web analytics

1998 Music Hits: Top Songs, Radio Favorites, and Pop Classics

1998 music was a colorful mix of teen pop, Latin pop, alternative rock, adult contemporary, hip-hop, R&B, country-pop, dance music, and movie soundtrack favorites. Smash Mouth, Shania Twain, Ricky Martin, Santana, Cher, Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, TLC, Backstreet Boys, Jennifer Lopez, Goo Goo Dolls, Sarah McLachlan, Jay-Z, and Lenny Kravitz helped define a year when radio, CDs, MTV, and late-1990s pop culture were all moving fast toward the new millennium.

This PopCultureMadness guide starts with the Top 10 songs of 1998, then groups more 1998 music hits by style so you can browse the year by sound, mood, and memory. It was the era when Latin pop exploded, teen pop was about to take over everything, and All Star began its long journey from hit song to internet punchline royalty.

Quick Answer: What Music Was Popular in 1998?

Popular music in 1998 included alternative rock, teen pop, Latin pop, R&B, hip-hop, adult contemporary, country-pop, dance music, and movie soundtrack songs. Songs like All Star, Man! I Feel Like a Woman!, Mambo No. 5, Smooth, Believe, …Baby One More Time, No Scrubs, and I Want It That Way helped define the late-1990s sound.

Top 10 Songs of 1998

  1. All Star – Smash Mouth
  2. Man! I Feel Like a Woman! – Shania Twain
  3. Mambo No. 5 – Lou Bega
  4. I Need to Know – Marc Anthony
  5. Smooth – Santana featuring Rob Thomas
  6. Livin’ la Vida Loca – Ricky Martin
  7. Canned Heat – Jamiroquai
  8. Believe – Cher
  9. Summer Girls – LFO
  10. We Like to Party! – Vengaboys

More 1998 Music Hits by Style

Beyond the Top 10, 1998 music gets more useful when grouped by style. The year had pop-rock anthems, Latin crossover hits, country-pop giants, R&B smashes, hip-hop radio favorites, dance-club tracks, soundtrack songs, and the first wave of teen-pop dominance that would define the end of the decade.

1998 Pop, Teen Pop, and Big Radio Hits

Pop music in 1998 was moving toward the huge teen-pop explosion of 1999 and 2000. Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Backstreet Boys, *NSYNC, LFO, Jessica Simpson, B*Witched, and Jennifer Lopez helped shape a bright, image-driven sound that fit perfectly on MTV and radio. This was pop with choreography, glossy hooks, and enough late-1990s styling to fog up a mall photo booth.

…Baby One More Time – Britney Spears
Genie in a Bottle – Christina Aguilera
I Want It That Way – Backstreet Boys
Larger Than Life – Backstreet Boys
All I Have to Give – Backstreet Boys
Summer Girls – LFO
Girl on TV – LFO
Music of My Heart – *NSYNC with Gloria Estefan
(God Must Have Spent) A Little More Time on You – *NSYNC
I Wanna Love You Forever – Jessica Simpson
C’est la Vie – B*Witched
Rollercoaster – B*Witched
If You Had My Love – Jennifer Lopez
Waiting for Tonight – Jennifer Lopez
Sometimes – Britney Spears
(You Drive Me) Crazy – Britney Spears

1998 Latin Pop, Dance, and Global Hits

Latin pop had a major mainstream breakthrough around 1998 and 1999. Ricky Martin, Marc Anthony, Enrique Iglesias, Santana, Elvis Crespo, and Jennifer Lopez helped bring Latin rhythms and bilingual pop energy into American radio. The sound was confident, danceable, and very ready for award-show stages with wind machines.

Livin’ la Vida Loca – Ricky Martin
The Cup of Life – Ricky Martin
Shake Your Bon-Bon – Ricky Martin
She’s All I Ever Had – Ricky Martin
I Need to Know – Marc Anthony
Suavemente – Elvis Crespo
Bailamos – Enrique Iglesias
Smooth – Santana featuring Rob Thomas
If You Had My Love – Jennifer Lopez
Waiting for Tonight – Jennifer Lopez

1998 R&B, Soul-Pop, and Vocal Ballads

R&B had a strong late-1990s presence, with Brandy, Monica, TLC, Brian McKnight, Mariah Carey, Whitney Houston, 112, Destiny’s Child, Monica, and Lauryn Hill shaping the smooth side of radio. The year had dramatic duets, girl-group confidence, slow jams, and big vocal moments. This was the kind of R&B where the harmonies did not just arrive — they made an entrance.

Have You Ever? – Brandy
No Scrubs – TLC
Unpretty – TLC
Back at One – Brian McKnight
When You Believe – Mariah Carey & Whitney Houston
Angel of Mine – Monica
Anywhere – 112 featuring Lil’ Zane
Bills, Bills, Bills – Destiny’s Child
I Do (Cherish You) – 98 Degrees
Heartbreaker – Mariah Carey featuring Jay-Z
I Still Believe – Mariah Carey
Ex-Factor – Lauryn Hill
Sweet Lady – Tyrese
Nobody’s Supposed to Be Here – Deborah Cox

1998 Hip-Hop, Rap, and Pop-Rap Favorites

Hip-hop and pop-rap were firmly part of mainstream radio by 1998. Jay-Z, Eminem, Will Smith, 2Pac, Juvenile, Ol’ Dirty Bastard, Q-Tip, Ja Rule, Lil’ Troy, and The Notorious B.I.G. helped shape a year that moved from party rap to harder-edged singles to crossover smashes. The era had shiny videos, huge hooks, and enough featured artists to make the CD booklet work overtime.

Changes – 2Pac
My Name Is – Eminem
Miami – Will Smith
Back That Azz Up – Juvenile featuring Mannie Fresh & Lil Wayne
Got Your Money – Ol’ Dirty Bastard featuring Kelis
Vivrant Thing – Q-Tip
Can I Get A… – Jay-Z featuring Amil & Ja Rule
Holla Holla – Ja Rule
Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem) – Jay-Z
Wild Wild West – Will Smith featuring Dru Hill & Kool Moe Dee
Wanna Be a Baller – Lil’ Troy
Rosa Parks – OutKast

1998 Alternative Rock, Pop-Rock, and Modern Rock Hits

Alternative rock and pop-rock were still major forces in 1998. Smash Mouth, Goo Goo Dolls, Pearl Jam, Blink-182, Sugar Ray, Lit, Fastball, Matchbox Twenty, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Everlast, Lenny Kravitz, Garbage, and Limp Bizkit helped give the year a guitar-driven edge. The sound ranged from sunny pop-rock to post-grunge to nu-metal chaos, because the late 1990s enjoyed variety and questionable pants.

All Star – Smash Mouth
Crush – Dave Matthews Band
Last Kiss – Pearl Jam
What’s My Age Again? – Blink-182
All the Small Things – Blink-182
Someday – Sugar Ray
Why Don’t You Get a Job? – The Offspring
Slide – Goo Goo Dolls
My Own Worst Enemy – Lit
Pretty Fly (For a White Guy) – The Offspring
Out of My Head – Fastball
Back 2 Good – Matchbox Twenty
Scar Tissue – Red Hot Chili Peppers
You Get What You Give – New Radicals
What It’s Like – Everlast
Jumper – Third Eye Blind
American Woman – Lenny Kravitz
Special – Garbage
Fly Away – Lenny Kravitz
Every Morning – Sugar Ray
Nookie – Limp Bizkit
Closing Time – Semisonic
Sweetest Thing – U2

1998 Country and Country-Pop Hits

Country-pop was a huge part of late-1990s music, led by Shania Twain, Faith Hill, Kenny Chesney, LeAnn Rimes, and Phil Collins-adjacent adult contemporary crossover from soundtrack culture. Twain in particular helped bring country-pop into full mainstream visibility. Country did not just cross over; it brought a big chorus and made itself comfortable.

Man! I Feel Like a Woman! – Shania Twain
That Don’t Impress Me Much – Shania Twain
Come On Over – Shania Twain
She Thinks My Tractor’s Sexy – Kenny Chesney
Looking Through Your Eyes – LeAnn Rimes
You’ll Be in My Heart – Phil Collins

1998 Dance, Club, and Electronic Hits

Dance music had a strong late-1990s run, with Cher, Vengaboys, Jamiroquai, Eiffel 65, Madonna, Fatboy Slim, and Baz Luhrmann showing how electronic and club sounds could move into pop culture. Believe was especially important for its vocal effect and polished dance-pop sound. The beat was mechanical, the hooks were huge, and the dance floor had no plans to clock out.

Believe – Cher
We Like to Party! – Vengaboys
Boom, Boom, Boom, Boom!! – Vengaboys
Canned Heat – Jamiroquai
Blue (Da Ba Dee) – Eiffel 65
Waiting for Tonight – Jennifer Lopez
Ray of Light – Madonna
Beautiful Stranger – Madonna
Everybody’s Free (To Wear Sunscreen) – Baz Luhrmann
The Rockafeller Skank – Fatboy Slim

1998 Adult Contemporary, Singer-Songwriter, and Big Ballads

Adult contemporary and singer-songwriter pop were everywhere in 1998. Sarah McLachlan, Edwin McCain, Shawn Mullins, Sixpence None the Richer, Eagle-Eye Cherry, Alanis Morissette, Sheryl Crow, and Savage Garden helped give the year a softer radio lane. This was the soundtrack for weddings, graduation montages, movie trailers, and people staring thoughtfully out of car windows.

I Will Remember You – Sarah McLachlan
Angel – Sarah McLachlan
I Could Not Ask for More – Edwin McCain
Kiss Me – Sixpence None the Richer
Steal My Sunshine – Len
Lullaby – Shawn Mullins
Save Tonight – Eagle-Eye Cherry
There She Goes – Sixpence None the Richer
Unsent – Alanis Morissette
I Knew I Loved You – Savage Garden
My Favorite Mistake – Sheryl Crow

1998 Movie, TV, and Soundtrack Favorites

Soundtracks had real power in 1998 and 1999. You’ll Be in My Heart came from Disney’s Tarzan, Music of My Heart was tied to the film of the same name, Beautiful Stranger came from Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, and Wild Wild West brought movie-theme rap into heavy rotation. Movie tie-ins were still a major pop engine, right before the internet started changing the machine.

You’ll Be in My Heart – Phil Collins
Music of My Heart – *NSYNC with Gloria Estefan
Beautiful Stranger – Madonna
Wild Wild West – Will Smith featuring Dru Hill & Kool Moe Dee
When You Believe – Mariah Carey & Whitney Houston

1998 MTV, TRL, and Late-1990s Pop Culture Favorites

MTV and early TRL culture shaped how late-1990s songs were remembered. Teen pop, Latin pop, pop-rock, hip-hop, and dance music all became more visual, more personality-driven, and more repeatable. In 1998, a hit did not just need a hook; it needed a look, a video, and possibly a very shiny shirt.

…Baby One More Time – Britney Spears
I Want It That Way – Backstreet Boys
Livin’ la Vida Loca – Ricky Martin
No Scrubs – TLC
All Star – Smash Mouth
Believe – Cher
My Name Is – Eminem
Man! I Feel Like a Woman! – Shania Twain

How PopCultureMadness Looks at 1998 Music

PopCultureMadness looks at 1998 music through chart activity, radio presence, CD sales, MTV visibility, soundtrack importance, cultural memory, and long-term trivia value. Some songs were official chart leaders, some were soundtrack giants, some belonged to the teen-pop wave, and some captured the exact sound of the late 1990s getting louder, glossier, and a little stranger before Y2K arrived.

1998 Music Hits Chart

  1. All Star – Smash Mouth
  2. Man! I Feel Like a Woman! – Shania Twain
  3. Mambo No. 5 – Lou Bega
  4. I Need to Know – Marc Anthony
  5. Smooth – Santana featuring Rob Thomas
  6. Livin’ la Vida Loca – Ricky Martin
  7. Canned Heat – Jamiroquai
  8. Believe – Cher
  9. Summer Girls – LFO
  10. We Like to Party! – Vengaboys
  11. Crush – Dave Matthews Band
  12. Last Kiss – Pearl Jam
  13. What’s My Age Again? – Blink-182
  14. Changes – 2Pac
  15. My Name Is – Eminem
  16. The Cup of Life – Ricky Martin
  17. …Baby One More Time – Britney Spears
  18. All the Small Things – Blink-182
  19. I Will Remember You – Sarah McLachlan
  20. Someday – Sugar Ray
  21. Genie in a Bottle – Christina Aguilera
  22. Why Don’t You Get a Job? – The Offspring
  23. Miami – Will Smith
  24. Have You Ever? – Brandy
  25. Shake Your Bon-Bon – Ricky Martin
  26. Boom, Boom, Boom, Boom!! – Vengaboys
  27. That Don’t Impress Me Much – Shania Twain
  28. Back at One – Brian McKnight
  29. (You Drive Me) Crazy – Britney Spears
  30. No Scrubs – TLC
  31. Slide – Goo Goo Dolls
  32. Blue (Da Ba Dee) – Eiffel 65
  33. Bailamos – Enrique Iglesias
  34. Angel – Sarah McLachlan
  35. My Own Worst Enemy – Lit
  36. Back That Azz Up – Juvenile featuring Mannie Fresh & Lil Wayne
  37. Larger Than Life – Backstreet Boys
  38. Pretty Fly (For a White Guy) – The Offspring
  39. Out of My Head – Fastball
  40. I Knew I Loved You – Savage Garden
  41. Bills, Bills, Bills – Destiny’s Child
  42. Closing Time – Semisonic
  43. She’s All I Ever Had – Ricky Martin
  44. Cowboy – Kid Rock
  45. Sweetest Thing – U2
  46. Got Your Money – Ol’ Dirty Bastard featuring Kelis
  47. Unpretty – TLC
  48. Back 2 Good – Matchbox Twenty
  49. Steal My Sunshine – Len
  50. Ex-Factor – Lauryn Hill
  51. I Do (Cherish You) – 98 Degrees
  52. She Thinks My Tractor’s Sexy – Kenny Chesney
  53. When You Believe – Mariah Carey & Whitney Houston
  54. I Want It That Way – Backstreet Boys
  55. I Could Not Ask for More – Edwin McCain
  56. Kiss Me – Sixpence None the Richer
  57. Music of My Heart – *NSYNC with Gloria Estefan
  58. You’ll Be in My Heart – Phil Collins
  59. Strong Enough – Cher
  60. Lullaby – Shawn Mullins
  61. Waiting for Tonight – Jennifer Lopez
  62. Never There – Cake
  63. Got You (Where I Want You) – The Flys
  64. Anywhere – 112 featuring Lil’ Zane
  65. Angel of Mine – Monica
  66. Girl on TV – LFO
  67. All I Have to Give – Backstreet Boys
  68. Vivrant Thing – Q-Tip
  69. Can I Get A… – Jay-Z featuring Amil & Ja Rule
  70. If You Had My Love – Jennifer Lopez
  71. Save Tonight – Eagle-Eye Cherry
  72. Holla Holla – Ja Rule
  73. Heartbreaker – Mariah Carey featuring Jay-Z
  74. Scar Tissue – Red Hot Chili Peppers
  75. I Still Believe – Mariah Carey
  76. Everybody’s Free (To Wear Sunscreen) – Baz Luhrmann
  77. You Get What You Give – New Radicals
  78. Wild Wild West – Will Smith featuring Dru Hill & Kool Moe Dee
  79. What It’s Like – Everlast
  80. It’s All Been Done – Barenaked Ladies
  81. Sometimes – Britney Spears
  82. Jumper – Third Eye Blind
  83. American Woman – Lenny Kravitz
  84. Special – Garbage
  85. Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem) – Jay-Z
  86. C’est la Vie – B*Witched
  87. Beautiful Stranger – Madonna
  88. Smile – Vitamin C featuring Lady Saw
  89. Better Days (And the Bottom Drops Out) – Citizen King
  90. Fly Away – Lenny Kravitz
  91. There She Goes – Sixpence None the Richer
  92. Every Morning – Sugar Ray
  93. Nookie – Limp Bizkit
  94. (God Must Have Spent) A Little More Time on You – *NSYNC
  95. Hey Leonardo (She Likes Me for Me) – Blessid Union of Souls
  96. Unsent – Alanis Morissette
  97. Rollercoaster – B*Witched
  98. Come On Over – Shania Twain
  99. Wanna Be a Baller – Lil’ Troy
  100. I Wanna Love You Forever – Jessica Simpson