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Glam Slam The Soundtrack

  • glamslam72
  • Nov 16, 2025
  • 5 min read

From the first sparkle to the last stomp – every key single that built the glitter empire, month by month.

This is the timeline that turned grey Britain day-glo: the exact order the anthems hit the streets, the airwaves, and the bedroom walls. No filler, no hindsight – just the songs that defined glam as it happened.

Date

Artist

Song

Why It Matters

February 1971

T.Rex

Hot Love

The first #1 with handclaps and glitter – glam is born

July 1971

T.Rex

Get It On

The riff that made every kid want a Les Paul

January 1972

Chicory Tip

Son of My Father

First glam #1 with a synth – the future arrives

April 1972

David Bowie

Starman

Ziggy lands on Top of the Pops – game over

April 1972

Alice Cooper

School’s Out

Shock rock joins the party

May 1972

Sparks

Wonder Girl

Art-school weirdos bring the falsetto

June 1972

Blackfoot Sue

Standing in the Road

Underrated stomp from the glam underground

July 1972

Mott the Hoople

All the Young Dudes

Bowie’s gift saves Mott and births an anthem

August 1972

Roxy Music

Virginia Plain

Art-glam explodes – oboe solos and eyeliner

August 1972

Slade

Mama Weer All Crazee Now

Working-class glam hits #1

September 1972

T.Rex

Children of the Revolution

Bolan’s last great roar

November 1972

Lou Reed

Walk on the Wild Side

Bowie-produced sleaze goes Top 20

November 1972

David Bowie

The Jean Genie

Ziggy does the Stones, better

January 1973

Sweet

Block Buster!

Siren intro, #1 smash – bubblegum meets thunder

February 1973

Slade

Cum On Feel the Noize

Straight in at #1 – chaos perfected

March 1973

T.Rex

20th Century Boy

The riff to end all riffs

April 1973

David Bowie

Drive-In Saturday

Doo-wop dystopia

April 1973

Wizzard

See My Baby Jive

Roy Wood’s Wall of Sound goes glam

May 197绕3

Suzi Quatro

Can the Can

Leather queen claims the throne

June 1973

Hector

Wired Up

Forgotten gem – Slade meets Sweet

August 1973

David Essex

Rock On

Cool as ice, dark as midnight

September 1973

Sweet

Ballroom Blitz

The ultimate glam riot

October 1973

Mud

Dyna-Mite

Chinn-Chapman stomp perfected

November 1973

Jobriath

Space Clown

America’s tragic glam prince

January 1974

Kenny

Baby I Love You, OK!

Bubblegum’s last gasp

April 1974

Sparks

This Town Ain’t Big Enough…

The greatest glam single ever?

October 1974

Queen

Killer Queen

Glam goes baroque

October 1974

Hello

New York Groove

Pure strut and glitter

January 1975

The Plod

Neo City

Glam’s dying breath – still kicks

From Bolan’s first sparkle to glam’s final curtain – this is the soundtrack, in order.Turn it up, strike a pose, and live it all again.



Glam Rock, a style that peaked in the early to mid-1970s, was defined by its theatrical flair, catchy hooks, and androgynous aesthetic. Below is a list of notable glam rock songs, ordered by their release date. I’ve focused on key tracks from the genre’s core period, primarily in the UK and US, based on verified release information. Exact dates can vary slightly due to regional releases or reissues, but I’ve used the earliest known release for each


T. Rex - "Hot Love" (February 1971)

Marc Bolan’s glittery breakthrough, defining early glam with its handclaps and swagger.


T. Rex - "Get It On" (July 1971)

A seductive, riff-driven classic, known as "Bang a Gong (Get It On)" in the US.


Chicory Tip - "Son of My Father" (January 1972)

A synth-heavy UK No. 1, blending bubblegum pop with glam’s sheen.


David Bowie - "Starman" (April 1972)

Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust anthem, a sci-fi call to the youth.


Sparks - "Wonder Girl" (May 1972)

From their debut album (Sparks), a quirky, theatrical track with Ron Mael’s eccentric lyrics and Russell Mael’s falsetto, embodying glam’s campy art-pop side.


Alice Cooper - "School’s Out" (April 1972)

A rebellious proto-glam hit with shock-rock theatrics.


Blackfoot Sue - "Standing in the Road" (June 1972)

A stomping, obscure UK track mixing glam energy with pub rock grit.


Mott the Hoople - "All the Young Dudes" (July 1972)

Bowie’s gift to Mott, a glam anthem for disaffected youth.


Roxy Music - "Virginia Plain" (August 1972)

Art-glam with Brian Eno’s synths and Bryan Ferry’s suave delivery.


Slade - "Mama Weer All Crazee Now" (August 1972)

A raucous, chant-heavy hit from Slade’s boisterous catalog.


T. Rex - "Sunken Rags" (September 1972)

An obscure B-side to "Children of the Revolution," with Bolan’s dreamy, driving vibe.


T. Rex - "Children of the Revolution" (September 1972)

A bold, stomping anthem with Bolan’s glam strut.


Lou Reed - "Walk on the Wild Side" (November 1972)

From Transformer, produced by Bowie, this sultry, decadent track captures glam’s androgynous allure.


David Bowie - "The Jean Genie" (November 1972)

A gritty, riff-heavy hit inspired by Iggy Pop and Jean Genet.


New York Dolls - "Personality Crisis" (July 1973)

From their debut album, this raw, campy track blends glam theatrics with proto-punk attitude.


Sweet - "Block Buster!" (January 1973)

A siren-driven chart-topper with bubblegum glam energy.


Slade - "Cum On Feel the Noize" (February 1973)

A rowdy, singalong classic from Slade’s working-class glam peak.


T. Rex - "20th Century Boy" (March 1973)

A swaggering, riff-heavy staple of T. Rex’s legacy.


David Bowie - "Drive-In Saturday" (April 1973)

A doo-wop-infused glam gem with dystopian storytelling.


Wizzard - "See My Baby Jive" (April 1973)

Roy Wood’s retro-glam hit, with a Phil Spector-inspired Wall of Sound.



Suzi Quatro - "Can the Can" (May 1973)

A gritty, bass-driven hit from glam’s leading lady.


Hector - "Wired Up" (June 1973)

A rare UK single with Slade-like energy and Sweet-style harmonies, a forgotten gem.


David Essex - "Rock On" (August 1973)

A sparse, echoey hit tied to Essex’s glam persona and Stardust role.


Sweet - "Ballroom Blitz" (September 1973)

A chaotic, high-energy anthem, a glam rock cornerstone.


Mud - "Dyna-Mite" (October 1973)

A Chinn-Chapman stomper with synchronized dance moves.


Jobriath - "Space Clown" (November 1973)

A theatrical, Broadway-esque track from the US glam pioneer, with Peter Frampton’s guitar.


New York Dolls - "Trash" (July 1973)

A sleazy, heartfelt track from their debut, mixing glam camp with punk rawness.


Lou Reed - "Vicious" (November 1972)

From Transformer, a snarling, Bowie-produced track with glam’s decadent edge.


Kenny - "Baby I Love You, OK!" (January 1974)

A pop-glam obscurity with Beach Boys harmonies and Sweet-style guitars.


Sparks - "This Town Ain’t Big Enough for Both of Us" (April 1974)

From Kimono My House, a dramatic, operatic hit with eccentric glam flair, a UK Top 5 single.


Queen - "Killer Queen" (October 1974)

Queen’s campy, baroque-pop breakthrough, a glam masterpiece.


Hello - "New York Groove" (October 1974)

A strutting, city-vibe cover of a Russ Ballard song, later covered by Ace Frehley.


The Plod - "Neo City" (January 1975)

A punky, obscure Essex glam track, released as the genre waned.

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