The Super Bowl halftime show gets all the love, but it's the national anthem that really sets the tone for the game. It's a wonderful little appetizer that sets the mood for kickoff, and the big game wouldn't be the same without it. So in honor of this long-underrated tradition, we went back 50 years and ranked each and every Super Bowl anthem performance.
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#51: Super Bowl XXIX - Kathie Lee Gifford
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If you just listened to this anthem performance, you'd likely think Kathie Lee did a perfectly good job performing the anthem. And you wouldn't be wrong. That said, if you watch the video, you'll notice that about halfway through the performance, Kathie Lee starts staring into the camera with bugged-out eyes and is lit with a red glow that makes her look like a demon. This gave me nightmares, and I'm not OK with it.
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#50: Super Bowl V - Tommy Loy
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#49: Super Bowl XV - Helen O'Connell
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#48: Super Bowl XXII - Herb Alpert
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#46 AND #45: TIE: Super Bowl II AND Super Bowl IX - Grambling State University Marching Band
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#44: Super Bowl XVII - Leslie Easterbrook
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#43: Super Bowl XVIII - Barry Manilow
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#42: Super Bowl XXIV - Aaron Neville
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#41: Super Bowl III - Lloyd Geisler
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#40: Super Bowl VII - Little Angels of Chicago's Holy Angels Church
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#39: Super Bowl IV - Doc Severinsen
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#38: Super Bowl XII - Phyllis Kelly
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For Super Bowl XII, the NFL tried to go for some local talent, enlisting University of Louisiana at Monroe's (then known as Northeast Louisiana University) Phyllis Kelly to perform it. She lacked the star power of previous performers, and her performance ended up being sadly forgettable.
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#37: Super Bowl XI - Vikki Carr... Kind Of
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It really could have been anybody singing the anthem at Super Bowl XXIII. If you weren't watching, you wouldn't know it was Billy Joel. The performance was muted, and though it didn't need to be an epic six-minute piano rock ballad, it would have been nice to see Joel put at least some of his personality into the performance like he did when he performed at Super Bowl XLI.
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#35: Super Bowl XLIX - Idina Menzel
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#34: Super Bowl VIII - Charley Pride
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This one is hard to judge, because all the surviving recordings of the anthem seem to have been destroyed and then replaced with versions played through a drive-thru speaker. From what I can gather, though, Charley Pride does a perfectly serviceable job — no forgotten words and no slip-ups.
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#33: Super Bowl XIII - The Colgate Thirteen
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#32: Super Bowl XXI - Neil Diamond
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#31: Super Bowl XXVI - Harry Connick Jr.
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#30: Super Bowl XLI - Billy Joel
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#28: Super Bowl LI - Luke Bryan
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A perfectly middle-of-the-road anthem performance by Luke Bryan here, with minor (and typically unnecessary) vocal embellishments that don't quite detract from the delivery, but then again, don't really add anything. Probably more indicative of the era than anything else, but Bryan's performance here is more than adequate.
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#27: Super Bowl XIX - San Francisco Choirs
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#26: Super Bowl XIV - Cheryl Ladd
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#25: Super Bowl I - The Pride of Arizona Marching Band, Michigan Marching Band and UCLA Choir
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#21: Super Bowl VI - U.S. Air Force Academy Chorale
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#20: Super Bowl XXXII - Jewel
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Jewel's performance here is solid, if a bit awkward. Vocally, she does a very good job, but as she begins, she rocks back and forth with her hands behind her back. She seemed very uncomfortable, until she decides, about five seconds in, to put her hand over her heart. It doesn't take away from the vocal performance, but it's just… awkward.
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#18: Super Bowl XXXI - Luther Vandross
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#17: Super Bowl XXXVII - Dixie Chicks
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#16: Super Bowl X - Tom Sullivan
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#14: Super Bowl XXXIII - Cher
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#13: Super Bowl XL - Dr. John, Aaron Neville and Aretha Franklin
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#12: Super Bowl XXXIX - U.S. Service Academies and the U.S. Army Herald Trumpets
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#10: Super Bowl XXXVIII - Beyoncé Knowles
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#9: Super Bowl XX - Wynton Marsalis
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#8: Super Bowl XVI - Diana Ross
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#6: Super Bowl 50 - Lady Gaga
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Some will say that Natalie Cole's gospel-tinged, over-the-top medley of patriotic songs performed prior to Super Bowl XXVIII was too much. They're wrong. Natalie Cole absolutely killed it.
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#2: Super Bowl XLVIII - Renée Fleming
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