Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 24, 2011 15:38:01 GMT -5
Katy Perry will probably be next. After 5 strong #1 singles, there's no way TOTGA will miss the Top 40.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Oct 14, 2011 7:51:46 GMT -5
52 37 KATY PERRY The One That Got Away 1065 448 617 5.906
1. California Gurls #1 2. Teenage Dream #1 3. Firework #1 4. E.T. #1 5. Last Friday Night #1 6. The One That Got Away (TBD)
:)
|
|
Cerebro
3x Platinum Member
Joined: September 2003
Posts: 3,640
|
Post by Cerebro on Oct 15, 2011 11:55:18 GMT -5
52 37 KATY PERRY The One That Got Away 1065 448 617 5.906 1. California Gurls #1 2. Teenage Dream #1 3. Firework #1 4. E.T. #1 5. Last Friday Night #1 6. The One That Got Away (TBD) :) You beat me to it, Codex. Just added this one to the list.
|
|
slw84
7x Platinum Member
I only tolerate legends
Joined: August 2008
Posts: 7,897
|
Post by slw84 on Oct 15, 2011 12:40:07 GMT -5
With "Fly" on the verge of cracking the top 40 (and it seems it, inevitably, will), I have added Nicki Minaj to the list as the latest inductee into the "more than 5" club. "Fly" will become the 6th top 40 single to chart off of Pink Friday. 1. Your Love 2. Check It Out 3. Right Thru Me 4. Moment 4 Life 5. Super Bass 6. Fly It's been official for a couple of weeks 1. Your love #21 2. Check it out #20 3. Right thru me #32 4. Moment 4 life #19 5. Superbass #3 6. Fly #25
|
|
Cerebro
3x Platinum Member
Joined: September 2003
Posts: 3,640
|
Post by Cerebro on Feb 19, 2012 13:50:53 GMT -5
And the Katy Perry train keeps chugging along. The debut of "Part Of Me" in the top 40 this week makes it 7 singles for her. Of course, this is only if you choose to count the original and the rerelease as the "same" album (a similar circumstance presented itself when Rihanna had a, combined, 6 top 40 singles from the original and rerelease versions of Good Girl Gone Bad).
This would, also, make Teenage Dream the sixth album to produce 7 top 40 singles. Of the five that have done it so far, three were by Michael Jackson (Thriller, Bad, and Dangerous). The others were Bruce Springsteen's Born In The U.S.A. and Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 (which holds the, current, record of 8 top 40 singles).
|
|
brod
Charting
Joined: March 2006
Posts: 46
|
Post by brod on Feb 19, 2012 14:29:04 GMT -5
Shouldn't Rihanna's "Rehab" be added to Good Girl Gone Bad?
|
|
Cerebro
3x Platinum Member
Joined: September 2003
Posts: 3,640
|
Post by Cerebro on Feb 19, 2012 15:56:21 GMT -5
Shouldn't Rihanna's "Rehab" be added to Good Girl Gone Bad? You're right. Glaring omission. That would, in fact, make Rihanna part of the elite "7 singles" club.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Feb 19, 2012 16:12:12 GMT -5
And the Katy Perry train keeps chugging along. The debut of "Part Of Me" in the top 40 this week makes it 7 singles for her. Of course, this is only if you choose to count the original and the rerelease as the "same" album (a similar circumstance presented itself when Rihanna had a, combined, 6 top 40 singles from the original and rerelease versions of Good Girl Gone Bad). This would, also, make Teenage Dream the sixth album to produce 7 top 40 singles. Of the five that have done it so far, three were by Michael Jackson ( Thriller, Bad, and Dangerous). The others were Bruce Springsteen's Born In The U.S.A. and Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 (which holds the, current, record of 8 top 40 singles). She's probably going to try to break Janet's record, but there's something very different about not only releasing an album packed with so much hit potential but being able to sustain the momentum to actually have that many hits from an album after it's been out so long compared to releasing newly recorded material a couple years later and simply attaching it to the same project.
|
|
|
Post by Rose "Payola" Nylund on Feb 20, 2012 22:58:50 GMT -5
Yeah, with Katy it's even more of an exception because it's been over a year and a half since the actual album came out. Rihanna was promoting Rated-A when Katy's album came out. Since then, Rihanna has had two full albums come out.
|
|
Lozzy
Diamond Member
Joined: January 2010
Posts: 49,237
|
Post by Lozzy on May 29, 2012 2:37:44 GMT -5
"Wide Awake" hit the Top 40 this week, making Teenage Dream the second album to date to achieve eight Top 40 singles, I believe. 69 31 KATY PERRY Wide Awake 1343 99 1244 10.592 Backstreet Boys • Backstreet Boys (1996) - 6 singles - "We've Got It Goin' On" (#35); "Quit Playing Games (With My Heart)" (#2); "As Long As You Love Me" (#3); "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)" (#10); "I'll Never Break Your Heart" (#2); "All I Have To Give" (#6) NOTE: This one's debatable. "We've Got It Goin' On" charted in late 1995. When the group, finally, took off a year-and-a-half later, several songs from the debut album (including "As Long As You Love Me"; "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)"; and "All I Have To Give") were repackaged as a second album, Backstreet's Back (1997), and might be, more properly, considered singles from that set. From what I've read recently, I believe this may be incorrect. From what I've been able to tell, the Backstreet Boys released their self-titled debut album internationally in 1996, then released their second album, Backstreet's Back internationally the following year. To coincide with their second international album, they released their self-titled U.S. debut, which featured a mix of songs from the two international albums. That U.S. album was later re-released in 1998 with the addition of "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)" which had been excluded originally as it wouldn't make sense to have a song titled "Backstreet's Back" on a debut album. Therefore, in the U.S., all six singles would correctly be defined as singles from the same album, Backstreet Boys from 1997 — except if you were to exclude "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)" as it was from a re-release. (And also, "We've Got It Goin' On", "Quit Playing Games (With My Heart)" and "I'll Never Break Your Heart" were from the '96 international album. "All I Have To Give" and "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)" were from the '97 international album.) I may well be wrong, though.
|
|
|
Post by Adonis the DemiGod! on May 29, 2012 5:44:17 GMT -5
"Wide Awake" hit the Top 40 this week, making Teenage Dream the second album to date to achieve eight Top 40 singles, I believe. 69 31 KATY PERRY Wide Awake 1343 99 1244 10.592 Backstreet Boys • Backstreet Boys (1996) - 6 singles - "We've Got It Goin' On" (#35); "Quit Playing Games (With My Heart)" (#2); "As Long As You Love Me" (#3); "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)" (#10); "I'll Never Break Your Heart" (#2); "All I Have To Give" (#6) NOTE: This one's debatable. "We've Got It Goin' On" charted in late 1995. When the group, finally, took off a year-and-a-half later, several songs from the debut album (including "As Long As You Love Me"; "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)"; and "All I Have To Give") were repackaged as a second album, Backstreet's Back (1997), and might be, more properly, considered singles from that set. From what I've read recently, I believe this may be incorrect. From what I've been able to tell, the Backstreet Boys released their self-titled debut album internationally in 1996, then released their second album, Backstreet's Back internationally the following year. To coincide with their second international album, they released their self-titled U.S. debut, which featured a mix of songs from the two international albums. That U.S. album was later re-released in 1998 with the addition of "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)" which had been excluded originally as it wouldn't make sense to have a song titled "Backstreet's Back" on a debut album. Therefore, in the U.S., all six singles would correctly be defined as singles from the same album, Backstreet Boys from 1997 — except if you were to exclude "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)" as it was from a re-release. (And also, "We've Got It Goin' On", "Quit Playing Games (With My Heart)" and "I'll Never Break Your Heart" were from the '96 international album. "All I Have To Give" and "Everybody (Backstreet's Back)" were from the '97 international album.) I may well be wrong, though. Actually, it's two albums. It took two album releases. I like Katy Perry but lets not get it twisted.
|
|
|
Post by Adonis the DemiGod! on May 29, 2012 5:46:57 GMT -5
And the Katy Perry train keeps chugging along. The debut of "Part Of Me" in the top 40 this week makes it 7 singles for her. Of course, this is only if you choose to count the original and the rerelease as the "same" album (a similar circumstance presented itself when Rihanna had a, combined, 6 top 40 singles from the original and rerelease versions of Good Girl Gone Bad). This would, also, make Teenage Dream the sixth album to produce 7 top 40 singles. Of the five that have done it so far, three were by Michael Jackson ( Thriller, Bad, and Dangerous). The others were Bruce Springsteen's Born In The U.S.A. and Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 (which holds the, current, record of 8 top 40 singles). She's probably going to try to break Janet's record, but there's something very different about not only releasing an album packed with so much hit potential but being able to sustain the momentum to actually have that many hits from an album after it's been out so long compared to releasing newly recorded material a couple years later and simply attaching it to the same project. For Billboard's purposes Katy Perry wouldn't be breaking any of Janet's records. Janet released one album that had 8 hits on it. Katy released two albums the second one with additional tracks tacked on. She couldn't get 8 hits off the original release. That's the bottom line.
|
|
|
Post by Adonis the DemiGod! on May 29, 2012 5:49:43 GMT -5
And the Katy Perry train keeps chugging along. The debut of "Part Of Me" in the top 40 this week makes it 7 singles for her. Of course, this is only if you choose to count the original and the rerelease as the "same" album (a similar circumstance presented itself when Rihanna had a, combined, 6 top 40 singles from the original and rerelease versions of Good Girl Gone Bad). This would, also, make Teenage Dream the sixth album to produce 7 top 40 singles. Of the five that have done it so far, three were by Michael Jackson ( Thriller, Bad, and Dangerous). The others were Bruce Springsteen's Born In The U.S.A. and Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 (which holds the, current, record of 8 top 40 singles). What about Janet album. Where are you now hit the Top 40.
|
|
Lozzy
Diamond Member
Joined: January 2010
Posts: 49,237
|
Post by Lozzy on May 29, 2012 6:09:26 GMT -5
Actually, it's two albums. It took two album releases. I like Katy Perry but lets not get it twisted. It's obviously a divided issue. Personally, I count re-release hits as if they were part of the original album. I'm not trying to shade Janet or anything like that, I am a fan of hers, I just believe that if an album is successful enough to warrant a repackage with extra material, that extra material should still count as part of the same body of work as the original album did. I don't believe that it's unfair, because there's no reason why other successful artists couldn't re-release their albums like Katy chose to do if they want. Remember when Rihanna was planning to re-release Loud? Well, she could have done that exactly, with "We Found Love", "You Da One", "Talk That Talk" and "Where Have You Been", and she'd likely be in this list for nine Top 40 entries from one album now. Hell, she could re-release the album for a second time with even more hits, and acheive 10+ entries from the same album. Of course, it's certainly not the best release model, but she could have done that. That's why I believe it's not unfair to count re-releases. But besides, it's obviously a divided issue, like I said earlier, and you can choose to ignore all mentions of Katy Perry in this thread if you wish. Cerebro did state in the first post of this thread that he only has re-releases here for the sake of completeness. For Billboard's purposes Katy Perry wouldn't be breaking any of Janet's records. Janet released one album that had 8 hits on it. Katy released two albums the second one with additional tracks tacked on. She couldn't get 8 hits off the original release. That's the bottom line. Well for Billboard's purposes, "State Of The World" wouldn't count since it didn't chart on the Hot 100, would it? ;) But we're not talking about Billboard here. We're talking about R&R and Mediabase, and neither of them have ever published any rules of this kind. What about Janet album. Where are you now hit the Top 40. 1. "That's The Way Love Goes" (#1) 2. "If" (#2) 3. "Again" (#1) 4. "Because Of Love" (#2) 5. "Anytime, Anyplace" (#8) 6. "You Want This" (#10) wweb.uta.edu/faculty/gghunt/charts/jjackson.html
|
|
Cerebro
3x Platinum Member
Joined: September 2003
Posts: 3,640
|
Post by Cerebro on May 29, 2012 6:26:20 GMT -5
"Wide Awake" hit the Top 40 this week, making Teenage Dream the second album to date to achieve eight Top 40 singles, I believe. 69 31 KATY PERRY Wide Awake 1343 99 1244 10.592 List updated.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on May 29, 2012 8:07:30 GMT -5
She's probably going to try to break Janet's record, but there's something very different about not only releasing an album packed with so much hit potential but being able to sustain the momentum to actually have that many hits from an album after it's been out so long compared to releasing newly recorded material a couple years later and simply attaching it to the same project. For Billboard's purposes Katy Perry wouldn't be breaking any of Janet's records. Janet released one album that had 8 hits on it. Katy released two albums the second one with additional tracks tacked on. She couldn't get 8 hits off the original release. That's the bottom line. For Billboard's purposes she's now tied with Janet for 8 hits off "one era" or whatever the new word for re-releases is now, just not off of an original release.
|
|
Lozzy
Diamond Member
Joined: January 2010
Posts: 49,237
|
Post by Lozzy on May 29, 2012 8:51:20 GMT -5
For Billboard's purposes Katy Perry wouldn't be breaking any of Janet's records. Janet released one album that had 8 hits on it. Katy released two albums the second one with additional tracks tacked on. She couldn't get 8 hits off the original release. That's the bottom line. For Billboard's purposes she's now tied with Janet for 8 hits off "one era" or whatever the new word for re-releases is now, just not off of an original release. On which Billboard chart is this so? "State Of The World" did not chart on the Hot 100.
|
|
Marv
6x Platinum Member
Joined: September 2004
Posts: 6,308
|
Post by Marv on Jun 1, 2012 22:44:53 GMT -5
At least Janet didn't resort to ripping off and alienating her fans by re-releasing albums with one or two new singles on them, and risk getting demolished and universally condemned throughout the industry on the cover of Billboard as Usher experienced several years ago.
Since 'State Of The World' was never released as a commercially available single, it was indeed ineligible to chart on BBs Hot 100 per their policy back then.
Top 40 isn't as big now as it was back then either, as it had started to falter by the time that Ms. Jackson's masterpiece was released, as 100+ stations would bail out of the format over the course of the next fifteen years.
|
|
|
Post by neverduplicated on Jun 2, 2012 2:04:07 GMT -5
At least Janet didn't resort to ripping off and alienating her fans by re-releasing albums with one or two new singles on them, and risk getting demolished and universally condemned throughout the industry on the cover of Billboard as Usher experienced several years ago. Judgemental much? Times are different now than they were in the early 90s. Now it is very common for albums to be re-released, whereas back then albums were pretty much never re-released, probably due to healthy album sales which are hard to come by today. It's also very uncommon for albums to have so many singles today, whereas it was more common in the 80s and 90s. I certainly agree that a distinction should be made between albums and eras when talking about re-releases, but do we need to resort to accusing Katy of ripping off and alienating her fans? It's pretty standard practice, and most of Katy's fans can easily purchase those singles separately online if they want them.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 2, 2012 2:27:32 GMT -5
I'm too tired to read through all four pages, but does Breakaway qualify? I remember that radio stations started playing "Gone" before "Walk Away" was announced as single #5, but I don't remember how high it charted.
|
|
Lozzy
Diamond Member
Joined: January 2010
Posts: 49,237
|
Post by Lozzy on Jun 2, 2012 2:42:14 GMT -5
I'm too tired to read through all four pages, but does Breakaway qualify? I remember that radio stations started playing "Gone" before "Walk Away" was announced as single #5, but I don't remember how high it charted. No, it does not, as "Gone" didn't crack the top forty (or fifty). wweb.uta.edu/faculty/gghunt/charts/kclarkson.htm There is a list in the first post of the thread you can refer to; you don't have to read through all four pages. :)
|
|
Cerebro
3x Platinum Member
Joined: September 2003
Posts: 3,640
|
Post by Cerebro on Jan 8, 2016 10:33:21 GMT -5
Its been 3-and-a-half years since this thread has been updated. We, finally, have a reason to update it.
With "Out Of The Woods" breaking into the top 40, today, it becomes the sixth top 40 single off of 1989. Taylor Swift joins the "More Than 5" club.
When updating this list, I, also realized that I didn't do my due diligence and failed to add Pitbull a couple of years ago. Global Warming had five top 40 singles. the rerelease, Global Warming: Meltdown, added a sixth single with "Timber". As with a couple of other acts on the list (Katy Perry and Rihanna), it all depends on whether or not you consider rereleases to be the "same" album as the original.
|
|
|
Post by Elusive Chanteuse on Jan 8, 2016 10:54:34 GMT -5
Its been 3-and-a-half years since this thread has been updated. We, finally, have a reason to update it. With "Out Of The Woods" breaking into the top 40, today, it becomes the sixth top 40 single off of 1989. Taylor Swift joins the "More Than 5" club. When updating this list, I, also realized that I didn't do my due diligence and failed to add Pitbull a couple of years ago. Global Warming had five top 40 singles. the rerelease, Global Warming: Meltdown, added a sixth single with "Timber". As with a couple of other acts on the list (Katy Perry and Rihanna), it all depends on whether or not you consider rereleases to be the "same" album as the original. Something I'll throw out as well. How about Lady Gaga? Is The Fame Monster considered a re-release as well? It can be bought by itself as an 8 track EP, but as well as a bundle with The Fame. If so, then that means Gaga has 7. Just something I am curious about.
|
|
divasummer
9x Platinum Member
Joined: November 2011
Posts: 9,999
|
Post by divasummer on Jan 8, 2016 15:51:17 GMT -5
I'm too tired to read through all four pages, but does Breakaway qualify? I remember that radio stations started playing "Gone" before "Walk Away" was announced as single #5, but I don't remember how high it charted. No, it does not, as "Gone" didn't crack the top forty (or fifty). wweb.uta.edu/faculty/gghunt/charts/kclarkson.htm There is a list in the first post of the thread you can refer to; you don't have to read through all four pages. :) Kelly's "Gone" never made the Top 50 airplay chart????? I could of sworn I used to see it towards the bottom of Billboards Top 40 airplay list.
|
|
Cerebro
3x Platinum Member
Joined: September 2003
Posts: 3,640
|
Post by Cerebro on Mar 1, 2016 9:26:47 GMT -5
Updated the list, again.
The Taylor hit train just keeps chugging along. This week, "New Romantics" debuted giving Taylor her seventh top 40 single off of 1989.
I'm, also, covering for another bit of negligence. David Guetta should've been added to the list, a few years back. He had six top 40 singles off of Nothing But The Beat -- "Where Them Girls At", "Without You", "Turn Me On", "Titanium", "I Can Only Imagine", and "Play Hard". The sixth single was from the rerelease, Nothing But The Beat 2.0.
|
|
leonagwen
Diamond Member
#LiteralLegender
Joined: November 2011
Posts: 15,275
|
Post by leonagwen on Mar 1, 2016 11:11:46 GMT -5
What about the Beatles? Didn't they have all 5 songs in the top 5 one week back in 1964? Whitney Houston?
|
|
Cerebro
3x Platinum Member
Joined: September 2003
Posts: 3,640
|
Post by Cerebro on Mar 1, 2016 13:04:54 GMT -5
What about the Beatles? Didn't they have all 5 songs in the top 5 one week back in 1964? Whitney Houston? First up, reread the title of the thread... More Than 5 Top 40 Singles. ;) Yes, The Beatles did control the top 5, once. However, those singles were from multiple albums (early Beatlemania was pretty fast and furious with releases). Whitney maxed out at five singles...five from 1987's Whitney -- "I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me)", "Didn't We Almost Have It All", "So Emotional", "Where Do Broken Hearts Go", and "Love Will Save The Day"; and five from the The Bodyguard soundtrack -- "I Will Always Love You", "I'm Every Woman", "I Have Nothing", "Run To You", and "Queen Of The Night". You'll note that I included The Bodyguard in the Soundtrack section on page 1 due to a sixth single -- "It's Gonna Be A Lovely Day" by The S.O.U.L. S.Y.S.T.E.M.
|
|