Some of the greatest musical movements were pioneered in groups of four.Grungeblew up with the Seattle Four,thrash metalrose to fame with the Big Four, and when it comes toHeartland rock,though the four are not as definitive as the Seattle Four or Big Four, the genre was primarily refined by Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, Bob Seger, andJohn Mellencamp.All four had varying levels of success, but what made John Mellencamp stand out werehis longstanding ties to his roots,and the fact that he never, to this day, forgot where he came from.

Though John Mellencamp has, surprisingly, only won one Grammy in his career, and only had one single reach the number one spot on the Billboard Hot 100, his career has been wildly influential, and massively impressive.Withover 20 studio albumsunder his belt(and still counting—his last album was released in 2023, and still rocking out at 73, he isn’t showing signs of stopping any time soon), Mellencamp is just as impactful a Heartland rocker as any of his contemporaries, andthese ten songs stand to prove it.

10Jack & Diane

American Fool(1982)

“Jack & Diane” was John Mellencamp’s only single to reach number one on the Billboard Hot 100. If someone has somehow never heard of John Mellencamp, they absolutely have still heard this song. It’s a song about coming of age, growing up in rural America, andthe inherent experiences that come with being a teenager that so many of us can relate to.The lyrics hit home, particularly in the bridge, when he sings"Holdin' on to sixteen as long as you can / Changes come around real soon, make us women and men."

Released in the summer of 1982,this track epitomizes Mellencamp in his prime.It was the second single off of his breakout album,American Fool,his first album to hit multi-platinum status at five times, and the single itself reached gold status. Since the song was released, it has become a quintessential high school track for generations of teenagers who resonated so deeply with Mellencamp’s chilling, emotional lyrics.

9Pink Houses

Uh-huh(1983)

FollowingAmerican Foolwas the highly anticipatedUh-huh, another smash hit of an album. “Pink Houses” was the album’s second single, and while it didn’t quite make it to the top of the chart, it peaked at number eight on the Billboard Hot 100. The song became an instant classic, with a bluesy acoustic guitar riff in the intro that just feels inviting to the listener.It’s the kind of melody that ingratiates John Mellencamp to anyone who may not already be familiar with him,and invites them to take a seat and listen to what he has to say.

“Pink Houses” highlights the best of what Mellencamp has to offer, both as a musician and a man, in that he truly values the little moments of everyday life.

In a since-archived interview withRolling Stone, Mellencamp explained that he was driving home from the airport when he saw a man sitting on his porch: “He waved, and I waved back. That’s how the song started.“That friendly interaction is captured perfectly in Mellencamp’s lyricswhen he sings,“Oh, but ain’t that America for you and me?““Pink Houses” highlights the best of what Mellencamp has to offer, both as a musician and a man, in that he truly values the little moments of everyday life.

8Small Town

Scarecrow(1985)

The second single off ofScarecrow, the third album in a string of multi-platinum ’80s records full of hits,“Small Town” isthesong that showcases John Mellencamp’s love and appreciation of his roots.Though a good number of his songs point to the idea that he has never forgotten where he came from, this song lays it out plainly when he sings,“No, I cannot forget from where it is that I come from / I cannot forget the people who love me.”

In an interview withAmerican Songwriter, Mellencamp explained, “I wrote [‘Small Town’] in the laundry room of my old house. We had company, and I had to go write the song.” The irony of having to write a song about the people and the place that shaped him at the expense of being present with those same people in that same place is not lost on me, and I’m sure it wasn’t lost on him either. He is an artist to his core, though, andthis song, and its sentiment, is one of the most important to him and his career.

7Cherry Bomb

The Lonesome Jubilee(1987)

“Cherry Bomb” was the second single from John Mellencamp’s 1987 album,The Lonesome Jubilee, and the song itself is a hell of a jubilee if I’ve ever heard one. It is perhaps his most country-influenced hit, complete with classical string instruments and an accordion.It’s the kind of melody you expect to hear at a saloon out west,and Mellencamp channels some hefty bluegrass twang in his vocals to compliment the musical backing.

Though “Jack & Diane” is the obvious choice when it comes to Mellencamp songs about growing up, “Cherry Bomb” invokes a similar sense of nostalgia with the lyrics:

That’s when a sport was a sport

And groovin' was groovin'

And dancin' meant everything

We were young and we were improvin'

Laughin', laughin' with our friends

Holdin' hands meant somethin', baby

Where “Jack & Diane” felt more like Mellencamp was presently situated in the feeling of being young,“Cherry Bomb” is about looking back on what that feeling was like after the fact.Years down the line, when you’re reminiscing about the good old days, this major-keyed feel-good song is the perfect soundtrack.

6I Need A Lover

John Cougar(1979)

“I Need A Lover” was John Mellencamp’s first ever hit to reach the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number 28. It was originally released in Australia on his 1978 albumA Biography, and when it reached the top ten in Australia, he later included the track on the albumJohn Cougar, his first with his new record label. TheJohn Cougarversion of the song features a nearly two-and-a-half-minute intro whichat once sounds like hard rock, folk, classic Mellencamp, and anything and everything in between.

This song is evidence that, if he wanted to, Mellencamp could have taken an entirely different musical route in his career and been just as successful.

Towards the end of the introduction, the electric guitar picks up, and the song starts to sound like a classic rock-influenced hit really without a trace of his ’80s sound. This song is evidence that, if he wanted to, Mellencamp could have taken an entirely different musical route in his career and been just as successful. Not even a year after he released the song in the US, rock legend Pat Benatar covered it and made it the lead single of her own debut album,foreshadowing the influence Mellencamp would come to have on the rest of the music industry.

5Hurts So Good

“Hurts So Good” was the lead single fromAmerican Fool, and John Mellencamp’s first to reach the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number two. It is also the song responsible for Mellencamp’s only Grammy Award, winning him Best Rock Vocal Performance in 1983. The song opens with a few measures of drums, followed byone of, if not the most, recognizable guitar riffs in Mellencamp’s discography.

In the sameAmerican Songwriterinterview, Mellencamp explained that he wrote the lyrics with his childhood friend, George Green, and once they had the words written, he said, “I went and picked up the guitar, and within seconds, I had those chords.” With the perfect Heartland rock lyrics, it only makes sense that the music just came to him naturally. A truly fitting title,“Hurts So Good” could easily be classified as his greatest love song,as the lyrics are a simple musing on being young and in love with the song’s subject.

4Crumblin' Down

The lead single fromUh-huh, John Mellencamp also wrote “Crumblin' Down” with George Green.Uh-huhfeatured some of Mellencamp’s most politically-driven hits, and this one was no exception.The song opens with the lines,“Some people ain’t no damn good / you may’t trust ‘em, you can’t love em"and if there was any doubt about those lyrics’ meaning, Mellencamp clarified it in an exclusive feature withRolling Stonea few decades after the album’s release:

“Crumblin' Down” is a very political song that I wrote with my childhood friend George Green. Reagan was president – he was deregulating everything and the walls were crumbling down on the poor. The song was the last one recorded and the first single. It was a hit immediately. I felt like I was pulling the wool over everyone’s eyes.

While many artists and public figures tend to stray from expressing their political views so overtly outside of the art itself for fear that it may deter some of their fans, Mellencamp was not one of them. Despite the political undertones—and overtones—of the lyrics, “Crumblin' Down” was a massive hit, even among Mellencamp’s fans who may not have agreed with him politically. The track peaked at number nine on the Billboard Hot 100, andmarked a stark pivot away from the lighthearted, youthful themes of his earlier hits fromAmerican Fool.

3Lonely Ol' Night

The lead single from 1987’sScarecrow, “Lonely Ol' Night” peaked at number six on the Billboard Hot 100. It’s an upbeat, classic John Mellencamp love song, with traditional drums, bass, and guitar, backing his trademark bluesy rock vocals. AfterUh-huh, and a mostly politically-motivated track list onScarecrow,Mellencamp doubled back, at least with this song, to the themes which gave him his big break in the first place.“Lonely Ol' Night” is a shining example, as the lyrics are catchy, romantic, and reminiscent of classic Mellencamp.

His throaty vocals truly shine in the chorus,“It’s a lonely ol' night / Can I put my arms around you? / It’s a lonely ol' night / Custom made for two lonely people like me and you.“It’s a perfect campfire song, anda clear lyrical call back to earlier hits like “Hurts So Good” and “Jack & Diane.“The feeling when listening to the track is a cool breeze on a warm summer night, and Mellencamp sings about love being the best cure for loneliness on a night like that.

2R.O.C.K. in the U.S.A. (A Salute to ’60s Rock)

The chord progression that this song follows isone that transports you back in time to the song’s namesake decade, and simply makes you want to dance.From the title, to the twangy vocals, to the blues-driven guitar, everything about “R.O.C.K. In The U.S.A.” screams classic oldies rock. The third single fromScarecrow, the song peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100, and is a lighthearted, yet nostalgic ode to the way life used to be for Mellencamp in the decade of his teenage years.

The lyrics are a universal tribute to the ’60s in America, a decade preoccupied on all fronts by the idea of the American Dream.

Characterized by lyrics like,“With the pipe dreams in their heads / And very little money in their hands,“Mellencamp pays homage to the overwhelming ideal that rockers of the ’60s both fantasized and wrote about in their music.The lyrics are a universal tribute to the ’60s in America,a decade preoccupied on all fronts by the idea of the American Dream. Beyond that, and at the song’s core, the simple repetition of the title in the chorus solidifies the track’s identity as a head-bobbing, absolutely classic tune.

1Authority Song

The fifth and final single from John Mellencamp’s pivotal albumUh-huh, “Authority Song” left no room for interpretation. The rebellious anthem is upbeat, with a musical backing which,if you completely ignore the words, you may easily mistake as a happy-go-lucky, upbeat Heartland rock hit.The lyrics, however, tell a very different story, of being anti-establishment, and defying authority at all costs, even when, as Mellencamp relays in the lyrics,“I fight authority, authority always wins.”

“Authority Song” peaked at number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it the third single fromUh-huhto reach the top 20 of the chart.The song’s opening guitar riff is pure twang, complimented perfectly by Mellencamp’s borderline Elvis-esque twang on vocals as well.Its lyrical nature is certainly angst-filled and rebellious, but the song itself is simply fun, a perfect track to throw on while hanging out in the countryside on a hot summer’s day—the sound that Mellencamp has so carefully cultivated in so much of his discography.