Top International (Western) Songs That Fire Up Karaoke for People in Their 50s [2025]
The key to choosing songs for karaoke is whether they can liven up the atmosphere, right?
This time, we’re introducing some upbeat English-language karaoke songs that have been popular among people in their 50s.
We hope you find this helpful!
Give them a try!
- [For People in Their 50s] Western Songs That Are Easy to Sing at Karaoke: 2025 Ranking
- [For people in their 60s] Western songs that get the crowd going at karaoke: Ranking [2025]
- [2025] For Men in Their 50s! A Collection of Classic Western Songs That Hype Up Karaoke
- [40s] Western Songs Ranking That Hype Up Karaoke [2025]
- [2025 Edition] Cool Western Songs to Sing! From the Latest Hits to All-Time Classics
- [40s] Best English Songs for Karaoke: 2025 Ranking
- [Women] Western Songs Easy to Sing at Karaoke: Ranking [2025]
- [Women] Western Songs Ranking That Hype Up Karaoke [2025]
- [Karaoke] Famous Western songs everyone knows! Easy-to-sing foreign tracks
- Karaoke Hits for People in Their 60s: Top Uplifting Songs by Popular Western Bands [2025]
- Recommended Western music for women in their 50s: world classics and popular songs
- Women: Popular Western Music Karaoke Rankings [2025]
- [Trendy Songs Keep Coming!] Easy-to-Sing Western Music That Heats Up Karaoke
[For People in Their 50s] Western Songs That Get the Crowd Going at Karaoke [2025] (91–100)
Born To Be WildSteppenwolf99rank/position

Was the Japanese title “Wild de Ikou”? This song is also super famous—probably one that everyone has heard.
It’s the theme song from the film Easy Rider, a wild track brimming with masculine romanticism, and it’s sure to get the guys fired up.
The FlameCheap Trick100rank/position

It hit No.
1 in the U.
S.
in 1988—a song that finally reached the summit in the band’s long history.
It became their first hit since 1979’s “I Want You To Want Me,” but because it was a commercially oriented track provided by outside writers, longtime fans weren’t entirely convinced.
The band themselves later recalled that they weren’t very enthusiastic about it either.
It’s a well-crafted, good song designed to sell, but it may be true that it left fans from the Budokan era a bit disappointed.





