Smells Like Gen X • Billboard Year-End Songs
Top 10 Songs of 1985 That Made MTV Pop Feel Unstoppable
1985 is one of the clearest peak-80s music years because the songs were no longer just coming out of the radio. They were coming from every screen, mall speaker, school dance, movie trailer, bedroom cassette deck, and MTV countdown that made pop culture feel like a full-contact sport. The top 10 songs of 1985 are not just a Billboard list — they are a snapshot of the moment music became sound, image, fashion, attitude, and memory all at once.
This was the year George Michael moved from bright Wham! pop into adult heartbreak, Madonna turned controversy into commercial dominance, a-ha made a music video feel like actual magic, Dire Straits turned MTV itself into a hook, Tears for Fears made anxiety sound beautiful, and Chaka Khan showed how pop, R&B, funk, rap, and dance music could collide without needing adult supervision.
This countdown uses Billboard’s Hot 100 Year-End chart, which means these were the biggest U.S. singles of the year based on chart performance. These were the unavoidable records — the songs that played in cars, malls, skating rinks, living rooms, gymnasiums, boom boxes, and every place where Gen X learned that the right chorus could hijack an entire year.
This is 1985 in ten songs: George Michael turning saxophone heartbreak into a national mood, Madonna taking over twice, Wham! weaponizing joy, Foreigner bringing the choir, Chaka Khan bending genres, Hall & Oates still building perfect radio machines, and MTV making every hit feel like it needed a wardrobe department.
Watch Every #1 Song from 1985
Want the video version of the 1985 chart rewind? Watch the Smells Like Gen X countdown of every Billboard Hot 100 #1 song from 1985, featuring Madonna, Wham!, Foreigner, Phil Collins, Simple Minds, Tears for Fears, Huey Lewis and the News, a-ha, Whitney Houston, Starship, and more.
It’s the moving-picture companion to this 1985 songs post — the year MTV, movie soundtracks, power ballads, synth-pop, and mall-radio domination all became permanent Gen X programming.
Listen to the 1985 Smells Like Gen X Playlist
Want the 1985 rewind in your ears while you scroll? Hit play on the companion Spotify playlist and let George Michael, Madonna, Wham!, Foreigner, Chaka Khan, Hall & Oates, Tears for Fears, Dire Straits, a-ha, and the rest of the year drag you straight into MTV-era pop overload.
It’s the soundtrack version of this page — saxophone heartbreak, mall-pop joy, power-ballad drama, synth-pop polish, genre-bending R&B, and enough neon memory fuel to make your old cassette case feel personally attacked.
Keep Rewinding 1985
The Billboard year-end songs were only one part of 1985. This was also the year Back to the Future, Rambo: First Blood Part II, Rocky IV, and The Breakfast Club owned the multiplex, network TV was shifting from soap-opera glamour toward sitcom dominance, the toy aisle got weirdly emotional and high-tech, and fads like Garbage Pail Kids, Hulkamania, friendship pins, slogan fashion, big hair, and New Coke made the year feel completely unhinged in the best possible way.
Keep the same-year rabbit hole going with the rest of the 1985 Smells Like Gen X cluster.
Every #1 Song from 1985
The Billboard Hot 100 chart-toppers from the year movie soundtracks, MTV icons, power ballads, and charity singles took over.
Top TV Shows of 1985
The Nielsen-ranked shows from the year Dynasty, Dallas, The Cosby Show, and Family Ties signaled a major TV shift.
Top 10 Movies of 1985
The box-office year of Back to the Future, Rambo, Rocky IV, Cocoon, and peak mid-80s movie mythology.
Top 10 Toys of 1985
Teddy Ruxpin, Cabbage Patch Kids, Transformers, He-Man, Care Bears, Pound Puppies, and toy-aisle overload.
Top 6 Biggest Fads of 1985
Garbage Pail Kids, Hulkamania, Choose Life fashion, friendship pins, big hair, and New Coke chaos.
More Music Rewinds
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Explore the 80s Hub
The main decade hub for 80s music, movies, TV, toys, fads, commercials, videos, and Gen X nostalgia.
#10 — “Take On Me” — a-ha
Chart Snapshot
#101985 Year-End Rank
#1Hot 100 Peak
1Weeks at #1
Why it hit
“Take On Me” had one of the decade’s cleanest pop weapons: a synth hook that practically jumps out of the speakers before the vocal even arrives. Then Morten Harket goes full skyscraper on the chorus, and suddenly the whole thing feels less like a song and more like a dare. Could you sing along? Not really. Did you try anyway? Obviously.
The song also proves how powerful MTV had become by 1985. Plenty of songs had videos, but “Take On Me” fused song and visual concept so tightly that they became one memory. The pencil-sketch world, the chase, the romance, the comic-book weirdness — it turned a great synth-pop single into a cultural object.
Gen X Rewind
This is one of those records where the video and the song fused together permanently. You didn’t just hear “Take On Me” — you pictured the pencil-sketch world, the comic-book chase, and that weird little MTV miracle happening in real time.
Legacy
A definitive 80s anthem and one of the strongest examples of how MTV could turn a great song into an unforgettable pop-culture artifact.
#9 — “Crazy for You” — Madonna
Chart Snapshot
#91985 Year-End Rank
#1Hot 100 Peak
1Weeks at #1
Why it hit
Madonna was already dominating the culture, but “Crazy for You” proved she could slow everything down without losing control of the room. The song is romantic, cinematic, and direct, but it still feels unmistakably like her — not fragile, not passive, just focused. It gave radio a softer Madonna without turning her into wallpaper.
It also shows how well 1985 connected pop stars to movie culture. A ballad could carry soundtrack energy, image energy, and star energy at the same time. Madonna did not have to shout here. She just had to let the song glow.
Gen X Rewind
This is slow-dance Madonna: dim gym lights, nervous hands, and the terrifying possibility that the person you liked might actually notice you existed.
Legacy
One of her signature ballads, and a key reminder that Madonna’s 1985 takeover was not just about provocation. She could also win with restraint.
#8 — “Money for Nothing” — Dire Straits
Chart Snapshot
#81985 Year-End Rank
#1Hot 100 Peak
3Weeks at #1
Why it hit
That opening guitar riff doesn’t enter the room. It kicks the door off the hinges. “Money for Nothing” sounded massive, sarcastic, and weirdly futuristic all at once, with a hook that tied itself directly to the MTV machine. It was rock music commenting on video culture while also becoming one of video culture’s biggest trophies.
That contradiction is what makes it such a perfect 1985 hit. It mocks the spectacle and benefits from the spectacle at the same time. In a year when music television was becoming part of everyday life, “Money for Nothing” turned the channel itself into a lyric, a visual, and a hook.
Gen X Rewind
This is the sound of cable TV becoming a lifestyle. It’s cynical, slick, huge, and somehow exactly what the mid-80s deserved.
Legacy
One of the most iconic riffs of the decade and a permanent piece of MTV mythology.
#7 — “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” — Tears for Fears
Chart Snapshot
#71985 Year-End Rank
#1Hot 100 Peak
2Weeks at #1
Why it hit
The genius of this record is how easy it feels on the surface. The groove is smooth, the chorus is open, and the production is bright enough for daytime radio — but underneath it, the song is full of anxiety, ambition, and unease. It’s a perfect pop record with a warning label hidden inside.
That made it one of the defining songs of 1985. It could work as sleek radio pop, but it also captured the larger mood of a decade obsessed with power, image, money, competition, and the feeling that everyone was being asked to smile while the machinery got louder.
Gen X Rewind
This is the official sound of driving nowhere in particular while feeling strangely important and vaguely doomed. Very Gen X. Very efficient.
Legacy
A timeless classic that still sounds clean, modern, and suspiciously relevant.
#6 — “Out of Touch” — Daryl Hall & John Oates
Chart Snapshot
#61985 Year-End Rank
#1Hot 100 Peak
2Weeks at #1
Why it hit
“Out of Touch” is Hall & Oates in precision mode. The groove is tight, the synths snap into place, and the chorus lands like it was built by people who had completely mastered radio architecture. By 1985, they weren’t chasing the decade. They were still helping define how polished pop-rock could sound.
The song also catches the duo at the exact point where their blue-eyed soul roots had been fully updated for the MTV era. It sounds clean, expensive, and rhythmically locked in — the kind of record that makes radio programming look easy, which it absolutely was not.
Gen X Rewind
This is the kind of song that makes you start moving before you’ve fully decided whether you’re in the mood. The record makes that decision for you.
Legacy
A peak radio-perfect record and one of the cleanest pop-rock crossovers of the decade.
#5 — “I Feel for You” — Chaka Khan
Chart Snapshot
#51985 Year-End Rank
#3Hot 100 Peak
0Weeks at #1
Why it hit
This track is an 80s genre collision that actually works. A Prince-written song, Chaka Khan’s powerhouse vocal, Melle Mel’s stuttered rap intro, Stevie Wonder’s harmonica, and a beat that refuses to sit still — it should feel overcrowded, but instead it feels alive. It’s one of those records where everyone brought something and somehow nobody ruined the party.
That is what makes it so important inside the 1985 Top 10. It is not just a hit; it is a preview of how less stable the walls between pop, R&B, funk, dance, and rap were going to become. The song sounds like the decade getting more flexible in real time.
Gen X Rewind
This is what 1985 sounded like when the walls between pop, R&B, funk, rap, and dance music started getting a lot less sturdy.
Legacy
A career-redefining hit and an all-time “how is this so cool?” record.
You May Also Remember
the 1985 #1 songs video,
the TV shows marking the shift toward sitcom dominance,
Back to the Future, Rambo, Rocky IV, The Breakfast Club, and the 1985 movie machine,
Teddy Ruxpin, Cabbage Patch Kids, Transformers, He-Man, Care Bears, and toy-aisle overload,
Garbage Pail Kids, Hulkamania, Choose Life fashion, friendship pins, big hair, and New Coke chaos,
and the full 80s nostalgia hub.
Basically: Madonna becoming the default setting, George Michael turning heartbreak into saxophone fog, a-ha making sketches move, Dire Straits roasting MTV while winning MTV, Garbage Pail Kids grossing out adults, and 1985 proving that pop culture had officially become a beautiful mess.
#4 — “I Want to Know What Love Is” — Foreigner
Chart Snapshot
#41985 Year-End Rank
#1Hot 100 Peak
2Weeks at #1
Why it hit
This is not a ballad that politely asks for space. It walks in carrying a choir, a spotlight, and several unresolved adult feelings. The song starts with ache, builds with patience, and then turns into full emotional theater. It worked because the hook was enormous, but also because the sincerity never felt fake.
By 1985, the power ballad had become one of the decade’s most reliable emotional machines. Foreigner leaned all the way in: slow build, huge chorus, gospel lift, and the kind of grown-up drama that made living rooms feel like confession booths.
Gen X Rewind
This is the sound of adults staring out rainy windows like every relationship had suddenly become a miniseries.
Legacy
A defining 80s power ballad — still huge, still emotional, still impossible to sing quietly.
#3 — “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go” — Wham!
Chart Snapshot
#31985 Year-End Rank
#1Hot 100 Peak
3Weeks at #1
Why it hit
Because it is basically bottled joy with a drumbeat. “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go” is bright, fast, shameless, and engineered for maximum grinning. George Michael understood pop pleasure at a ridiculous level, and this song is pure proof: no gloom, no subtlety, no apology.
The song also understood the mid-80s better than most people did. It was colorful, visual, instantly marketable, and completely unconcerned with being cool in a serious way. It knew joy could be a strategy.
Gen X Rewind
This is the song that turns a living room into a dance floor whether anyone gave it permission or not. Add a Choose Life shirt and suddenly subtlety has left the building.
Legacy
One of the purest pop hits of the era — still a serotonin injection on demand.
#2 — “Like a Virgin” — Madonna
Chart Snapshot
#21985 Year-End Rank
#1Hot 100 Peak
6Weeks at #1
Why it hit
“Like a Virgin” was the moment Madonna became unavoidable in a whole new way. The production is clean, the hook is lethal, and the delivery is all confidence. But the real power was cultural. The song sounded like pop music, behaved like a headline, and gave people something to argue about while still humming the chorus.
That was Madonna’s superpower in 1985. She did not separate the song, the look, the video, the performance, and the controversy. She made them one machine. And once that machine got moving, pop culture had to deal with her on her terms.
Gen X Rewind
This is the exact moment the Madonna era stopped feeling like a trend and started feeling like the default setting of pop culture.
Legacy
A defining song of the 80s, because the 80s didn’t whisper. They made the outfit, the video, the controversy, and the chorus arrive at the same time.
#1 — “Careless Whisper” — George Michael
Chart Snapshot
#11985 Year-End Rank
#1Hot 100 Peak
3Weeks at #1
Why this was the #1 song of 1985
Because that sax riff doesn’t just introduce the song — it announces emotional damage in formalwear. “Careless Whisper” is smooth, dramatic, and devastating, with George Michael stepping outside the lighter Wham! image and showing exactly how much adult-pop authority he already had.
The record works because it is restrained and huge at the same time. It never has to scream. The melody, vocal, and atmosphere do the damage quietly, which somehow makes it hit harder. In a year full of bright videos, big fashion, and MTV spectacle, “Careless Whisper” won by sounding like regret had rented a tuxedo.
Gen X Rewind
This is late-night radio, dim lights, and staring out the window like you have a storyline. You probably didn’t. The song gave you one anyway.
Legacy
An all-time 80s classic — still instantly recognizable, still impossible to ignore, still emotionally illegal.
Also Huge in 1985
The Billboard #1 songs that ruled 1985 radio,
network TV shifting toward sitcom dominance,
Back to the Future, Rambo, Rocky IV, The Breakfast Club, and the 1985 movie boom,
Teddy Ruxpin, Cabbage Patch Kids, Transformers, He-Man, Care Bears, and Pound Puppies,
Garbage Pail Kids, Hulkamania, friendship pins, slogan fashion, big hair, and New Coke chaos,
and the decade running at full neon temperature.
1985 Rewind Verdict
1985 was the year pop music became fully multimedia. Songs were no longer just songs — they were videos, movie moments, fashion cues, school-dance memories, radio habits, and entire personality accessories. Madonna turned controversy into dominance. George Michael proved he could move from bright pop to grown-up heartbreak without missing. Tears for Fears made anxiety sound gorgeous. Dire Straits turned MTV into a hook. a-ha made a music video feel like magic.
What makes this top 10 so strong is that it captures the whole mid-80s ecosystem. You get the MTV miracle of “Take On Me,” the pop-culture detonation of “Like a Virgin,” the adult heartbreak of “Careless Whisper,” the power-ballad cathedral of Foreigner, the sleek anxiety of Tears for Fears, the genre collision of Chaka Khan, and the pure candy-colored joy of Wham!
For Gen X, these records do not feel like trivia. They feel like wiring. They were part of how the year looked, sounded, dressed, flirted, moped, danced, drove around with the windows down, and learned that a music video could make a song feel permanently stapled to your childhood.
FAQ: Top Songs of 1985
What was the #1 song of 1985 on the Billboard Hot 100 year-end chart?
The #1 year-end song of 1985 was “Careless Whisper” by George Michael.
What were the top songs of 1985?
Billboard’s year-end Top 10 for 1985 includes George Michael, Madonna, Wham!, Foreigner, Chaka Khan, Hall & Oates, Tears for Fears, Dire Straits, a-ha, and Madonna again with “Crazy for You.”
Why does this list use Billboard’s year-end Hot 100?
This series uses Billboard’s year-end Hot 100 because it reflects the biggest U.S. singles of the year based on chart performance, not just personal opinion or modern nostalgia.
How long was “Careless Whisper” #1?
“Careless Whisper” spent three weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and finished as Billboard’s #1 song of 1985.
How long was “Like a Virgin” #1?
“Like a Virgin” spent six weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and helped make Madonna one of the defining pop stars of the decade.
Did “I Feel for You” hit #1 on the Hot 100?
No. “I Feel for You” was a massive hit and ranked #5 for the year, but it peaked at #3 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Which 1985 songs reached #1 on the Hot 100?
Several songs in this countdown reached #1, including “Careless Whisper,” “Like a Virgin,” “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go,” “I Want to Know What Love Is,” “Out of Touch,” “Everybody Wants to Rule the World,” “Money for Nothing,” “Crazy for You,” and “Take On Me.”
What is the most iconic MTV-era hit in the 1985 Top 10?
“Take On Me” is one of the clearest MTV-era breakthroughs because the song, video, visual style, and cultural memory fused into one perfect 1985 pop moment.
Why does 1985 music feel so connected to MTV?
By 1985, MTV had made image part of how many songs were experienced. Hits like “Take On Me,” “Money for Nothing,” “Like a Virgin,” and “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” were not just heard — they were strongly tied to videos, visuals, fashion, and screen memory.
Is there a playlist for the top songs of 1985?
Yes. This page includes the Smells Like Gen X 1985 Spotify playlist so you can listen while you scroll through the countdown.