A 1998 Hit Has Been Named the Best Pop Song of the 1990s
On September 29, 1998, a soon-to-be legendary pop song hit the airwaves, and now, it's being named the best pop song of the 1990s.
On that day, Britney Spears released "...Baby One More Time" as a single off her 1999 debut album by the same name. The song, which was written by Max Martin and produced by Martin and Rami Yacoub, would launch her career and become iconic in the '90s pop landscape.
Classic Britney Spears Hit From 1998 Deemed the Best Pop Song of the Decade by Music Experts
In a Thursday, March 19 feature for Audio Ink Radio, reporter Scarlett Hunter makes the case that Spears' "...Baby One More Time" is the greatest pop song of the decade.
"Pop music in the late ’90s often leaned big. Big hooks, big personalities, big production," she notes in the piece. "And while '…Baby One More Time' certainly has its share of that, it never feels overwhelming. The beat hits, the structure locks in, but the song still breathes. It leaves space for the listener to step into it."
Hunter adds that, "the argument for it isn't complicated" and that people keep coming back to it, "not because they're trying to make a point, but because something about it still feels immediate, even years later. It still sounds like a beginning."
For even more credibility, Rolling Stone also called the song the "greatest debut single of all time."
The Grammy Awards Honor Classic Pop Hit and Say It 'Established Spears' Signature Sound'
Rob LeDonne of the Grammy Awards' website also sings the praises of this Spears song. In a September 2023 feature on the hit, he says that "Spears understood the melodic power of '... Baby One More Time' immediately."
"The whole song is about that stress that we all go through as teens," Spears said in an interview with the Guardian in 2018. "I knew it was a great song. It was different and I loved it, (but) I don't think you can anticipate how a song is going to be received."
LeDonne also notes that the song earned Spears her first Grammy nominations, which were for Best New Artist and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance at the 42nd Grammy Awards.
"The momentous track also helped usher in a new era of pop music culture, sound and production," he notes in the piece. "Aside from making a household name out Spears and inspiring countless pop songstresses in her wake, it kicked off a historic streak of smashes for its enigmatic producer Max Martin, became one of the MTV generation's most iconic music videos and, for a time, shifted the center of pop from Los Angeles to Stockholm, Sweden."

