Streaming begins reshaping the mainstream

Top Songs of 2011

The Billboard Year-End Top 20, led by “Rolling in the Deep” by Adele.

The musical landscape of 2011

Streaming, social media and electronic dance production changed discovery and promotion. Collaborations became especially important as genre boundaries weakened.

Katy Perry appears 3 times in the Top 20, making the artist one of the clearest recurring presences in this year’s list.

What to listen for

Compare festival-scale electronic production with more intimate pop and R&B records built for repeat personal listening.

This list contains 16 different credited artists. The number gives a quick indication of whether the year was concentrated among repeat hitmakers or spread across a wider field.

Billboard Year-End Top 20 songs of 2011

RankSongArtistListen
1 Rolling in the Deep Adele Spotify ↗
2 Party Rock Anthem LMFAO Spotify ↗
3 Firework Katy Perry Spotify ↗
4 ET Katy Perry Spotify ↗
5 Give Me Everything Pitbull Spotify ↗
6 Grenade Bruno Mars Spotify ↗
7 Super Bass Nicki Minaj Spotify ↗
8 Moves Like Jagger Maroon 5 Spotify ↗
9 On the Floor Jennifer Lopez Spotify ↗
10 SM Rihanna Spotify ↗
11 Pumped Up Kicks Foster the People Spotify ↗
12 Someone Like You Adele Spotify ↗
13 The Lazy Song Bruno Mars Spotify ↗
14 Just a Kiss Lady Antebellum Spotify ↗
15 Forget You Cee Lo Green Spotify ↗
16 Till the World Ends Britney Spears Spotify ↗
17 Just Cant Get Enough The Black Eyed Peas Spotify ↗
18 Last Friday Night Katy Perry Spotify ↗
19 Stereo Hearts Gym Class Heroes Spotify ↗
20 The Show Goes On Lupe Fiasco Spotify ↗

Build a 2011 playlist

Start with “Rolling in the Deep” by Adele, then alternate familiar high-ranking records with contrasting selections from the lower half of the list.

Open the playlist builder

How this page should be used

Year-End charts summarize performance across an extended chart year. They are not simply a list of songs that reached number one, and historical methodology has changed. Treat this page as a guided listening resource and compact chart-history reference rather than a mathematical comparison with other eras.