Mr. Brightside – The Killers
#1Mr. Brightside is the defining 2000s rock anthem for many listeners. Its anxious storytelling, instant opening riff and huge chorus made it a club song, festival song, party song and indie-rock staple all at once.
The 2000s pushed rock in every direction at once. Indie rock exploded, emo became mainstream, nu metal crossed over, garage rock came roaring back, and festival-ready alternative bands took over. This guide ranks the best 2000s rock songs across indie, emo, pop punk, alternative, nu metal and modern rock.
The best 2000s rock songs combine strong hooks, identity and long-term replay value. This was a decade where rock split into multiple mainstream lanes: indie dancefloor anthems, emo singalongs, nu metal crossover hits, garage rock revival tracks and huge alternative festival songs.
This ranking focuses on songs released during the 2000s, so it avoids 90s carryover tracks and later 2010s hits. It balances popularity, cultural impact, streaming endurance, influence and how well each track captures the decade.
A song could rank highly because it became a generational anthem, launched a major band, defined a scene, dominated rock radio, or still works today as a gateway into 2000s rock.
That means massive songs like Mr. Brightside, In the End and American Idiot sit alongside indie revival classics, emo landmarks and heavier crossover songs from the same decade.
Mr. Brightside is the defining 2000s rock anthem for many listeners. Its anxious storytelling, instant opening riff and huge chorus made it a club song, festival song, party song and indie-rock staple all at once.
Seven Nation Army has one of the most recognisable riffs of the century. Its minimalism made it feel raw, but its hook became so universal that it crossed into sports chants and global pop culture.
In the End blended rock, metal, rap and electronic atmosphere into one of the decade’s most recognisable songs. Its piano hook and emotional chorus made Linkin Park a defining band of early-2000s rock.
American Idiot brought political urgency and pop-punk energy back to the centre of rock culture. It was direct, fast and instantly memorable, helping Green Day define a new era after their 90s breakthrough.
This song launched Arctic Monkeys as one of the most important British guitar bands of the decade. It sounded fast, scrappy and sharply observed, capturing the energy of mid-2000s indie nightlife.
Take Me Out became one of the standout songs of the indie rock revival because of its sharp structure, danceable rhythm and unforgettable guitar lines.
This is one of the defining emo-rock songs of the 2000s. It starts like a theatrical piano ballad and grows into a full-scale rock anthem, giving the scene its biggest dramatic centrepiece.
Use Somebody turned Kings of Leon into global rock stars. Its emotional vocal performance and wide-open chorus made it one of the decade’s biggest late-2000s rock hits.
The Middle is one of the most uplifting rock songs of the early 2000s. Its message, melody and simplicity helped it become a crossover hit that still feels instantly familiar.
Chop Suey! remains one of the most unpredictable and recognisable heavy rock songs of the 2000s. Its frantic shifts, huge chorus and strange structure made it unlike anything else on mainstream rock radio.
The Killers, Arctic Monkeys, Franz Ferdinand, The Strokes, Bloc Party and The Kooks.
Green Day, My Chemical Romance, Fall Out Boy, Paramore, Jimmy Eat World and Blink-182.
Linkin Park, System of a Down, Papa Roach, Drowning Pool and Avenged Sevenfold.
See how these 2000s classics compare with the biggest rock songs from every era.
The 2000s were defined by variety. Indie rock brought sharp guitars and dancefloor energy back into fashion, while emo made emotional, theatrical rock a mainstream force. Nu metal and alternative metal dominated the early part of the decade, and modern rock bands pushed toward huge festival and arena choruses.
This is why the decade can include Mr. Brightside, In the End, Take Me Out, Welcome to the Black Parade and Use Somebody without any of them sounding like they came from the same scene.
Songs like Mr. Brightside, In the End, Seven Nation Army, American Idiot, Welcome to the Black Parade and Use Somebody remain among the most recognisable rock songs from the 2000s.
Their staying power comes from memorable hooks, clear identity and the fact that they still work in playlists, live sets, parties and nostalgic listening.
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