The Hero Song

Brazil by Declan McKenna

937,856,659 streams

ONE HIT WONDER
Declan McKenna

"The Declan McKenna song 'Brazil' is 7x more famous than their next biggest song, making them a ONE HIT WONDER. See the stats on JustOneHit.com."

Ratio

7.2x

Hit Streams

937.9M

Verdict

Certified One Hit Wonder

One Hit Wonder Meter

LEGEND
One Hit Wonder

Declan McKenna · 7.2x ratio

Streams Comparison

Brazil 937,856,659
Why Do You Feel So Down 130,242,066
Make Me Your Queen 67,983,705
British Bombs 56,640,414
The Key to Life on Earth 37,946,991
Slipping Through My Fingers 35,788,753
Isombard 34,792,136
Paracetamol 33,904,664
The Kids Don't Wanna Come Home - Single Version 24,503,184
Beautiful Faces 23,154,073

Other Songs

Tracks 2–10 by streams

2. Why Do You Feel So Down 130,242,066
3. Make Me Your Queen 67,983,705
4. British Bombs 56,640,414
5. The Key to Life on Earth 37,946,991
6. Slipping Through My Fingers 35,788,753
7. Isombard 34,792,136
8. Paracetamol 33,904,664
9. The Kids Don't Wanna Come Home - Single Version 24,503,184
10. Beautiful Faces 23,154,073

The Story

Declan McKenna was still a teenager when he wrote the song that defined him. "Brazil", which he first put on YouTube in 2014 and released properly the following year, is a protest track aimed at FIFA for awarding the 2014 World Cup to Brazil while so many of the country's people lived in poverty. It was an unusually sharp piece of writing for someone barely into his mid-teens, and it helped him win the Glastonbury Emerging Talent Competition in 2015.

The acclaim launched a genuine career. McKenna has released well-reviewed albums and built a devoted following as one of British indie's brighter songwriters. But none of his other songs has come close to "Brazil" on streaming.

"Brazil" sits near 938 million plays, while his next most-streamed track, "Why Do You Feel So Down", trails at around 130 million. That puts the ratio near 7.2, past our 5.0 line, so by our measure Declan McKenna is a certified one-hit wonder.

It is one of those cases where the label sits awkwardly next to the artist. McKenna is young, prolific, and still building, and a second breakout could easily close the gap. For now, though, an angry, clever song written in his mid-teens remains the one the world keeps returning to.

Sources

By The JustOneHit Editorial Team Last updated 22 May 2026