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The 60s Bubblegum Pop Hits: Sweet, Catchy and Built for Singalongs

The 60s bubblegum pop hits were bright, catchy, simple, and proudly built for instant sing-along value. This was pop music with big hooks, teen appeal, handclaps, cheerful choruses, and just enough sugar to make your dentist nervous.

Strictly speaking, bubblegum pop really came into focus in the late 1960s with groups like The Archies, Ohio Express, 1910 Fruitgum Company, and The Lemon Pipers. But the sound did not come from nowhere. Earlier 1960s teen idols, girl groups, dance-craze records, surf pop, novelty songs, and British Invasion favorites all helped prepare the audience for music that was light, catchy, and hard to shake.

This list includes true bubblegum hits, bubblegum-adjacent pop favorites, teen dance records, novelty hits, and early rock-and-roll songs that helped shape the sound. Some of these songs are serious pop classics. Some are goofy. Some are both, which is where bubblegum really shines.

Call it candy-coated pop, call it teenybopper music, or call it the soundtrack to a very colorful lunchbox. Either way, these songs knew how to stick.

Best 60s Bubblegum Pop Hits

The most obvious 1960s bubblegum pop songs are the ones that sound like they arrived with their own cartoon logo. Sugar, Sugar, Yummy Yummy Yummy, Simon Says, 1, 2, 3, Red Light, and Green Tambourine sit right at the center of the style.

  • Sugar, Sugar – The Archies
  • Yummy Yummy Yummy – Ohio Express
  • Simon Says – 1910 Fruitgum Company
  • 1, 2, 3, Red Light – 1910 Fruitgum Company
  • Chewy Chewy – Ohio Express
  • Green Tambourine – The Lemon Pipers
  • Daydream Believer – The Monkees
  • I’m a Believer – The Monkees
  • Build Me Up Buttercup – The Foundations
  • Dizzy – Tommy Roe

The 60s Bubblegum Pop Hits

  1. Sugar, Sugar – The Archies
  2. The Twist – Chubby Checker
  3. I Want to Hold Your Hand – The Beatles
  4. Daydream Believer – The Monkees
  5. Fun, Fun, Fun – The Beach Boys
  6. The Loco-Motion – Little Eva
  7. Hang On Sloopy – The McCoys
  8. She Loves You – The Beatles
  9. I’m a Believer – The Monkees
  10. Sweet Caroline – Neil Diamond
  11. Rag Doll – The Four Seasons
  12. Hanky Panky – Tommy James and the Shondells
  13. Let’s Hang On! – The Four Seasons
  14. Happy Together – The Turtles
  15. Green Tambourine – The Lemon Pipers
  16. 98.6 – Keith
  17. Surf City – Jan & Dean
  18. Yummy Yummy Yummy – Ohio Express
  19. Simon Says – 1910 Fruitgum Company
  20. Tossin’ and Turnin’ – Bobby Lewis
  21. 1-2-3 – Len Barry
  22. (Just Like) Romeo and Juliet – The Reflections
  23. Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me – Mel Carter
  24. Hey! Baby – Bruce Channel
  25. Cool Jerk – The Capitols
  26. Memphis – Johnny Rivers
  27. Good Morning Starshine – Oliver
  28. Tell Him – The Exciters
  29. Hooked on a Feeling – B.J. Thomas
  30. I Will Follow Him – Little Peggy March
  31. Mr. Tambourine Man – The Byrds
  32. Good Luck Charm – Elvis Presley
  33. Dizzy – Tommy Roe
  34. Teen Angel – Mark Dinning
  35. Chewy Chewy – Ohio Express
  36. Palisades Park – Freddy Cannon
  37. Red Rubber Ball – The Cyrkle
  38. Running Bear – Johnny Preston
  39. Leader of the Pack – The Shangri-Las
  40. I’m Henry VIII, I Am – Herman’s Hermits
  41. G.T.O. – Ronny & the Daytonas
  42. Johnny Angel – Shelley Fabares
  43. Mr. Lonely – Bobby Vinton
  44. Alley Oop – The Hollywood Argyles
  45. My Boyfriend’s Back – The Angels
  46. Runaway – Del Shannon
  47. Puff, the Magic Dragon – Peter, Paul and Mary
  48. Cathy’s Clown – The Everly Brothers
  49. 1, 2, 3, Red Light – 1910 Fruitgum Company
  50. The Tra La La Song (One Banana, Two Banana) – The Banana Splits

True Bubblegum Pop: The Candy Center

These are the songs closest to the classic bubblegum pop sound: simple choruses, bright production, teen appeal, and titles that practically smell like a candy aisle. They are not trying to be mysterious. They are trying to get stuck in your head by lunchtime.

  • Sugar, Sugar – The Archies
  • Yummy Yummy Yummy – Ohio Express
  • Chewy Chewy – Ohio Express
  • Simon Says – 1910 Fruitgum Company
  • 1, 2, 3, Red Light – 1910 Fruitgum Company
  • Green Tambourine – The Lemon Pipers
  • The Tra La La Song (One Banana, Two Banana) – The Banana Splits
  • Dizzy – Tommy Roe

Teen Pop and Singalong Favorites

Bubblegum pop overlapped with teen pop, especially when the songs were cheerful, catchy, and easy to sing after one listen. The Monkees, The Beatles, The Four Seasons, The Beach Boys, and The Jackson 5 all worked in bigger musical worlds, but many of their hits helped shape the bright pop sound bubblegum fans loved.

  • I Want to Hold Your Hand – The Beatles
  • She Loves You – The Beatles
  • Daydream Believer – The Monkees
  • I’m a Believer – The Monkees
  • Fun, Fun, Fun – The Beach Boys
  • ABC – The Jackson 5
  • I Want You Back – The Jackson 5
  • Rag Doll – The Four Seasons
  • Let’s Hang On! – The Four Seasons
  • Build Me Up Buttercup – The Foundations

Dance Craze, Novelty and Handclap Pop

Before bubblegum pop became a label, novelty and dance-craze songs had already proved that a simple hook could move records, dances, and entire rooms. These songs kept things fun, direct, and occasionally ridiculous in the best possible way.

  • The Twist – Chubby Checker
  • The Loco-Motion – Little Eva
  • Hey! Baby – Bruce Channel
  • Cool Jerk – The Capitols
  • Alley Oop – The Hollywood Argyles
  • I’m Henry VIII, I Am – Herman’s Hermits
  • Running Bear – Johnny Preston
  • Good Morning Starshine – Oliver
  • G.T.O. – Ronny & the Daytonas
  • Palisades Park – Freddy Cannon

Girl Groups, Teen Drama and Sweet Pop

Some 1960s favorites brought melodrama, romance, heartbreak, and teenage storytelling into pop music. They are not all bubblegum, but they share the immediacy and emotional punch that made teen pop so powerful.

  • My Boyfriend’s Back – The Angels
  • Leader of the Pack – The Shangri-Las
  • Tell Him – The Exciters
  • Johnny Angel – Shelley Fabares
  • I Will Follow Him – Little Peggy March
  • Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me – Mel Carter
  • Teen Angel – Mark Dinning
  • Mr. Lonely – Bobby Vinton
  • Cathy’s Clown – The Everly Brothers
  • Runaway – Del Shannon

1950s Roots of Bubblegum Pop

The 1950s did not really have bubblegum pop in the late-60s sense, but many 1950s songs helped build the audience for catchy teen pop, novelty hits, dance records, and playful rock-and-roll. These songs helped create the pop language that bubblegum later made sweeter.

  1. Rock Around the Clock – Bill Haley & His Comets
  2. Put Your Head on My Shoulder – Paul Anka
  3. Rockin’ Robin – Bobby Day
  4. (How Much Is) That Doggie in the Window? – Patti Page
  5. Be-Bop Baby – Ricky Nelson
  6. School Day (Ring! Ring! Goes the Bell) – Chuck Berry
  7. 16 Candles – The Crests
  8. Oh, Boy! – Buddy Holly
  9. Short Shorts – The Royal Teens
  10. Little Bitty Pretty One – Thurston Harris
  11. See You Later, Alligator – Bill Haley & His Comets
  12. Charlie Brown – The Coasters
  13. The Thing – Phil Harris
  14. Bird Dog – The Everly Brothers
  15. Teen-Age Crush – Tommy Sands
  16. The Children’s Marching Song (Nick Nack Paddy Whack) – Mitch Miller
  17. Come On-a My House – Rosemary Clooney
  18. The Ballad of Davy Crockett – Bill Hayes
  19. Standing on the Corner – The Four Lads
  20. Hot Diggity (Dog Ziggity Boom) – Perry Como
  21. Wake Up Little Susie – The Everly Brothers
  22. Dance with Me Henry – Georgia Gibbs
  23. Secret Love – Doris Day
  24. Witch Doctor – David Seville
  25. Sincerely – The McGuire Sisters

Bubblegum Pop Trivia

  • Sugar, Sugar is one of the defining bubblegum pop records. The Archies were not a touring band in the usual sense; they were a fictional group connected to Archie Comics and animated television.
  • Bubblegum pop often came from studio projects. Some classic bubblegum records were built by producers, songwriters, and session musicians rather than traditional bands.
  • Ohio Express and 1910 Fruitgum Company helped give bubblegum its flavor. Songs like Yummy Yummy Yummy, Chewy Chewy, Simon Says, and 1, 2, 3, Red Light made the style bright, simple, and unmistakable.
  • The Twist is a dance-craze classic, not a bubblegum song. It belongs here because it helped prove that a simple, repeatable pop idea could become a national movement.
  • The Monkees blurred lines between TV, pop, and teen fandom. Their biggest songs were more sophisticated than bubblegum, but their television connection and singalong appeal made them important to the same audience.
  • The Banana Splits pushed the cartoon-pop idea even further. The Tra La La Song (One Banana, Two Banana) connected children’s television, pop hooks, and novelty fun.
  • The 1950s roots section is more “pre-bubblegum” than bubblegum. Songs like Rockin’ Robin, Witch Doctor, and Short Shorts helped show how novelty, teen appeal, and simple hooks could work together.

Why 60s Bubblegum Pop Still Works

Bubblegum pop lasts because it does not overcomplicate the mission. It wants to be catchy, cheerful, repeatable, and easy to remember. That may sound simple, but writing a song people can recall after one chorus is harder than it looks.

The best 60s bubblegum pop hits also capture a particular kind of youth-focused optimism. They are short, colorful, melodic, and built around hooks that do not ask permission before moving into your brain.

Some of these records were studio-crafted. Some were novelty hits. Some came from major rock and pop artists who were doing something much bigger than bubblegum. Together, they show how 1960s pop created a sweet spot between innocence, rhythm, teen energy, and commercial savvy.

Sources and Further Reading

The Sweet Spot Between Rock, Teen Pop and Bubblegum

The 60s bubblegum pop story is not only about candy titles and cartoon bands. It is also about how pop music learned to aim directly at young listeners with hooks that were bright, fast, and unforgettable.

From Sugar, Sugar to Daydream Believer, from The Loco-Motion to Yummy Yummy Yummy, these songs show how the 1960s turned simple pop pleasure into a sound of its own. Bubblegum may not always be deep, but it sure knows how to stick to your shoes.