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60 Music Trivia Questions That Will Start Arguments at Your Table

By
Joshua Thompson, B.A. Film Studies
Close-up of a vintage vinyl record spinning on a turntable.

The most confident wrong answer I’ve ever heard in a trivia room was a guy who bet his entire team’s score that “Hey Jude” was written about John Lennon’s son. He stood up when he said it. His wife put her head in her hands. He was wrong, and the way he was wrong tells you everything about how music trivia actually works: we build stories around songs, and those stories feel so true that we’d stake money on them.

I’ve been writing and hosting music trivia for years, and the thing I’ve learned is that the people who search for music trivia already know a lot. They’ve absorbed decades of liner notes, interviews, behind-the-scenes documentaries, and Reddit threads. They’re not looking for “what instrument does a drummer play.” They want questions that test the edges of what they know, that catch them leaning the wrong way, that give them something to bring back to the group chat. That’s what these 60 questions are built to do.

The Ones You Think You Know

1. What Beatles song was Paul McCartney inspired to write after a dream about his mother?

I’ve asked this one hundreds of times. Half the room goes straight for “Hey Jude” because it sounds like the kind of song a mother would inspire. But McCartney’s mother Mary came to him in a dream during a tense period of recording, speaking words of comfort. The song wrote itself after that.

Show Answer
“Let It Be.” The common wrong answer is “Hey Jude,” which was actually written for John Lennon’s son Julian during the divorce from Cynthia.

 

2. Which member of Destiny’s Child was NOT one of the original members?

This one separates the casual fans from the people who actually lived through the lineup drama.

Show Answer
Michelle Williams. The original lineup was Beyoncé Knowles, Kelly Rowland, LeToya Luckett, and LaTavia Roberson.

 

3. What’s the best-selling physical single of all time?

Every table argues about this. People throw out “Bohemian Rhapsody,” “I Will Always Love You,” even “Candle in the Wind.” And that last guess is close, but not in the way they think.

Show Answer
“White Christmas” by Bing Crosby, with estimated sales over 50 million copies. “Candle in the Wind 1997” by Elton John is the best-selling single since charts began tracking reliably, but Crosby’s total accumulated sales across decades dwarf everything else.

 

4. What instrument did Kurt Cobain play on Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” that wasn’t a guitar?

People forget that Cobain was more musically restless than his image suggests.

Show Answer
He didn’t play another instrument on that specific track. This is a trick question, and I include it because it catches people who want to show off. Some will guess piano or drums, but the studio recording features Cobain on guitar and vocals only.

 

5. Before “Bohemian Rhapsody,” what was Queen’s first single to chart in the U.S.?

This is the kind of question where knowing too much actually hurts. People who know Queen’s UK history guess “Seven Seas of Rhye” or “Keep Yourself Alive.” But the American charts were a different animal.

Show Answer
“Killer Queen” from 1974, which reached No. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100.

 

6. What year was the first Grammy Awards ceremony held?

Everyone guesses earlier than the real answer. It feels like the Grammys have been around since the dawn of recorded music, but they’re younger than you think.

Show Answer
1959. The ceremony was held on May 4 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. The common wrong answer is something in the late 1940s, which is when the Emmys started.

 

7. What song has spent the most total weeks on the Billboard Hot 100?

This changes every few years, but as of now, the answer surprises people who assume it’s something from the streaming era.

Show Answer
“Blinding Lights” by The Weeknd, with 90 weeks on the chart. It managed this by straddling the pre-pandemic and pandemic eras in a way that gave it an almost supernatural shelf life.

 

The Ones That Make You Feel Old

8. Nirvana’s “Nevermind” was released closer to the moon landing than to today. True or false?

I love watching faces change on this one. People do the math in real time and you can see the exact moment it lands.

Show Answer
True. “Nevermind” came out in 1991, 22 years after the 1969 moon landing. We’re now over 30 years past its release.

 

9. How old was Billie Eilish when “Bad Guy” hit number one?

People either guess too young or too old. The reality is right in the uncanny valley of adolescence.

Show Answer
17 years old. She’d recorded much of the album in her brother Finneas’s bedroom when she was even younger.

 

10. What was the first music video played on MTV?

This is the music trivia equivalent of a layup. But I include it because about 30% of rooms still get it wrong, and the ones who get it right feel genuinely good about themselves.

Show Answer
“Video Killed the Radio Star” by The Buggles, aired August 1, 1981.

 

11. The Spice Girls had how many number-one singles in the United States?

This is where British and American music knowledge collides. UK fans are shocked by the answer.

Show Answer
One. Just “Wannabe.” They were a cultural supernova in America but the charts didn’t reflect it the way they did in the UK, where they had nine number ones.

 

12. What decade saw the invention of the electric guitar?

Most people guess the 1950s because that’s when rock and roll made it famous. The actual timeline is wilder.

Show Answer
The 1930s. The “Frying Pan” lap steel guitar by Rickenbacker in 1931 is generally considered the first commercially produced electric guitar.

 

13. Amy Winehouse, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison, and Kurt Cobain all share what unfortunate distinction besides dying young?

Some people know this immediately. Others have never heard of it and it hits them like a truck.

Show Answer
They all died at the age of 27, forming the core of what’s known as the “27 Club.”

 

Genre Benders

14. What genre of music gets its name from a Creole slang term for “fine” or “good”?

This one rewards the linguistically curious. Most people in the room take a wild swing.

Show Answer
Zydeco. The word likely derives from the Creole pronunciation of the French phrase “les haricots” (the snap beans), as in “les haricots sont pas salés” , the snap beans aren’t salty, meaning times are hard. Though some etymologists connect it more directly to a term meaning “good.”

 

15. What country is the birthplace of reggaeton?

Everyone says Jamaica. Everyone. And it’s wrong in a way that reveals how much people conflate reggaeton with reggae.

Show Answer
Panama, where the genre first emerged in the 1970s before being popularized in Puerto Rico in the 1990s. Jamaica influenced it, but the genre was born from Latin American and Caribbean fusion.

 

16. What was the first rap song to reach number one on the Billboard Hot 100?

Hip-hop heads always guess something from the golden age. The real answer is both earlier and more novelty-flavored than they want it to be.

Show Answer
“Rapture” by Blondie in 1981. Yes, a new wave band fronted by Debbie Harry. This fact has started more arguments at my events than almost any other answer.

 

17. Before becoming a solo country superstar, Dolly Parton was a regular performer and duet partner on whose TV show?

Country fans nail this. Everyone else guesses Johnny Cash.

Show Answer
Porter Wagoner. Their musical partnership lasted from 1967 to 1974, and Parton’s departure inspired her to write “I Will Always Love You.”

 

18. K-pop group BTS’s name is an acronym for what Korean phrase?

The ARMY in the room always gets this. The rest learn something.

Show Answer
Bangtan Sonyeondan, which translates roughly to “Bulletproof Boy Scouts.” They later added the English backronym “Beyond the Scene.”

 

19. What instrument is Yo-Yo Ma famous for playing?

I include a question like this to give the room a breath. Not every question needs to be a trap. Sometimes the pleasure is just in knowing.

Show Answer
The cello.

 

20. What African American genre, born in New Orleans in the early 20th century, is considered the first truly American art form?

The phrasing matters here. People who say “blues” aren’t wrong about the timeline but they’re wrong about the specific claim.

Show Answer
Jazz. While the blues predates and deeply influenced it, jazz is the genre most often cited by musicologists and cultural historians as the first uniquely American art form.

 

Behind the Curtain

21. What famous guitarist is known for playing his instrument upside down and left-handed?

This one’s accessible, but the image it conjures is so specific that it works in any room.

Show Answer
Jimi Hendrix. He played a right-handed Fender Stratocaster flipped over, restringing it for left-handed play.

 

22. What rock band was originally called “Smile” before two of its members formed a new group?

Prog rock nerds get this. Everyone else takes a guess that reveals what era they grew up in.

Show Answer
Queen. Brian May and Roger Taylor were in Smile before Freddie Mercury joined and insisted on the name change.

 

23. Who wrote “I Will Always Love You” , the version Whitney Houston made legendary?

I’ve watched people physically recoil at the answer when they don’t know it. And then they go home and listen to the original and text me about it.

Show Answer
Dolly Parton, who wrote and originally recorded it in 1973. She reportedly earned over $10 million from Houston’s version alone.

 

24. What producer, known as the “Fifth Beatle,” shaped the sound of nearly every Beatles album?

The nickname gives it away for some. But I’ve had tables argue about whether it’s Brian Epstein or the actual answer.

Show Answer
George Martin. Epstein was their manager, but Martin was the producer who arranged strings, suggested tempo changes, and essentially co-created the sonic landscape of their records.

 

25. What artist has won the most Grammy Awards in history?

This changes occasionally, and the current answer shocks people who assume it’s someone from classic rock or jazz.

Show Answer
Beyoncé, with 32 Grammy wins as of 2024. She surpassed Georg Solti, the classical conductor who held the record at 31 for over two decades.

 

26. Fleetwood Mac’s “Rumours” was recorded while how many couples in the band were breaking up?

People know the album was born from chaos. They just underestimate the scale of it.

Show Answer
Two. John and Christine McVie were divorcing, and Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks were splitting up. Mick Fleetwood was also going through his own marital issues outside the band. The album was essentially a group therapy session that sold 40 million copies.

 

27. What was Elvis Presley’s first number-one hit?

“Hound Dog” is the reflex answer. It’s not right. The actual song is more tender than people expect from early Elvis.

Show Answer
“Heartbreak Hotel” in 1956. “Hound Dog” came later that same year.

 

28. What legendary Motown songwriter and producer wrote “My Girl” for The Temptations?

Motown history is rich enough to fill an entire trivia night. This one’s a good entry point.

Show Answer
Smokey Robinson, along with fellow Miracle Ronald White.

 

Numbers That Don’t Feel Right

29. How many studio albums did The Beatles release in their roughly eight-year career?

The number is absurd when you consider how long modern artists take between albums. People always guess too low.

Show Answer
Thirteen (in the UK discography). Between 1963 and 1970, they released thirteen studio albums. Taylor Swift fans will point out she’s on a similar pace, and they’re not wrong.

 

30. What is the longest song ever to reach number one on the Billboard Hot 100?

People guess “Bohemian Rhapsody” or “American Pie.” Both are long. Neither is the answer.

Show Answer
“All Too Well (10 Minute Version)” by Taylor Swift at 10 minutes and 13 seconds. It broke the record previously held by Don McLean’s “American Pie” at 8:42.

 

31. How many keys does a standard piano have?

Another breather. But I’ve seen music majors overthink this one into the wrong answer.

Show Answer
88 keys (52 white and 36 black).

 

32. How many members are in the Wu-Tang Clan?

Even fans lose count. There’s always someone at the table counting on their fingers.

Show Answer
Nine original members (ten if you count the late Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s cousin who sometimes performed). The core nine: RZA, GZA, Ol’ Dirty Bastard, Method Man, Raekwon, Ghostface Killah, Inspectah Deck, U-God, and Masta Killa.

 

33. What is the most-streamed song on Spotify of all time?

This answer will date this article eventually, but right now it catches people off guard because it’s not the artist they expect.

Show Answer
“Blinding Lights” by The Weeknd, surpassing Ed Sheeran’s “Shape of You.” The Weeknd dominates streaming-era records in a way that doesn’t match his cultural footprint compared to, say, Drake or Taylor Swift.

 

34. How many symphonies did Beethoven complete?

Classical music people know this cold. Everyone else guesses a number that’s either way too high or suspiciously round.

Show Answer
Nine. His Ninth Symphony, featuring “Ode to Joy,” was his last. He was almost completely deaf when he composed it.

 

One-Hit Wonders and Other Lies We Tell Ourselves

35. Dexys Midnight Runners are considered one-hit wonders for “Come On Eileen.” In what country were they actually a consistent chart presence with multiple hits?

The one-hit wonder label is almost always an American invention. This question exposes that bias beautifully.

Show Answer
The United Kingdom, where they had several top-ten hits and two number-one singles.

 

36. What “one-hit wonder” actually had a second top-five Billboard hit that everyone forgets?

I’ll give you a hint: the forgotten hit was called “Fly.” The band wore top hats.

Show Answer
Sugar Ray. People remember “Fly” but forget “Every Morning” also hit No. 3. They had a genuine run of radio dominance in the late ’90s that got erased from collective memory.

 

37. What artist released “MMMBop” and continued to make music for over two decades after, including launching their own beer brand?

This is less a trivia question and more a vibe check. People either find this delightful or deeply unsettling.

Show Answer
Hanson. The brothers never stopped recording and touring. Their beer is called “MMMHops” because of course it is.

 

Lyrics That Trick You

38. In Queen’s “We Will Rock You,” what comes after “buddy, you’re a boy, make a big noise”?

People sing this at sporting events constantly and still get the next line wrong.

Show Answer
“Playin’ in the street, gonna be a big man someday.” Most people jump to “kickin’ your can all over the place,” which is the third line.

 

39. What Elton John song contains the misheard lyric “hold me closer, Tony Danza”?

I’ve used this in a round called “Mondegreens” and it gets the biggest laugh of the night every single time.

Show Answer
“Tiny Dancer.” The actual lyric is “hold me closer, tiny dancer.” This was famously referenced in the show “Friends.”

 

40. The Police song “Every Breath You Take” is often played at weddings. What is the song actually about?

Sting himself has said he’s baffled by this. The answer is right there in the lyrics if you listen for even thirty seconds.

Show Answer
Stalking and obsessive surveillance. Sting wrote it about the dissolution of his first marriage. “Every move you make, every bond you break, I’ll be watching you” is not a love poem.

 

41. What song’s opening lyric is “Is this the real life? Is this just fantasy?”

A gimme. But sometimes a room needs a collective moment of confidence before you take it away again.

Show Answer
“Bohemian Rhapsody” by Queen.

 

42. In “Hotel California” by the Eagles, what year is referenced as the last time “they” had “that spirit here”?

People who’ve heard this song a thousand times suddenly realize they’ve never actually listened to this line.

Show Answer
1969. “We haven’t had that spirit here since 1969.” It’s also a wine pun, since “spirit” refers to alcohol, and 1969 was the last year the hotel stocked a particular vintage. Or it’s about the death of 1960s idealism. The Eagles have been deliberately vague.

 

The Ones That Start Fights

43. What band has sold more albums worldwide: Led Zeppelin or The Rolling Stones?

This is a pure argument-starter. Both sides will be loud. Both sides will be confident. Only one is right.

Show Answer
Led Zeppelin, with estimated sales of 300 million compared to The Rolling Stones’ approximately 240 million. This shocks Stones fans, who point to longevity. Zeppelin fans just point to “IV.”

 

44. Who has more number-one Billboard hits: Michael Jackson or Madonna?

The King of Pop versus the Queen of Pop. People pick their allegiance and defend it.

Show Answer
They’re nearly tied, but Madonna edges it out with 12 number ones to Michael Jackson’s 13. Wait. Actually, Jackson has 13 and Madonna has 12. I’ve watched teams argue about this for ten minutes, and the closeness of it is the point.

 

45. What instrument does the lead singer of Twenty One Pilots play during live performances that is unusual for a frontman?

The answer is so visually specific that once you’ve seen it, you can’t unsee it.

Show Answer
The ukulele (among other instruments, but the ukulele is the signature surprise). Tyler Joseph also frequently plays piano and drums during shows.

 

46. What country has won the Eurovision Song Contest the most times?

Americans have no idea. Europeans will fight over this like it’s a border dispute.

Show Answer
Ireland, with seven wins. Sweden is close behind with seven as well (they tied as of 2023 with Loreen’s second win). Luxembourg also has five, which surprises people given the country’s size.

 

47. Is “Stairway to Heaven” by Led Zeppelin the most-played song on classic rock radio?

Everyone assumes yes. The data says otherwise, and the real answer is somehow even more unavoidable.

Show Answer
No. Depending on the study and time period, songs like “Don’t Stop Believin'” by Journey and “Sweet Home Alabama” by Lynyrd Skynyrd have surpassed it in total plays. “Stairway” is actually played less frequently because of its length , stations prefer songs under five minutes.

 

Deep Cuts

48. What singer’s real name is Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta?

At this point, most people know this. But I keep it in because the full name is so beautifully Italian that it deserves to be said out loud.

Show Answer
Lady Gaga.

 

49. What was the first album ever released on compact disc?

This is a great pub trivia question because the answer is so perfectly, boringly appropriate.

Show Answer
Billy Joel’s “52nd Street” in 1982 in Japan. It was chosen by Sony partly because it was already popular and partly because they wanted to demonstrate the CD’s superior audio quality with a well-produced album.

 

50. What band’s drummer is widely considered one of the greatest ever, despite the band being primarily known for their guitarist?

This is intentionally open-ended. I want to hear who the table picks before I give my answer, because the debate is the game.

Show Answer
I’m looking for Led Zeppelin’s John Bonham, though The Jimi Hendrix Experience’s Mitch Mitchell and Cream’s Ginger Baker are worthy arguments. Bonham’s work on “Moby Dick” and “When the Levee Breaks” essentially defined what rock drumming could be.

 

51. What classical composer continued to compose masterpieces after becoming completely deaf?

Most people get this. The real question is whether they understand the magnitude of it.

Show Answer
Ludwig van Beethoven. He composed his Ninth Symphony, one of the most complex orchestral works ever written, while unable to hear a single note of it performed.

 

52. What hip-hop album was the first to win the Pulitzer Prize for Music?

This was a seismic moment in music history, and it still catches people who assume the Pulitzer only goes to classical or jazz compositions.

Show Answer
“DAMN.” by Kendrick Lamar in 2018. The Pulitzer board called it “a virtuosic song collection unified by its vernacular authenticity and rhythmic dynamism.”

 

53. What famous music festival took place on a dairy farm in Bethel, New York, not in the town it’s named after?

The geography of this event is one of those facts that makes the whole story better once you know it.

Show Answer
Woodstock. The festival was originally planned for Woodstock, NY, then Wallkill, NY, before finally landing on Max Yasgur’s dairy farm in Bethel, about 60 miles from the town of Woodstock.

 

54. What musical term refers to a song’s speed, measured in beats per minute?

A palate cleanser. Not every question needs to be a puzzle box.

Show Answer
Tempo.

 

55. What supergroup featured members of Cream, The Beatles, Traffic, and Blind Faith?

This is a wormhole. The interconnections between late-’60s British rock bands could fill a conspiracy board.

Show Answer
Blind Faith itself was the supergroup, featuring Eric Clapton (Cream), Ginger Baker (Cream), Steve Winwood (Traffic), and Ric Grech (Family). If you’re thinking of a group with a Beatle, Derek and the Dominos featured Clapton alongside George Harrison on the album “Layla.”

 

Almost Home

56. What was Michael Jackson’s iconic dance move called, which he first performed on the “Motown 25” TV special in 1983?

Everyone knows the move. Not everyone knows the moment it was born in public.

Show Answer
The moonwalk. Jackson performed it during “Billie Jean,” and the audience reaction is one of those rare moments where you can hear the exact second a cultural shift happens.

 

57. What singer-songwriter wrote “Hallelujah,” reportedly going through 80 draft verses before finishing it?

The Jeff Buckley version is so ubiquitous that younger people often don’t know it’s a cover. I’ve seen genuine shock when the answer lands.

Show Answer
Leonard Cohen. He released it in 1984 on the album “Various Positions.” The song was initially a commercial failure. Cohen once told a story about asking Bob Dylan how long “I and I” took to write. Dylan said 15 minutes. Cohen said “Hallelujah” took him five years.

 

58. What is the only music group to have a number-one hit in every decade from the 1960s to the 2010s?

This question makes people list every long-running band they can think of. The Stones, U2, Aerosmith. None of them are right.

Show Answer
No group has achieved this. The question is a trap. Artists like Cher and Barbara Streisand come closest as solo acts spanning multiple decades, but no single group has hit number one in five consecutive decades. I include questions like this because the best trivia sometimes teaches you that the thing you were looking for doesn’t exist.

 

59. What Taylor Swift album was famously re-recorded and released as a “Taylor’s Version” first?

Swifties will demolish this. But the re-recording saga is genuinely one of the most interesting music business stories of the century, and this is the entry point.

Show Answer
“Fearless (Taylor’s Version),” released in April 2021. The entire re-recording project was a response to Scooter Braun acquiring Swift’s original master recordings, and it fundamentally changed how artists and the industry think about ownership.

 

60. What song was playing in the gymnasium during the last dance at your high school prom?

You won’t find this one on any other music trivia list. I can’t give you the answer because it’s different for every person reading this. But I’ll tell you what happens when I ask it at a live event: the room goes quiet for about two seconds, and then it gets loud. People turn to each other. Someone starts humming. Someone pulls out their phone to prove they’re right. And that’s the thing about music trivia that makes it different from every other category. It’s never really about the facts. It’s about the fact that a three-minute song recorded in a studio somewhere can become the most important thing in a room full of strangers, decades after anyone pressed record. The answer is whatever song just popped into your head. You’re right.

Show Answer
Your answer. That’s the point.

 

Joshua Thompson, B.A. Film Studies

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