10 Great Songs That Never Mention Their Title

Some songs shout their title in the chorus like a neon sign. Others? They take the scenic route. You hear the whole thing—verse, chorus, bridge, fade out—and that title never shows up. Not once. It’s a move that says, “You’ll remember me anyway.”

Sometimes it’s an artistic choice. Sometimes it’s accidental. And sometimes it’s just… fun. Here are 10 songs (plus one cheeky bonus) that never mention their title in the lyrics, but still became unforgettable.

“Bohemian Rhapsody” – Queen
Six minutes of operatic rock genius. Zero mentions of “Bohemian” or “Rhapsody.” Freddie Mercury made a song so iconic that the title just had to stand back and let the music do the talking. Galileo agrees.

“Smells Like Teen Spirit” – Nirvana
The grunge anthem of a generation—and not a single whiff of the title anywhere. It came from a joke spray-paint tag on a wall, and it stuck. Nirvana proved that a song could be huge without being literal.

“Black Dog” – Led Zeppelin
The title came from a stray black Labrador wandering the studio during recording. The song itself? Pure bluesy chaos with no dogs in sight. Not even a bark. Zeppelin doing Zeppelin things.

“Baba O’Riley” – The Who
Named after Meher Baba and Terry Riley, this arena-sized track is often mistaken for “Teenage Wasteland,” which is mentioned in the chorus. But the title? Never sung. It’s classic Who misdirection.

“Brain Damage” – Pink Floyd
You’ll hear about lunatics on the grass, on the path, and on the dark side of the moon, but never the phrase “brain damage.” Yet it captures the whole mood in two words. Roger Waters nailed the feeling.

“Space Oddity” – David Bowie
Ground Control to Major Tom: nowhere in your transmission do you say “Space Oddity.” But the sound, the story, the slow floating away—it’s cosmic poetry with or without the name tag.

“A Day in the Life” – The Beatles
A stunning snapshot of ordinary strangeness. You’ll hear about reading the news and holes big enough to drive a bus through—but not the title. And somehow, that makes it even more haunting.

“For What It’s Worth” – Buffalo Springfield
Written in response to 1960s unrest on the Sunset Strip, this song is often called “Stop, Hey, What’s That Sound.” The real title? Hidden like a secret. And still, everyone knows what it’s worth.

“Around the World” – Daft Punk
Okay, technically this one mentions the title. But here’s the punchline: it’s the only thing it says. Literally. “Around the World” is repeated 144 times. No verses, no bridges, no metaphors. Just two robots chanting a travel itinerary like it’s a mantra. And guess what? It still slaps.

“Subterranean Homesick Blues” – Bob Dylan
You’ll hear about fire hoses, parking meters, and the man in the coonskin cap—but the title is nowhere to be found. It’s Dylan in pure stream-of-consciousness mode. Blink and you’ll miss 14 social movements.

Whether it’s an epic rock suite or a protest anthem, these songs prove you don’t need to name-drop the title to make a song stick in someone’s brain forever. Sometimes, the mystery is the hook. And sometimes, like Around The World, you just want to be the loudest robert in the room saying your own travel plans.