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The best New Year’s songs to countdown to 2024

Ring in 2024 with this list of the best New Year’s songs, and get ready to say ‘cheers!’

Nick Levine
Ella Doyle
Edited by
Nick Levine
&
Ella Doyle
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New Year's Eve is a stressful one. There’s so much riding on it, and so much pressure to have a good time, you can often end up forgetting what’s really important: drinking too much and staying up past midnight!

Here at Time Out, we thought we’d remind you exactly how you should be bringing the New Year in: by listening to songs about New Years, on New Years. In fact, we’ve got 30 of them. Here are the best songs about New Years to listen to on New Years. Cheers!

Listen to these songs on Amazon Music

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🎅 The best Christmas songs

Written by Andrzej Lukowski, Nick Levine, Christopher Tarantino, Liv Kelly, Ed Cunningham and Ella Doyle. 

Best New Year’s songs, ranked

‘Happy New Year’ by Abba

1. ‘Happy New Year’ by Abba

The legendary Swedish hitmakers included this paean to the new year on their turn-of-the-decade 1980 album, ‘Super Trouper’. A retrospective of-sorts on the close of the ‘70s, the Euro megastars croon, ‘It's the end of a decade / In another 10 year's time, who can say what we'll find?’ Sadly, the answer turned out to be just one more Abba album before this year’s unexpected comeback.

‘1999’ by Prince

2. ‘1999’ by Prince

Prince’s party anthem hits hard every year, even two decades after Millennium Eve, but in 2021 there’s something kind of wistful about it. Most of us won’t be able to ‘party like it’s 1999’ this NYE, not really, but that doesn’t mean we can’t have a bash anyway. Just try not to listen too closely to the Purple One’s rather fatalistic lyrics about ‘judgement day’ and dancing ‘my life away’.

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‘Happy New Year’ by Let’s Eat Grandma
Photograph: Apple Music

3. ‘Happy New Year’ by Let’s Eat Grandma

New Year’s is a time of looking backward and looking forward... how on Earth do you capture that in a song? But UK duo Let’s Eat Grandma somehow manage exactly that on ‘Happy New Year’, a tune that reminisces about the relationship of childhood friends Rosa Walton and Jenny Hollingworth but also celebrates how they’ll always be best mates. If you aren’t moved by this one, your heart’s made of stone. Plus, it’s got fireworks sound effects in it – it doesn’t get more New Years-y than that.

https://media.timeout.com/images/106058775/image.jpg
Ed Cunningham
News Editor, Time Out UK and Time Out London
‘The Final Countdown’ by Europe
Photo by Epic

4. ‘The Final Countdown’ by Europe

Nobody outside of Europe’s home country really knows anything about the Swedish rock band… apart from one thing: in 1986 they penned this exquisitely dumb global smash that upon close inspection seems to be about taking a rocket to Venus (!) but has forever been adopted as the storming official soundtrack to any sort of countdown based celebration.

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‘New Year’s Resolution’ by Camera Obscura

5. ‘New Year’s Resolution’ by Camera Obscura

Tired of Belle & Sebastian, but still looking for something Scottish and twee? Well, look no further than 4AD’s Camera Obscura, who’ve released five lovely albums of indie pop with names like ‘Let’s Get Out of This Country’ and ‘Underachievers Please Try Harder’, and this 2013 tune from ‘Desire Lines’.

‘Let’s Start the New Year Right’ by Bing Crosby

6. ‘Let’s Start the New Year Right’ by Bing Crosby

Bing Crosby—Mr. Holiday himself—sang this Irving Berlin-penned tune in the 1942 film Holiday Inn, co-starring Marjorie Reynolds and his pal Fred Astaire. The film also contained the Academy Award-winning ‘White Christmas’ for which this song was the b-side to when it was released on vinyl in 78 RPM (RIP).

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Raise Your Glass by P!nk
Photograph: Apple Music

7. Raise Your Glass by P!nk

Okay, this noughties banger isn’t specifically about December 31, but what better time is there to follow P!nk’s instructions and raise your glass? Boogie your way into 2024 to this catchy if not super cringey belter, whether you’re too cool for school or too school for cool. New Year’s Eve is literally the day to ‘don’t get fancy, just get dancy’, after all.

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Liv Kelly
Contributing Writer
‘New Year’s Resolution’ by Otis Redding and Carla Thomas

8. ‘New Year’s Resolution’ by Otis Redding and Carla Thomas

Looking to replicate the success of Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell (and Kim Weston and more), Stax Records combined two of their biggest stars to knock an album together. The result, 1967’s minor soul classic ‘King & Queen’, was recorded in six days with Thomas and Redding backed by Isaac Hayes and Booker T & the MGs. The LP helped turn Redding into a major star a year before his tragic plane crash.

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It’s the End of the World as we Know It (And I Feel Fine)
Photo by IRS Records

9. It’s the End of the World as we Know It (And I Feel Fine)

REM’s cult classic single wasn’t an enormous hit in 1987, but its apocalyptic/upbeat chorus has led to it percolating through the public consciousness in the decades since: its mixture of extreme ending and extreme joy speaks perfectly to to those of us happy to set fire to the old year and move on, while its borderline incomprehensible verses literally describe a massive party. 

‘Auld Lang Syne (The New Year’s Anthem)’ by Mariah Carey
Photo by Island Def Jam

10. ‘Auld Lang Syne (The New Year’s Anthem)’ by Mariah Carey

Look, she offered up the definitive Christmas song, and while it’s absolutely not one for Robert Burns purist she comes near enough to nailing the quintessential New Year’s Eve song. Yes, there are innumerable variants on ‘Auld Lang Syne’, and it’s not really a shocker that Mariah’s housey arrangement was somewhat divisive when released in 2010. But if you’re in the mood for lung-busting singalong sincerity, this has it all.

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‘Firework’ by Katy Perry
Photo by Capitol

11. ‘Firework’ by Katy Perry

Katy Perry’s most enduring song basically works in almost any sort of social context: funeral? Yes! Christening? Undoubtedly. Passing your driving test? Why no? Still, her surgingly uplifting pop banger undoubtedly gets about 10 percent better if there are actual fireworks around, as there are wont to be at New Year’s Eve.

‘Bringing In A Brand New Year’ by Charles Brown

12. ‘Bringing In A Brand New Year’ by Charles Brown

Texas-blues man and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Tony ‘Charles’ Brown was an apprentice electrician, a high school chemistry teacher and a mustard gas worker in the 1940s before he got discovered. This is just one of his numerous holiday songs—and over 100 singles on a variety of labels—from a ridiculously prolific career both as a solo artist and a member of the Three Blazers.

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‘Funky New Year’ by The Eagles

13. ‘Funky New Year’ by The Eagles

A non-album nugget that from the L.A.’s 1970s lords of white-funk, this song was the b-side of the band’s ‘Please Come Home For Christmas.’ The band recorded both seasonal tunes during the two-year sessions for their commercially successful 1979 album ‘The Long Run’.

‘Gonna Make it Through This Year’ by Great Lake Swimmers

14. ‘Gonna Make it Through This Year’ by Great Lake Swimmers

Americana for people who hate Americana is a good way to describe Tony Dekker’s Great Lake Swimmers. The ironic part about that, though, is that the decade–running pastoral band is from Ontario, Canada, and yet here they are showing us the best part of our great country.

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‘New Year’s Eve’ by Tom Waits

15. ‘New Year’s Eve’ by Tom Waits

Sounding exactly how you would expect a Tom Waits New Years Eve song to sound, this one even incorporates ‘Auld Lang Syne’ into the chorus. Waits has said the song was incredibly long but had to be cut down to ‘a pony. That's an alcoholic term for a small bottle.’ Classic Tom!

‘This Will Be Our Year’ by The Zombies

16. ‘This Will Be Our Year’ by The Zombies

For anyone who’s had kind of a rough 2021 – and come on, who hasn’t? – this comforting ‘60s pop tune should act as a salve. ‘And this will be our year,’ sings frontman Colin Blunstone over poignant but purposeful guitar chords, ‘Took a long time to come.’ It’s a universal sentiment, world-weary but still fundamental, that many of us will relate to.

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‘New Year’s Eve’ by MØ

17. ‘New Year’s Eve’ by MØ

You’ll probably know Danish singer-songwriter MØ for her feature on the inescapable Major Hit ‘Lean On’, one of the most streamed songs of all time. This NYE-themed electro gem is more pensive and reflective, but also a song about forgetting all your cares for a night. ‘Got a problem, baby let it be, hop up on my back, have a happy New Year’s Eve,’ she sings yearningly. We’ll certainly raise a glass to that. 

‘What Are You Doing New Year’s Eve’ by Ella Fitzgerald

18. ‘What Are You Doing New Year’s Eve’ by Ella Fitzgerald

Probably the most covered New Year’s song, Frank Loesser’s 1947 hit has been recorded by artists as varied as Bette Midler, Donny Osmond, Lena Horne, the Carpenters, Johnny Mathis, Harry Connick Jr. and the Stylistics. The Zooey Deschanel and Joseph Gordon-Levitt video version alone has 16 million views on YouTube.

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‘Happy New Year’ by The McGuire Sisters

19. ‘Happy New Year’ by The McGuire Sisters

Fun fact: Phyllis, Christine and Dorothy McGuire became massive song and dance stars in the ‘40s with multiple million-selling records, but they permanently retired from public performance in 1968 when Phyllis’s rumored-relationship with famed mobster Sam Giancana got them blacklisted. Luckily, they managed to released this tune in 1957 first.

‘New Year’s Day’ by U2
Photo by Island

20. ‘New Year’s Day’ by U2

If you’ve reached the anthemic classic rock song bit of the night but aren’t entirely ready to wallow in aggressively dumb soft rock, then bust out the wintry magnificence of U2’s first big hit. The New Year’s Day that Bono is yowling about sounds distinctly bleaker than the one you‘re probably hoping for, but accepting that you’ve committed to putting U2 on at a party, it’s a genuinely spine-chilling piece of music.

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‘In the New Year’ by The Walkmen

21. ‘In the New Year’ by The Walkmen

The indie rockers’ boozy warbled tales of nostalgia are a perfect match for a holiday that’s about looking forward as much as it is looking back. The band may have gone on an “extreme hiatus” in 2013, but this track, from 2008’s underrated You & Me, is a gem that easily still stands.

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