The 140 Best Songs With a Color in the Title

Prince Purple Rain Album Cover - 1

Warner Bros.

It’s easy to feel tangled up in blue these days, but if you’re finding yourself wrapped in a purple haze and looking a whiter shade of pale, our list of the best songs with a color in the title will give you the green light to feeling mellow yellow again. So put on your little black dress, hop in a big yellow taxi or a little red Corvette, and look up at that blue sky. Let these colorful songs be the soundtrack of your day.

RELATED: The 75 Best Songs with a Number in the Title .

Classic Songs With a Color in the Title

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Best Life

  1. “Blackbird,” The Beatles
  2. “Say It Loud—I’m Black and I’m Proud,” James Brown
  3. “Black Magic Woman,” Santana
  4. “Tangled Up in Blue,” Bob Dylan
  5. “Almost Blue,” Elvis Costello
  6. “Mr. Blue Sky,” Electric Light Orchestra
  7. “Blue Velvet,” Bobby Vinton
  8. “Blue Moon,” The Marcels
  9. “Brown Eyed Girl,” Van Morrison
  10. “Green Grass of Home,” Tom Jones
  11. “The Green Door,” Jim Lowe
  12. “Fields of Gold,” Sting
  13. “Band of Gold,” Freda Payne
  14. “Pink Moon,” Nick Drake
  15. “Purple Rain,” Prince
  16. “Lady in Red,” Chris de Burgh
  17. “Red Sails in the Sunset,” Bing Crosby
  18. “She Wears Red Feathers,” Guy Mitchell
  19. “Little Red Corvette,” Prince
  20. “Red Rain,” Peter Gabriel
  21. “99 Red Balloons,” Nena
  22. “White Wedding,” Billy Idol
  23. “A Whiter Shade of Pale,” Procol Harum
  24. “Mellow Yellow,” Donovan
  25. “Big Yellow Taxi,” Joni Mitchell
  26. “Goodbye, Yellow Brick Road,” Elton John

RELATED: The 36 Best Karaoke Songs for Totally Owning the Stage .

Rock Songs With Colors in the Title

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Best Life

  1. “Amber,” 311
  2. “Back in Black,” AC/DC
  3. “Electric Blue,” Arcade Fire
  4. “Welcome to the Black Parade,” My Chemical Romance
  5. “Supermassive Black Hole,” Muse
  6. “Paint It Black,” The Rolling Stones
  7. “Black Sun,” Death Cab for Cutie
  8. “Blue Charlotte,” John Mellencamp
  9. “Pale Blue Eyes,” The Velvet Underground
  10. “Blue Suede Shoes,” Elvis Presley
  11. “Forever in Blue Jeans,” Neil Diamond
  12. “Blue Morning in the Rain,” Chris Rea
  13. “Behind Blue Eyes,” The Who
  14. “Blue Sunshine,” Blue October
  15. “Brown Sugar,” The Rolling Stones
  16. “That Green Gentleman,” Panic! at the Disco
  17. “Girl’s Not Grey,” AFI
  18. “Grey Street,” Dave Matthews Band
  19. “Agent Orange,” Depeche Mode
  20. “Orange Crush,” R.E.M.
  21. “Purple Sky,” Kid Rock
  22. “Purple Haze,” Jimi Hendrix
  23. “Nights in White Satin,” Moody Blues
  24. “White Rabbit,” Jefferson Airplane
  25. “White Trash Millionaire,” Black Stone Cherry

RELATED: The 33 Best Graduation Songs to Celebrate Your Next Step .

Pop Songs With a Color in the Title

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Best Life

  1. “Little Black Dress,” One Direction
  2. “Back to Black,” Amy Winehouse
  3. “Black Horse and the Cherry Tree,” KT Tunstall
  4. “Black Cat,” Janet Jackson
  5. “Black or White,” Michael Jackson
  6. “Black Magic,” Little Mix
  7. “Blackstar,” David Bowie
  8. “Blue Jeans,” Lana Del Rey
  9. “Counting Blue Cars,” Dishwalla
  10. “Into the Blue,” Kylie Minogue
  11. “Out of the Blue,” Debbie Gibson
  12. “Blue,” Leann Rimes
  13. “True Blue,” Madonna
  14. “How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful,” Florence + the Machine
  15. “Mamy Blue,” Ricky Shayne
  16. “Golden Hour,” Kacey Musgraves
  17. “Golden,” Harry Styles
  18. “Behind These Hazel Eyes,” Kelly Clarkson
  19. “Green Light,” Lorde
  20. “Pink + White,” Frank Ocean
  21. “Pink Champagne,” Ariana Grande
  22. “Pretty in Pink,” The Psychedelic Furs
  23. “Red,” Taylor Swift
  24. “Red, Red, Red,” Fiona Apple
  25. “Red Blooded Woman,” Kylie Minogue
  26. “Red Light Ladies,” Linda Lewis
  27. “White Flag,” Dido
  28. “Yellow,” Coldplay

Hip-Hop and R&B Songs With Colors

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Best Life

  1. “Men in Black,” Will Smith
  2. “Black Panther,” Kendrick Lamar
  3. “Black Widow,” Iggy Azalea
  4. “Black and Yellow,” Wiz Khalifa
  5. “Blue Sky,” Common
  6. “Blue,” Beyoncé
  7. “Black Hand Side,” Queen Latifah
  8. “Brown Sugar,” D’Angelo
  9. “Goldie,” ASAP Rocky
  10. “Gold Digger,” Kanye West
  11. “Green Light,” John Legend
  12. “Grass Is Always Greener,” Ludacris
  13. “Green Lights,” Aloe Blacc
  14. “Just Be Good to Green,” Professor Green
  15. “PYNK,” Janelle Monáe
  16. “Red Room,” Offset
  17. “Red,” Daniel Merriweather
  18. “Red Lipstick,” Rihanna
  19. “White Iverson,” Post Malone
  20. “Bodak Yellow,” Cardi B

RELATED: The 24 Best ’90s Country Songs to Take You Back to That Iconic Decade .

Country Songs With a Color in the Title

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Best Life

  1. “Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain,” Willie Nelson
  2. “Forever in Blue,” Chris Isaak
  3. “Blue Bird,” Miranda Lambert
  4. “Blue Mesa,” Randy Travis
  5. “Blue Skies,” Uncle Kracker
  6. “Blue,” LeAnn Rimes
  7. “Blue Ain’t Your Color,” Keith Urban
  8. “Bowling Green,” Glen Campbell
  9. “Girl in Green,” Blue Rodeo
  10. “Pink Chiffon,” Mitchell Torok
  11. “Touch of Pink,” Jerry Wallace
  12. “Biff the Friendly Purple Bear,” Dick Feller
  13. “Red Light,” David Nail
  14. “Bleed Red,” Ronnie Dunn
  15. “Like Red on a Rose,” Alan Jackson
  16. “Little Red Rodeo,” Colin Raye
  17. “Ruby Puts Her Red Dress On,” Joel Crouse
  18. “White Lightning,” The Cadillac Three
  19. “Yellow Bandana,” Faron Young
  20. “Yellow Brick Road,” Morgan Frazier

RELATED: The 50 Best Songs with a Name in the Title .

’90s Songs With Colors in the Title

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Best Life

  1. “Black,” Pearl Jam
  2. “Black Hole Sun,” Soundgarden
  3. “Black and White,” Sarah McLachlan
  4. “Blue (Da Ba Dee),” Eiffel 65
  5. “A Certain Shade of Green,” Incubus
  6. “Orange,” Metal Molly
  7. “Orange Fell,” The Trash Can Sinatras
  8. “Orange Flip,” Book of Love
  9. “Pink,” Aerosmith
  10. “Pink Triangle,” Weezer
  11. “Pink Elephant,” Wally Willette
  12. “Pale Purple,” Ani DiFranco
  13. “Red Bar,” Pearl Jam
  14. “Blood Red River,” Beth Orton
  15. “I Saw Red,” Warrant
  16. “The Red Shoes,” Kate Bush
  17. “Pretty Fly (For a White Guy),” The Offspring
  18. “White Room,” Sheryl Crow
  19. “The White Room,” Rick Springfield
  20. “Bled White,” Elliot Smith
  21. “Forever Yellow Skies,” The Cranberries

The 33 Best Graduation Songs to Celebrate Your Next Step

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© Rhino/YouTube

It’s graduation day! Chances are that you or your proud student will be marching across the stage while “Pomp and Circumstance” blares, but with all due respect to that graduation staple, which English composer Sir Edward Elgar wrote in the early 1900s, that song is a little, well, old. “Pomp and Circumstance” is a march, and while there is a time and a place for a march, the students of today need a song that slaps or bangs or goes.

If you’re looking for other songs to blast as you celebrate getting your diploma (or advancing from elementary school to high school), read on for 33 tracks that are perfect for such an occasion. There are some kid-friendly songs about accomplishment and the future, big boastful hip-hop songs about having made it, some country music about the journey we all call life, songs that capture how bittersweet moving on can be, and upbeat jams that will make you want to throw your graduation cap high in the air. So Congrats to the Class of 2024—now let’s hit play, turn up the volume, and get this graduation party started!

RELATED: The 36 Best Karaoke Songs for Totally Owning the Stage .

Graduation Songs for Primary or Elementary School

Kids might recognize this as being sung by Gazelle, not Shakira , as that was the character the Colombian singer voiced in the 2016 film Zootopia . It’s an exuberant, upbeat tune that’s perfect for grade schoolers as they advance to middle school, high school, and beyond. As Shakira/Gazelle sings, she encourages her listeners to be open to whatever comes next.

Despite—or, perhaps, because—they are one of the greatest bands of all time, the Beatles have a lot of music that is remarkably kid-friendly. “With a Little Help From My Friends,” from their 1962 album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band , is a charming tune that celebrates how important friends are to making it through school.

Minion-loving kids will be happy to hear Pharrell Williams’ song “Happy”—as will just about anybody else who’s listening in. The 2013 track is such a wonderfully simple song about a celebratory emotion, making it a fitting selection for any graduation party. You graduated! What’s there not to be happy about?

Most Disney “I Want” songs —that is, the song where the protagonist sings about their hopes, dreams, and aspirations—would make for pretty good graduation songs. “How Far I’ll Go,” from Moana , is one of the best. Written, as all the songs on the 2016 movie were, by Hamilton’s Lin-Manuel Miranda , it’s a sweeping, big song, aptly sung by Auli’i Cravalho . (Who made her film debut at just age 16 in this movie!)

Man, 2016 was a good year for songs from kids’ movies, huh? Justin Timberlake sings the breakout song from the Trolls soundtrack, an upbeat, infectiously peppy song about feeling good. It’s a natural fit for a graduation celebration.

The seven labors of Hercules are nothing compared to post-grad life, but you, like the title character in the Disney movie, have what it takes to “Go the Distance.” The “I Want” song from the 1997 film, “Go the Distance” is a sweeping, soaring track that will have a class of elementary schoolers singing along. ( Michael Bolton recorded a pop version of the song for the closing credits, should you want something with a little more zest.)

A song about an entire school coming together in celebration? Is there a more perfect song for an elementary or primary school graduation than this song from the High School Musical franchise?

RELATED: 44 Country Wedding Songs to Celebrate Your Big Day .

Upbeat Graduation Songs to Walk Out To

The lead single from Katy Perry’s 2013 album Prism is an empowering, affirming battlecry. It’s a terrific choice for a graduation song because, having made it through the trials and tribulations of school, you’re ready to unleash your full potential with what comes next. They’re gonna hear you roar!

Recently deployed as a hilarious and effective needle drop in the Sydney Sweeney rom-com Anyone But You , Natasha Bedingfield’s 2004 song is overdue for this sort of resurgence. It’s a sweeping, optimistic song about the future. What comes after graduation is, indeed, “unwritten.”

Alice Cooper said “School’s Out” was an attempt to capture the feeling of one of the best parts of somebody’s life —the minutes ticking down until school is over and summer vacation begins—into one song. “If we can catch that three minutes in a song, it’s going to be so big,” the rock star said, and he was right. There’s no better time to blast “School’s Out” than after graduation, when school is truly out forever. (Though, hopefully, not blown to pieces.)

Making it through high school or college is a tremendous feeling. You’re on top of the world, ready to take on whatever comes next. The iconic band Queen captured that vibe well in “Don’t Stop Me Now,” a cut from their 1978 album Jazz .

Is “Celebration,” from Kool & The Gang’s 1980 album Celebrate!, a little over-played and on-the-nose? Well, yes. Does that really matter? No! It’s a classic for a reason and a fitting soundtrack to any celebration of good times. (Come on!) As a good time, graduation deserves to be celebrated.

Throw your fist in the air just like Judd Nelson at the end of The Breakfast Club when this iconic high school song from the 1985 movie plays at the graduation party. Brain, athlete, basket case, princess, criminal—doesn’t matter what you are, because you made it through high school, learning a lot about yourself in the process. Don’t forget the friends you made it through with.

If you actually plan on having Lizzo’s 2022 song “About Damn Time” play while walking across the stage, you might run into a little issue with a curse word being right there in the title. But, if your school is cool (or if this is just going to be on the graduation party playlist), it’s a great choice. After four years of classes, homework, and tests, it is about damn time to graduate.

RELATED: 11 “Romantic” Songs That Are Actually Offensive .

Emotional Graduation Songs

There’s a bittersweetness to Vitamin C’s 1999 “Graduation (Friends Forever),” a song about how friends tend to drift apart after they graduate high school. That might not be exactly the vibe you and your friends might want for a graduation song, but the reality of the lyrics is emotional and poignant. It can serve as a subtle challenge, too. You and your buds actually will be friends forever.

There are a lot of Miley Cyrus songs that could be good for a graduation party (did you come into high school like a “ wrecking ball ”?) but this song from the fourth season of the Hannah Montana TV series is perfectly apt. “I’ll Always Remember You” is a wistful song about moving on to the next stage—parting, but not forgetting.

The lead single from Billie Eilish’s sophomore album Happier Than Ever , “My Future” is a pensive ballad about the future—a topic that should be top of mind for many recent graduates. Though it starts out rather restrained, it eventually blossoms into something bigger, making even the very structure of the song thematically appropriate for a graduation song.

Sarah McLachlan’s 1995 song “I Will Remember You” is perhaps a little overly sentimental. You might even call it “a bit much.” But, sometimes that’s exactly what’s called for in a song. It’s an emotional soundtrack for friends as they graduate together and go on to whatever’s next. Close friends might part ways after high school, but they won’t forget about each other. Consider “I Will Remember You” a good graduation song for inseparable friends.

RELATED: 22 Hit Songs Musicians Hate Playing Live .

Hip-Hop Songs About Graduation

Album art for Nicki Minaj Pink Friday, Roman Reloaded, The Re-Up - 9

Young Money/Cash Money/Universal Republic

Graduating with honors is one of the many boasts that Nicki Minaj makes in her 2012 song “I’m Legit.” Good for her. You don’t even need to have graduated with honors yourself (congrats if you did, though) in order to be legit after making it through school.

Producer Benny Blanco and rapper Juice WRLD’s 2019 song is a hip-hop reimagining of Vitamin C’s ‘90s bop of the same name. It’s a little bit more upbeat than the original, and it also boasts a really, really good music video, full of stars including Hailee Steinfeld , Olivia Munn , Justice Smith , and Kaitlyn Dever .

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Def Jam/Roc-A-Fella

Kanye West’s recent heel turn aside, you could do a lot worse for a graduation party than by playing the entirety of Ye’s third album, fittingly titled Graduation . But, if forced to pick just one song from the 2007 LP, “Champion,” the second track, is a pretty good one. It’s big and bold and upbeat and will make you, the recent grad, feel like the champion you are.

What is freshman year but “the bottom?” Drake’s lead single from his 2013 album Nothing Was the Same is a perfect song about being on top of the world. (Never mind that, if you’re going on to college, you will be at the bottom again. That’s cool—Drake will still sound good four years from now.)

There’s tragedy behind Wiz Khalifa and Charlie Puth’s song from the 2015 movie F7 , as it’s a touching tribute to actor Paul Walker , who died while the movie was still in production. But the sentiment behind it—that we will see the people who are important to us again, no matter what—is a very fitting one for graduation, especially as you and your friends might all be headed off to different colleges or careers. You’ll see each other again.

Crossing the stage to get a diploma is the culmination of years of hard work, but it’s also a victory lap of sorts. You did it. Enjoy the praise—perhaps while listening to Macklemore and Ryan Lewis’ 2012 song “Victory Lap,” a proud celebration of everything you’ve accomplished.

“Made It,” the 2010 single from Kevin Rudolf and featuring verses from other Cash Money rappers Lil Wayne , Birdman , and Jay Sean , is another high-energy, very prideful song about having accomplished something. A diploma is just a fancy way of saying “you made it,” so why not max out the volume blasting this at the party after you walk across the stage?

Best Country Songs About Graduation

Lee Ann Womack’s 2000 song “I Hope You Dance” (which she recorded with the county band Sons of the Desert) has a sort of wistfulness about it. The song, like many good graduation numbers, is about the passing of time, yet Womack implores the listener not to take anything for granted nor to “lose your sense of wonder.” It’s a song about embarking on a new path, finding joy in it, and appreciating the little moments, making “I Hope You Dance” a very relevant soundtrack for recent grads preparing for their next adventure. An adventure that will, hopefully, feature dancing.

The lyrics of this 2006 Rascal Flatts track will probably take the words out of the mouths of any graduate’s loved ones. It’s a sweeping, earnest song about wishing for the best as somebody special goes through life. Who doesn’t, upon graduation, wish that “life becomes all that you want it to?”

Graduation rightfully tends to be thought of as the end of something and the start of a brand new chapter. Maybe you’ll go off to college far away from where you grew up. Maybe you’re staying in the area but setting out on your own, on your own terms, for the first real time. Whatever the case may be, those are things to celebrate, but as the great Alan Jackson sings, “you can always come home.” His 2015 song is a welcome addition to any graduation playground because it’s a nice reminder to have as you stand on the precipice of whatever adventure comes next.

If you’re happy to put school in the rearview mirror, a not-especially country Taylor Swift track, “Shake It Off,” might be a good pick for a graduation song. But, if you want to stick to the country genre and are feeling emotional about leaving it behind and growing up, her 2010 Speak Now cut “Never Grow Up” is a lovely tune for the occasion.

On his 2003 album No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems , Kenny Chesney is a little further away from being young than a recent graduate who is blasting this song probably is. Perhaps Chesney’s distance from that crazy, special time period only makes “Young” more powerful. He’s looking back while graduates are looking forward, putting this song in a very powerful nexus. Also, and perhaps more importantly, it’s a rollicking good time.

No matter how big your high school or college was, it’s a tiny sliver of the world compared to what comes next. The Chicks’ 1998 classic “Wide Open Spaces” is a great graduation song to that end, as it’s all about a young girl who is ready to set out on her own, heading off to somewhere there’s “room to make her big mistakes.” Post-grad life is high stakes, and there’s something exciting about that which the Chicks capture very well.