Classic rock rankings usually feel like déjà vu, with the same handful of bands hogging the top spots. But UltimateClassicRock.com just gave the genre a fun shake-up by creating a list of the Top 100 Classic Rock Songs — with one important twist: only one song per artist.
That means no Beatles triple-play, no Led Zeppelin overload, and no Queen domination. Just one iconic track each, battling it out for rock supremacy.
And the crown goes to… Aerosmith’s “Sweet Emotion”. Released in 1975, it’s still one of the band’s most recognizable riffs and a permanent fixture on any rock radio playlist.
Right behind it at #2 is Led Zeppelin’s epic “Kashmir”, followed by The Rolling Stones’ gritty “Gimme Shelter” in third. The rest of the top five is just as stacked: AC/DC’s “Back in Black” at #4, and The Beatles’ “A Day in the Life” rounding things out at #5.
Here’s how the rest of the Top 20 shakes out:
- “All Along the Watchtower” – The Jimi Hendrix Experience
- “Bohemian Rhapsody” – Queen
- “Everybody Wants Some!!” – Van Halen
- “Comfortably Numb” – Pink Floyd
- “Paranoid” – Black Sabbath
- “Baba O’Riley” – The Who
- “Sweet Child O’ Mine” – Guns N’ Roses
- “Don’t Stop Believin’” – Journey
- “Sweet Home Alabama” – Lynyrd Skynyrd
- “Fortunate Son” – Creedence Clearwater Revival
- “Born to Run” – Bruce Springsteen
- “Crazy Train” – Ozzy Osbourne
- “L.A. Woman” – The Doors
- “La Grange” – ZZ Top
- “Hotel California” – Eagles
The full list spans decades of rock history, from psychedelic ’60s anthems to arena-shaking ’80s hits. And because of the one-song-per-artist rule, it’s a much more diverse playlist than the usual “Greatest Rock Songs” countdowns.
Fans online are already debating the rankings, questioning whether Bohemian Rhapsody should be higher, if Hotel California is underrated at #20, and whether it’s even possible to pick just one Pink Floyd song without starting a fight.
If nothing else, the list is a killer crash course in rock history — perfect for building a playlist that’ll keep you air-guitaring for hours without repeating the same band twice.
