The List

5 One-Hit Wonders With Lyrics Better Than Most No. 1 Hits

Sometimes, a one-hit wonder will come along as the pure embodiment of David Byrneโ€™s โ€œPsycho Killerโ€ sentiment: โ€œSay something once, why say it again?โ€ If youโ€™re going to get your point across, then you might as well do so succinctly. After that, what purpose does repetition serve?

Across multiple decades and just as many genres, these five one-hit wonders topped the charts for a singular moment, said what they had to say, and then faded out of the charts and into a more nostalgic musical rotation.

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โ€œMMMBopโ€ by Hanson

Iโ€™ll start this list of one-hit wonder lyrics by getting the obvious joke out of the way: no, Iโ€™m not including Hansonโ€™s 1997 hit song, โ€œMMMBopโ€, for the chorus. If you get past the infectious earworm โ€œmmmbopsโ€ and โ€œba duba bopsโ€, the verses are actually surprisingly sentimental.

โ€œYou have so many relationships in this life / only one or two will last / You go through all the pain and strife / then you turn your back, and theyโ€™re gone so fast,โ€ the song begins. โ€œSo, hold on the ones who really care / in the end, theyโ€™ll be the only ones there / when you get old, start losing your hair.โ€

โ€œEverybodyโ€™s Got to Learn Sometimeโ€ by The Korgis

Full disclosure: I watched Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind at a formidable time in my life, and for a long time, I thought Beckโ€™s version that plays at the end of the movie was an original. But it was first a hit for British one-hit wonders The Korgis, whose lyrics reflect on self-transformation and improvement in a simple but effective way.

โ€œChange your heart / look around you / change your heart / it will astound you / and I need your lovinโ€™ like the sunshine / Everybodyโ€™s got to learn sometime.โ€ The lyrics arenโ€™t verbose by any means, but they get rather grandiose ideas of reflection and discernment with just a few phrases.

โ€œFloat Onโ€ by Modest Mouse

Before any Modest Mouse fans protest, Iโ€™d like to remind you, dear reader, that I compile these one-hit wonder lists using the pinnacle of mainstream chart success: the Billboard Hot 100. And โ€œFloat Onโ€ was, indeed, the only Modest Mouse single that charted on the non-genre-specific list. I digress. The point is the timelessness of the bandโ€™s darkly optimistic lyrics that remind us things arenโ€™t all that bad, and frankly, it could always get worse.

โ€œBad news comes, donโ€™t you worry even when it lands / Good news will work its way to all them plans / We both got fired on exactly the same day / Well, weโ€™ll all float on, good news is on the way.โ€

โ€œSan Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair)โ€

Few songs have presented such a compelling argumentโ€”or guidebookโ€”to visit a city like Scott McKenzieโ€™s โ€œSan Franciscoโ€. Written by The Mamas and the Papasโ€™ John Phillips, the quintessentially late-60s folk tune has all the gentle, peace-loving demureness of the happiest, sunshiniest corners of the counterculture movement. The song evokes images of smiling hippies passing out flowers in the park. In the bridge, it becomes almost anthemic.

โ€œAll across the nation, such a strange vibration / People in motion / Thereโ€™s a whole generation with a new explanation / People in motion.โ€ย  McKenzieโ€™s convincing vocal performance makes it hard not to want to drop everything and travel to the West Coast โ€œlove-inโ€ full of โ€œgentle people.โ€

โ€œHarper Valley P.T.A.โ€ by Jeannie C. Riley

Finally, closing out this list of incredible lyrics in one-hit wonder tracks is Jeannie C. Rileyโ€™s storytelling song, โ€œHarper Valley P.T.A.โ€ Technically, the beauty of this 1968 single is the lyrical content in its entirety. As the daughter of the woman the Harper Valley P.T.A. is berating in a note, Riley describes all the things the association dislikes about her. Her skirts, her boyfriends, her drinking. โ€œSigned by the secretary, Harper Valley P.T.A.โ€

The mother attends the associationโ€™s meeting that night and lays into the group for their hypocrisy, citing their own infidelity, addiction, and indecency. She ends the song with one final K.O., wrapped up by her onlooker daughter.

โ€œThen you have the nerve to tell me you think that as a mother, Iโ€™m not fit / Well, this is just a little Peyton Place, and youโ€™re all Harper Valley hypocrites,โ€ the momโ€™s tirade ends. Riley concludes, โ€œNo, I wouldnโ€™t put you on because it really did happen just this way / the day my mama socked it to the Harper Valley P.T.A.โ€

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