Dance/Mix Show Airplay

Dance/Mix Show Airplay (formerly Hot Dance Airplay) is a monitored electronic dance music radio chart that is featured weekly in Billboard magazine. The chart came about as a result of the small but influential impact of electronic dance music on the radio in the United States and the stations that program it. The chart was openly available through Billboard, Billboard Radio Monitor and R&R from its 2003 inception to 2008, when it became exclusive-only to Billboard. Because the chart is not featured on Billboard.com, it can only be accessed through its subscription-only Billboard.biz website.

In the issue dated November 19, 2011, the chart's name and methodology was changed. Director of charts Keith Caulfield explained in his "Over the Counter" column: "Effective this week, Billboard's Dance Airplay chart is renamed Dance/Mix Show Airplay, as its source of data is widely expanded. Formerly a ranking based on airplay at six dance-formatted reporters (four terrestrial radio stations, plus SiriusXM's BPM channel and Music Choice's Dance/Electronica channel) the plays-based list expands to include mixshow plays on mainstream top 40 and select rhythmic stations that have submitted their hours of mixshow programming, as monitored by Nielsen BDS, to Billboard."[1]

Contents

History

The chart made its debut on October 17, 2003, with "Just the Way You Are" by Milky being the first number-one song, even though it had been number one for three weeks, having topped it the week ending September 28.[2] The reason for this is because the chart was unpublished for the first ten weeks of its existence, which means that its official issue start date was August 17, when the actual first number-one was "Never (Past Tense)" by Roc Project featuring Tina Arena.[2]

The current number one for the issue dated January 14, 2012, is "We Found Love" by Rihanna featuring Calvin Harris.

Chart criteria

There are twenty-five positions on this chart and it is solely based on radio airplay. Dance/Mix Show Airplay is a component chart of the Billboard Hot 100. Six radio stations (all exclusive) are electronically monitored 24 hours a day, seven days a week by Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems. Songs are ranked by a calculation of the total number of spins per week with its "audience impression", which is based upon exact times of airplay and each station's Arbitron listener data. The chart also include the 140 Mainstream Top 40 and 72 Rhythmic Top 40 reporters that features mix shows as part of their programming.

Songs receiving the greatest growth will receive a "bullet", although there are tracks that will also get bullets if the loss in detections doesn't exceed the percentage of downtime from a monitored station. "Airpower" awards are issued to songs that appear on the top 20 of both the airplay and audience chart for the first time, while the "greatest gainer" award is given to song with the largest increase in detections. A song with six or more spins in its first week is awarded an "airplay add". If a song is tied for the most spins in the same week, the one with the biggest increase that previous week will rank higher, but if both songs show the same amount of spins regardless of detection the song that is being played at more stations is ranked higher. Songs that fall below the top 15 and have been on the chart after 26 weeks are removed and go to recurrent status.

Chart statistics and other facts

1. Rihanna – 10
2. Madonna – 7
3. David Guetta – 6
3. Katy Perry - 5
5. Justin Timberlake – 4 (tie)
5. Britney Spears - 4 (tie)

Dance/Mix Show Airplay radio panel

There are six reporters who make up this panel (as of November 6, 2011), according to Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems, all of them part of the Top 40 panel:[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Caulfield, Keith (2011). "Over the Counter". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media) (2011-11-19): page 53. 
  2. ^ a b c Caulfield, Keith (2003-10-17). "Billboard Bits: Jack Black, Dub Narcotic, Milky". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media, Inc). http://www.billboard.com/news/billboard-bits-jack-black-dub-narcotic-milky-2005943.story. Retrieved 2010-06-28.