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10 of the greatest music comebacks ever

10 of the Greatest Music Comebacks Ever

A music comeback can take several forms. Sometimes a reunion puts a band back in front of a huge crowd. Other times, an older song finds a new audience and starts climbing the charts again years after its original release.

The strongest returns do more than grab attention for a week. A great comeback can reset a career, break records, or remind listeners why an artist mattered in the first place. All 10 entries below did more than revisit old success.

Kate Bush
Openverse

10. Kate Bush

Kate Bush pulled off one of the most striking catalog revivals in recent memory when Stranger Things featured “Running Up That Hill” in 2022. The 1985 song shot to No. 1 on the U.S. Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart and climbed to No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100, far above its original American peak.

Cher
Openverse

9. Cher

Cher’s 1998 return with “Believe” was more than a hit single. The song gave her the longest gap between No. 1 songs on the Billboard Hot 100, arriving 33 years and seven months after “I Got You, Babe.” At age 52, she also stood out in a pop landscape not known for rewarding longevity so generously.

Red Hot Chilli Peppers
Openverse

8. Red Hot Chili Peppers

The Red Hot Chili Peppers came back strong in 2022 with Unlimited Love, an album that reunited the group with John Frusciante. Working again with Rick Rubin added to the sense of occasion, while “Black Summer” became the band’s 14th No. 1 on the alternative chart.

Spice Girls
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7. Spice Girls

The Spice Girls had reunited before, but the 2019 return landed on a larger scale. The tour sold out, became the highest-grossing UK tour of the year, and won the Billboard Live Music Award for Top Boxscore. Even without Victoria Beckham, public demand remained enormous.

Openverse

6. Sophie Ellis-Bextor

Sophie Ellis-Bextor got a rare second life from an older hit when Saltburn pushed “Murder on the Dancefloor” back into heavy rotation. The 2001 single returned to the charts in 2024, reaching listeners who may not have known the song the first time around. Few comeback stories are cleaner than a catalog revival strong enough to beat expectations two decades later.

Usher
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5. Usher

Usher had already secured his place in pop and R&B long before 2024, but a long gap between studio albums changed the stakes of his return. Coming Home ended an eight-year recording break and reached No. 2 on the Billboard 200.

ABBA
Openverse

4. ABBA

ABBA’s return in 2021 felt almost impossible for years, which made Voyage even more impressive when the album finally arrived. The group had not released a new studio record since The Visitors in 1981, yet four decades later, a fresh project still generated huge attention and strong sales across multiple countries.

Openverse

3. Elvis

Even Elvis Presley needed a reset. Too much time spent making films during the 1960s had cooled his musical momentum, but the 1968 television special Elvis changed the story quickly. The performance gave him a sharper image, stronger material, and a route back to the charts with “If I Can Dream.”

Girls Aloud
Openverse

2. Girls Aloud

Girls Aloud returned in 2024 under emotional circumstances, which gave the reunion extra weight. The group had not performed together since 2013, and the new tour followed Sarah Harding’s death in 2021. What might have been a straightforward nostalgia run took on much more meaning because the comeback also served as a tribute.

No Doubt
Openverse

1. No Doubt

No Doubt’s 2024 comeback worked because the return felt like a real event rather than a routine reunion. The band had not performed together since 2015, so the Coachella appearance came with genuine anticipation and a level of interest many legacy acts would envy.

The best music comebacks do not rely on memory alone. They create a fresh reason to listen, whether through a reunion, a new release, or a long-overdue reminder of past greatness.

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