, including the title track and โ€œOโ€™Sailorโ€ from her 2005 record, Extraordinary Machine. Her home-recorded Fetch the Bolt Cutters from 2020 also includes multiple bangers, including โ€œUnder the Tableโ€ and โ€œShameika.โ€

Franz Ferdinand

Wrapping up our list of 1990s and 2000s one-hit wonders is Franz Ferdinand, a Scottish rock band that landed their biggest single with โ€œTake Me Outโ€ from their eponymous 2004 debut. Although the song peaked at a humble No. 66 on the Billboard Hot 100, it performed much better on the Billboard Alternative Airplay chart, topping out at No. 3. The song and its corresponding music video dominated the rock and alternative airways in the mid-2000s, but the Scottish band has far more deserving hits than that track alone.

Weโ€™d argue that โ€œDo You Want Toโ€ from You Could Have It So Much Better and โ€œNo You Girlsโ€ from Tonight: Franz Ferdinand have just as much driving alt-rock power and groove.ย 

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