Music

The 10 best Super Bowl national anthem performances of all time

While she was backed by a choir decked out in all white, country star Mickey Guyton turned the national anthem into a stirring statement about the diversity of the USꦛ at Super Bowl 2022.

Her assured, confident performance set the stage for the Los Angeles Rams to tackle the Cincinnati 🦂🎃Bengals at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California. (The hometown Rams won, 23-20.)

This year it’s a decidedly different country artist —𓃲 Chris Stapleton —who will get his moment to big-up those stars and stripes when SB LVII goes down between the Philadelphia Eagles and the Kansas City Chiefs at State Farm Arena in Glendale, Arizona on Sunday.

But who are the most super “Star-Spangled Banner” singers o𓆉f all atꦅ the big game?

Here, we rank the Top 10 to ever belt it out.

10. Demi Lovato (2020)

The nation🔥al anthem is perfect for a singer like Lovato, who has the pipes but sometimes lacks the personality as an artist.

Technically, the “Give Your Heart a Break” belter hit all the right notes — and looked fab doing so, in her white pantsuit —꧑ and delivered a pꦍurist’s rendition that scored with the Super Bowl masses.

9. Renée Fleming (2014) 

Backed by the Armed Forces Ch🃏orus, the soprano showed all those dudes on the field who was the head diva in charge with her classical powers that turned MetLife Stadium into th🤪e Metropolitan Opera House for three minutes. 

Opera singer Renée Fleming signs the national anthem during Super Bowl XLVIII at MetLife Stadium between the Denver Broncos and the Seattle Seahawks on February 2, 2014 in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Getty Images

8. Mariah Carey (2002)

Just a few months after 9/11, Carey did the honors at the New Orleans Superdome, where Tom Brady won the first of his six Super Bowl rings with the New England Patriots. Giving her vocals some of that Mimi melisma — complete with her trademark whistle notes — a peak Carey reminded us that we belonged t♒ogether when we needed it most.

7. Billy Joel (1989 and 2007)

has the distinction of being one of only two singers — the other being Aaron Neville — to perform the national anthem t🌳wice at the Super Bowl, so he has to make this list. And they were two very different renditions: In 1989, he sang it a capꦍpella, while in 2007 — with decidedly less hair — he played the keys as he sang Francis Scott Key’s lyrics.

6. The Chicks (2003)

The artists formerly known as the Dixie Chicks — no strangers t✱o political controversy — let their three-part harmonies melt the nation into sweet unity. With minimal accompaniment, the purity of their voices met the moment by bringing home the lyrics and diffusing all divisiveness.

The Chicks perform the National Anthem before Super Bowl XXXVII between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Oakland Raiders on January 26, 2003 at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, California. Sporting News via Getty Images

5. Luther Vandross (1997)

The sultan of soul responsible for a generation of babies being made, Vandross came the closest that anyone has ever come to turning “The Star-Spangled Banner” into a q🌠uiet-storm slow jam in 1997ꦇ. All it was missing was some incense.

Luther Vandross performs the National Anthem before Super Bowl XXXI on January 26, 1997 at the Louisiana Superdome. AP

4. Beyoncé (2004)

Befitting the hometown queen that she was, Bey was offered the choice of either singing the national anthem or performing during the halftime show in her native Houston in 2004. She opted for doing a “Star-Spangled Banner” that proved she had serious vocal game, but the stellar moment was overshadowed by Janet Jackson’s infamous halftime show nip slip. Let’s not forget of course that Bey herself went on to slay the halftime show not once but twice (2013 and 2016).

Beyonce sings the National Anthem to kick off Super Bowl XXXVIII. WireImage

3. Lady Gaga (2016)

Five years before she sang the national anthem at the presidential inauguration in 2021, G꧙aga blew away the men in tights with her powerhouse pipes in 2016. And for good measure, she came back to headline the the very next year.

2. Jennifer Hudson (2009)

Beyoncé’s Oscar-winning “Dreamgirls” co-star belted those notes fiercer than any linebacker ever could when she took the field at Super Bowl XLIII in Tampa, Florida, in 2009. The performance was a show of true resilience and strength: Just a few months before, Hudson’s mother, brother and nephew were murdered.

Jennifer Hudson performs the national anthem prior to the start of Super Bowl XLIII between the Arizona Cardinals and the Pittsburgh Steelers on February 1, 2009 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida. FilmMagic

1. Whitney Houston (1991)

With a gospel-influenced arrangement inspired by Marvin Gaye, Houston — rocking that iconic white tracksuit, with matching headband — will always be the MVP of Super Bowl national-anthem singers. No doubt, she♛ was the bomb bursting in air that night.