Classic Western songs to listen to when you want to cry: the world’s tearjerker songs and popular tracks for shedding tears
Have you ever had times when you’re carrying sadness and just want to cry your heart out? In those moments, rather than forcing yourself to cheer up, letting your emotions flow out with your tears can sometimes ease your heart.
In this article, we’re sharing plenty of Western songs that will stay by your side when you feel like crying.
Tender, beautiful melodies and voices that resonate will gently hold your feelings.
When you want to let your emotions go, or quietly let the tears fall, give these a listen.
- Tear-jerking Western songs: The world's recommended weep-inducing tracks
- [Bereavement Song] To you whom I can no longer meet... Tear-jerking songs about death
- [For when you want to cry or feel sad] Tear-jerking masterpieces that make you cry when you listen
- [Masterpiece] Tear-jerking Western songs. The tears won’t stop… truly sad songs [2026]
- [Tearjerker] From ballads that will make you sob to timeless classics—moving songs that touch the heart
- Classic Western songs with tear-jerking lyrics. Heartfelt message songs from around the world.
- [Today's Tearjerker Song] Tear ducts destroyed! Timeless and trending tracks that will make you cry no matter what
- Songs That Make You Cry: Heart-Wrenching Western Music—from Timeless Classics to the Newest Hits
- [Yami Song] Fight darkness with darkness!? Deep tracks that stay close to your pain
- Tear-jerking songs that will loosen your tear ducts, perfect for Instagram Stories
- Beautiful Melodies: A Collection of Masterpieces and Moving Piano Songs
- Adele’s Tearjerkers: Best Crying Songs and Popular Hits Ranking [2026]
- Western songs used in commercials — tear-jerking classics and popular tracks
Classic Western songs to listen to when you want to cry: The world’s tearjerker songs and popular tearful tracks (41–50)
Drugs don’t workThe Verve

This song is by The Verve, a Britpop band from the UK in the 1990s.
It is included on the album Urban Hymns.
The album is well known for also featuring the massive hit Bitter Sweet Symphony.
SorryTyler Royale

This is a song by Tyler Royale, a singer-songwriter from Atlanta who has been immersed in music since the age of nine.
Released in June 2020, the track is an R&B number that expresses apology and regret toward a former lover.
Even while knowing she can no longer convey her feelings, the painful emotions she still holds for that person are rendered through her deep, soulful vocals, tightening the listener’s chest.
As you listen to the wistful melody, you can almost see the protagonist regretting her mistakes.
Hearing this poignant track might inspire you to be honest with your feelings and express them to someone you cherish, so you won’t have any regrets again.
Wish you were herePink Floyd

The British band Pink Floyd.
Their appeal lies in their highly original songs that incorporate not only rock but also blues and folk.
Having begun their rise in the late 1960s, they reached No.
1 in the United States with the album released in 1975 that shares the title of this song.
Just Want You to KnowBackstreet Boys

This song by the American group Backstreet Boys pours unspoken feelings for a former lover into a powerful sound.
Released in July 2005, it’s included on the acclaimed album “Never Gone” and reached the top 10 on the charts in the UK and Spain.
Stepping beyond their traditional pop image, the track shifts to a rock-tinged sound marked by memorable guitar riffs, revealing a new side of the group.
It portrays a bittersweet yet straightforward male perspective, wishing to tell someone they’ll never meet again, “There’s just this one thing I want you to know.” If you have lingering feelings about a past relationship, listening to this song might help you face your emotions.
Missing YouBackstreet Boys

The Backstreet Boys are a U.S.-born vocal group that dominated the music scene in the ’90s, and they’re also known for their 1999 album Millennium, which sold over 24 million copies worldwide.
This song is a hidden gem of a ballad quietly included on their classic 1997 release Backstreet’s Back, during the height of their fame.
The earnest longing to see a cherished person who has gone away is sung straight from the heart over a wistful melody.
The structure, with members taking turns as lead vocalists, and the beautiful harmonies woven by all five members are truly moving—simply mesmerizing.
It’s the kind of song that will gently comfort your heart when you want to bask in a bit of sentimentality at night or when an old love suddenly comes to mind.


