Bussiness
The best songs of 2024
2. “Good Luck, Babe!” by Chappell Roan
This time last year, I crowned Chappell Roan’s “Red Wine Supernova” as the best song of 2023.
I’m willing to bet Roan wasn’t stunned by the praise; “I’m not that surprised people like it because it’s really good,” she told Dork at the time. But the selection did get some pushback from friends and lurkers online. Back then, Roan was little known by mainstream standards, performing for crowds of a couple thousand at most on The Midwest Princess Tour. Upon its release, “Red Wine Supernova” debuted at No. 75 on the Hot 100 — nothing to sniff at, certainly, but nothing sensational.
Now, “sensation” is just one of many suitable labels for Roan’s career. She’s become a main character in pop music, performing for massive crowds at music festivals and millions of viewers on network TV. Her rise to stardom has been ferociously analyzed, nitpicked, and gawked at, but as Roan said herself, it should’ve come as no surprise. She boasts an exceptional, magnetic talent that, once witnessed, makes it impossible to ignore or forget.
This became clearer than ever at Coachella, where Roan performed the as-yet-unreleased single “Good Luck Babe!” with the conviction of a much bigger star. A clip of her singing the bridge while staring down the barrel of the camera, eyes alight with both anguish and clarity, went viral online. There, in the desert, standing face-to-face with “I told you so,” she banished every flicker of doubt.
“Good Luck Babe!” is now a top-five hit on the Hot 100, a Grammy nominee for song of the year, and the epicenter of this year’s so-called “lesbian renaissance.”
In retrospect, it’s no wonder that Roan’s watershed moment was a song that nods to her own staying power, a magic touch that lingers for a lifetime. She was right all along: You’d have to stop the world just to stop the feeling.
If you like this, listen to: Roan only released this one song in 2024, but keep an eye out for her much-teased sophomore album, expected to arrive next year.
It’ll presumably feature unreleased songs “The Subway,” which Roan has performed at several music festivals, and “The Giver,” a sapphic Shania Twain-esque bop that Roan debuted on “Saturday Night Live.”