The List

4 Bad Choruses That Stopped a Song From Going No. 1

Sometimes, bad choruses really can make or break an otherwise good song. The following four songs have arguably less-than-stellar choruses holding them together, and I think these songs avoided the No. 1 spot because of it. Letโ€™s take a look! Many of these tracks are incredible, even with their controversial choruses.

โ€œemo girlโ€ by Machine Gun Kelly feat. Willow

This collaboration between MGK and Willow is a standout single from the formerโ€™s 2022 pop punk album, Mainstream Sellout. This song, produced by Blink-182โ€™s Travis Barker, was an excellent collaboration between the three musicians. 

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However, that chorus just doesnโ€™t hit and tends to get repetitive. Still, the song did pretty well on the charts. โ€œemo girlโ€ peaked at No. 77 on the Billboard Hot 100 and hit the Top 10 on the US Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart.

โ€œYellow Submarineโ€ by The Beatles

Out of all of The Beatlesโ€™ discography, the chorus of โ€œYellow Submarineโ€ is probably the least inventive. However, Iโ€™m not going to act like this isnโ€™t one of the most legendary Fab Four tracks of all time. 

This 1966 banger made it to No. 2 on the Hot 100 chart and topped multiple other charts as well. I think it would have secured that top spot on the Hot 100 if the chorus had been just a little less repetitive.

โ€œFranticโ€ by Metallica

โ€œFranticโ€ is a killer Metallica song. However, that chorus is justโ€ฆ not it. At least to me. โ€œFrantic, tick tick tick tick tick tick tockโ€ gets a little nerve-frying after a while. 

Still, the song is an excellent opener on St. Anger. โ€œFranticโ€ hit No. 4 on the UK Rock & Metal chart and ranked even higher elsewhere, but it didnโ€™t make it to the Hot 100 after its release in 2003.

โ€œRiotโ€ by Bullet For My Valentine

Remember this heavy metal tune from Bullet For My Valentine? This 2013 track makes it to our list of good songs with bad choruses because its chorus just doesnโ€™t match the power of the songโ€™s verses. โ€œWhoa-oa-oah / Here come the sirens, here comes the law / Whoa-oa-oah / Run from the sirens, run from the lawโ€ is far from the most poetic focal point of the song. 

Still, โ€œRiotโ€ did pretty well chart-wise and hit No. 22 on the Mainstream Rock Songs chart.

Photo by Mark and Colleen Hayward/Getty Images

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