A good friendship playlist does not happen by accident. It takes songs that actually mean something, tracks that capture the specific feeling of having someone in your corner who has seen you at your worst and stuck around anyway. Here are twenty that do the job.
“That’s What Friends Are For” by Dionne Warwick and Friends
Released in 1985 and featuring Elton John, Gladys Knight, and Stevie Wonder, this one set the gold standard for the genre. It raised millions for AIDS research and somehow still sounds like a warm hug every single time.
“Friends Forever” by Thunderclap Newman
A 1969 deep cut that never got the recognition it deserved, built around a deceptively simple melody and a lyric about holding onto the people who shaped you. Pete Townshend produced it and it sounds like nothing else from that era.
“We Are Family” by Sister Sledge
Written and produced by Nile Rodgers and Bernard Edwards in 1979, this one transcended its disco origins almost immediately and became the universal shorthand for collective belonging. Every sports team, every school gymnasium, every wedding dance floor in the world has heard this song. There is a reason for that.
“Lean on Me” by Bill Withers
Written in one sitting in 1972, Withers drew on his small-town West Virginia upbringing to capture something universal. The simplicity of the message is exactly why it has never stopped resonating.
“Count on Me” by Bruno Mars
Gentle, warm, and built around a fingerpicked acoustic guitar, this 2010 track does not try to be anything other than exactly what it is. Bruno Mars at his most sincere.
“You’ve Got a Friend” by James Taylor
Carole King wrote it, James Taylor made it his own, and the 1971 recording became one of the defining songs of an era. It still holds up as one of the most honest statements about what friendship actually feels like.
“You’re My Best Friend” by Queen
Written by bassist John Deacon and released on A Night at the Opera in 1975, this is the one that often gets overshadowed by the small matter of Bohemian Rhapsody sitting on the same album. That is understandable but unfair. Deacon wrote it for his wife and it shows, built around a Wurlitzer electric piano that gives it a warmth no guitar could replicate. Freddie Mercury initially resisted recording it but delivered one of his most charming vocals. A perfect pop song hiding inside one of the greatest rock albums ever made.
“With a Little Help from My Friends” by The Beatles
Ringo gets the spotlight on this 1967 Sgt. Pepper track and absolutely earns it. Joe Cocker later turned it into something almost unrecognizable, but the original is a perfect piece of breezy, generous pop.
“I’ll Stand by You” by The Pretenders
Chrissie Hynde wrote this in 1994 as something closer to a love song, but its unconditional quality has made it a go-to for anyone who has ever needed to tell a friend they are not going anywhere. It holds enormous emotional weight.
“Wind Beneath My Wings” by Bette Midler
Yes, it is unabashedly sentimental. No, that is not a criticism. The 1988 recording from Beaches remains one of the most emotionally direct tributes to the person standing quietly behind you while you take all the credit.
“Seasons of Love” by the Cast of Rent
Five hundred twenty-five thousand six hundred minutes. The opening number of the 1996 musical asks how you measure a year, and the answer it lands on is love and connection. Hard to argue with that.
“Graduation (Friends Forever)” by Vitamin C
Released in 2000 and built around a sample of Pachelbel’s Canon, this one soundtracked the end of an era for an entire generation of high school students. Deeply uncool in certain circles, completely unavoidable at every graduation ceremony for a decade, and quietly perfect at what it sets out to do.
“Ebony and Ivory” by Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder
A 1982 collaboration that wore its message on its sleeve and did not apologize for it. Critics have been sniffy about it for decades, but the spirit behind it remains completely earnest and the melody is impossible to shake.
“Wannabe” by Spice Girls
Underneath the zig-a-zig-ah and the platform shoes was a genuine anthem about female friendship and loyalty. The 1996 debut single announced five distinct personalities bound together by something real, and a generation of girls understood it immediately.
“Thank You for Being a Friend” by Andrew Gold
Written and recorded in 1978, this is arguably the most literal friendship anthem in the entire pop canon, and it earns every word of it. Most people know it as the Golden Girls theme, but Gold’s original recording has a looseness and charm that the TV version only hints at. A genuinely great song that has spent decades living in the shadow of a sitcom, which is both its curse and the reason it will never go away.
“What I Got” by Sublime
Broderick is gone but this 1996 track from the self-titled album endures as a loose, sun-baked reminder to be grateful for the people and moments you have right now. It sounds effortless because it basically was.
“Greatest Love of All” by Whitney Houston
Self-love and self-respect as the foundation for loving anyone else. The 1985 recording showcases a voice at the peak of its powers, and the message underneath the gospel-tinged production is one worth revisiting regularly.
“Old Friends” by Simon and Garfunkel
From the 1968 Bookends album, this quietly devastating two-minute meditation on aging and loyalty imagines two old men sitting on a park bench. Paul Simon was 26 when he wrote it. Somehow he got it exactly right.
“You’ve Got a Friend in Me” by Randy Newman
Written for Toy Story in 1995 and performed with deceptive simplicity, this one has worked its way so deep into the cultural fabric that it barely registers as a movie song anymore. It just registers as true.
“Stand by Me” by Ben E. King
Written in 1961 and drawing on a gospel tradition that goes back decades further, this one is as close to a perfect song as popular music has ever produced. Ben E. King’s vocal is unhurried and completely confident, and the message has not aged a single day.