Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 5, 2007 19:35:15 GMT -5
SOS only made it to #17 two weeks ago
|
|
|
Post by RihannaFAN²=ColdUmbrella! on Sept 5, 2007 19:44:47 GMT -5
im talkin bout Rihanna not the jonas brothers
|
|
jenglisbe
Diamond Member
Joined: January 2005
Posts: 35,200
|
Post by jenglisbe on Sept 5, 2007 21:35:12 GMT -5
I love that superbu counted "What's It Gonna Be?" for Janet but didn't count "IKWYW" for Mariah. Some people are so transparent. LMAO!
|
|
superbu
Charting
Joined: April 2004
Posts: 375
|
Post by superbu on Sept 5, 2007 21:48:49 GMT -5
I love that superbu counted "What's It Gonna Be?" for Janet but didn't count "IKWYW" for Mariah. Some people are so transparent. LMAO! Well, I'll have to listen to "I Know What You Want" again, I guess. When I was compiling a Mariah "hits" comp for my media player, I left it off, thinking, "Jeez, she barely sings on that song." Maybe I'm mistaken. And I did think about leaving "What's It Gonna Be" off as well. (Yes, I have a huge agenda, jensglibe... I'm out to get Mariah... really, I am.)
|
|
superbu
Charting
Joined: April 2004
Posts: 375
|
Post by superbu on Sept 5, 2007 21:59:29 GMT -5
Thanks! But, I just want to count the rock era. Or the Hot 100 era... Oh... you had counted the pre-Hot 100 era with the 36 Elvis singles... that's why I expanded it back to the debut of the sales chart in 1940. :)
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 5, 2007 22:06:38 GMT -5
Thanks! But, I just want to count the rock era. Or the Hot 100 era... Oh... you had counted the pre-Hot 100 era with the 36 Elvis singles... that's why I expanded it back to the debut of the sales chart in 1940. :) The sales chart might have debuted in 1940, but it didn't enter the rock and roll era until "Rock Around The Clock" went to #1 in July 1955. That's where Fred Bronson begins his "Billboard Book of Number #1 Hits," and I think that's an overall good place to start any Billboard list of trivia for our purposes. Either that, or the beginning of the Hot 100 itself on Aug 4, 1958. But then, as becomes glaringly obvious, Elvis' doesn't get credit for any of his pre-Hot 100 achievements, some of which were extraordinary.
|
|
WotUNeed
2x Platinum Member
Deacon Blues
Joined: April 2010
Posts: 2,935
|
Post by WotUNeed on Sept 5, 2007 22:11:20 GMT -5
I'm more inclined to say that studying the Hot 100 from its inception is the way to go. There are a lot of artists besides Elvis who are slighted that way, but it eliminates all the subjective calls constantly being made by whoever is creating whatever statistical analysis.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2007 0:11:44 GMT -5
Janet Jackson probably shouldn't have "Diamonds" in her total. Or, rather, I should say, it's open to interpretation if she should, but Billboard would not put it in there. Diamonds is not part of the total
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2007 0:13:52 GMT -5
I have this but it needs expanding and updating: ARTISTS WITH THE MOST TOP 10 SINGLES 1. Elvis Presley (36 or 38 - depending on how you count the double a side singles) 2. Madonna (36) 3. The Beatles (34) 4. Stevie Wonder (28) 4. Michael Jackson (28) 6. Janet Jackson (27) 6. Elton John (27) 8. Mariah Carey (25) 9. Whitney Houston (23) 9. The Rolling Stones (23) 10. Paul McCartney (22) 11. George Michael (21) 12. Chicago (20) 12. The Supremes (20) I have the same totals, I can expand it if you like
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Sept 6, 2007 8:54:22 GMT -5
Yes, please.
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Sept 6, 2007 9:28:12 GMT -5
ARTISTS WITH THE MOST TOP 10 SINGLES IN THE ROCK ERA
1. Elvis Presley (36) 1. Madonna (36) 2. The Beatles (34)
3. Stevie Wonder (28) 3. Michael Jackson (28) 4. Janet Jackson (27) 4. Elton John (27) 5. Mariah Carey (25) 6. Whitney Houston (23) 6. The Rolling Stones (23) 7. Paul McCartney (22) 7. George Michael (21) 8. Chicago (20) 8. The Supremes (20)
9. Prince (19) 9. Ricky Nelson (19) 10. Marvin Gaye (18) 10. Pat Boone (18) 10. Cher (18) 10. Diana Ross (18) 11. Bee Gees (17) 11. Aretha Franklin (17) 11. Hall & Oates (17) 12. The Temptations (16) 12. Rod Stewart (16) 12. Connie Francis (16) 13. P Diddy (15) 13. The Beach Boys (15) 13. The Four Seasons (15) 13. Olivia Newton-John (15) 13. The Everly Brothers (15)
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Sept 6, 2007 9:35:47 GMT -5
2m, I'm curious if Puffy Daddy or R Kelly have 15 or more Top 10 hits.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2007 9:40:10 GMT -5
R Kelly 13 Diddy 15
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2007 9:43:03 GMT -5
CAN'T NOBODY HOLD ME DOWN I'LL BE MISSING YOU MO MONEY MO PROBLEMS BEEN AROUND THE WORLD/IT'S ALL ABOUT THE BENJAMIN'S COME WITH ME LOOKIN' AT ME ALL NIGHT LONG SATISFY YOU I NEED A GIRL(PART ONE) I NEED A GIRL(PART TWO) BUMP, BUMP, BUMP SHAKE YA TAILFEATHER I DON'T WANNA KNOW COME TO ME LAST NIGHT
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Sept 6, 2007 10:03:07 GMT -5
Thanks, 2m.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2007 14:13:44 GMT -5
'MORE' IS THE MOST: It was a momentous event in the history of the Hot Country Songs chart last week when Kenny Chesney tied the record for the highest debut (since the chart expanded to 50 positions in January 1964) with the No. 16 opening of "Don't Blink." But just one week later, that entry has been eclipsed by the first song to ever debut on this chart at No. 1: Garth Brooks goes into the history books with his record-breaking "More Than a Memory" (Pearl).
It's almost impossible to enter an airplay-based chart in pole position because of the nature of radio. Airplay builds much more gradually than sales. The just-over-a-dozen songs that have managed to debut at No. 1 on The Billboard Hot 100 have done so by garnering immediate massive sales. On Hot Country Songs, which is compiled solely from airplay data, even the most-anticipated songs (like Chesney's "Don't Blink" and Carrie Underwood's "So Small") debut in the top 20, not in the top 15. There hasn't even been a debut in the top 10 until now, let alone a song starting its chart life at the summit.
But Brooks defied the odds and received an enormous amount of spins for "Memory" in its first week at radio. It is his 19th No. 1 on this chart, and his first since "To Make You Feel My Love" spent a week on top in August 1998. 'Memory" is Brooks' 36th top 10 hit, and his first since "Good Ride Cowboy" went to No. 3 in December 2005.
"Memory" is the 79th chart entry for Brooks. His chart career began with "Much Too Young (To Feel This Damn Old)," which entered the tally the week of March 25, 1989, giving him a chart span of 18 years, five months and three weeks.
|
|
WotUNeed
2x Platinum Member
Deacon Blues
Joined: April 2010
Posts: 2,935
|
Post by WotUNeed on Sept 6, 2007 15:41:25 GMT -5
Trivia question to which I don't know the answer, but one of you might:
There have been plenty of Hot 100 chart toppers which topped both the airplay and sales charts, topped only one of those two, or never topped either component. Have there been any songs to top both component charts (obviously not in the same week) but not actually top the Hot 100?
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2007 16:13:18 GMT -5
I don't know, I have a complete listing of airplay #1's but not sales #1's. The sales chart was one that I lost interest in, until downloads came into play, simply because the sales chart was not relevant. If you can be #1 on sales and be nowehere on the Hot 100, it becomes a chart that I would choose not to follow.
So I couldn't completely answer the question.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2007 16:15:23 GMT -5
The 20 songs that have lasted longer than 51 weeks are: 69 weeks: "How Do I Live," LeAnn Rimes (1997) 65 weeks: "You Were Meant for Me" / "Foolish Games," Jewel (1997) 62 weeks: "You and Me," Lifehouse (2005) 60 weeks: "Macarena" (Bayside Boys Mix), Los Del Rio (1996) 58 weeks: "Smooth," Santana featuring Rob Thomas (1999) 58 weeks: "How to Save a Life," The Fray (2006) 56 weeks: "I Don't Want to Wait," Paula Cole (1998) 56 weeks: "The Way You Love Me," Faith Hill (2001) 55 weeks; "Missing," Everything But the Girl (1996) 55 weeks: "Barely Breathing," Duncan Sheik (1997) 54 weeks: "December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)," Four Seasons (1976, 1994) 54 weeks: "Unwell," Matchbox Twenty (2003) 54 weeks: "Hanging by a Moment," Lifehouse (2001) 54 weeks: "Higher," Creed (2000) 53 weeks: "Too Close," Next (1998) 53 weeks: "Breathe," Faith Hill (2000) 53 weeks: "Kryptonite," 3 Doors Down (2000) 53 weeks: "Drops of Jupiter (Tell Me)," Train (2001) 52 weeks: "Truly Madly Deeply," Savage Garden (1998) 52 weeks: "How's It Going to Be," Third Eye Blind (1998) 52 weeks: "Before He Cheats", Carrie Underwood (2007) 69 weeks: "How Do I Live," LeAnn Rimes (1997) 65 weeks: "You Were Meant for Me" / "Foolish Games," Jewel (1997) 62 weeks: "You and Me," Lifehouse (2005) 60 weeks: "Macarena" (Bayside Boys Mix), Los Del Rio (1996) 58 weeks: "Smooth," Santana featuring Rob Thomas (1999) 58 weeks: "How to Save a Life," The Fray (2006) 56 weeks: "I Don't Want to Wait," Paula Cole (1998) 56 weeks: "The Way You Love Me," Faith Hill (2001) 55 weeks; "Missing," Everything But the Girl (1996) 55 weeks: "Barely Breathing," Duncan Sheik (1997) 54 weeks: "December, 1963 (Oh, What a Night)," Four Seasons (1976, 1994) 54 weeks: "Unwell," Matchbox Twenty (2003) 54 weeks: "Hanging by a Moment," Lifehouse (2001) 54 weeks: "Higher," Creed (2000) 53 weeks: "Too Close," Next (1998) 53 weeks: "Breathe," Faith Hill (2000) 53 weeks: "Kryptonite," 3 Doors Down (2000) 53 weeks: "Drops of Jupiter (Tell Me)," Train (2001) 53 weeks: "Before He Cheats", Carrie Underwood (2007)
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 6, 2007 16:16:18 GMT -5
6 albums since 1963, have been in the top 10 after week 99.
The top 6.
148 SOUND OF MUSIC SOUNDTRACK 121 WEST SIDE STORY SOUNDTRACK 111 COME ON OVER SHANIA TWAIN 102 PETER, PAUL & MARY PETER, PAUL & MARY 100 RAMBLIN' ROSE NAT "KING" COLE 100 ALL THE RIGHT REASONS NICKELBACK
|
|
Acid Eyes
Diamond Member
Joined: June 2007
Posts: 10,892
|
Post by Acid Eyes on Sept 6, 2007 16:17:48 GMT -5
53 weeks: "Too Close," Next (1998) That song seems so out of place on this list.
|
|
Acid Eyes
Diamond Member
Joined: June 2007
Posts: 10,892
|
Post by Acid Eyes on Sept 6, 2007 16:26:23 GMT -5
Most Weeks in Top 10 - 2007 Billboard Year
Girlfriend 18 Buy U a Drank (Shawty Snappin') 17 Big Girls Don't Cry (Personal)* 15 The Sweet Escape 15 Irreplaceable 14 Say It Right 14 Umbrella 14 Don't Matter 13 Glamorous 13 Hey There Delilah* 13 I Wanna Love You 13 Makes Me Wonder 12 Cupid's Chokehold 11 Fergalicious 11 Party Like a Rockstar 11 How to Save a Life 10 It's Not Over 10 Smack That 10 The Way I Are* 10 We Fly High 10
*Currently top 10
|
|
|
Post by busyboy on Sept 6, 2007 16:32:02 GMT -5
53 weeks: "Too Close," Next (1998) That song seems so out of place on this list. Really? I thought the one songs that's out of place has spent 60 weeks on the chart... ;)
|
|
jenglisbe
Diamond Member
Joined: January 2005
Posts: 35,200
|
Post by jenglisbe on Sept 7, 2007 9:31:28 GMT -5
Didn't "Macarena" have two chart runs? And the "YWMFM"/"FG" total is a bit misleading because it essentially combines the weeks from both songs, or no?
|
|
Acid Eyes
Diamond Member
Joined: June 2007
Posts: 10,892
|
Post by Acid Eyes on Sept 7, 2007 9:58:30 GMT -5
53 weeks: "Too Close," Next (1998) That song seems so out of place on this list. Really? I thought the one songs that's out of place has spent 60 weeks on the chart... ;) LOL, I was thinking of that one, too, but I remember how huge that was. And the two chart runs explains its odd placement.
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Sept 7, 2007 10:04:41 GMT -5
I added Cher and Diana Ross who both have 18 Top 10 hits.
I was going by the Joel Whitburn books in my original list. He did not lump Cher's Top 10s with Sonny & Cher's Top 10s. Same with Diana Ross and Diana Ross and The Supremes...
I have the Billboard issue that celebrated the 40th anniversary of the Hot 100 in August 1998. I'll post their Artist with the Most Top 10 lists.
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Sept 7, 2007 10:08:16 GMT -5
ARTISTS WITH THE MOST TOP 10 SINGLES ON THE HOT 100
1. Madonna (36) 2. The Beatles (34) 3. Stevie Wonder (28) 3. Michael Jackson (28) 5. Janet Jackson (27) 5. Elton John (27) 7. Mariah Carey (25) 7. Elvis Presley (25) 9. Whitney Houston (23) 10. The Rolling Stones (23)
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Sept 7, 2007 10:13:15 GMT -5
FEMALE ARTISTS WITH THE MOST TOP 10 SINGLES ON THE HOT 100
1. Madonna (36) 2. Janet Jackson (27) 3. Mariah Carey (25) 4. Whitney Houston (23) 5. Cher (18) 5. Diana Ross (18) 7. Aretha Franklin (17) 8. Connie Francis (15) 8. Olivia Newton-John (15) 10. Donna Summer (14)
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Sept 7, 2007 16:17:33 GMT -5
Chart Beat Chat at Billboard.com:
WILL MADONNA MOVE UP?
Dear Fred,
I'm a big fan of Dionne Warwick. In a marketing campaign for her concert, she was billed as the female artist with the second highest number of Hot 100 hits. I've always thought that title belongs to Madonna. I did a little research and was shocked to find out that it was true and Madonna wasn't even in third place. Connie Francis is tied with Dionne.
Can you kindly give me a rundown of the top female artists with the most Hot 100 hits? As a bigger fan of Madonna, I'm hoping with the release of her new album, she will be No. 2.
Kirby Go Vancouver, Canada
Dear Kirby,
The solo female artist with the most Hot 100 hits is Aretha Franklin, who has scored 76 chart entries between 1961 and 1998. By some strange coincidence, her 76th song to chart, "Here We Go Again," peaked at No. 76.
You're right about Dionne Warwick and Connie Francis being tied for second place, with 56 chart entries each. Connie collected her 56 songs between 1957 and 1969. Dionne ran up her total of 56 chart entries between 1962 and 1998.
Since Dionne and Connie are tied for second place, we skip down to fourth place, where Madonna has 52 chart entries (Brenda Lee appears to have 52 chart entries, but only if you count her Christmas perennial "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" three times. Since it was a re-entry the second and third time around, Lee's official total is 50).
You've probably already done the math -- Madonna needs five more Hot 100 songs to land in second place, a feat certainly within her reach. We'll have to wait and see if she can do it with one album or two.
|
|
jenglisbe
Diamond Member
Joined: January 2005
Posts: 35,200
|
Post by jenglisbe on Sept 7, 2007 20:29:12 GMT -5
I added Cher and Diana Ross who both have 18 Top 10 hits. I was going by the Joel Whitburn books in my original list. He did not lump Cher's Top 10s with Sonny & Cher's Top 10s. Same with Diana Ross and Diana Ross and The Supremes... I have the Billboard issue that celebrated the 40th anniversary of the Hot 100 in August 1998. I'll post their Artist with the Most Top 10 lists. That's an interesting ruling, especially with him. He doesn't count The Supremes stuff for Diana, but he counts Wham's hits for George Michael. Weird.
|
|