Songs on the Billboard Hot 100 are sounding more cynical and slower overall over the past five years.

The finding is one among many in ChartCipher’s in-depth trend report about Hot 100 hits, whether they peaked at No. 1 or No. 100, from 2021 through 2025. (“Using AI, ChartCipher extracts granular data for the compositional, lyrical and sonic qualities of songs and delivers insights into the qualities shaping today’s hits,” the company notes in its release.)

Below are three key takeaways from ChartCipher’s latest research.

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More Cynical, Slower Songs

Perhaps it’s not the most uplifting revelation, but “the common lyrical moods that increased the most over the five-year period all point in the same emotional direction,” ChartCipher observed. “Cynical rose from 59% to 70%” of all charted songs in that span. “Anger increased from 26% to 36%. Nostalgic rose from 23% to 33%.

“Taken alongside the shift toward slower, less kinetic production, as well as the continued dominance of darker timbres,” the 2025 report spotlighted, “the Hot 100 is increasingly being defined by a moodier, more distant emotional tone.

“The chart as a whole moved toward lower-energy production,” ChartCipher stated. “Songs under 79 BPM increased from 35% in 2021 to 44% in 2025, while songs in the 80 to 99 BPM range fell from 33% to 24%. Darker timbres remained dominant throughout.”

High-profile examples of such hits in 2025 include Tate McRae’s “Tit for Tat,” Taylor Swift’s “Cancelled!” and Morgan Wallen’s “I’m the Problem.”

To be more upbeat, romantics will find comfort in love’s sustained triumphant presence on the Hot 100. Noted ChartCipher, “Love remained the most popular lyrical theme across all five years,” with splendored takes of between 42% and 51%.

Hip-Hop/Rap Rules, Rock Rises

As covered in the 2025 analysis of top 10 Hot 100 hits by ChartCipher sister company Hit Songs Deconstructed, pop last year far outpaced hip-hop/rap in prominence among primary genres, 42% to 19%; the genres have alternated annual wins since 2018.

Among all Hot 100 hits, however, hip-hop/rap has reigned each year in 2021-25. As a primary genre, it claimed a 29% presence in 2025, following showings of 35% (2024), 31% (2023), 42% (2022) and 47% (2021). Despite its declines, it has led in each of those years over runner-up pop, largely steady at 24% (2025), 23% (2024), 25% (2023), 27% (2022) and 25% (2021).

On their heels, rock as a primary genre was “the most notable gainer across the period,” per ChartCipher, with increases each year and more than doubling in that span from 10% of all Hot 100 hits in 2021 to 22% in 2025.

‘Yes, And?’ No, Nothing More

The most common word count for a Hot 100 song title in each of the last five years? Two, continuing a trend toward brevity dating back more than a decade.

“Hot 100 song titles have remained short and consistent across the full 2021 to 2025 period, with one- and two-word titles collectively accounting for the majority of charting songs in every year,” ChartCipher reports.

Over that stretch, 16 No. 1 hits (or 23% of all leaders in that span) were two-word titles, from the first two new No. 1s in that timeframe — “Drivers License” by Olivia Rodrigo and “What’s Next” by Drake — through “Squabble Up” by Kendrick Lamar in 2024. Others in between include “Heat Waves” by Glass Animals, “Last Night” by Wallen, “Cruel Summer” by Swift, “Yes, And?” by Ariana Grande and “Lose Control” by Teddy Swims.

(Rodrigo’s new Hot 100 No. 1, “Drop Dead,” and Ella Langley’s “Choosin’ Texas,” down to No. 2, are the first such leaders since “Squabble Up.”)

Swift alone contributed to the haul with half of the top 10 on the Hot 100 dated Oct. 18, 2025, when The Life of a Showgirl made its chart entrance. The set that week was represented in the top tier by “Elizabeth Taylor” (No. 3), “Father Figure” (No. 4), “Wi$h Li$t” (No. 6), “Actually Romantic” (No. 7) and “Eldest Daughter” (No. 9).

Even two No. 100-peaking titles in 2025 were that concise: “Cowboy Songs” by George Birge and “Infinite Baths” by Sleep Token.

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