Joan Jett & The Blackhearts’ ‘I Love Rock N Roll’ has been crowned the ‘Best Rock Song of All Time’ by Entertainment Weekly. Here’s why this 1982 anthem — born as a cover but transformed into a cultural tremor — remains as relevant as ever.
The verdict is in: Joan Jett’s ‘I Love Rock N Roll’ has been officially named the best rock song of all time by Entertainment Weekly. It’s a title that feels less like a surprise and more like a long-overdue coronation for a track that didn’t just rule the charts — it rewrote the rules.
Born in 1975 by British band The Arrows, the song was a solid rocker. But when Joan Jett reclaimed it in 1982, she didn’t just cover it. She weaponized it.
After her groundbreaking run with The Runaways — the legendary all-female punk-rock band that shattered gender barriers in the 1970s — Jett found herself at a crossroads. She recorded her debut solo album with Kenny Laguna and his backing band, The Blackhearts, but was turned down by 23 labels. Undaunted, they launched their own label, Blackheart Records, and released the album themselves.
That audacious gamble turned into a seismic victory. “I Love Rock N Roll” hit shelves in late 1981, exploded onto the airwaves in early 1982, and roared to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, where it reigned for seven straight weeks. Overnight, it became the signature track of Jett’s storied career — and one of the most universally recognized anthems in rock history.
But the real magic isn’t just in the numbers. It’s in the meaning.
Why ‘I Love Rock N Roll’ Isn’t Just a Song — It’s a Statement
Joan Jett never viewed rock just as music. She saw it as a movement. “I think people have to understand that rock & roll is not just rock & roll,” she told Rolling Stone. “It’s more than that. It can be a message sender. It is something that is powerful and strong. And it is something that can be used to fight. People have injustices, and you can declare them and fight for it.”
Her words echo the track’s DNA. While The Arrows’ original was a solid bar-band stomper, Jett’s version was a declared rebellion. Her voice — raw, rasping, utterly unapologetic — turned each lyric into a rallying cry. The production, masterminded by Laguna, was stripped down to its bone: a chugging riff, stomping handclaps, and a call-and-response energy that made every listener feel like they were part of a riot.
It was punk, it was metal, it was pop, it was all rock — and it belonged to everyone. Not just boys, not just rebels. Nobody showed the world why rock was for everyone like Joan Jett.
The Legacy That Can’t Be Silenced
For over four decades, “I Love Rock N Roll” has been everywhere: films, commercials, sports arenas, and karaoke bars from Boston to Bangkok. Its opening riff is instantly recognizable, its message undeniable.
- Generations of musicians credit it as the song that made them pick up a guitar.
- Generations of fans yell it back in concert, fist in the air, feeling seen.
- Generations of critics have called it the sound of rock in its purest form.
It started as a cover, but it ended as a transformation. Under Joan Jett’s authority and spirit, “I Love Rock N Roll” wasn’t about copying. It was about claiming rock as a language of freedom — and making it no one’s but your own.
That’s why it’s not just the best rock song of all time. It’s the sound of rebellion that never ages, never fades, and never loses its place as the anthem for anyone who’s ever been told: “You don’t belong here.”
For more definitive analysis on the music and culture that shape our world, follow onlytrustedinfo.com, where we bring you the fastest, sharpest insights you won’t find anywhere else.