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Post by Deleted on May 8, 2015 10:53:07 GMT -5
I am wondering something, for a song that Reaches Number 1 on the charts, how long do they usually last on the charts? I think it is around 44 weeks, or most Number 1 songs drop at around 44 weeks, there any stats or anything about this? im interested in knowing this one, thanks
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Gary
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Post by Gary on May 8, 2015 10:58:15 GMT -5
Through a certain time period or "all time"? Through the early 90s, no songs - period, spent more than 43 weeks charting.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on May 8, 2015 13:19:02 GMT -5
Probably since 2003
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Post by Deleted on May 8, 2015 15:47:17 GMT -5
I am wondering something, for a song that Reaches Number 1 on the charts, how long do they usually last on the charts? I think it is around 44 weeks, or most Number 1 songs drop at around 44 weeks, there any stats or anything about this? im interested in knowing this one, thanks List of #1 songs since 2003 that spent 45+ weeks on the chart: "Yeah!" - Usher ft. Lil' Jon & Ludacris "Big Girls Don't Cry" - Fergie "Viva La Vida" - Coldplay "Just Dance" - Lady GaGa ft. Colby O'Donis & Akon"I Gotta Feeling" - Black Eyed Peas "Just The Way You Are" - Bruno Mars "Rolling In The Deep" - Adele "Give Me Everything" - Pitbull ft. Ne-Yo, Nayer & Afrojack "Party Rock Anthem" - LMFAO ft. Lauren Bennett & GoonRock (look at that, three consecutive #1's!) "Moves Like Jagger" - Maroon 5 ft. Christina Aguilera (four within less a few months...) "Somebody That I Used To Know" - Gotye & Kimbra "Call Me Maybe" - Carly Rae Jepsen (another back-to-back) "Thrift Shop" - Macklemore & Ryan Lewis ft. Wanz "Blurred Lines" - Robin Thicke ft. T.I. & Pharrell "Dark Horse" - Katy Perry ft. Juicy H "Happy" - Pharrell Williams" "All Of Me" - John Legend (three in a row yet again...) The following three might make the list this year: "All About That Bass" - Meghan Trainor "Shake It Off" - Taylor Swift "Uptown Funk!" - Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars interesting how "Yeah!" was the only one to do it before the digital era... honorable mention to "Royals" by Lorde which spent 44 weeks on the chart. A few songs including "Poker Face" by Lady GaGa, "We Found Love" by Rihanna ft. Calvin Harris, "Sexy And I Know It" by LMFAO, "We Are Young" by fun. ft. Janelle Monae, "One More Night" by Maroon 5 and "Rude" by Magic! spent 40+ weeks on the chart. I noticed there were also a few like "Gold Digger", "No One", "Fancy" and "Timber" that spent 39 weeks on.
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WolfSpear
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Post by WolfSpear on May 11, 2015 11:10:09 GMT -5
(In reference to "Dionne & Friends")
One of the earliest "featured artist" examples...
Whether or not you credit that to Elton is up to you. I'm sure he'd be happy to have a top 10 for 1986, considering his most recent album had tanked.
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onebuffalo
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Post by onebuffalo on May 11, 2015 13:46:17 GMT -5
(In reference to "Dionne & Friends") One of the earliest "featured artist" examples... Whether or not you credit that to Elton is up to you. I'm sure he'd be happy to have a top 10 for 1986, considering his most recent album had tanked. I would. Elton John does sing part of the song by himself. I would definitely count that as one of his #1 hits.
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Gary
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Post by Gary on May 11, 2015 13:54:17 GMT -5
I always kind of thought it was where each of the "friends" has a #1 hit.
The record credits all 4, Due to print space Billboard may be abbreviating but that does not mean Elton John, Stevie Wonder & Gladys Knight are uncredited.
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onebuffalo
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Post by onebuffalo on May 14, 2015 11:33:06 GMT -5
This is how I would rank Elton John's hits. First number is weeks at #1 or #2 followed by weeks in the top 40. Ready?
1. Candle In The Wind 1997-1997-14-28 2. That's What Friends Are For-with Dionne Warwick, Gladys Knight, and Stevie Wonder-1986-4-17 3. Don't Go Breaking My Heart-with Kiki Dee-1976-4-15 4. Crocodile Rock-1973-3-14 5. Island Girl-1975-3-12 6. Philadelphia Freedom-1975-2-17 7. Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds-1975-2-10 8. Bennie And The Jets-1974-1-16 9. Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me-with George Michael-1992-1-16 10. Goodbye Yellow Brick Road-1973-3-14 (#2) 11. Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me-1974-2-09 (#2) 12. I Don't Wanna Go On With You Like That-1988-1-13 (#2) 13. Daniel-1973-1-12 (#2)
What do you think?
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Daniel Collins
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Post by Daniel Collins on May 27, 2015 10:44:51 GMT -5
Songs that spent at least 1 week on each of the position in the top 10.
Savage Garden - Truly Madly Deeply
Chart run: 26-17-12- 9-7-6-*1*-1-2-4-4-3-5-5-5-5-6-7-6-5-8-7-5-7-7-8-9-8-10-12-14-14-14-18-19-19-19-24-22-23-22-22-21-25-26-27-29-27-25-25-25-27
T-Pain (ft. Yung Joc) - Buy U A Drank (Shawty Snappin')
Chart run: 84-59-46-32-24-14- 10-7-5-4-3-*1*-2-4-3-3-4-5-5-5-6-9-8-11-12-15-19-22-27-35-37-38-49-43-43
Jay Sean (ft. Lil Wayne) - Down
72-78-63-32-6-6-7-3-2-2-2-3-2-*1*-2-1-3-4-5-7-10-9-10-10-8-7-7-10-16-23-24-23-27-31-30-32-32-39-43-48
Is it too much to ask for a song to have a run similar to these 3 but in ascending order? "Uptown Funk!" please do it .
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onebuffalo
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Post by onebuffalo on Jun 25, 2015 13:13:24 GMT -5
Just going through a few websites and found out that today is the sixth anniversary of Michael Jackson's death. Let us rank his top two hits on the Hot 100. First number is weeks at #1 or #2 followed by weeks in the top 40. Ready?
1. Billie Jean-1983-7-17 2. Black Or White-1991-7-15 3. Say Say Say-with Paul McCartney-1983-6-18 4. Rock With You-1980-4-19 5. Beat It-1983-3-18 6. Man In The Mirror-1988-2-13 7. Bad-1987-2-11 8. You Are Not Alone-1995-1-14 9. The Way You Make Me Feel-1988-1-13 10. Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough-1979-1-12 11. I Just Can't Stop Loving You-1987-1-11 12. Dirty Diana-1988-1-11 13. Ben-1972-1-11 14. The Girl Is Mine-with Paul McCartney-1983-3-14 (#2) 15. Rockin' Robin-1972-2-11 (#2)
What do you think?
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HolidayGuy
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Post by HolidayGuy on Jun 25, 2015 13:18:46 GMT -5
^Did you see Billboard's ranking of MJ's hits, based on chart performance?
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onebuffalo
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Post by onebuffalo on Jun 25, 2015 13:24:15 GMT -5
^Did you see Billboard's ranking of MJ's hits, based on chart performance? Yes I did when they first came out. Say Say Say got the nod for the biggest Michael Jackson hit.
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HolidayGuy
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Post by HolidayGuy on Jun 25, 2015 13:48:35 GMT -5
^Yes- probably not the one we may think of as his biggest hit, but, for the chart climate at the time, huge.
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onebuffalo
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Post by onebuffalo on Jun 25, 2015 14:27:26 GMT -5
^Yes- probably not the one we may think of as his biggest hit, but, for the chart climate at the time, huge. It kept Say It Isn't So by Hall & Oates at #2!
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Post by areyoureadytojump on Jun 25, 2015 15:11:43 GMT -5
www.billboard.com/biz/articles/6612594/madonna-returns-to-hot-100-with-b-im-madonnaMadonna Returns to Hot 100 With 'B**** I'm Madonna'By Gary Trust | June 25, 2015 Her Madgesty is back on the Billboard Hot 100. Madonna's playfully self-celebratory "B**** I'm Madonna," featuring Nicki Minaj, debuts on the Hot 100 (dated July 4) at No. 84, powered most heavily by its 1,454 percent gain to 2.6 million U.S. streams in the week ending June 21, according to Nielsen Music. The song's official video premiered June 17 (first exclusively on Tidal for 24 hours) and includes cameos by Beyonce, Miley Cyrus, Katy Perry, Chris Rock, Kanye West and other stars. The third single from Madonna's album Rebel Heart becomes the set's first Hot 100 hit, preventing the LP from becoming her first studio album not to generate a Hot 100 entry. Lead single "Living for Love" and follow-up "Ghosttown" both fell shy of the list. Still, both songs crowned the Dance Club Songs chart, with the latter becoming her 45th No. 1 on the survey and rewriting the record for the most leaders an artist has notched on any Billboard ranking. ("B****" debuts at No. 26 on Dance Club Songs this week.) "B****" arrives as Madonna's 57th Hot 100 hit and first since "Give Me All Your Luvin' " (also featuring Minaj, as well as M.I.A.) became her record-extending 38th top 10 in 2012. The Beatles follow with 34 Hot 100 top 10s. Among women, Madonna boasts the fourth-most charted Hot 100 titles dating to the ranking's 1958 launch. Here's an updated look at the top 10 women with the most visits to the Hot 100, with Madonna and Minaj both upping their counts by one this week: 73, Aretha Franklin 69, Taylor Swift 63, Nicki Minaj 57, Madonna 56, Dionne Warwick 53, Connie Francis 49, Rihanna 48, Brenda Lee 47, Mariah Carey 43, Miley Cyrus Madonna also joins an exclusive club of artists that have charted Hot 100 hits whose titles include their own names. Prince, for instance, reached No. 36 in 1992 with "My Name Is Prince." Honorable mentions for Eminem, whose debut entry "My Name Is" also rose to No. 36, in 1999, and whose "The Real Slim Shady" soared to No. 4 in 2000. Plus, three other iconic acts charted self-referential titles, although not due to their lyrics: "The Beach Boys' Medley" surfed to No. 12 in 1981; "The Beatles' Movie Medley" reached the same rank, in 1982; and, Elvis Presley's "The Elvis Medley" reached No. 71, also in 1982. Speaking of the Beatles, they charted the only composition prior to Madonna's latest with "Madonna" in its title: their classic "Lady Madonna" peaked at No. 4 in 1968. (Later that year, Fats Domino's cover spent two weeks at No. 100.)
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THINKIN BOUT YOU
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Post by THINKIN BOUT YOU on Jul 5, 2015 5:05:07 GMT -5
Most top 10 albums 1. ROLLING STONES 36 2. FRANK SINATRA 32 3. BEATLES 30 4. BARBRA STREISAND 29 5. ELVIS PRESLEY 27 6. BOB DYLAN 17 7. PAUL MCCARTNEY 16 8. JOHNNY MATHIS 16 9. ELTON JOHN 16 10. MADONNA 16 11. Neil Diamond 14 12. Kingston Trio 14 13. Mitch Miler 14 14. George Strait 14 15. The Beach Boys 13 16. Bruce Springsteen 13 17. Garth Brooks 13 18. Van Halen 13 19. Rod Stewart 13* 20. Eric Clapton 12 21. Ray Coniff 12 22. Andy Williams 12 23. Chicago 12 24. Mariah Carey 12 Notes: Barbara Streisand gets her 29th top 10 album this week EDIT TO ADD: edits fom the post below Who's Frank Sinatra? I've only heard of one act named "Frank" which is Frank Ocean..
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Gary
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Post by Gary on Jul 5, 2015 15:47:52 GMT -5
Most top 10 albums 1. ROLLING STONES 36 2. FRANK SINATRA 32 3. BEATLES 30 4. BARBRA STREISAND 29 5. ELVIS PRESLEY 27 6. BOB DYLAN 17 7. PAUL MCCARTNEY 16 8. JOHNNY MATHIS 16 9. ELTON JOHN 16 10. MADONNA 16 11. Neil Diamond 14 12. Kingston Trio 14 13. Mitch Miler 14 14. George Strait 14 15. The Beach Boys 13 16. Bruce Springsteen 13 17. Garth Brooks 13 18. Van Halen 13 19. Rod Stewart 13* 20. Eric Clapton 12 21. Ray Coniff 12 22. Andy Williams 12 23. Chicago 12 24. Mariah Carey 12 Notes: Barbara Streisand gets her 29th top 10 album this week EDIT TO ADD: edits fom the post below Who's Frank Sinatra? I've only heard of one act named "Frank" which is Frank Ocean.. Almost like saying "who's the Beatles?"
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HolidayGuy
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Post by HolidayGuy on Jul 13, 2015 9:37:27 GMT -5
Billboard finally did some reporting on the whole "featuring" credits, whatnot, with totals (even doing a percentage list, which is what I've started looking at recently): www.billboard.com/articles/columns/chart-beat/6627296/ask-billboard-lead-vs-featured-artists-who-has-the-most-hot-100Ask Billboard: Lead vs. Featured Artists: Who Has the Most Hot 100 Hits?By Gary Trust | July 12, 2015 LEAD VS. FEATURED ARTISTS: WHO HAS THE MOST HOT 100 HITS? @gthot20, hey! How drastically would the milestones of the hot 100 change if they were based on only if the artist was the lead on the song? -- Casey. (@caseytbh) July 4, 2015 Hi Casey, That's one of the most frequently questions that comes up in "Ask Billboard" tweets and emails, so I think it's time we finally dig into the topic. Let's actually look at several different lists to get a wide scope of measuring some superlatives over the Billboard Hot 100's nearly 57-year history. We can run lots of lists, actually, because it's the Internet, and we're not about to run out of space. In fact, because it's the Internet, first, here's a cat video! (of me and my girlfriend, Michelle's, cat trying to eat spaghetti … that I'm trying to eat, but can't … because she's trying to): Paws-itively cute. OK, now, on to the answer. (Again, beware, several comparisons ahead.) As featured billings have become commonplace on the Hot 100, the question often comes up of who has the most Hot 100 hits only among lead artists. While counting both lead and featured billings is entirely viable – it's an accomplishment any time you place on the Hot 100, no matter your contribution – it could be akin to, say, counting an actor's Academy Award wins combining nods for both best lead and best supporting roles. It doesn't tell quite the same story as looking at each honor individually. So, first, here's a look at the acts with the most Hot 100 hits all-time, regardless of lead or featured credit (through the chart dated July 18): Total, Artist 207, Glee Cast 126, Lil Wayne 108, Elvis Presley 91, James Brown 86, Drake 83, Jay Z 74, Ray Charles 73, Aretha Franklin 72, Chris Brown 71, the Beatles 69, Taylor Swift 67, Elton John 67, Kanye West 65, Nicki Minaj 63, Stevie Wonder Now, here are those 15 acts, including their totals as leads: Total - as Lead, Artist 207 - 207, Glee Cast 126 - 45, Lil Wayne 108 - 108, Elvis Presley 91 - 91, James Brown 86 - 45, Drake 83 - 54, Jay Z 74 - 72, Ray Charles 73 - 73, Aretha Franklin 72 - 37, Chris Brown 71 - 71, the Beatles 69 - 66, Taylor Swift 67 - 67, Elton John 67 - 41, Kanye West 65 - 26, Nicki Minaj 63 - 62, Stevie Wonder So, clearly, rap/hip-hop has helped rewrite artists totals on the Hot 100, Lil Wayne, for instance, has charted the bulk of his 126 entries as a featured artist. That's the collaborative nature of rap and hip-hop, as acts in the genre so often guest on one another's tracks; assist on pop hits (a la Kendrick Lamar on Swift's "Bad Blood"); or, conversely, drive a song while incorporating a sung hook from a featured pop artist (such as Wiz Khalifa's "See You Again," featuring Charlie Puth). To answer the original question, then: Who has the most Hot 100 hits as a lead artist? The list looks like this: Total, Artist 207, Glee Cast 108, Elvis Presley 91, James Brown 73, Aretha Franklin 72, Ray Charles 71, the Beatles 67, Elton John 66, Taylor Swift 62, Stevie Wonder 57, the Rolling Stones 56, Madonna 55, Marvin Gaye 54, the Beach Boys 54, Jay Z 53, Neil Diamond 53, Connie Francis 53, the Temptations 53, Jackie Wilson That's a much more pop-infused ranking, and one with more veteran acts who mostly hit the Hot 100 when featured credits were essentially non-existent. And, one more list: Who has the most Hot 100 hits in featured roles? That's, unsurprisingly, a rap/hip-hop-led ranking: Total, Artist 81, Lil Wayne 41, Drake 39, Nicki Minaj 35, Chris Brown 31, T-Pain 29, Jay Z 27, Ludacris 26, Kanye West (Quick break from all these stats … Um … here's a cat joke: Q: What type of music does a cat like? A: … any kind, as long as it's … cat-chy. Thank you! I a-meow-out of here …) Back to the main subject. And, back to the list of acts with the most hits as lead artists. One artist stands out: Jay Z, the rapper with the most Hot 100 appearances as a lead, 54. That stat leads to an apples-to-apples comparison: What rap acts have the most Hot 100 hits as lead artists? First, let's look at the rappers with the most Hot 100 visits overall: Total, Artist 126, Lil Wayne 86, Drake 83, Jay Z 67, Kanye West 65, Nicki Minaj 55, Ludacris 55, T.I. 53, Eminem 46, T-Pain (best described as a rapper/singer, and who's collaborated on many rap tracks) 41, Pitbull 41, Rick Ross Now (as similarly analyzed above among all acts), here are the rappers with the most Hot 100 hits as leads: Total, Artist 54, Jay Z 45, Drake 45, Lil Wayne 41, Eminem 41, Kanye West 34, T.I. 28, Ludacris 28, Nelly 27, 50 Cent 26, Nicki Minaj 26, Pitbull 25, LL Cool J Takeaways? Jay Z, Drake, Lil Wayne, Eminem and West boast the most Hot 100 charted titles as leads among rappers. That reinforces how many hits on which they've served as the main creative force (at least going by their songs' official billings). From that, we can come up with one more key ranking, creating a new stat in the process. What rappers have the highest percentage of claiming lead credit on their Hot 100 hits? In other words, which rappers have controlled their chart destinies the most by charting the most often with songs on which they've been credited as the lead act? Here's a look at how rappers (with at least 25 Hot 100 hits) stack up by that stat: Rappers With the Highest Percentage of Lead Credits on Their Hot 100 Hits Percentage, Artist (Hits as Lead/Total) 89%, LL Cool J (25/28) 82%, Nelly (28/34) 77%, Eminem (41/53) 76%, Flo Rida (19/25) 69%, 50 Cent (27/39) 63%, Pitbull (26/41) 62%, T.I. (34/55) And, alternately, for that matter, the rappers (with 25 chart visits or more) with the lowest percentages of showing as leads on their Hot 100 hits: 33%, T-Pain 35%, Akon 36%, Lil Wayne 37%, Rick Ross 40%, Nicki Minaj It makes sense that LL Cool J has appeared as a lead on so many of his Hot 100 charted songs, as his career began in the '80s before featured billing became a regular element of rap. It's perhaps more impressive that Nelly (82 percent) and Eminem (77 percent) rank so high, given that they arrived in an era of widespread collaboration in the genre. On the other side, T-Pain is the guest extraordinaire among rappers, appearing two-thirds of the time on the Hot 100 as a featured act. Of course, looked at another way: maybe those 31 (of his 46) hits on which he's guested wouldn't have been as big without his assistance. Again, any Hot 100 hit reflects a level of success worth noting, regardless of whether an act is a lead or featured. So, those are several ways to look at what artists, and rappers specifically, have hit the Hot 100 the most in lead roles. We could add many more filters – the most No. 1s, most top 10s, most weeks on the chart, etc. – but this analysis should still provide insights regarding acts most at the forefront of songs on which they've appeared. Wow, what a longer response than I would've guessed when I started. Of course, I can't take all the credit. I had help from an adorable, furry (and spaghetti-loving) featured act (… act being an anagram for cat …) myself.
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Daniel Collins
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Post by Daniel Collins on Jul 19, 2015 12:39:55 GMT -5
www.billboard.com/biz/articles/6612594/madonna-returns-to-hot-100-with-b-im-madonnaMadonna Returns to Hot 100 With 'B**** I'm Madonna'73, Aretha Franklin 69, Taylor Swift 63, Nicki Minaj 57, Madonna 56, Dionne Warwick 53, Connie Francis 49, Rihanna 48, Brenda Lee 47, Mariah Carey 43, Miley Cyrus It seems like some changes occur in Billboard's database. Hannah Montana and Miley Cyrus' Hot 100 entries are now counted together which was not the case before: Hey! I don't know where should I ask this so I'm putting it here: Did Billboard add the Hannah Montana credited songs to Miley Cyrus' Hot 100 entries or not? Technically, they should combine it but I'm still unsure about it. I can't find any article from Billboard regarding this. Thanks to anyone who would help :) Based on this Chart Beat article, it's clearly no - they are separate:
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HolidayGuy
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Post by HolidayGuy on Jul 25, 2015 20:53:50 GMT -5
Here are the acts with the most No. 1 albums (in terms of album sales only) in the SoundScan/Nielsen Music era (for acts with pre-SoundScan No. 1 albums, I put their amount of No. 1s in parentheses). Any corrections/additions are welcome.
Jay-Z: 13 (includses one with R. Kelly, one with Kanye West and one with Linkin Park) Garth Brooks: 9 Eminem: 7 Bruce Springsteen: 7 (+4) Kenny Chesney: 7 Kanye West: 6 (includes one with Jay-Z) Madonna: 6 (+3) Dave Matthews Band: 6 Britney Spears: 6 R. Kelly: 6 (includes one with Jay-Z) U2: 5 (+2) Metallica: 5 Alicia Keys: 5 Beyonce: 5 Mariah Carey: 5 (+1) Michael Jackson: 5* (+2) George Strait: 5 Pearl Jam: 5 Linkin Park: 5 DMX: 5 Justin Bieber: 5 Rick Ross: 5 2 Pac: 5
*-This total includes Number Ones, which hit No. 1 on Top Comprehensive Albums in 2009.
NOTE: Miley Cyrus has six, if you count the Hannah Montana soundtracks.
Based on my count, 20 acts have four No. 1 albums in the SoundScan era.
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suth
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Post by suth on Aug 6, 2015 6:53:04 GMT -5
I was watching some of the year-end Hot 100 video compilations from the early '70s on YouTube, and I noticed some curious omissions. It looks as though Billboard just calculated from January to November until about 1973, completely skipping the month of December in the process. It turns out a lot of classic songs never made it onto any year-end Hot 100 because they peaked toward the end of their respective year. Some of the omissions are pretty striking:
"Hello Goodbye," The Beatles (3 weeks #1) "For Once In My Life," Stevie Wonder "Wichita Lineman," Glen Campbell "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye," Steam (2 weeks #1) "Leaving On A Jet Plane," Peter, Paul and Mary (1 week #1) "Someday We'll Be Together," Diana Ross & the Supremes (1 week #1) "Down on the Corner," Creedence Clearwater Revival "And When I Die," Blood, Sweat and Tears "I Think I Love You," Partridge Family (3 weeks #1) "Tears Of A Clown," Smokey Robinson & the Miracles (2 weeks #1) "Black Magic Woman," Santana "Have You Seen Her," Chi-Lites "I Am Woman," Helen Reddy (1 week #1) "If You Don't Know Me By Now," Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes "Ventura Highway," America "I'll Be Around," The Spinners
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HolidayGuy
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Post by HolidayGuy on Aug 6, 2015 11:58:17 GMT -5
Since Billboard released those lists related to "featuring" credits, it will be a lot easier to keep track.
Since that posting (reflecting info through the July 18 chart), Drake's landed one "Featuring Drake" credit, while Eminem's scored an entry as lead act (featuring Gwen Stefani).
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Post by areyoureadytojump on Aug 21, 2015 8:45:14 GMT -5
I haven't updated this since April 2014:
MOST TOP 10 ALBUMS ON THE BILLBOARD 200
Rolling Stones 36
Frank Sinatra 33
Barbra Streisand 32 "Release Me"
The Beatles 31 "On Air: Live at the BBC Volume 2"
Elvis Presley 27
Madonna 20 "MDNA" Bob Dylan 20 "Tempest"
Paul McCartney 19 "New"
George Strait 18 "Love Is Everything" Elton John 18 "The Diving Board" Bruce Springsteen 18 "High Hopes"
Neil Diamond 17 "Hot August Night" Rod Stewart 17 "Time"
Johnny Mathis 16 Mariah Carey 16 "MCIIY"
Dave Matthews 15 "Away From The World" Tim McGraw 15 "Two Lanes Of Freedom" Jay Z 15 "Magna Carta... Holy Grail" Garth Brooks 15 "Blame It On My Roots" R Kelly 15 "Black Panties"
Prince 14 "Lotus Flow3r" Van Halen 14 "Different Kind of Truth" The Beach Boys 14 "That's Why God Made the Radio" Eric Clapton 14 "Old Sock" Toby Keith 14 "Drinks After Work" Barry Manilow 14 "Night Songs" *new*
Santana 13 "Guitar Heaven" Led Zeppelin 13 "Celebration"
Chicago 12 Rush 12 Alan Jackson 12 "Thirty Miles West" Bon Jovi 12 "What About Now" Korn 12 "The Paradigm Shift" Celine Dion 12 "Loved Me Back To Life" Mary J Blige 12 "A Mary Christmas"
Elvis will be getting his 28th Top 10 album next week.
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Post by Daryl the Beryl on Aug 21, 2015 9:02:53 GMT -5
I haven't updated this since April 2014: MOST TOP 10 ALBUMS ON THE BILLBOARD 200Barbra Streisand 32 "Release Me" Madonna 20 "MDNA" George Strait 18 "Love Is Everything" Mariah Carey 16 "MCIIY" Tim McGraw 15 "Two Lanes Of Freedom" Garth Brooks 15 "Blame It On My Roots" Alan Jackson 12 "Thirty Miles West" These should be updated since... Barbra Streisand's Partners topped the chart last year. Madonna's Rebel Heart went to no. 2 this year. George Strait's Live album (the AT&T one) went to no. 4 last year. Mariah Carey's Me I Am Mariah album went top 3 last year. As does Tim McGraw's Sundown Heaven Town. Garth Brooks' Man Against Machine went top 4 last year. Alan Jackson's Precious Memories Volume II and Angels and Alcohol were top 5 Billboard 200 albums.
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85la
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Post by 85la on Aug 21, 2015 20:29:28 GMT -5
I was watching some of the year-end Hot 100 video compilations from the early '70s on YouTube, and I noticed some curious omissions. It looks as though Billboard just calculated from January to November until about 1973, completely skipping the month of December in the process. It turns out a lot of classic songs never made it onto any year-end Hot 100 because they peaked toward the end of their respective year. Some of the omissions are pretty striking: "Hello Goodbye," The Beatles (3 weeks #1) "For Once In My Life," Stevie Wonder "Wichita Lineman," Glen Campbell "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye," Steam (2 weeks #1) "Leaving On A Jet Plane," Peter, Paul and Mary (1 week #1) "Someday We'll Be Together," Diana Ross & the Supremes (1 week #1) "Down on the Corner," Creedence Clearwater Revival "And When I Die," Blood, Sweat and Tears "I Think I Love You," Partridge Family (3 weeks #1) "Tears Of A Clown," Smokey Robinson & the Miracles (2 weeks #1) "Black Magic Woman," Santana "Have You Seen Her," Chi-Lites "I Am Woman," Helen Reddy (1 week #1) "If You Don't Know Me By Now," Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes "Ventura Highway," America "I'll Be Around," The Spinners Yeah, I've noticed that for many years myself. Also missing from the Beatles are I Feel Fine and Yesterday, both pretty big number ones. Or some songs made the list but ranked much lower than you'd think. For example Michael Jackson's Don't Stop till You Get Enough only ranked at #91 for 1979, despite also being a fairly big number one hit. My guess is that these songs all ran into the year-end cutoff date, which might have varied from year to year, so their points might have been split between two years. Whereas now in the Soundscan era songs like this would usually be able to make at least one year-end list, before, the points system they used and the pattern of chart lives might have made it so that big hits could easily miss appearing on any year. Or it could be like you said that all chart data from roughly late November and December went to waste, not counting for the current year nor carried over into the next. But I'm not sure if that was the case, because you'll also notice that We Can Work it Out ranked fairly high for 1966, but a large portion of its run began in Nov/Dec 1965, so maybe all the weeks of a song counted if its peak was outside of the Nov/Dec period...I don't know. It's hard enough trying to know what goes on with Billboard now, trying to research what went on in previous decades might be impossible!
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WolfSpear
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Post by WolfSpear on Aug 26, 2015 13:26:04 GMT -5
Longest gap between chart debut and first top 10 appearance (Billboard 200):
Straight Outta Compton - N.W.A. (March 1989/August 2015 - 26 years, 8 months)
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WolfSpear
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Posts: 896
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Post by WolfSpear on Sept 7, 2015 17:21:37 GMT -5
Here's a "just for fun"...
Given that its been 75 years since Billboard began a sales based chart, I think it's time to look at the top 10 artists on the charts all-time. Of course, artists who charted between 1940-1954 will benefit thanks to small chart size at that time. Nonetheless, despite all the changes in the market (big charts/more competition/few singles per year), here's how it stacks up with "Whitpoints".
1) Bing Crosby - 10973 2) Elvis Presley - 9029 3) Perry Como - 9021 4) Frank Sinatra - 8079 5) Glenn Miller - 6584 6) Nat "King" Cole - 5645 7) The Andrews Sisters - 5229 8) Jo Stafford - 5195 9) The Beatles - 5147 10) Guy Lombardo - 4833
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badrobot
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Post by badrobot on Sept 8, 2015 16:49:55 GMT -5
Explain whitpoints to me...
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onebuffalo
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Post by onebuffalo on Sept 8, 2015 17:15:58 GMT -5
Explain whitpoints to me... Joel Whitburn, who has researched a variety of music charts gives points to a song where it peaks. A #1 song gets 100 points, plus 10 points for every additional week it stays #1. A #2 peaking single gets 90 points, plus five points for every week at #2. I don't have my top 40 Billboard book with me, so I hope you get the picture. I would expect Bing Crosby to be #1 during the pre-rock era (1980-1955). I believe he charted like 300 times between the 1920s-1960s. He had like 40 #1s during that time and spent the most time at #1 (don't know how many weeks, though).
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badrobot
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Post by badrobot on Sept 8, 2015 17:17:35 GMT -5
Got it! I have seen that point system before I just hadn't heard it called that before. :)
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