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Karaoke Recommendations and Popular Western Music Artists Ranking for Women in Their 60s [2025]

Karaoke Recommendations and Popular Western Music Artists Ranking for Women in Their 60s [2025]
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Karaoke Recommendations and Popular Western Music Artists Ranking for Women in Their 60s [2025]

Once work and child-rearing have settled down, many people take up karaoke as a hobby.

In particular, I think many women enjoy singing the memorable songs from their youth with friends.

This time, we’ll introduce a ranking of Western music artists popular among women in their 60s.

Top 10 Karaoke Picks: Most Popular Western Music Artists for Women in Their 60s [2025] (Ranks 1–10)

Top Of The WorldCarpenters1rank/position

The Carpenters’ classic “Top Of The World” is memorable for its light, upbeat melody.

While the Carpenters are known as a pop duo, this song strongly reflects country music characteristics.

A key point of this piece lies in the English.

The vocal line has a narrow range and doesn’t require much dynamic variation, so it’s easy to sing.

However, among the Carpenters’ songs, the BPM here is relatively fast, which can make the English lyrics feel a bit crowded.

If you’re not confident in English, try linking the vowel of the previous word to the consonant of the next—for example, sing “Top of the world” more like “Topov th’ worl(d)”—to help it flow more naturally.

Dancing QueenABBA2rank/position

ABBA – Dancing Queen (Official Music Video)
Dancing QueenABBA

This song is filled with the joy of celebrating youth and freedom, and just listening to it makes your heart start to dance.

You can feel the exhilaration of becoming the star of the dance floor through the lyrics.

Released as a single in Sweden in August 1976, it went on to become a worldwide hit.

It remains a beloved classic to this day, appearing in works like the film “Mamma Mia!”.

Of ABBA’s 14 Top 40 hits, this is said to be the only one that reached number one in the United States.

Why not let the music carry you and sing along with a smile, as you reminisce about a nostalgic page of your youth?

Hello Mr. MonkeyArabesque3rank/position

A 1978 disco hit by the West German (at the time) music project Arabesque.

It was apparently a big hit in Japan as well.

Since it was often played in discos back then, many people might find their bodies moving naturally when they hear this song.

Sing, dance, and have a great time together!

Moon RiverAudrey Hepburn4rank/position

It’s the theme song from the film Breakfast at Tiffany’s, and in the movie Audrey sings it softly while strumming an acoustic guitar.

Andy Williams’s version is nice too, but Audrey’s delicate, slender voice is so fragile and captivating.

Even if (I’m) wet in the rainB.J.Thomas5rank/position

Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head [With Japanese Translation] by B. J. Thomas
Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head by B.J. Thomas

An insert song from the film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, which was based on two real-life bank robbers.

If you think about it rationally, it’s just a story about rough, villainous thieves with no room for sympathy, but Paul Newman and Robert Redford as Butch and Sundance are cool to the end, and Katharine Ross as the heroine, Etta, was beautiful.

There’s a bucolic scene where they, rushing headlong toward ruin, briefly enjoy a moment of peace to the backdrop of this song; along with the shocking final freeze-frame, it has stayed with me strongly.

The tune is breezy and bright, so I want to sing it with a sense of fun and humor.

EvergreenBarbara Streisand6rank/position

The theme song from the 1976 remake film “A Star Is Born,” composed by Barbra herself, who also starred in the movie, became a huge hit.

Both the melody and lyrics are beautiful; Esther (Barbra) sings it in the film, but when it plays over the end credits, it’s a deeply moving masterpiece that brings unstoppable tears.

It’s perfect for singing about love with both power and tenderness.

Cnce Upon A Time In CaliforniaBelinda Carlisle7rank/position

Belinda Carlisle, a female singer who was active from the late ’80s to the early ’90s, is known for her distinctive voice—mysterious in that it carries the bright edge of a high register while also having the richness characteristic of overtones.

Her cover of “Anyone Who Had a Heart,” included on her album “Once Upon a Time in California,” is a classic by Dionne Warwick and is sung within a relatively narrow range, from mid2C to hiD.

Since the original is what it is, there’s a bit of a Black music flavor that remains, but it doesn’t demand any advanced riffs or runs.

If you focus on vibrato that aligns the overtones and frequencies with the off-beats, you should be able to achieve a very high-quality result.

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