Gary
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Post by Gary on Apr 23, 2018 14:38:26 GMT -5
Longest Stay In The Top 10 t10 TITLE ARTIST 33 SHAPE OF YOU SHEERAN, ED 32 HOW DO I LIVE LEANN RIMES 32 CLOSER CHAINSMOKERS FEATURING HALSEY 31 UPTOWN FUNK! MARK RONSON FEATURING BRUNO MARS 30 SMOOTH SANTANA FEATURING ROB THOMAS 29 PARTY ROCK ANTHEM LMFAO FEATURING LAUREN BENNETT & GOOROCK 28 YOU WERE MEANT FOR ME\FOOLISH GAMES JEWEL 28 THAT'S WHAT I LIKE BRUNO MARS 26 TRULY MADLY DEEPLY SAVAGE GARDEN 25 THE TWIST CHUBBY CHECKER 25 UN-BREAK MY HEART TONI BRAXTON 25 APOLOGIZE TIMBALAND FEATURING ONEREPUBLIC 25 COUNTING STARS ONEREPUBLIC 25 ALL ABOUT THAT BASS MEGHAN TRAINOR 25 TRAP QUEEN FETTY WAP 25 DESPACITO LUIS FONSI & DADDY YANKEE FEURING JUSTING BIEBER 25 PERFECT ED SHEERAN
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jebsib
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Posts: 1,927
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Post by jebsib on Apr 23, 2018 14:39:50 GMT -5
I think Gary Trust is in love with Camila. There's hardly a week that hasn't gone by since "Worth It" when he hasn't mentioned this girl's chart placements.
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Gary
Diamond Member
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Posts: 45,890
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Post by Gary on Apr 23, 2018 14:42:51 GMT -5
Nice For What #1 on streaming at 59.3 Gods Plan 44.2
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Soundcl🕤ck
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Posts: 11,063
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Post by Soundcl🕤ck on Apr 23, 2018 15:21:09 GMT -5
Is Foolish Games/You Were Meant For Me one song or two? Foolish Games "A CD single for the song was not issued in the United States. However, a re-released version of the "You Were Meant for Me" single CD had a hidden bonus track of the single version of "Foolish Games". Because of this, instead of debuting and charting on the chart in the traditional way, "Foolish Games" was able to continue the chart life of "You Were Meant for Me". The latter, which was on its 41st week on the chart at number 25, rebounded to number 12 as "Foolish Games", eventually peaking at number 7 eight weeks later. Despite this, Billboard counted the two singles as one, and such, "Foolish Games" was also listed for peaking at number two, despite the song never actually peaking at that position, thanks to the peak of the second single."
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Post by shoocoochoocoo on Apr 23, 2018 15:25:50 GMT -5
What??
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#LisaRinna
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#LiteralLegender
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Posts: 42,892
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Post by #LisaRinna on Apr 23, 2018 15:27:53 GMT -5
Nice For What #1 on streaming at 59.3 Gods Plan 44.2 "Nice For What" -1.1 million "God's Plan" -3.3 million
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Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Apr 23, 2018 15:31:02 GMT -5
Pump at #24, not bad. "ESSKEETIT" is certainly better than Gucci Gang, he expands his vocabulary a bit! Plus, I also find it amusing how he produced the beat himself. Credits to him
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renfield75
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Posts: 1,644
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Post by renfield75 on Apr 23, 2018 15:35:21 GMT -5
I still can't process how literally every single pop powerhouse flopped within like 2 years. Ariana and Rihanna might be the only two to survive the purge out of like 20-30 hitmakers. We're seeing a massive generational sea change right now. It reminds me of the '88-'92 era; we saw the rise of a new generation of HUGE hitmakers sending song after song into the top ten, if not number one: New Kids On The Block, Paula Abdul, Bobby Brown, Roxette, Wilson Phillips, Milli Vanilli, MC Hammer, Bell Biv DeVoe, Rick Astley, Fine Young Cannibals, Taylor Dayne, Jody Watley, Nelson, Karyn White, After 7, Color Me Badd...by 1993, after the success of 'Nevermind' and 'The Chronic', not a single one of them would ever see the top twenty again. Those acts who had been A-List stars just a year earlier were immediately abandoned.
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Gary
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Posts: 45,890
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Post by Gary on Apr 23, 2018 16:02:49 GMT -5
List of artists with #1 hits on country airplay and Pop songs
Backstreet Boys Kelly Clarkson Tim McGraw P!nk Maren Morris Taylor Swift Bebe Rexha
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jebsib
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Posts: 1,927
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Post by jebsib on Apr 23, 2018 16:04:19 GMT -5
Not to mention all the Hair Metal bands, pop rappers and those 80s hangover Veterans like Phil Collins, Paul McCartney and Steve Winwood. It was like a brand new industry.
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Post by Baby Yoda Hot100Fan on Apr 23, 2018 16:30:35 GMT -5
I still can't process how literally every single pop powerhouse flopped within like 2 years. Ariana and Rihanna might be the only two to survive the purge out of like 20-30 hitmakers. We're seeing a massive generational sea change right now. It reminds me of the '88-'92 era; we saw the rise of a new generation of HUGE hitmakers sending song after song into the top ten, if not number one: New Kids On The Block, Paula Abdul, Bobby Brown, Roxette, Wilson Phillips, Milli Vanilli, MC Hammer, Bell Biv DeVoe, Rick Astley, Fine Young Cannibals, Taylor Dayne, Jody Watley, Nelson, Karyn White, After 7, Color Me Badd...by 1993, after the success of 'Nevermind' and 'The Chronic', not a single one of them would ever see the top twenty again. Those acts who had been A-List stars just a year earlier were immediately abandoned. That particular era I remember fondly because it covered my last 3 years of High School and first two years of College. I definitely liked the variety of music that was popular of the time and can easily name all the songs that were hits from those acts. Definitely the two albums mentioned changed the landscape of popular music, as popular rock became more alternative and hip-hop started to become mainstream.
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iHype.
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Joined: October 2014
Posts: 4,714
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Post by iHype. on Apr 23, 2018 17:07:46 GMT -5
Really I think for most of these artists they are honestly just out of touch with how popular music sounds lmao.
Perfect Illusion, Filthy, Walk on Water, Younger Now, etc just wouldn't have been a hit in any recent era of musical trends.
And then there's the artists who are just begging to flop by releasing the same music over and over again at this point. Maroon 5, Sam Smith, P!nk, Meghan Trainor... literally all their singles could've been on their respective albums 5 years ago and wouldn't sound one bit out of place. Come on now, do something new.
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rainie
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the future disappears into memory
Joined: February 2016
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Post by rainie on Apr 23, 2018 17:12:09 GMT -5
I still can't process how literally every single pop powerhouse flopped within like 2 years. Ariana and Rihanna might be the only two to survive the purge out of like 20-30 hitmakers. We're seeing a massive generational sea change right now. It reminds me of the '88-'92 era; we saw the rise of a new generation of HUGE hitmakers sending song after song into the top ten, if not number one: New Kids On The Block, Paula Abdul, Bobby Brown, Roxette, Wilson Phillips, Milli Vanilli, MC Hammer, Bell Biv DeVoe, Rick Astley, Fine Young Cannibals, Taylor Dayne, Jody Watley, Nelson, Karyn White, After 7, Color Me Badd...by 1993, after the success of 'Nevermind' and 'The Chronic', not a single one of them would ever see the top twenty again. Those acts who had been A-List stars just a year earlier were immediately abandoned. The even crazier part of this imo is that barely any of these artists are actually remembered outside of the chart watching community. Like sure, everyone knows who MC Hammer is, and there’s a few other names some people would recognize like Paula Abdul, New Kids on the Block, and Roxette, but aside from Rick Astley, who is really only popular because of memes...that’s about it. Crazy.
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iHype.
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Post by iHype. on Apr 23, 2018 17:13:08 GMT -5
And regardless of the whole shift in popular sounds, I think female popstars were going to face the shut-out on the charts they're facing now.
There was a serious lack of huge female names to debut this decade. The biggest Pop females to debut this decade are Meghan Trainor, Lana Del Rey, and Ariana Grande. And the former two were essentially one-album wonders.
Compare that to 2000s female debuts with Alicia Keys, Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Beyonce, Rihanna, Kelly Clarkson, Avril Lavigne, Miley Cyrus, and so many other huge top names. You can't expect the same female stars from over a decade ago to continue to keep getting hits, once they reached a natural hault, there was going to be a huge female shut-out since there's literally almost zero huge new names to replace them.
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rainie
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the future disappears into memory
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Post by rainie on Apr 23, 2018 17:21:42 GMT -5
And regardless of the whole shift in popular sounds, I think female popstars were going to face the shut-out on the charts they're facing now. There was a serious lack of huge female names to debut this decade. The biggest Pop females to debut this decade are Meghan Trainor, Lana Del Rey, and Ariana Grande. And the former two were essentially one-album wonders. Compare that to 2000s female debuts with Alicia Keys, Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Beyonce, Rihanna, Kelly Clarkson, Avril Lavigne, Miley Cyrus, and so many other huge top names. You can't expect the same female stars from over a decade ago to continue to keep getting hits, once they reached a natural hault, there was going to be a huge female shut-out since there's literally almost zero huge new names to replace them. I mean there’s not NO ONE — don’t forget about Selena Gomez, Demi Lovato, and quite possibly Alessia Cara. But I agree there’s not as many and the ones I listed (besides Ariana I guess) really don’t feel all that huge.
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85la
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Post by 85la on Apr 23, 2018 17:32:36 GMT -5
It's nice to see The Middle in the top 5. I'm not a huge fan of the song, but I like Maren Morris a lot - she's a very talented hot new country singer, and it's nice to see some variety and 2 songs by country artists in the top 5 after such a long time.
I wonder how close GP and NFW are in points? It seems like GP might return to #1 next week, as NFW's streaming and sales leads might narrow and GP should still maintain a comfortably large airplay lead. It doesn't look like it'll happen for Ariana, and honestly I don't think J. Cole poses a real threat either, unless he has record gargantuan streaming numbers, because it doesn't look like he'll get very high track sales, and, from searching on kworb, none of his songs are getting any airplay.
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Soundcl🕤ck
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Joined: August 2017
Posts: 11,063
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Post by Soundcl🕤ck on Apr 23, 2018 17:35:28 GMT -5
And regardless of the whole shift in popular sounds, I think female popstars were going to face the shut-out on the charts they're facing now. There was a serious lack of huge female names to debut this decade. The biggest Pop females to debut this decade are Meghan Trainor, Lana Del Rey, and Ariana Grande. And the former two were essentially one-album wonders. Compare that to 2000s female debuts with Alicia Keys, Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Beyonce, Rihanna, Kelly Clarkson, Avril Lavigne, Miley Cyrus, and so many other huge top names. You can't expect the same female stars from over a decade ago to continue to keep getting hits, once they reached a natural hault, there was going to be a huge female shut-out since there's literally almost zero huge new names to replace them. I mean there’s not NO ONE — don’t forget about Selena Gomez, Demi Lovato, and quite possibly Alessia Cara. But I agree there’s not as many and the ones I listed (besides Ariana I guess) really don’t feel all that huge. Camila?
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iHype.
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Joined: October 2014
Posts: 4,714
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Post by iHype. on Apr 23, 2018 17:47:43 GMT -5
I mean there’s not NO ONE — don’t forget about Selena Gomez, Demi Lovato, and quite possibly Alessia Cara. But I agree there’s not as many and the ones I listed (besides Ariana I guess) really don’t feel all that huge. Camila? Yeah she's definitely successful now, but I think she still has to prove a little more there's demand for her solo. Havana is basically 75% of her solo career success currently. Although I do think she can definitely breakout. She kinda reminds me of how the industry pushed Rihanna during her first 3 albums to release radio hits until she stuck with the audience and became a familiar artist.
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Post by Baby Yoda Hot100Fan on Apr 23, 2018 18:01:17 GMT -5
^I think the biggest thing that women have going against them for singles is that their songs don't get streamed as much as those by men. Just look a the top songs in Spotify and Apple Music.
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felipe
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Joined: January 2009
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Post by felipe on Apr 23, 2018 18:15:27 GMT -5
I still can't process how literally every single pop powerhouse flopped within like 2 years. Ariana and Rihanna might be the only two to survive the purge out of like 20-30 hitmakers. We're seeing a massive generational sea change right now. It reminds me of the '88-'92 era; we saw the rise of a new generation of HUGE hitmakers sending song after song into the top ten, if not number one: New Kids On The Block, Paula Abdul, Bobby Brown, Roxette, Wilson Phillips, Milli Vanilli, MC Hammer, Bell Biv DeVoe, Rick Astley, Fine Young Cannibals, Taylor Dayne, Jody Watley, Nelson, Karyn White, After 7, Color Me Badd...by 1993, after the success of 'Nevermind' and 'The Chronic', not a single one of them would ever see the top twenty again. Those acts who had been A-List stars just a year earlier were immediately abandoned. While I do understand your point, even though a lot of acts did come and go furing that period, Madonna, Janet or Whitney didn't lose their relevance because of these new acts, did they?
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𝓲𝓽'𝓼.𝓰𝓿
Diamond Member
Unsteady Weirdo
𝓪 𝓽𝓸𝓻𝓽𝓾𝓻𝓮𝓭 𝓹𝓸𝓮𝓽
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My Charts
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Post by 𝓲𝓽'𝓼.𝓰𝓿 on Apr 23, 2018 18:19:37 GMT -5
20. Imagine Dragons – "Whatever It Takes" (22-20)
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Gary
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Joined: January 2014
Posts: 45,890
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Post by Gary on Apr 23, 2018 18:28:05 GMT -5
Everyone has a time where they will lose their relevance Although it didn't happen in the early 90s it did eventually happen, as it does for all
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Sherane Lamar
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Banned
Long live XXX
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Post by Sherane Lamar on Apr 23, 2018 18:36:34 GMT -5
We're seeing a massive generational sea change right now. It reminds me of the '88-'92 era; we saw the rise of a new generation of HUGE hitmakers sending song after song into the top ten, if not number one: New Kids On The Block, Paula Abdul, Bobby Brown, Roxette, Wilson Phillips, Milli Vanilli, MC Hammer, Bell Biv DeVoe, Rick Astley, Fine Young Cannibals, Taylor Dayne, Jody Watley, Nelson, Karyn White, After 7, Color Me Badd...by 1993, after the success of 'Nevermind' and 'The Chronic', not a single one of them would ever see the top twenty again. Those acts who had been A-List stars just a year earlier were immediately abandoned. The even crazier part of this imo is that barely any of these artists are actually remembered outside of the chart watching community. Like sure, everyone knows who MC Hammer is, and there’s a few other names some people would recognize like Paula Abdul, New Kids on the Block, and Roxette, but aside from Rick Astley, who is really only popular because of memes...that’s about it. Crazy. You might have missed Bobby Brown on that list. That dude's pretty legendary. Still mentioned and name dropped on all sorts of songs. Milli Vanilli are pretty legendary too. For the wrong reasons of course. Milli Vanilli was mentioned on the new J. Cole album.
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Gary
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Posts: 45,890
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Post by Gary on Apr 23, 2018 18:42:58 GMT -5
And Milli Vanilli's music is awesome. For me, the controversy didn't change the quality of the songs.
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Post by kcdawg13 on Apr 23, 2018 18:44:25 GMT -5
I think Katy Perry and Gaga could make realistic commercial comebacks if they play their cards right
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renaboss
Platinum Member
I don't want to miss a thing.
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Post by renaboss on Apr 23, 2018 18:45:33 GMT -5
So, what in the heck happened to "In My Blood"?
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Gary
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Posts: 45,890
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Post by Gary on Apr 23, 2018 18:50:47 GMT -5
Cardi B - 13 songs charting second week in a row
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Post by kcdawg13 on Apr 23, 2018 18:56:25 GMT -5
Btw I don’t think anybody mentioned it but The Middle is in the middle of the Top 10
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lazer
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Post by lazer on Apr 23, 2018 19:11:45 GMT -5
I think Katy Perry and Gaga could make realistic commercial comebacks if they play their cards right What would it take for them to take back the spotlight?
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Post by kcdawg13 on Apr 23, 2018 19:14:50 GMT -5
^ Release good music
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