Thirty days of summer is a pretty paltry amount of time to celebrate the LGBTQ+ community. Pride is so much more than a month of parades and celebrations. It’s life. And while we’d never balk at an excuse to celebrate everything that Pride stands for, we also believe that any time is the perfect time to crank up these gay songs and let the rainbow flag fly. That’s why we’ve assembled a 50-song playlist perfectly calibrated for Pride Month and beyond, featuring some of history’s greatest LGBTQ+ artists and allies. You’ll find party anthems and techno songs, disco infernos and punk-rock proclamations. No need to wait for the parade. This is your all-seasons, all-time-great Pride playlist.
Written by Brent DiCrescenzo, Adam Feldman, Sophie Harris, Andy Kryza, Ethan LaCroix, Kris Vire, and Kate Wertheimer.
RECOMMENDED:
đ The best party songs ever made
đ€ The best karaoke songs
đș The best pop songs of all time
đž The best classic rock songs
đ The best happy songs
Best gay songs, ranked
Image: Polydor
1. âI Will Surviveâ by Gloria Gaynor
It starts off slowly, shrouded in fear; then the beat kicks in, the song builds in confidence, and by the end, now backed by a string section, itâs a full-bore disco anthem of self-assurance. On its beautiful face, Gloria Gaynorâs âI Will Surviveâ is about a woman getting over the guy who done her wrong; but in 1978, as gay liberation was gathering steam in heated nightclubs around the world, it also played like an declaration of hard-won pride (âI used to cry / But now I hold my head up highâ) and independence from the hetero norm (âIâm not that chained-up little person still in love with youâ). In the 1980s, when AIDS wiped out tens of thousands of those celebrants, the song took on new layers of resonance. Today “I Will Survive” carries all of that baggage, and lifts it up along with the spirits of anyone who hears its message. Did you think weâd crumble? Did you think weâd lay down and die? Think again. Weâre going to dance.âAdam Feldman
Image: Columbia
2. âFreedom! â90â by George Michael
Six years after scoring a No. 1 hit called “Freedom” with Wham!, George Michael crushed the charts with this tune of the same name. The redundancy was the point. Michael was destroying his past, writing over it, melting it away with acid house. In the video, the symbols of his “Faith” fame burned and crumbledâhis leather jacket, the guitar, the Wurlitzer. The pop star didn’t appear in the video himself, instead putting his words in the mouths of godly women from the golden age of supermodelsâCampbell, Evangelista, Turlington, Crawford. The lip-synching proclaimed: Take this song, anyone, everyone, it is yours. (Though the less said about the Robbie Williams version, the better.)Â âBrent
Image: Warner Bros. Records
3. âVogueâ by Madonna
“Look around: Everywhere you turn is heartache.” That’s not exactly a fluffy opening shot for a dance-pop songâand that’s the point. Recorded at the height of America’s AIDS crisis and inspired by New York’s underground gay ball scene (famously documented in the 1991 film Paris Is Burning), Madonna’s deep-houseâinflected 1990 smash commands you to leave the heavy stuff asideâif only for a few minutesâand find salvation on the dance floor. Nearly a quarter century later, this classic track from one of the most gay-beloved artists of all time sounds no less imperative. âEthan LaCroix
Image: Xtra Mile
4. âBlack Me Outâ by Against Me!
Singer Laura Jane Grace has always been a revolutionaryâsee songs like “Baby I’m an Anarchist” â but nothing rebelled as deeply against the heteropatriarchal terrain of the punk music mainstream than her explorations of coming out as a trans woman on her pivotal album Transgender Dysphoria Blues. This song isn’t a feel-good tune â it’s a glaring middle finger to those that keep you from claiming and presenting your authentic self. Bash back and scream along: “I want to piss on the walls of your house.”
Image: Columbia
5. “Montero (Call Me By Your Name)” By Lil Nas X
Lil Nas X became a legend when he invaded the good ol’ boys’ country club with “Old Town Road.” He became an icon with “Montero,” an supercharged hit dripping with raw sexuality. Nas unabashed individualism and embrace of hookup culture made him a trailblazer in the world of hip hop, but nobody would have paid a lick of attention if the song wasn’t an absolute bop. Nas says he’s only here to sin. Giving into the temptation to join in is extra easy when the beat sounds like “.”
Image: Motown Records
6. âIâm Coming Outâ by Diana Ross
Yes, this song is about that kind of “coming out.” Chic’s Nile Rodgers was inspired to write this funky 1980 gem for Diana Ross after seeing multiple drag queens dressed as the iconic singer at a gay disco in New York. For her part, Ross was in the process of extracting herself from her long relationship with Motown when “I’m Coming Out” arrived on the charts, giving the song additional significance for the music legend. Today, Ross still opens her shows with “I’m Coming Out,” and the song remains a quintessential anthem of liberationâgay or otherwise. âEthan
Photograph: Luke Gilford
7. âQueenâ by Perfume Genius
Though Seattle singer-songwriter Mike Hadreas first came to prominence making fragile, melancholy songs hidden behind a piano, he reinvented the program with this single from his 2014 opus, Too Bright. Blaring â80s-pop synths, orchestral flourishes and lustrous backing vocals make for a triumphant party banger about turning the things other people see as “broken” into your armor and strength, all achieved with a smirkâ”No family is safe / When I sashay.”
Image: Mountain Apple Company
8. âOver the Rainbowâ by Judy Garland
For generations who grew up as âfriends of Dorothy,â yearning to escape into a realm of Technicolor urban fantasy, the tacit gay national anthem was Garlandâs wistful ballad from 1939âs The Wizard of Oz (with a gorgeous melody by Harold Arlen and touching lyrics by social activist E.Y. âYipâ Harburg). Garlandâs later performances of the song on TV and in concertâolder, battered by life, but still dreaming of a happier placeâhad even greater power. But even now that so many closet doors have opened, âOver the Rainbowââand donât you dare call it âSomewhere Over the Rainbow,â lest someone threaten to revoke your gay cardâstill inspires pride and reverence. Listening to it feels like saluting the rainbow flag. âAdam
Image: Capitol Records
9. âI Want to Break Freeâ by Queen
Youâd never guess this emancipation anthem was written by Queen bassist John Deacon and not frontman Freddie Mercury, such is the relish with which Mercury belts it out: “God knows, I’ve got to break free!” The Brits didnât bat an eye at the video â a parody of U.K. soap opera Coronation Street, which has the entire band in drag, Mercury as a horny housewifeâbut it was banned over here in the U.S. Par for the course. âSophie Harris
Image: Casablanca
10. âY.M.C.A.â by Village People
For any guy who’s ever wanted to be (or sleep with) a cowboy, cop or leather-clad biker, the Village People reign supreme as gay-anthem chart toppers. Songs like “Macho Man,” “Go West,” “Cruisin'” and “In the Navy” are full of double entendres, and 1978’s “Y.M.C.A.” â which became one of the most popular singles of the 1970s â is no different. In fact, the Young Men’s Christian Association was so appalled at the song’s implications that it threatened to sue, until it noticed that membership had significantly increased in the wake of the tune’s success. Turns out any press is good press â eh, boys? âKate WertheimerRecommended
Image: Strictly Rhythm
11. âFreeâ by Ultra NatĂ©
A global smash for dance diva Ultra NatĂ© in 1997, âFreeâ offers liberation not as a luxury but as an imperative: âYouâve got to live your life â do what you want to do,â urges the singer. The melancholy guitar riff that kicks off the song gives way to an ecstatic, celebratory chorus thatâs the musical embodiment of throwing your hands in the air. So donât hold back! âSophie Harris
Image: Sire
12. âA Little Respectâ by Erasure
âWhat religion or reason could drive a man to forsake his lover?â sings Andy Bell on this stirring synth-pop classic â a hit for British duo Erasure in 1988, and a perfect, piquant response to the British governmentâs outrageous Section 28 act. Word is that at the time, Bell would introduce the song onstage saying, âWhen I was a little girl, I asked my mummy, âCan I be gay when I grow up?â She replied, âYes, if you show a little respect.ââ âSophie
Image: Fantasy
13. âYou Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)â by Sylvester
A decade after Stonewall, openly gay musicians were still a rarity (being out is arguably a risky career move to this day). But flamboyant singer-songwriter Sylvester proved that queerness wasn’t incongruous with chart success, thanks to this incredibly infectious 1978 disco classic, one of the most beloved songs of its era. âEthan LaCroix
Image: Warner Bros. Records
14. âCloserâ by Tegan and Sara
The Quin twins may have become the worldâs most influential lesbian sister act with the massive success of this lead single from 2013âs Heartthrob, which finds the ladies shifting away from fuzzy guitars and toward shimmery dance pop. Itâs the most accessible entreaty to getting physical since Olivia Newton-John went to Dancercise; that Tegan and Saraâs young fans donât give a shit about the gender of the âyouâ in âhow to get you underneath meâ puts us that much closer to fine. âKris
Image: Channel Orange
15. “Forrest Gump” by Frank Ocean
“You run my mind boy,” Frank Ocean sings on this whistle-kissed, impossibly sweet R&B throwback from Channel Orange, the landmark album that served as Ocean’s introduction to the mainsteram pop/R&R/hip-hop world where LGBTQ contributions are most often lampshaded. Taken on its own, “Forrest Gump” is lovely, but it’s also just one piece of the complex puzzle that makes Ocean such a bracing, unpredictable and timeless artist.
Image: Casablanca
16. âGo Westâ by Pet Shop Boys
When the Village People got all Horace Greeley in 1979, it was most likely a wink and a nod to the growing gay utopia of San Francisco. By the time the Pet Shop Boys covered âGo Westâ in 1993, it was something altogether different. Coming at a moment after the most devastating years of the AIDS crisis, when the epidemic was better understood but its future was frustratingly unknowable, Neil Tennantâs melancholy reading of the song’s hope-filled lyrics, with backing from a large, all-male choir, finds something unexpectedly moving in a cheesy artifact. âKris
Image: Warner Bros. Records
17. âBelieveâ by Cher
Pop queen and gay icon Cher has been making records for six decades and has scored a No. 1 Billboard hit in each of those decades. But 1998 megahit âBelieveâ is the jewel in the crown, still one of the best-selling singles of all time. Hatched in the mold of âI Will Survive,â âBelieveâ matches its message of romantic courage to shamelessly trashy Eurodance backing and lashings of vocal Auto-Tune. Ridiculous? Yes. Empowering? Utterly. âSophie Harris
Image: London Records
18. âSmalltown Boyâ by Bronski Beat
The openly gay British trio Bronski Beat was a pioneer in integrating explicit LGBT-activist messages into its music, including this 1984 debut hit. Frontman Jimmy Somerville, in a sensitive falsetto, sings about a lad who flees hometown bullying â âRun away, turn awayâ is the recurring refrain â against a steady, reassuringly numb background of rhythm and synthesizer. The song takes the pain of rejection and makes it danceable. âAdam
Image: Columbia
19. âItâs Raining Menâ by the Weather Girls
Gay icons Diana Ross, Donna Summer, Cher and Barbra Streisand all turned down Paul Jabara and Paul Shaffer’s campy composition before the Weather Girls snatched it up in 1982. It’s impossible to imagine any of those more famous singers diving into this ridiculous classic with the fearlessness and vocal pyrotechnics of former Sylvester backup singers Izora Armstead and Martha Wash, who take the song over the top in the best possible sense. âEthan LaCroix
Image: Polydor
20. âLetâs Have a Kikiâ by Scissor Sisters
In the summer of 2012, “Let’s Have a Kiki” was so ubiquitous in New York gay bars and clubs that it nearly crossed over into annoying. By the time Sarah Jessica Parker sang it on Glee, we were officially over it. But after a brief break, it’s time to accept this song for what it is: A hilarious primer on queer underground culture (as with “Vogue,” the New York ball scene is the inspiration here), set to an irresistible techno beat. No wonder it got so big that your mom now thinks that MTA stands for “Motherfuckers Touching my Ass.” âEthan
Image: Kill Rock Stars
21. âWhere the Girls Areâ by The Gossip
We couldâve gone with a number of Gossip tracks; fiery frontwoman Beth Ditto has said the groupâs later breakthrough hit âStanding in the Way of Controlâ was penned as a reaction to President Bushâs endorsement during the 2004 election cycle of a constitutional amendment against same-sex marriage, after all. But thereâs something about the casual confidence with which the self-described âfat, feminist lesbian from Arkansasâ introduces herself in this lo-fi come-on from the bandâs 2000 debut: âWhen Iâm right, Iâll say Iâm right.â âKris Vire
Image: Parlophone
22. âAll the Loversâ by Kylie Minogue
The Australian pop princess may have scored her biggest dance-floor hit with âCanât Get You Out of My Headâ (or, ahem, âThe Locomotionâ), but euphoric, gorgeous disco swoon âAll the Loversâ really captures the spirit of Pride. Minogue herself has said that the video is an homage to her gay audience; it features a human pyramid of pansexual smooching (in the style of naked-installation artist Spencer Tunick). For good measure, thereâs also a galloping white horse, a dove, balloons and an inflatable elephant. âSophie
Image: Tommy Boy
23. âSupermodel (You Better Work)â by RuPaul
RuPaul, you are a goddess. The drag queen next door debuted this sassy hit in 1992, winning over not only gay fans, but an audience as wide as that of Nirvana’s Kurt Cobain, who cited the song as one of his favorites a year later. RuPaul is full of catchphrases (“lip-synch for your life,” anyone?), but the ones in this song are by far her most widely known and most oft repeated. Sashay, shantay! Shantay shantay shantay. âKate Wertheimer
Image: RCA
24. âBeautifulâ by Christina Aguilera
A connecting link between Cyndi Lauperâs âTrue Colorsâ and Katy Perryâs âFireworkâ (both on this list), Aguileraâs 2002 power ballad â written and produced by 4 Non Blondes lesbian hitmaker Linda Perry â proffers affirmation to those who feel they donât fit in. In the video, these include young people with body issues, a goth punk, a (biological) man putting on womenâs clothes and two guys tongue-kissing in public. âI am beautiful no matter what they say,â Aguilera insists on behalf of all these surrogates. âWords canât bring me down.â But songs can lift you up, and this one is a musical antidepressant. âAdam
Image: Interscope
25. âBorn This Wayâ by Lady Gaga
No one has ever campaigned so openly for a gay fan base as Lady Gaga, and her 2011 hit “Born This Way” was her most obvious gift to our demographic. The song has its detractors â it’s basically a rewrite of Madonna’s “Express Yourself,” it’s got some questionable lyrics (“Orient”? Really?), and the concept of being “born” gay is kind of irrelevant and unsubtle. Still, it’s hard not to be moved by its message of self-acceptance, and no other song composed in recent decades sounds better blaring from a float in a Gay Pride parade â and that’s all you can really ask from a great Pride anthem. âEthan LaCroix
Image: Columbia
26. âGonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)â by C+C Music Factory
A gag in a 1997 episode of The Simpsons found a manly steel mill turning into a flamboyant gay club when this 1990 track came over the loudspeaker â an indication of just how thoroughly gay this song is. “Gonna Make You Sweat” is the second song on our list featuring the powerhouse vocals of Weather Girls singer Martha Wash, who never quite achieved mainstream fame (she was replaced in this track’s video by C+C Music Factory member Zelma Davis), but has been beloved by the gay community for decades. âEthan
Image: RCA
27. âThe Jean Genieâ by David Bowie
The copper mullet, the lightning bolt across the face â in 1972, Bowie was at the peak of his androgynous alien phase, pushing Ziggy Stardust closer to the sun until he incinerated in a flash. A year before, in a Melody Maker interview, the glam rocker had declared himself gay. Though he later sloppily retracted the statement in a drug fog (he was living on a rumored diet of coke, milk and peppers), it remained a momentous occasion in pop music. As “Mannish Boy” echoed through Mick Ronson’s dirty blues riff, the Jean Genie, or Aladdin Sane, or whatever Bowie’s avatar might have been at the moment, proved you could growl through tough and gnarly rock while sporting perfectly applied lip gloss. âBrent DiCrescenzo
Image: Universal
28. âVizâ by Le Tigre
Before forming her dance-DJ-production project MEN, JD Samson stepped up to the mike as a member of this electro-rock trio. “Viz” (2004), about butch-lesbian visibility, offers an early glimpse of Samson’s sly humor and her ability to make radical queer politics into dance-floor fodder. Bandmates Kathleen Hanna and Johanna Fateman join in on the final chorus for a joyous feminist sing-along. âEthan
Image: Sire
29. âYour Loving Armsâ by Billie Ray Martin
Most gay dance anthems are packed with drama of both the lyrical and vocal variety. But in 1994, German singer Billie Ray Martin invaded clubland with this icy floor filler that’s so calm she almost seems detached. Don’t let that near-monotone fool you, thoughâ Martin is a formidable vocalist, and when she finally cuts loose (“Burning inside, burning inside, yeah!”), it’s a master class in the art of delayed gratification. âEthan LaCroix
Image: Cooperative Music
30. âCity Grrrlâ by CSS
Bad girls and gay boys have always been besties, and this 2011 track from Brazilian combo Cansei de Ser Sexy is a loving ode to that special relationship. Lead singer Lovefoxxx looks back on adolescent fantasies of “being busy with my job and my gay friends, laughing and drinking with my one-night stands” in the “big city.” Anyone who’s ever felt trapped in a small town (and eventually escaped) will definitely relate. âEthan
Image: Some Bizzare
31. âTainted Loveâ by Soft Cell
Okay, the gay experience is not all about empowerment and acceptance and rainbows and unicorns. Sometimes itâs about toxic narcissists who break your heart, and Soft Cellâs 1981 single â a cover of a forgotten 1964 soul track by Gloria Jones â captures all the anger and hurt that unrequited love can bring. The confusion, too: âDonât touch me, please / I cannot stand the way you teaseâ quickly relents into a âTouch me, babyâ fadeout. And gay lead singer Marc Almond gave it a subtle edge of queer insider knowledge. âAdam Feldman
32. âGimme! Gimme! Gimme! (A Man After Midnight)â by ABBA
ABBA may be synonymous with â70s soft rock, but this galloping disco anthem proved the Swedes could also turn up the tempo. Singer Agnetha FĂ€ltskog wails about the frustration of being lonely (and maybe horny) late at night while parked in front of the TV. It’s a familiar scenario to anyone who’s ever spent a long night flipping through Grindr (or Scruff or Manhunt or whatever).âEthan LaCroix
33. âLast Danceâ by Donna Summer
All good things must come to an end, and Donna Summerâs 1978 disco smash is an invitation to go out with a bang. Written for the movie Thank God Itâs Friday by gay disco composer Paul Jabaraâwho won an Oscar for itâthe number begins in a sleepy, reflective space, then rouses itself and its listeners to get back in the swing of things. Not surprisingly, it is often played as the final tune of a long night, offering one last shot to party like thereâs no tomorrow (and then, tomorrow, to party again).âAdam Feldman
Image: Portrait
34. âTrue Colorsâ by Cyndi Lauper
Cyndi Lauperâs spunky 1983 debut album, Sheâs So Unusual, overflowed with coded queer messages (including a reference to Blueboy magazine and a Prince cover that didnât change the gender pronouns), but the title track of her 1986 follow-up endeared her even more to LGBT listeners tired of being judged for being different. âI see your true colors / And thatâs why I love you,â Lauper sings in a voice of tenderness tinged with urgency. âSo donât be afraid to let them show / Your true colors are beautiful like a rainbow.â In her long history of gay activism â perhaps no other straight pop star has been more actively engaged on that front â Lauper has always been willing to speak colorful truth to power. â
Image: Island Records
35. âCome to My Windowâ by Melissa Etheridge
Four years before Ellen declared, âYep, Iâm Gay,â on the cover of Time, Melissa Etheridge titled her 1993 album Yes I Am after publicly coming out as a lesbian at an inaugural event for Bill Clinton. The rocker won a Grammy for this single, an appeal to a lover that’s steeped in tumult and possible secrecy. The terrific bridge â “I don’t care what they think, I don’t care what they say / What do they know about this love anywayâ â seemed almost tailor-made to inspire gay listeners to come out with confidence. âKris Vire
Image: Capitol Records
36. “Him” by Sam Smith
While “Dancing With A Stranger” is the more club-ready song from the gay British icon, we all need a bit of time for reflection. Smith returns to the balladry that made him famous with this pensive, piano-driven song about the singer’s struggle reconciling his identity with his religion. Anyone who’s ever struggled with that particular duality should feel wholly seen. And anyone who hasn’t will nonetheless be left in tears. That’s the power of Sam Smith.Â
Image: RCA
37. âWalk on the Wild Sideâ by Lou Reed
With this dry, wry, bass-driven paean to sexual outlaws from his 1972 album, Transformer, Reed cemented his street cred as the epitome of New York cool. The subjects of his seen-it-all narration are five colorful characters from the crowd that Andy Warhol had declared, by fiat, âsuperstarsâ: early trans icons Holly Woodlawn, Candy Darling and Jackie Curtis, plus a couple of very irregular Joes (Dallesandro and Campbell). The song became a top-20 hit (though the radio edit scrubbed out a reference to backroom blow jobs), and helped raise the voltage bar on what was considered shocking. âAdam Feldman
Image: Kill Rock Stars
38. âRebel Girlâ by Bikini Kill
This muscular riot-grrrl anthem finds singer Kathleen Hanna straddling the line between platonic crush (“I think I want to be her best friend”) and flat-out sapphism (“In her kiss, I taste the revolution!”). If you want to see a room full of gay girls (and more than a few boys) lose their shit, play this 1993 classic on the jukebox. â
Image: Ode
39. âSweet Transvestiteâ by Tim Curry
High-school and college boys looking for an excuse to wear sexy black lingerie in public found a perfect one in Richard OâBrienâs B-flick musical spoof and midnight-movie cult smash The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Tim Curryâs outrageous camp charisma as the antiheroic Dr. Frank-N-Furter â alien, mad scientist and deviant seducer in one gartered package â dragged cross-dressing out of the shadows and strutted it as a virtue. Shamelessness has never seemed so easy. âAdam Feldman
Image: Island Records
40. âBattle Cryâ by Angel Haze
The young rapper, who identifies as pansexual, doesnât directly address sexuality in this second single from 2013’s Dirty Gold. But the trackâs themes of working away from a repressive religious upbringing and relying on inner strength to overcome obstacles (“I realized I was a teacher, not just one of the heathens / I’m going to destroy the fallacies, start creating believersâ), combined with a seductively uplifting Sia-sung hook, make for gold indeed. âKris VireRecommended
Image: Konichiwa
41. âHang with Meâ by Robyn
Fuck buddies, open relationships, one-night-stands⊠gays don’t have the market on casual sexuality cornered, but we certainly have it figured out a little better than our straight brethren. Critically adored pop sensation Robyn proved she could hang with the gays in 2010 when she released this single spelling out the pros and cons of friends with benefits. âEthan LaCroix
42. âMake Your Own Kind of Musicâ by Mama Cass
Cass Elliott was a big, warm woman with a big, warm voice, and she didnât fit easily into the sleek, cool world of pop music; she was unlucky in love, and died of a heart attack at 32. But these are the kinds of things that can make a gay boy love you even more. Part good-time gal pal and part maternal figure, she had credibility in 1969 whenâhaving just ended her stint with the Mamas and the Papas, which forever tagged her as Mama Cassâshe sang Barry Mann and Cynthia Weilâs words of encouragement and independence: âMake your own kind of music / Even if nobody else sings along.ââAdam Feldman
Image: XL
43. âGay Barâ by Electric Six
âYou! I want to take you to a gay bar.â Like many of the tracks on this Detroit dance-rock outfitâs 2003 debut (Fire), âGay Barâ is infectious nonsense. But its hand-clappy, surf-rock vibe is good fun, and a tongue-in-cheek video, featuring singer Dick Valentine cavorting homoerotically around the White House with a cadre of scantily clad Gaybraham Lincolns, helped make the song a hit at theâŠyou know. âKris Vire
Image: Terrible Records
44. âWutâ by Le1f
It’s a rare (and brave) thing to be a gay hip-hop artist, but Le1f is unabashedly queer â and also incredibly talented. “Wut” (2012) was his coming-out single (pun intended?), featuring some insanely tongue-twisting verses and a lot of Le1f thigh in the music video. Is it the coming of a new banjee rap era? Perhaps. Though, as Le1f told Fader, “Gay rapâŠis not a genre. My goal is always to make songs that a gay dude or a straight dude can listen to and just think, This dude has swag.” Mission accomplished. âKate
Image: Columbia
45. âDamn I Wish I Was Your Loverâ by Sophie B. Hawkins
âI give you something sweet each time you come inside my jungle book,â coos omnisexual chanteuse Sophie B. Hawkins in this sensual 1992 hit, an explosive ode to unfulfilled desire thatâs become a Pride staple. MTV banned the supposedly saucy video, but itâs the song that sizzles, as this fully clothed but still sexy version attests. âSophie Harris
Image: XL
46. âI U Sheâ by Peaches
Peaches may be the sexiest human alive, and the reason is made clear in this song, off 2003’s Fatherfucker: “I don’t have to make the choice / I like girls and I like boys.” Never has sexuality been so fluid (and never have gender norms been so completely disregarded) as in the career of super queer, super talented Merrill Beth Nisker, who pushes the envelope and offends sensibilities at every turn. Also,Â
Image: Casablanca
47. âGrace Kellyâ by Mika
This bold, fabulous single, from Mika’s 2007 Life in Cartoon Motion, is at heart about refusing to change who you are to find acceptance. It’s the stuff gay anthems are made of, from the message to the sheer jam-packedness of the music â tap-dancing rhythms, iconic film dialogue, Elton-like piano riffs and campy vocals all work together to create a joyous pop hit. (It also doesn’t hurt that Mika is such a dreamboat.) âKate Wertheimer
Image: A&M
48. âFinallyâ by CeCe Peniston
CeCe Peniston’s 1991 hit holds up just fine on its own, but it’s been elevated to anthem status (and makes the cut here) thanks to its inclusion in the 1994 film classic The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. Two decades later, it’s impossible to hear this song without picturing Terence Stamp, Hugo Weaving and Guy Pearce lip-synching along in their eye-popping drag getups. âEthan
Image: ZTT
49. âRelaxâ by Frankie Goes to Hollywood
The BBC tried to ban this thumping, boundary-pushing 1984 debut single by Britpop provocateurs Frankie Goes to Hollywood, for sexually suggestive (if confusing) lyrics like these: âRelax, donât do it / When you want to suck to it / Relax, donât do it / When you want to come.â The songâs outrĂ© original video was a Fellini-esque fantasy involving leathermen, drag queens, tiger wrestling and an obese emperor in a toga, all building to an even more over-the-top climax; the video was banned by the BBC, too (and MTV). But it didnât matter: The song was a hit, and Frankie Goes to Hollywoodâs time had come. âAdam Feldman
Image: Republic Records
50. “You Need to Calm Down” by Taylor Swift
Taylor has long been an ally, but before Lover she seemed to be cheering from the sidelines. “You Need To Calm Down” finds Taylor front and center, calling out callous bigots and homopobes with lines like “‘shade never made anybody less gay.” The bubblebum beat serves as much as a flippant middle finger to dirtbags as it does a call to the dancefloor for those who aren’t. Bonus points for the video featuring an army of former Drag Race contestants… including Taylor impersonator Jade Jolie.