11 Number One Songs That Were Written Shockingly Fast
11 Number One Songs That Were Written Shockingly Fast

Juan SpinelliSun, July 12, 2026 at 11:00 AM UTC
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Some hit songs sound like they must have taken months to build, rewrite, and polish into shape. But now and then, a song seems to arrive almost fully formed, as if the writer simply caught it at the right second. A quick writing session does not mean the recording was simple or that the song’s success was guaranteed. It just means the first spark came fast, and in these cases, that spark somehow climbed all the way to number one.
1. “Just Dance,” Lady Gaga

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Before Lady Gaga became one of the biggest names in pop, she was still trying to turn her strange, stylish club instincts into a mainstream breakthrough. “Just Dance” reportedly came together in about 10 minutes with RedOne, while Gaga was hungover and trying to capture the blurry feeling of being out too late. The song did not explode overnight; it slowly worked its way up the charts before reaching number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in January 2009. For a track written so quickly, it ended up sounding almost weirdly precise, bright, simple, and impossible to mistake for anyone else’s debut.
2. “Royals,” Lorde

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“Royals” felt different from the expensive, glossy pop around it, which made its fast origin even more fitting. Lorde wrote the lyrics in roughly half an hour, turning images of celebrity excess, suburban distance, and teenage boredom into something dry and strangely magnetic. The song eventually reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100, making her one of the rare teenagers to top the chart with a song that sounded so restrained. It was not big in the usual radio-pop way, but that was exactly why people noticed it.
3. “Dreams,” Fleetwood Mac

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Fleetwood Mac were deep in the emotional mess of Rumours when Stevie Nicks slipped away and wrote the band’s only Billboard Hot 100 number one. She has said “Dreams” took about 10 minutes, written on a keyboard with a drum pattern playing nearby at the Record Plant in Sausalito. The rest of the band was not instantly convinced, and Christine McVie later admitted the early version sounded almost too plain. Then the arrangement opened up, and that spare little song became one of the calmest, sharpest breakup records ever to hit the top.
4. “Umbrella,” Rihanna featuring Jay-Z

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“Umbrella” is one of those pop songs where the hook does most of the heavy lifting, but that hook apparently did not take long to appear. The-Dream has described writing it very quickly, with the song originally moving through the industry before landing with Rihanna. Britney Spears and Mary J. Blige have both been part of the song’s “almost” history, but Rihanna’s version gave it the cool, slightly dramatic edge it needed. Once released, it became a huge number one hit and helped push her from rising star to full pop centerpiece.
5. “Crazy Little Thing Called Love,” Queen

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Freddie Mercury wrote “Crazy Little Thing Called Love” while Queen was recording in Munich, and the story almost sounds too casual for a number one hit. He has said the song came together in about five to 10 minutes, with Roger Taylor later placing the scene in a bath at the Bayerischer Hof Hotel. The track leaned into Mercury’s love of Elvis Presley and early rock-and-roll, but it did not feel like a museum piece. Released in 1979, it became Queen’s first Billboard Hot 100 number one in the United States, staying at the top for four weeks.
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6. “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It),” Beyoncé

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Everything around “Single Ladies” feels tightly designed, from the video to the choreography to the black-and-white visual style. The actual writing, though, moved at a much looser speed. The-Dream has said the song was written in about 17 minutes, built around a phrase that was easy to understand and even easier to repeat. Beyoncé turned that quick idea into a four-week Billboard Hot 100 number one, and the song became one of those rare pop records where the hook, the hand movement, and the video all became inseparable.
7. “Wannabe,” Spice Girls

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“Wannabe” sounds like five people bursting into the room at once, which is probably part of why its rushed origin makes sense. The Spice Girls’ debut single was written during a fast, energetic session with Richard Stannard and Matt Rowe, and the recording was reportedly completed in less than an hour. It went on to top charts around the world, including the UK and the United States, becoming the group’s global introduction. The song is messy in a way polished pop usually avoids, but that looseness helped make it feel alive.
8. “All About That Bass,” Meghan Trainor

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“All About That Bass” had the bounce of an old-school pop novelty record, but its chart run was anything but small. Meghan Trainor and Kevin Kadish reportedly wrote it in around 40 to 45 minutes, leaning into a retro rhythm, a body-confidence message, and a chorus built for instant recognition. The song reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and stayed there for weeks. It was catchy enough to feel simple, but that simplicity was doing a lot of work.
9. “Stay with Me,” Sam Smith

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“Stay with Me” is not a complicated song on the surface, which is part of its power. Sam Smith has said it came together in about 30 to 40 minutes with Jimmy Napes and Tourist in a London studio, starting with a few piano chords and growing into that layered, choir-like vocal. The song reached number one in the UK and several other countries, while becoming Smith’s major global breakthrough. It feels less like a dramatic confession than a lonely thought that slipped out before anyone could overthink it.
10. “See You Again,” Wiz Khalifa featuring Charlie Puth

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A tribute song can easily become too heavy, but “See You Again” found a simple emotional line and stayed close to it. Charlie Puth has said the central song idea came together in about 10 minutes during an early studio session for Furious 7. The track was written in connection with the film’s farewell to Paul Walker, then reshaped with Wiz Khalifa’s verses into a pop-rap ballad that reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100. Its speed of creation is surprising because the final song feels so carefully placed.
11. “Hound Dog,” Big Mama Thornton and Elvis PresleyELVIS / VIA REDDIT
“Hound Dog” began as a sharp blues song for Big Mama Thornton before Elvis Presley’s version turned it into a pop and rock-and-roll phenomenon. Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller wrote it in roughly 12 to 15 minutes, reportedly working fast after seeing Thornton perform. Thornton’s original became a number one R&B hit, and Presley’s later version went even further, topping major Billboard charts in 1956. The song’s afterlife is complicated, but the speed of the writing is still startling, especially for a record that kept changing shape across generations.
In the mood for more?
Check out 16 Songs Written During Difficult Moments in Artists’ Lives, or take a look at 18 Musicians Who Secretly Wrote Songs for Other Artists. If you want to see more surprising music history, you can check out 12 Famous Albums Recorded in Places Nobody Expected.
Source: “AOL Entertainment”