Entertainment Music 12 Best R&B Break-Up Songs List Includes Songs From Beyonce, John Legend, and Mary J. Blige Share PINTEREST Email Print Music Rhythm & Blues Top Picks Rock Music Pop Music Alternative Music Classical Music Country Music Folk Music Rap & Hip Hop World Music Punk Music Heavy Metal Jazz Latin Music Oldies Learn More By Mark Edward Nero Mark Edward Nero Mark Edward Nero is an expert on the soul, gospel, and rhythm and blues music genres who interviewed dozens of artists and appeared in documentaries. Learn about our Editorial Process Updated on 03/31/18 If your significant other has just broken up with you and you're looking for music that expresses your miserable mood, or if you're the person ready to call it quits in a relationship and are looking for inspiration; or if you simply like music about people being kicked to the curb and having broken hearts, then check out this list of the best R&B break-up songs. 'Ex-Factor,' Lauryn Hill Columbia "Ex-Factor" was the second single from The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill album in 1998 and reached number seven on the Billboard R&B chart in 1999. It was inspired by Hill's troubled relationship with Wyclef Jean. 'Can't Let Go,' Anthony Hamilton Arista From Anthony Hamilton's 2005 Ain't Nobody Worryin' CD, "Can't Let Go" hit an emotional chord with listeners, remaining on the Billboard R&B chart for 68 weeks. It's a painful song about losing someone you deeply love and not being able to move on from the relationship. 'Irreplaceable,' Beyonce Columbia Ne-Yo composed "Irreplaceable for Beyonce; a song that became a female empowerment anthem about ending a relationship with a man who is unfaithful. It is one of Beyonce's most popular singles, certified double platinum, and remaining at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 for ten weeks. 'Everybody Knows,' John Legend Sony Music "Everybody Knows" is one of John Legend's saddest songs. Recorded for his 2008 Evolver CD, it tells the story of a man who can't cope with the fact that his former lover now has a new man in her life. Legend opens the song singing: "It gets harder every day but I can't seem to shake the painI'm trying to find the words to say, please stayIt's written all over my faceI can't function the same when you're not hereI'm calling your name and no one's there" 'Un-Break My Heart,' Toni Braxton LaFace "Un-Break My Heart" is the most successful song of Toni Braxton's career. It won a Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. From her 1996 album Secrets, it remained at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 for eleven weeks. The song was certified platinum and was ranked the number four song of the first 40 years of Billboard magazine (1958-1998). In the song, Braxton begs a former lover to return and "un-break her heart." 'So Sick,' Ne-Yo Def Jam From his 2006 debut CD, In My Own Words, "So Sick" is the biggest hit of Ne-Yo's career. Certified four times platinum, the song reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100. The story about a man who is tired of hearing love songs on the radio because they remind him of breaking up with his girlfriend was inspired by Ne-Yo's own experience. He says, "It's about the first time I fell in love with a girl in a way that I completely screwed it up. So it was a story that I didn't have to think really hard about putting it together. A lot of heartbreak went into that song, so that's why I think a lot of people dug it the way they did - because you can feel it." 'Not Gon' Cry,' Mary J. Blige Arista Records From the 1996 Waiting To Exhale soundtrack produced by Babyface, "Not Gon' Cry" by Mary J. Blige became her second platinum single, and her third number one hit on the Billboard R&B chart. The song also peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100. "Not Gon' Cry" received a Grammy Award nomination for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance and a Soul Train Music Award nomination for Best R&B/Soul Single Female. The song was inspired by a storyline in Waiting to Exhale as Bernadine (portrayed by actress Angela Bassett), is abandoned by her cheating husband. 'I Need You,' Mayer Hawthorne Stones Throw Records On his doo-wop-style song "I Need You," Mayer Hawthorne sorrowfully laments how he let his woman get away, and how much he needs her back in his life. Key lyric: "When I saw you last night, it brought back memories to life/Of how we used to love one another, so sad we didn't go any further." 'How It Was Supposed to Be,' Ryan Leslie feat. Jadakiss Universal In the song "How It Was Supposed to Be" from his 2006 self-titled debut album, Ryan Leslie wishes he could change the events that caused his girlfriend to leave him. Sample lyrics: "Now when I think back to the days that you were mine, oh how I wish I could flip the switch to turn back the hands of time/You were the one that made me real, Now that you're gone tell me, what in the world am I supposed to feel?" 'Used to Be My Girl,' Brian McKnight Warner Bros Records From Brian McKnight's 2006 Ten CD, "Used to Be My Girl" flips the script on a breakup as he taunts the new lover of his former girlfriend. He sings, "Go 'head playboy do your thing, don't be mad when she calls my name." 'How Can You Mend a Broken Heart,' Al Green Hi Records "How Can You Mend A Broken Heart" by The Bee Gees is the ultimate song about recovering from a break-up. Al Green delivered one of his greatest vocal performances on the cover version he recorded for his 1972 Let's Stay Together album. 'Tyrone,' Erykah Badu Universal Erykah Badu provided a song for women to use when kicking their boyfriends out when she recorded "Tyrone" for her 1997 Live album.