With "Push It", Salt-N-Pepa turned a B-side into one of the defining records of the 1980s, bringing Hip Hop into homes, clubs, and radio stations around the world. Fun, fearless, and instantly recognizable, it remains one of Hip Hop's most iconic crossover records.
"A Horse With No Name" is from the self-titled debut album America (1971/1972). Dewey Bunnell wrote the song within hours while in England, evoking the memories of the Arizona desert of childhood.
Released as a single in 1972, it spent three weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100, taking Neil Young's "Heart of Gold" from the top, and became the biggest hit of the band's career. To this day, it is the most played song in America in the world.
For What It's Worth is from the album Buffalo Springfield (1966). Stephen Stills wrote the lyrics after driving across the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles in November 1966 and seeing police violently cracking down on a peaceful protest by young people against curfew and nightclub closures.
Released as a single in December 1966, it reached #7 on the Billboard Hot 100 (the biggest hit of the band's short career), even though it did not directly address the Vietnam War, radio and the public adopted the song as a cry against police repression and injustice.
CuraΓ§ao π¨πΌ national team arrived for the 2026 World Cup in a school bus π with no windowsππβ¦. These guys are creating amazing memories
She Sells Sanctuary is from the album Love (1985). It was The Cult's biggest hit to date (#15 on the UK Singles Chart, helping Love enter the Top 4) and marked the last recording with drummer Nigel Preston before he was fired.