1989 Music Hits: Pop, Rock, Rap, Dance, and Big Radio Anthems
1989 music hits caught pop music at a very busy crossroads. The late ’80s were still loud, glossy, and big-haired, but hip-hop, dance-pop, college rock, and alternative sounds were pushing harder into the mainstream. It was the kind of year where Madonna, The B-52’s, Guns N’ Roses, Young MC, New Kids on the Block, U2, Bobby Brown, and Milli Vanilli could all crowd the same radio dial and somehow make sense.
This was the year of Love Shack, Like a Prayer, Bust a Move, Wind Beneath My Wings, Funky Cold Medina, Patience, She Drives Me Crazy, and My Prerogative. Pop radio had hooks for days, MTV still had major influence, and every genre seemed to be wearing either leather, neon, denim, or a questionable amount of hair spray.
The songs below mix major chart hits, MTV favorites, rock staples, hip-hop breakthroughs, dance-floor favorites, and adult contemporary radio giants from 1989. Some became timeless. Some became wonderfully frozen in 1989. A few may still be hiding in your cousin’s cassette case.
Top 10 Songs of 1989
- Love Shack – The B-52’s
- Like a Prayer – Madonna
- Bust a Move – Young MC
- Wind Beneath My Wings – Bette Midler
- Joy and Pain – Rob Base & DJ E-Z Rock
- Funky Cold Medina – Tone Lōc
- All I Want Is You – U2
- Patience – Guns N’ Roses
- She Drives Me Crazy – Fine Young Cannibals
- Kiss – Art of Noise featuring Tom Jones
1989 Music Hits by Style
Pop, Dance-Pop, and Mainstream Radio Favorites
Pop music in 1989 was bright, slick, and incredibly hook-heavy. Madonna continued her late-’80s dominance with Like a Prayer, Express Yourself, and Cherish, while Paula Abdul, Debbie Gibson, Roxette, Gloria Estefan, and New Kids on the Block helped define the sound of mainstream radio.
This was also the year when pop could be serious, silly, romantic, stylish, or completely overproduced, sometimes before the second chorus. The synthesizers were still busy, the videos were still dramatic, and nobody was afraid of a key change.
- Like a Prayer – Madonna
- Express Yourself – Madonna
- Cherish – Madonna
- Straight Up – Paula Abdul
- Forever Your Girl – Paula Abdul
- Electric Youth – Debbie Gibson
- Lost in Your Eyes – Debbie Gibson
- The Look – Roxette
- Listen to Your Heart – Roxette
- Get on Your Feet – Gloria Estefan
- Don’t Wanna Lose You – Gloria Estefan
- You Got It (The Right Stuff) – New Kids on the Block
- I’ll Be Loving You (Forever) – New Kids on the Block
- Hangin’ Tough – New Kids on the Block
- She Drives Me Crazy – Fine Young Cannibals
- Right Back Where We Started From – Sinitta
Hip-Hop, Rap, and New Jack Swing
Hip-hop continued to gain mainstream ground in 1989. Young MC’s Bust a Move became one of the year’s most recognizable rap hits, while Tone Lōc scored with both Funky Cold Medina and Wild Thing. Rob Base & DJ E-Z Rock, Beastie Boys, De La Soul, LL Cool J, 2 Live Crew, and Bobby Brown showed just how broad rap and rap-adjacent pop had become by the end of the decade.
New Jack Swing also helped reshape pop and R&B. Bobby Brown’s My Prerogative, Every Little Step, and On Our Own blended dance beats, R&B vocals, and hip-hop attitude into a sound that pointed directly toward the early 1990s.
- Bust a Move – Young MC
- Joy and Pain – Rob Base & DJ E-Z Rock
- Funky Cold Medina – Tone Lōc
- Wild Thing – Tone Lōc
- My Prerogative – Bobby Brown
- Every Little Step – Bobby Brown
- On Our Own – Bobby Brown
- Buffalo Stance – Neneh Cherry
- Me Myself and I – De La Soul
- Hey Ladies – Beastie Boys
- Me So Horny – 2 Live Crew
- I’m That Type of Guy – LL Cool J
- Birthday Suit – Johnny Kemp
- My Fantasy – Teddy Riley featuring Guy
Dance, Club, Freestyle, and House Music
Dance music had a strong year in 1989, with house, freestyle, club-pop, and R&B-influenced dance tracks crossing into mainstream radio. Soul II Soul’s Keep On Movin’ and Back to Life (However Do You Want Me) brought a smoother, groove-centered sound, while Inner City’s Good Life helped represent the house music side of the year.
Erasure, Rick Astley, Was (Not Was), Martika, Dino, Taylor Dayne, and Milli Vanilli all added to the dance-pop mix. Some of it was stylish. Some of it was cheesy. Some of it was both, which may be the most 1989 thing possible.
- Keep On Movin’ – Soul II Soul
- Back to Life (However Do You Want Me) – Soul II Soul
- Good Life – Inner City
- A Little Respect – Erasure
- She Wants to Dance with Me – Rick Astley
- Walk the Dinosaur – Was (Not Was)
- I Feel the Earth Move – Martika
- With Every Beat of My Heart – Taylor Dayne
- I Like It – Dino
- Baby Don’t Forget My Number – Milli Vanilli
- Blame It on the Rain – Milli Vanilli
- Partyman – Prince
- Kiss – Art of Noise featuring Tom Jones
- Smooth Criminal – Michael Jackson
Rock, Hard Rock, and Hair Metal
Rock in 1989 was still big, loud, and arena-ready. Guns N’ Roses had several major songs in the mix, including Patience, Paradise City, and Nightrain, while Bon Jovi, Aerosmith, Mötley Crüe, Warrant, Great White, Poison, Winger, Skid Row, and Bad English kept hard rock and hair metal very visible.
This was the final stretch before alternative and grunge began to change rock radio in a major way. For the moment, the guitars were still screaming, the choruses were huge, and the leather pants were probably not breathable.
- Patience – Guns N’ Roses
- Paradise City – Guns N’ Roses
- Nightrain – Guns N’ Roses
- Lay Your Hands on Me – Bon Jovi
- I’ll Be There for You – Bon Jovi
- Love in an Elevator – Aerosmith
- Dr. Feelgood – Mötley Crüe
- Heaven – Warrant
- Once Bitten, Twice Shy – Great White
- Your Mama Don’t Dance – Poison
- Seventeen – Winger
- 18 and Life – Skid Row
- When I See You Smile – Bad English
- Close My Eyes Forever – Lita Ford & Ozzy Osbourne
- Cult of Personality – Living Colour
- One – Metallica
Alternative Rock, College Rock, and Modern Rock
Alternative and college rock were gaining more space in 1989, even if mainstream pop radio had not fully caught up yet. The B-52’s had a massive crossover moment with Love Shack, while The Cure, R.E.M., 10,000 Maniacs, Indigo Girls, Love and Rockets, XTC, and Edie Brickell & New Bohemians gave the year a smarter, quirkier, and more left-of-center sound.
This side of 1989 pointed toward the 1990s more than the glam-metal side did. The mood was shifting, the guitars were changing, and college radio was quietly building the next decade’s playlist.
- Love Shack – The B-52’s
- Lovesong – The Cure
- Fascination Street – The Cure
- Stand – R.E.M.
- Pop Song 89 – R.E.M.
- Trouble Me – 10,000 Maniacs
- Closer to Fine – Indigo Girls
- So Alive – Love and Rockets
- What I Am – Edie Brickell & New Bohemians
- Mayor of Simpleton – XTC
- Veronica – Elvis Costello
- Anchorage – Michelle Shocked
- Dear God – Midge Ure
- End of the Line – Traveling Wilburys
Adult Contemporary, Pop Ballads, and Soundtrack Favorites
The ballads of 1989 were everywhere. Bette Midler’s Wind Beneath My Wings became one of the year’s signature emotional hits, while Richard Marx, Phil Collins, Cher, Peter Cetera, Linda Ronstadt, Aaron Neville, Debbie Gibson, Natalie Cole, and Gloria Estefan helped keep adult contemporary radio very busy.
Many of these songs were built for movie moments, slow dances, radio dedications, and the kind of dramatic pause that makes people stare out windows for no clear reason. 1989 did not underplay emotion; it put it in a spotlight and gave it reverb.
- Wind Beneath My Wings – Bette Midler
- All I Want Is You – U2
- Put a Little Love in Your Heart – Annie Lennox & Al Green
- Don’t Know Much – Linda Ronstadt & Aaron Neville
- After All – Cher & Peter Cetera
- Another Day in Paradise – Phil Collins
- The Best – Tina Turner
- Eternal Flame – The Bangles
- The Living Years – Mike + The Mechanics
- Angel Eyes – The Jeff Healey Band
- Two Hearts – Phil Collins
- Right Here Waiting – Richard Marx
- If I Could Turn Back Time – Cher
- Miss You Like Crazy – Natalie Cole
- Lost in Your Eyes – Debbie Gibson
- You Got It – Roy Orbison
R&B, Soul, and Pop-Soul Crossovers
R&B and pop-soul had a strong place in 1989, especially through Bobby Brown, Soul II Soul, Tina Turner, Donny Osmond, Johnny Kemp, Deon Estus, and Aaron Neville. This was a crossover-heavy era, where R&B songs could slide easily into dance clubs, pop radio, MTV, and adult contemporary playlists.
The late ’80s R&B sound helped set the stage for the New Jack Swing and vocal-group boom that would become even bigger in the early 1990s. In other words, the decade was ending, but the groove was not clocking out.
- My Prerogative – Bobby Brown
- Every Little Step – Bobby Brown
- On Our Own – Bobby Brown
- Keep On Movin’ – Soul II Soul
- Back to Life (However Do You Want Me) – Soul II Soul
- Buffalo Stance – Neneh Cherry
- Birthday Suit – Johnny Kemp
- Heaven Help Me – Deon Estus & George Michael
- Soldier of Love – Donny Osmond
- Don’t Know Much – Linda Ronstadt & Aaron Neville
- Put a Little Love in Your Heart – Annie Lennox & Al Green
- Miss You Like Crazy – Natalie Cole
Classic Rock Veterans and Legacy Artists
1989 also had plenty of familiar names still making noise. U2, Tom Petty, Queen, Eric Clapton, Fleetwood Mac, Roy Orbison, Billy Joel, Paul Simon, and Tina Turner all appeared with songs that kept older rock and pop traditions active during a fast-changing year.
Some of these artists were reinventing themselves, while others were reminding everyone they could still write radio songs with lasting power. The new kids were arriving, but the veterans had not handed over the keys yet.
- All I Want Is You – U2
- Angel of Harlem – U2
- I Won’t Back Down – Tom Petty
- Runnin’ Down a Dream – Tom Petty
- We Didn’t Start the Fire – Billy Joel
- As Long as You Follow – Fleetwood Mac
- You Got It – Roy Orbison
- Pretending – Eric Clapton
- I Want It All – Queen
- The Obvious Child – Paul Simon
- The Best – Tina Turner
- End of the Line – Traveling Wilburys
Novelty, Pop Culture, and “Only in 1989” Songs
Some 1989 hits were more than songs; they were full pop-culture moments. Love Shack was a party record with a cartoonish sense of fun, Walk the Dinosaur became a strange and unforgettable dance-floor oddity, and We Didn’t Start the Fire packed decades of history into one rapid-fire Billy Joel lesson. This was also the year when songs like Me So Horny, Rico Suave, and Baby Don’t Forget My Number made clear that pop culture was not always aiming for subtlety. Sometimes, 1989 walked into the room wearing sunglasses indoors and somehow got away with it. Featured 1989 novelty and pop-culture songs:
- Love Shack – The B-52’s
- Walk the Dinosaur – Was (Not Was)
- We Didn’t Start the Fire – Billy Joel
- Rico Suave – Gerardo
- Me So Horny – 2 Live Crew
- Baby Don’t Forget My Number – Milli Vanilli
- Blame It on the Rain – Milli Vanilli
- Partyman – Prince
PCM’s 1989 Top 100 Music Hits Chart
- Love Shack – The B-52’s
- Like a Prayer – Madonna
- Bust a Move – Young MC
- Wind Beneath My Wings – Bette Midler
- Joy and Pain – Rob Base & DJ E-Z Rock
- Funky Cold Medina – Tone Lōc
- All I Want Is You – U2
- Patience – Guns N’ Roses
- She Drives Me Crazy – Fine Young Cannibals
- Kiss – Art of Noise featuring Tom Jones
- Lay Your Hands on Me – Bon Jovi
- Put a Little Love in Your Heart – Annie Lennox & Al Green
- Angel of Harlem – U2
- Smooth Criminal – Michael Jackson
- My Prerogative – Bobby Brown
- I’ll Be There for You – Bon Jovi
- Paradise City – Guns N’ Roses
- Wild Thing – Tone Lōc
- Every Little Step – Bobby Brown
- I Won’t Back Down – Tom Petty
- Lovesong – The Cure
- Love in an Elevator – Aerosmith
- Express Yourself – Madonna
- Don’t Know Much – Linda Ronstadt & Aaron Neville
- You Got It (The Right Stuff) – New Kids on the Block
- Keep On Movin’ – Soul II Soul
- Get on Your Feet – Gloria Estefan
- After All – Cher & Peter Cetera
- Buffalo Stance – Neneh Cherry
- Another Day in Paradise – Phil Collins
- So Alive – Love and Rockets
- Back to Life (However Do You Want Me) – Soul II Soul
- Listen to Your Heart – Roxette
- Orinoco Flow (Sail Away) – Enya
- I Feel the Earth Move – Martika
- When I See You Smile – Bad English
- Birthday Suit – Johnny Kemp
- Heaven Help Me – Deon Estus & George Michael
- The Look – Roxette
- Baby Don’t Forget My Number – Milli Vanilli
- Dr. Feelgood – Mötley Crüe
- Heaven – Warrant
- She Wants to Dance with Me – Rick Astley
- Me Myself and I – De La Soul
- Walk the Dinosaur – Was (Not Was)
- Once Bitten, Twice Shy – Great White
- The Best – Tina Turner
- On Our Own – Bobby Brown
- A Little Respect – Erasure
- Eternal Flame – The Bangles
- Me So Horny – 2 Live Crew
- Soldier of Love – Donny Osmond
- We Didn’t Start the Fire – Billy Joel
- Hey Ladies – Beastie Boys
- The Living Years – Mike + The Mechanics
- Stand – R.E.M.
- Trouble Me – 10,000 Maniacs
- Your Mama Don’t Dance – Poison
- Close My Eyes Forever – Lita Ford & Ozzy Osbourne
- Closer to Fine – Indigo Girls
- With Every Beat of My Heart – Taylor Dayne
- Angel Eyes – The Jeff Healey Band
- Blame It on the Rain – Milli Vanilli
- End of the Line – Traveling Wilburys
- Two Hearts – Phil Collins
- Don’t Wanna Lose You – Gloria Estefan
- Right Here Waiting – Richard Marx
- If I Could Turn Back Time – Cher
- Anchorage – Michelle Shocked
- Straight Up – Paula Abdul
- I’ll Be Loving You (Forever) – New Kids on the Block
- Pop Song 89 – R.E.M.
- Hangin’ Tough – New Kids on the Block
- Dear God – Midge Ure
- What I Am – Edie Brickell & New Bohemians
- Miss You Like Crazy – Natalie Cole
- I Like It – Dino
- Forever Your Girl – Paula Abdul
- Cherish – Madonna
- I’m That Type of Guy – LL Cool J
- Cult of Personality – Living Colour
- My Fantasy – Teddy Riley featuring Guy
- Electric Youth – Debbie Gibson
- Veronica – Elvis Costello
- Partyman – Prince
- As Long as You Follow – Fleetwood Mac
- Right Back Where We Started From – Sinitta
- Runnin’ Down a Dream – Tom Petty
- Mayor of Simpleton – XTC
- Lost in Your Eyes – Debbie Gibson
- Fascination Street – The Cure
- Nightrain – Guns N’ Roses
- Seventeen – Winger
- Now You’re in Heaven – Julian Lennon
- Good Life – Inner City
- You Got It – Roy Orbison
- One – Metallica
- 18 and Life – Skid Row
- Pretending – Eric Clapton
- I Want It All – Queen