Canadian Singles Chart

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Canadian Singles Chart is currently compiled by the U.S.-based music sales tracking company, Nielsen SoundScan [1]. The chart is compiled every Wednesday, and is published by Jam! Canoe on Thursdays.

Originally, when the chart was incepted in 1996, there were a total of 200 positions (with the top 50 being published by Jam!). However, because of the reduced singles market in Canada, only the top 10 positions now appear on the SoundScan chart (SoundScan has a policy that at least 10 copies have to be sold in order to make its singles chart).

Since the early-1990s, single sales in Canada have decreased dramatically. By 2004, sales in Canada declined even more, because of the popularity of digital downloading of music. As a result, Canadian sales are not as substantial as they had been before in the 1990s and early-2000s, and singles remained on the chart for even lengthier periods of time.

Starting in 2005, Nielsen SoundScan compiled a Digital Tracks chart, based on download sales from Napster, Puretracks, iTunes Canada, and Archambault. In 2006, SoundScan introduced a Digital Songs chart, combining all versions of each song and ranking them accordingly (different versions of each song, appear separately on the Tracks chart). The Digital Songs chart appears in Billboard, and Billboard.biz.

[edit] References

Lwin, Nanda; The Canadian Singles Chart Book; Music Data Canada; (August 1996) ISBN 1-896594-09-3

Lwin, Nanda; Top 40 Hits: The Essential Chart Guide; Music Data Canada; 384 pp. (September 1999) ISBN 1-896594-13-1

[edit] See also

  • List of official record charts

[edit] External links