Best Songs Of 2012
10. "Payphone," Maroon 5
Singing about a payphone in 2012 is like showing up to freshman Psych 101 lugging a Selectric typewriter instead of an iPad: You could do it, but nobody would know what your deal was. And yet, thanks to Maroon 5singer Adam Levine's towering chorus falsetto on the Grammy-nominated tune, a warm marching-band dance thrum, haunting piano line, some unnecessarily urgent cursing and Wiz Khalifa's "came up from nuthin'" show-stopping verses, it totally worked. "Payphone" spent 19 weeks in the top 10, sold more than 3 million digital copies and made M5 superstars ... again. Tap, tap, tap, return. — Gil Kaufman
Singing about a payphone in 2012 is like showing up to freshman Psych 101 lugging a Selectric typewriter instead of an iPad: You could do it, but nobody would know what your deal was. And yet, thanks to Maroon 5singer Adam Levine's towering chorus falsetto on the Grammy-nominated tune, a warm marching-band dance thrum, haunting piano line, some unnecessarily urgent cursing and Wiz Khalifa's "came up from nuthin'" show-stopping verses, it totally worked. "Payphone" spent 19 weeks in the top 10, sold more than 3 million digital copies and made M5 superstars ... again. Tap, tap, tap, return. — Gil Kaufman
9. "Glad You Came," the Wanted
Boy bands aren't supposed to be this saucy. But the Wanted took a tune about drinking and flirting the night away and made it undeniably charming. And thought it was released in 2011, the fist-pumping ode really didn't catch fire until this year. But once it did, the single stormed the charts, eventually landing at #1 on Billboard's Pop Songs list. The U.K. band's racy track has not only sold millions of copies, it's also perhaps the best use of innuendo to hit pop radio in a while. Oh, how cheeky those boys are! — Jocelyn Vena
Boy bands aren't supposed to be this saucy. But the Wanted took a tune about drinking and flirting the night away and made it undeniably charming. And thought it was released in 2011, the fist-pumping ode really didn't catch fire until this year. But once it did, the single stormed the charts, eventually landing at #1 on Billboard's Pop Songs list. The U.K. band's racy track has not only sold millions of copies, it's also perhaps the best use of innuendo to hit pop radio in a while. Oh, how cheeky those boys are! — Jocelyn Vena
8. "Gangnam Style," Psy
Before Psy's late-breaking controversy, his viral hit "Gangnam Style"befuddled Bill O'Reilly, infiltrated the NFL, inspired more parodies thanClint Eastwood at the RNC and, oh, yeah, racked up nearly 1 billionviews on YouTube. "Gangnam" is either the track we, as a culture needed right now, or the track we, as a culture, deserved (probably both). But no matter what your take, chances are you did the dance at least once. —James Montgomery
Before Psy's late-breaking controversy, his viral hit "Gangnam Style"befuddled Bill O'Reilly, infiltrated the NFL, inspired more parodies thanClint Eastwood at the RNC and, oh, yeah, racked up nearly 1 billionviews on YouTube. "Gangnam" is either the track we, as a culture needed right now, or the track we, as a culture, deserved (probably both). But no matter what your take, chances are you did the dance at least once. —James Montgomery
Psy Dances Into #8 Best Song Of 2012
7. "Mercy," Kanye West (featuring Big Sean, Pusha T and 2 Chainz)
Kanye West is hip-hop's undisputed mad scientist, trapped in the lab tinkering with sonic frequencies until he comes up with the perfect blend of dirty rap/pop. Yeezy made a Frankenstein of a hit with "Mercy," drawing inspiration from DJ Screw, dancehall and every rapper's favorite film, "Scarface." Not only was the song a club staple, it ruled radio, peaking at #1 on the BillboardRap Songs chart, and snagged two 2013 Grammy nominations. Mercy, mercy me. — Rob Markman
Kanye West is hip-hop's undisputed mad scientist, trapped in the lab tinkering with sonic frequencies until he comes up with the perfect blend of dirty rap/pop. Yeezy made a Frankenstein of a hit with "Mercy," drawing inspiration from DJ Screw, dancehall and every rapper's favorite film, "Scarface." Not only was the song a club staple, it ruled radio, peaking at #1 on the BillboardRap Songs chart, and snagged two 2013 Grammy nominations. Mercy, mercy me. — Rob Markman
6. "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together," Taylor Swift
After building a cottage industry out of high-school fairy tales, the (soon to be) 23-year-old Swift finally graduated with "Never Ever," a biting break-up track that, while packed with lyrical "like, ever's," still manages to arrive at a thoroughly grown-up conclusion: She is better off alone. Story-book endings are for kids, after all ... just don't tell Harry. — J.M.
After building a cottage industry out of high-school fairy tales, the (soon to be) 23-year-old Swift finally graduated with "Never Ever," a biting break-up track that, while packed with lyrical "like, ever's," still manages to arrive at a thoroughly grown-up conclusion: She is better off alone. Story-book endings are for kids, after all ... just don't tell Harry. — J.M.
'Never Ever' Nabs Taylor Swift #6 Spot On Best Song Of 2012
5. "Starships," Nicki Minaj
With her frenetic club hit, Nicki simultaneously taught us that "starships were meant to fly" and that critics can't always see the glow sticks coming their way. The RedOne-produced single drew ire within the hip-hop community for its heavy dance/pop vibe, but the rave-worthy video — shot on a beach in Hawaii — coupled with a catchy hook made this an instant, pump-your-fists smash. Party on y'all. — Nadeska Alexis
With her frenetic club hit, Nicki simultaneously taught us that "starships were meant to fly" and that critics can't always see the glow sticks coming their way. The RedOne-produced single drew ire within the hip-hop community for its heavy dance/pop vibe, but the rave-worthy video — shot on a beach in Hawaii — coupled with a catchy hook made this an instant, pump-your-fists smash. Party on y'all. — Nadeska Alexis
4. "What Makes You Beautiful," One Direction
Much like the guys in 1D, this track comes off sweet and innocent. Oh, yeah, it's also bananas infectious. Released at the top of the year, the bubbly pop tune served as the perfect introduction to the mop-topped U.K. boy band on the way to going platinum three times over. It's the kind of tune you stay, yes, Up All Night to. And by packing their Stateside shows in 2012, fans showed they couldn't resist a song, from five adorable dudes, about wanting to love us just the way we are. — J.V.
Much like the guys in 1D, this track comes off sweet and innocent. Oh, yeah, it's also bananas infectious. Released at the top of the year, the bubbly pop tune served as the perfect introduction to the mop-topped U.K. boy band on the way to going platinum three times over. It's the kind of tune you stay, yes, Up All Night to. And by packing their Stateside shows in 2012, fans showed they couldn't resist a song, from five adorable dudes, about wanting to love us just the way we are. — J.V.
One Direction Take #4 Best Song Of 2012
3. "Somebody That I Used to Know," Gotye (featuring Kimbra)
For us common folk, break-ups are pretty hard, but not for Gotye. The Grammy-nominated Aussie turned his heartache into pure pop gold. We're not sure who the ice queen was, but thanks to her, we got one of the hottest songs of 2012. "Somebody That I Used to Know" hit #1 in just about every country with a radio frequency, including the U.S. and 'Ye's native Australia. If you don't know, now you know. — R.M.
For us common folk, break-ups are pretty hard, but not for Gotye. The Grammy-nominated Aussie turned his heartache into pure pop gold. We're not sure who the ice queen was, but thanks to her, we got one of the hottest songs of 2012. "Somebody That I Used to Know" hit #1 in just about every country with a radio frequency, including the U.S. and 'Ye's native Australia. If you don't know, now you know. — R.M.
2. "We Are Young," Fun.
Dubstep has its stomach-rumbling drop, but no one in pop music this year could outdo the thrill six-time Grammy nominees Fun. served up with the musical cliff-dive that is "We Are Young." The song that took the band to six weeks at #1 and Grammy nomination heaven combines tribal drumming and Nate Ruess' keening, drunken ramblings with a rousing, half-time chorus that begs to be shouted at house parties by bleary-eyed pals with their arms around each other. It was like the Transformer of pop: its power is overwhelming and it simply could not be stopped. — G.K.
Dubstep has its stomach-rumbling drop, but no one in pop music this year could outdo the thrill six-time Grammy nominees Fun. served up with the musical cliff-dive that is "We Are Young." The song that took the band to six weeks at #1 and Grammy nomination heaven combines tribal drumming and Nate Ruess' keening, drunken ramblings with a rousing, half-time chorus that begs to be shouted at house parties by bleary-eyed pals with their arms around each other. It was like the Transformer of pop: its power is overwhelming and it simply could not be stopped. — G.K.
1. "Call Me Maybe," Carly Rae Jepsen
In a year where pop music was dominated by defiant statements — "We are young," "We found love," "We are never ever getting back together" — it's interesting that the song that defined the past 12 months was one that hinged on a decidedly timid sentiment: "Call me, maybe?" Are we becoming a kinder, gentler nation? Probably not, but with her signature smash, Jepsen proved that we're still not adverse to the occasional dose of humility, either. Of course, when it comes packaged in pop this shiny and sublime, it's difficult to ignore. A spoonful of sugar always helps the medicine go down, after all. — Montgomery
In a year where pop music was dominated by defiant statements — "We are young," "We found love," "We are never ever getting back together" — it's interesting that the song that defined the past 12 months was one that hinged on a decidedly timid sentiment: "Call me, maybe?" Are we becoming a kinder, gentler nation? Probably not, but with her signature smash, Jepsen proved that we're still not adverse to the occasional dose of humility, either. Of course, when it comes packaged in pop this shiny and sublime, it's difficult to ignore. A spoonful of sugar always helps the medicine go down, after all. — Montgomery
Carly Rae Jepsen's 'Call Me Maybe' Wins Best Song Of 2012
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