← Back to Taking Back Sunday
Ranked Songs · Taking Back Sunday · Emo / Post-Hardcore · Amityville, New York

Taking Back Sunday Best Songs Ranked — The Definitive Guide

From the dual-vocal intensity of Tell All Your Friends to the arena-scaled hooks of Louder Now and the reunion-era maturity of Happiness Is, Taking Back Sunday built a catalogue that spans the full range of what emo and post-hardcore could do. These are the 10 essential tracks.

Taking Back Sunday performing live
Jump to Song

What Makes a Great Taking Back Sunday Song?

A great Taking Back Sunday song is built on productive tension — between the two vocal lines that argue and complete each other, between the post-hardcore aggression of the guitars and the melodic hooks that make the songs stick, between emotional rawness and compositional precision. The best tracks don't sound like they're trying to be immediate; they sound like they can't help it.

The band formed in Amityville, New York in 1999 and released Tell All Your Friends in 2002. These ten tracks span that debut through the reunion era, covering every phase of a career that has been more consistent than its critical reputation sometimes suggests.

Top 10 Taking Back Sunday Songs Ranked

01

A Decade Under the Influence

Album: Where You Want to Be · 2004
Where You Want to Be

A Decade Under the Influence is the most immediately accessible Taking Back Sunday song and the track that most new listeners encounter first. The opening guitar figure is recognisable within seconds, the melody is immediate without being simple, and the chorus lands with a force that justifies every second of the build-up. Recorded in the revised lineup following the departure of John Nolan, it demonstrates that the band's capacity for a great hook didn't depend on the dual-vocal dynamic that had defined the debut. It remains the band's most widely heard track and the correct single-song introduction for any new listener.

Song Note

The title references the sense of disorientation that follows the end of a significant relationship — a decade as a metaphor for the deep, disproportionate time-distortion that grief produces. The lyric operates in the same emotional register as the debut — relationships ending, accountability and anger intertwined — but with a slightly more considered delivery than the raw urgency of Tell All Your Friends.

Why #1: the most immediately accessible TBS track and the correct single-song introduction — recognisable within seconds and still the band's most widely heard song.
02

Cute Without the 'E' (Cut from the Team)

Album: Tell All Your Friends · 2002
Tell All Your Friends

Cute Without the 'E' is the most important song in the Taking Back Sunday catalogue — the track from Tell All Your Friends that most completely demonstrates what made the debut so distinctive. The dual-vocal exchange between Lazzara and Nolan is at its most dramatically deployed here: the sense of two voices inhabiting the same emotional space and contesting it, finishing each other's lines, harmonising on phrases that have different meanings depending on who is singing them. The production captures the band at the exact moment their live energy was most concentrated, and the result is one of the definitive documents of early 2000s emo.

Why #2: the most important TBS song — the track that most completely demonstrates the dual-vocal dynamic that made the debut so distinctive and influential.
03

MakeDamnSure

Album: Louder Now · 2006
Louder Now

MakeDamnSure is the most radio-friendly track in the Taking Back Sunday catalogue and the commercial peak single that helped Louder Now reach number two on the Billboard 200. The verse-to-chorus dynamic is the most refined the band had achieved at this point — the quiet verse building to a chorus that opens up with exactly the right amount of force. Fred Mascherino's clean guitar work and Adam Lazzara's more controlled vocal delivery give the song a polish that the Victory Records material never attempted, and the trade-off produces something that works as both an arena rock anthem and a standalone piece of songwriting.

Why #3: the most radio-friendly TBS track and the commercial peak single — the most refined verse-to-chorus dynamic in the catalogue.
04

There's No 'I' in Team

Album: Tell All Your Friends · 2002
Tell All Your Friends

There's No 'I' in Team is the most intense track on Tell All Your Friends and the song that opens the album with an immediate statement of intent. The guitar entry is abrupt and uncompromising, the vocal is already at maximum urgency, and the track makes no concessions to accessibility before it's earned them. The dual-vocal interplay between Lazzara and Nolan is deployed with particular effectiveness here — the sense of argument and counterpoint is more compressed and more forceful than anywhere else on the record. An album that opens this well has already established its credentials.

Why #4: the most intense Tell All Your Friends track — the album opener that establishes the band's credentials immediately and without compromise.
05

You're So Last Summer

Album: Tell All Your Friends · 2002
Tell All Your Friends

You're So Last Summer is the most melodically generous track on Tell All Your Friends — a song that gives the dual-vocal dynamic more room to breathe than the faster material and uses that space to build a chorus of genuine expansiveness. The title is one of the best in the emo canon: cutting, specific, and immediately resonant with anyone who has experienced the particular shame of being dismissed. The track demonstrates that the debut was capable of range as well as intensity, and it is frequently cited as a favourite among dedicated fans who have spent time with the full record.

Why #5: the most melodically generous Tell All Your Friends track — the song that demonstrates the debut's range beyond pure intensity.
06

This Photograph Is Proof (I Know You Know)

Album: Where You Want to Be · 2004
Where You Want to Be

This Photograph Is Proof is the most emotionally direct track on Where You Want to Be and the song that best demonstrates the continuity between the debut era and the revised lineup's output. The lyric addresses the particular pain of being misrepresented — evidence used against you, a record of something that doesn't mean what the other person says it means — with a specificity and anger that connects directly to the emotional register of Tell All Your Friends. Lazzara's delivery here is among his most controlled and most effective on the album.

Why #6: the most emotionally direct Where You Want to Be track — the song that best demonstrates continuity with the debut era despite the lineup change.
07

Timberwolves at New Jersey

Album: Tell All Your Friends · 2002
Tell All Your Friends

Timberwolves at New Jersey is the best deep cut on Tell All Your Friends — a track that sits slightly later in the album's sequence and uses a more varied dynamic range than the opening tracks. The guitar interplay here is particularly strong, with Nolan and Reyes moving between rhythm and lead in a way that gives the song more textural density than its running time might suggest. It is the track most often cited by fans who have spent significant time with the debut as a personal favourite that casual listeners tend to overlook.

Why #7: the best Tell All Your Friends deep cut — more varied and texturally dense than the opening tracks, and a consistent fan favourite.
08

Divine Intervention

Album: Louder Now · 2006
Louder Now

Divine Intervention is the strongest album track on Louder Now beyond "MakeDamnSure" — a mid-tempo song with more emotional weight and compositional sophistication than the album's more immediate material. The production is characteristic of the major label era — bigger and more polished than Victory Records — but the song earns the scale rather than being overwhelmed by it. It demonstrates that the Mascherino-era lineup was capable of material beyond the singles and is the track most likely to convert listeners who came to the band through "MakeDamnSure" and want to go deeper into the album.

Why #8: the strongest Louder Now track beyond the singles — more weight and sophistication than the immediate material and the best route deeper into the album.
09

Flicker Fade

Album: Happiness Is · 2014
Happiness Is

Flicker Fade is the best track from the reunited classic lineup's most melodically refined album and the song that best demonstrates what the reunion era added to the band's catalogue. The classic dual-vocal dynamic between Lazzara and Nolan is restored and deployed with a maturity and precision the debut never had the patience for. The production is cleaner and more spacious than the early records, which suits the reflective quality of the lyric, and the track demonstrates that the original lineup's reunion produced creative results rather than just nostalgia.

Why #9: the best reunion-era TBS track — demonstrates what the restored classic lineup added to the catalogue beyond nostalgia.
10

El Paso

Album: Taking Back Sunday · 2011
Taking Back Sunday

El Paso closes this ranking as the strongest track from the first full album the reunited original lineup recorded together. The song has an immediacy and energy that connects directly to the debut era while benefiting from the decade of experience and production development that had accumulated in the interim. Nolan's vocal contributions are at their most prominent since the first two records, and the guitar interplay sounds genuinely reinvigorated. It announced that the reunion was producing creative results rather than just revisiting old ground.

Why #10: the strongest track from the first full reunion album — immediate, energetic, and proof that the classic lineup still had something to say.

Best Taking Back Sunday Songs for Beginners

A Decade Under the InfluenceStart here — the most immediately accessible track and the correct first listen.
MakeDamnSureFor radio hooks — the commercial peak single and the most arena-ready track.
Cute Without the 'E'For the debut sound — the most important track on the defining album.
There's No 'I' in TeamFor intensity — the debut opener that makes the case for the band immediately.
You're So Last SummerFor melody — the most melodically generous track on Tell All Your Friends.
Flicker FadeFor the reunion era — the best argument for the classic lineup's continued relevance.

Best Taking Back Sunday Albums to Hear Next

2002
Tell All Your Friends

The essential starting album. Contains Cute Without the 'E', There's No 'I' in Team, You're So Last Summer, and Timberwolves at New Jersey. One of the defining emo albums of the 2000s.

2006
Louder Now

The commercial peak. Contains MakeDamnSure and Divine Intervention. Reached number two on the Billboard 200.

2004
Where You Want to Be

Contains A Decade Under the Influence and This Photograph Is Proof. The most immediately accessible album and the correct second listen after the debut.

Taking Back Sunday Songs: FAQ

What is Taking Back Sunday's best song?
A Decade Under the Influence is the most immediately accessible and widely heard track. Cute Without the 'E' is the most important song on the defining album. MakeDamnSure is the commercial peak single and most radio-friendly track.
What makes Tell All Your Friends so important to emo?
Tell All Your Friends is considered important primarily because of its dual-vocal approach — Lazzara and Nolan trading lead lines, harmonising, and finishing each other's sentences in a way that created a sense of argument and dialogue within the songs. Combined with post-hardcore guitar interplay and lyrics with genuine emotional weight, the record felt simultaneously raw and precisely constructed. It influenced a generation of acts in the emo and post-hardcore space and is regularly cited on lists of the defining records of its era.
Is the Louder Now era as good as the Tell All Your Friends era?
Louder Now is a different kind of record — more polished, more radio-oriented, larger in scale — but it contains some of the strongest individual songs in the catalogue, particularly "MakeDamnSure." The absence of John Nolan's dual-vocal counterpart changes the dynamic significantly, and listeners who came to the band through the debut often find Louder Now more immediately accessible but less emotionally concentrated. The commercial peak and the creative peak are not the same album here, which is common in bands that make the transition to major labels.
Are the reunion era albums worth listening to?
Yes, particularly Happiness Is (2014) — the most melodically refined album the reunited lineup produced and one that is frequently underrated in assessments of the band's full catalogue. The restoration of the classic dual-vocal dynamic and the additional maturity that two decades of songwriting bring to Lazzara and Nolan's interplay make it a stronger record than its commercial reception suggested. Taking Back Sunday (2011), the first full reunion album, is also worth the listen for the energy it brings back to the classic configuration.
What is the connection between Taking Back Sunday and Brand New?
Taking Back Sunday and Brand New — another Long Island band — have a well-documented history of personal and musical rivalry that is reflected in their lyrics. The conflict involved relationships between members of the two bands, specifically between Brand New vocalist Jesse Lacey and members of TBS. Songs on both Tell All Your Friends and Brand New's Your Favorite Weapon are believed to reference the same real-world events from different perspectives, creating what fans often discuss as a lyrical dialogue between the two records.

Explore More