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Bananarama Popular Song Rankings [2025]

Bananarama Popular Song Rankings [2025]
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Bananarama Popular Song Rankings [2025]

It’s a group name with a nice ring to it that makes you want to say it out loud.

In Japan, it was popular during the disco boom and is sometimes mentioned alongside that era.

Here, we’ll rank some of Bananarama’s most popular songs.

Bananarama Popular Song Rankings [2025]

I Heard A RumourBananarama1rank/position

Bananarama – I Heard A Rumour (Live At The London Eventim Hammersmith Apollo)
I Heard A RumourBananarama

Bananarama is a girls’ group from England.

Active since the 1980s, they gained international popularity with a sound centered on Eurobeat and new wave.

“I Heard a Rumour” is one of their signature tracks, reaching No.

3 on the Billboard Dance Club chart.

Its Eurobeat style with strong synth-pop elements is especially striking.

The song is frequently used in Japanese media, so many of you may find it familiar.

Be sure to give it a listen.

Cruel SummerBananarama2rank/position

International trailer for the film “Ghostbusters: Frozen Summer”
Cruel SummerBananarama

Bananarama is a British girl group that became a huge hit in the 1980s.

Their signature song “Cruel Summer” was released in 1983, and later featured in the film The Karate Kid, becoming a beloved track that symbolizes the bittersweet feeling of summer.

The song explores themes of loneliness and sadness in summer, and Bananarama’s straightforward expression resonates deeply.

Chosen as the theme song for the latest film Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, it has gained a new opportunity to be discovered by a younger generation of fans.

Whether you usually listen to pop or 80s music, or you’re part of a younger audience, I recommend learning about the background and message of these songs.

Love In The First DegreeBananarama3rank/position

Bananarama – Love In The First Degree
Love In The First DegreeBananarama

When it comes to Eurobeat in the ’80s, it’s got to be them! Bananarama’s cute vocals captivated everyone.

While “Venus” became a global hit, this song was also catchy and popular as an adorable dance number.

They had many fans in Japan, and their songs were playing everywhere.

VenusBananarama4rank/position

Bananarama – Venus (Official Video)
VenusBananarama

Formed in London, Bananarama vividly colored the pop scene of the ’80s.

Their bold cover of a famous song by a Dutch band—named after the goddess of beauty—became a global smash in 1986 and still brings a rush of summer exhilaration.

Reborn with the energetic Hi-NRG sound the members themselves craved, the track’s music video portrays them like mythic goddesses, radiating irresistible allure and passionate love.

Released as a single from the album “True Confessions,” it hit No.

1 on the U.

S.

Billboard Hot 100 in September 1986.

Long beloved as a Gillette commercial tune and reigning as a summer anthem throughout the ’90s, this song is perfect for amping up drives and parties alike.

VenusBananarama5rank/position

It’s a signature song by the British female pop trio Bananarama from 1986, which reached No.

1 on the Billboard chart.

The original was released in 1969 by the Dutch group Shocking Blue and was also a huge hit.

The track became widely popular in Japan thanks to the 1980s disco boom and its use on Fuji TV’s show “Warau Inu no Seikatsu.”

Aie a MwanaBananarama6rank/position

Bananarama – Aie A Mwana – 01
Aie a MwanaBananarama

In Japan, Bananarama is best known for their hit cover of “Venus,” but in their home country of the UK, they racked up ten Top 10 hits starting with “It Ain’t What You Do (It’s the Way That You Do It).” This debut single is a cover of a 1971 song, and the lyrics are in Swahili.

I Heard RumourBananarama7rank/position

Bananarama’s hit song “Venus” is well known, but this track also became a big hit, reaching No.

3 on the U.

S.

Dance Club Songs chart.

Their fashion is quintessentially ’80s—like a British version of Madonna.

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