100 Best Songs of 1998

The year is 1998. The world is teetering on the edge of a new millennium, fueled by a weird mix of Y2K anxiety and a desperate, shiny optimism. We were all buying Nokia brick phones, watching Dawson’s Creek, and pretending we understood the plot of The Matrix. But mostly, we were listening to the 100 best songs of 1998 on the Billboard charts.

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As a lifelong chart nerd, I’ve spent way too much time obsessing over the Billboard Hot 100 1998 rankings. Why? Because back then, the charts were the only honest map of the American psyche. Before the internet fractured us into a billion sub-genres, we all shared the same airwaves. Whether you were in a suburban mall in Ohio or a club in Atlanta, 1998 music nostalgia hits the same. It was a fever dream where country-pop crossover queens, ’90s R&B hits, and guys in bucket hats making “jiggy” sounds all fought for the same four minutes of your attention.

Looking back at the best songs of 1998, it wasn’t just a “good year” for music. It was a chaotic, beautiful, and deeply human pivot point. We were moving away from the gritty grunge of the mid-’90s and diving headfirst into the glossier reality of late-’90s pop music. These weren’t just tracks; they were the soundtrack to the moments that defined us: the breakups in parked cars, the sweaty house parties, and the slow dances that felt like the end of the world.

The Top 10 Songs of 1998: A Deep Dive into the Soul of America

This isn’t just a list of the top songs of 1998. This is a post-mortem of what we valued, what we obsessed over, and what we were too embarrassed to admit we liked.

10. Paula Cole – I Don’t Want To Wait

“I don’t want to wait for our lives to be over / I want to know right now what will it be?”

Let’s be real: you hear this song, and you see James Van Der Beek’s crying face. It’s unavoidable. But beyond the Dawson’s Creek connection, Paula Cole captured a specific brand of late-90s existential dread. We were all impatient. We were all waiting for “life” to start, terrified it might pass us by before we figured out who we were. It’s an earnest, piano-driven plea for presence in a world that was already starting to move too fast.

9. Usher – Nice & Slow

“I’ll take my time / Cause I’m in no rush / And I want to make sure you’re comfortable.”

Before Usher was a global mogul, he was the kid who perfected the “slow jam.” This track defined the ’90s R&B hits that dominated American radio: high-gloss production and vocals like liquid velvet. I remember this playing on every car radio at night, making everyone feel way cooler and more sophisticated than they actually were during their drive-thru runs.

8. Elton John – Candle In The Wind 1997

“And it seems to me you lived your life / Like a candle in the wind.”

This song is a heavy outlier. It’s a global wake for Princess Diana that lingered on the U.S. charts because we weren’t ready to stop grieving. It’s a rare moment when the charts stop being about “entertainment” and become about a shared human experience. It was the fastest-selling single for a reason: we needed a place to put our collective sadness.

7. K-Ci and JoJo – All My Life

“All my life I prayed for someone like you / And I thank God that I, that I finally found you.”

If you were alive in 1998, you attended at least three American weddings or school dances where this was the centerpiece. It is the ultimate “I’m all in” anthem. Coming from the Jodeci lineage, K-Ci and JoJo brought a raw, gospel-inflected passion to pop radio that made every other love song feel a bit flimsy. It’s vulnerable, slightly desperate, and undeniably powerful.

6. Janet – Together Again

“Everywhere I go, every smile I see / I know you are there, smiling back at me.”

Janet Jackson turned the pain of the AIDS crisis into a shimmering, house-inspired dance track. That’s the genius of it. It’s a song about death that makes you want to live. I remember the vibe in the clubs when this came on: it wasn’t just dancing, it was a release. It proved that the top songs of 1998 could have a massive heart under all that production.

5. LeAnn Rimes – How Do I Live

“How do I live without you? / I want to know / How do I breathe without you if you ever go?”

This song stayed on the U.S. charts for 69 weeks. Read that again. It’s a statistical anomaly. Whether you prefer the LeAnn version or the Trisha Yearwood one, the song became the definitive power ballad of the era. It’s the sound of absolute, terrifying dependence on another person, and for some reason, we couldn’t get enough of that feeling.

4. Savage Garden – Truly Madly Deeply

“I want to stand with you on a mountain / I want to bathe with you in the sea.”

The Australians brought us a brand of romanticism that was almost painfully sincere. It’s a “bed of roses” kind of song. At a time when the world was starting to get cynical and “meta,” Savage Garden was out here singing about bathing in the sea. It worked because we all secretly want to be loved with that kind of un-ironic intensity.

3. Shania Twain – You’re Still The One

“You’re still the one I run to / The one that I belong to / You’re still the one I want for life.”

Shania Twain didn’t just cross over; she took over. This song was the bridge between Nashville and the rest of the planet. It’s a song about beating the odds, which is a theme that never goes out of style. Even now, when those opening chords hit, there’s a sense of warmth and “we made it” that most pop stars would kill for.

2. Brandy and Monica – The Boy Is Mine

“You need to give it up / Had enough / I told you, ‘Boy, he’s mine!'”

This was the heavyweight title fight of the year. The production by Rodney Jerkins was futuristic, twitchy, and perfect. But the real draw was the chemistry (and the rumored rivalry) between Brandy and Monica. It was a masterclass in passive-aggressive vocal sparring. Every girl I knew in 1998 picked a side. It was the pinnacle of R&B storytelling.

1. Next – Too Close

“I step back, I’m sorry as can be / But girl, you know it’s something I can’t help.”

Here it is: the most honest song of 1998. While everyone else was singing about mountains and soulmates, Next was singing about getting an accidental “physical reaction” while dancing in a club. It’s hilarious, it’s groovy, and it’s peak 1998. It dominated the top songs of 1998 because it was catchy as hell and dared to talk about the messy, awkward reality of being a human being with hormones. It’s the ultimate “guilty pleasure” that we eventually stopped feeling guilty about.

Our Pick: Allure feat. 112 – All Cried Out

“My body never knew such pleasure / My heart never knew such pain.”

If you want to talk about the unsung heavy lifters of ’90s R&B hits, you have to talk about Allure and 112. “All Cried Out” is a cover of the 1986 Lisa Lisa & Cult Jam classic, but Allure didn’t just cover it: they modernized it into something that felt like a baptism by rain and heartbreak. Produced by Mariah Carey, this track hit number four on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1998, and for good reason. It’s that rare song that sounds best when you’re staring out a rainy window, feeling like your life is a high-stakes music video.

The Full Top 100 Songs of 1998

Rank

Artist

Title

Peak

WoC

1

Next

Too Close

1

38

2

Brandy and Monica

The Boy Is Mine

1

27

3

Shania Twain

You’re Still The One

2

42

4

Savage Garden

Truly Madly Deeply

1

52

5

LeAnn Rimes

How Do I Live

2

69

6

Janet

Together Again

1

46

7

K-Ci and JoJo

All My Life

1

34

8

Elton John

Candle In The Wind 1997

1

42

9

Usher

Nice & Slow

1

29

10

Paula Cole

I Don’t Want To Wait

11

56

11

Third Eye Blind

How’s It Going To Be

9

52

12

Destiny’s Child

No, No, No

3

31

13

Celine Dion

My Heart Will Go On

1

20

14

Will Smith

Gettin’ Jiggy Wit It

1

24

15

Usher

You Make Me Wanna…

2

47

16

Usher

My Way

2

30

17

Mariah Carey

My All

1

20

18

Monica

The First Night

1

26

19

Puff Daddy & The Family

Been Around The World

2

21

20

Sarah McLachlan

Adia

3

36

21

Jennifer Paige

Crush

3

24

22

Backstreet Boys

Everybody (Backstreet’s Back)

4

33

23

Aerosmith

I Don’t Want To Miss A Thing

1

20

24

Public Announcement

Body Bumpin Yippie-Yi-Yo

5

31

25

Faith Hill

This Kiss

7

34

26

Uncle Sam

I Don’t Ever Want To See You Again

6

29

27

Montell Jordan

Let’s Ride

2

21

28

Marcy Playground

Sex And Candy

8

44

29

Robyn

Show Me Love

7

33

30

Boyz II Men

A Song For Mama

7

20

31

Mase

What You Want

6

20

32

Madonna

Frozen

2

20

33

Wyclef Jean

Gone Till November

7

30

34

LSG

My Body

4

24

35

Chumbawamba

Tubthumping

6

31

36

Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz

Deja Vu (Uptown Baby)

9

24

37

‘N Sync

I Want You Back

13

28

38

Five

When The Lights Go Out

10

33

39

Jon B.

They Don’t Know

7

31

40

Master P

Make Em’ Say Uhh!

16

28

41

Nicole feat. Missy Elliott

Make It Hot

5

23

42

All Saints

Never Ever

4

21

43

Janet

I Get Lonely

3

20

44

Mase

Feel So Good

5

24

45

Voices Of Theory

Say It

10

25

46

Billie Myers

Kiss The Rain

15

31

47

Puff Daddy

Come With Me

4

20

48

Sylk-E Fyne

Romeo And Juliet

6

20

49

Mya and Sisqo

It’s All About Me

6

20

50

Hanson

I Will Come To You

9

20

51

Barenaked Ladies

One Week

1

25

52

K.P. and Envyi

Swing My Way

6

21

53

Xscape

The Arms Of The One Who Loves You

7

20

54

Somethin’ For The People

My Love Is The Shhh!

4

26

55

Tatyana Ali

Daydreamin’

6

22

56

Dru Hill

We’re Not Making Love No More

13

23

57

Third Eye Blind

Semi-Charmed Life

4

43

58

Lisa Loeb

I Do

17

25

59

Mase

Lookin’ At Me

8

20

60

LeAnn Rimes

Looking Through Your Eyes

18

26

61

Divine

Lately

1

24

62

Backstreet Boys

Quit Playing Games (With My Heart)

2

43

63

Next

I Still Love You

14

28

64

Inoj

Time After Time

6

25

65

Jimmy Ray

Are You Jimmy Ray?

13

20

66

Ace Of Base

Cruel Summer

10

20

67

Master P

I Got The Hook Up!

16

20

68

Puff Daddy & The Family

Victory

19

20

69

Spice Girls

Too Much

9

16

70

Pras feat. ODB and Mya

Ghetto Supastar

15

24

71

Dru Hill feat. Redman

How Deep Is Your Love

3

22

72

Kelly Price

Friend Of Mine

12

22

73

Busta Rhymes

Turn It Up [Remix]

10

22

74

Edwin McCain

I’ll Be

5

37

75

Madonna

Ray Of Light

5

20

76

Sister Hazel

All For You

11

43

77

Monifah

Touch It

9

24

78

Lox

Money, Power & Respect

17

20

79

The Verve

Bitter Sweet Symphony

12

20

80

Busta Rhymes

Dangerous

9

20

81

Spice Girls

Spice Up Your Life

18

20

82

98 Degrees

Because Of You

3

31

83

Loreena McKennitt

The Mummers’ Dance

18

20

84

Allure feat. 112

All Cried Out

4

28

85

Big Punisher feat. Joe

Still Not A Player

24

34

86

Aaliyah

The One I Gave My Heart To

9

25

87

Jewel

Foolish Games / You Were Meant For Me

2

65

88

Inoj

Love You Down

25

24

89

2Pac

Do For Love

21

20

90

Luke

Raise The Roof

26

20

91

Nu Flavor

Heaven

27

26

92

Jd (Jermaine Dupri)

The Party Continues

29

20

93

Missy Elliott feat. Da Brat

Sock It 2 Me

12

20

94

Next

Butta Love

16

32

95

Aretha Franklin

A Rose Is Still A Rose

26

20

96

Boyz II Men

4 Seasons Of Loneliness

1

21

97

LL Cool J

Father

18

20

98

Gerald Levert

Thinkin’ Bout It

12

20

99

Deborah Cox

Nobody’s Supposed To Be Here

2

40

100

TQ

Westside

12

20

Note on Methodology: This ranking utilizes data from the Billboard Hot 100 year-end charts and historical analyst data. For instances where Billboard data was unavailable or to reflect cultural longevity in America, rankings were adjusted based on retrospective popularity on modern streaming platforms like Spotify and YouTube.

1998 Hits – The 100 Best Songs of the Year on Spotify

Final Thoughts: Why 1998 Music Nostalgia Still Hits

We tend to look back at the late ’90s pop music scene through an ironic lens, mocking the baggy jeans and over-the-top music videos. But beneath the frost-tipped hair and the lens flares, 1998 was a year of genuine emotional connection in America. It was the last time we were all truly on the same page before the world turned digital.

If you find yourself feeling a little disconnected, do yourself a favor: go back to the best songs of 1998 for an hour. Turn off the notifications, put on your best headphones, and let the smooth R&B and the earnest pop ballads wash over you. There’s a particular kind of magic in the music of that year.

Frequently Asked Questions

What was the #1 song on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1998?

The year-end number one song was “Too Close” by Next. While other songs spent more time at the top during the calendar year, “Too Close” had the most massive, sustained impact across U.S. radio and sales throughout 1998.

Why was 1998 such a big year for R&B in the U.S.?

1998 was the “Golden Era” of R&B production. Producers like Rodney Jerkins, Missy Elliott, and Timbaland were reinventing the sound with futuristic beats. At the same time, artists like Usher, Brandy, and Monica brought a vocal sophistication that felt both classic and brand new.

What songs defined American pop culture in 1998?

Beyond the Top 10, songs like Celine Dion’s “My Heart Will Go On” (thanks to the Titanic phenomenon) and Will Smith’s “Gettin’ Jiggy Wit It” defined the cultural zeitgeist. These songs were inescapable in malls, movie theaters, and sports arenas across the country.