Canadian Hot 100
The Canadian Hot 100 is a music industry record chart in Canada for singles, published weekly by Billboard magazine. The Canadian Hot 100 was launched on the issue dated June 16, 2007, and is currently the standard record chart in Canada; a new chart is compiled and officially released to the public by Billboard on Tuesdays.
The chart is similar to Billboard's U.S. based Hot 100 in that it combines physical and digital sales as measured by Nielsen SoundScan, streaming activity data provided by online music sources, and radio airplay as measured by Nielsen BDS. Canada's airplay chart is the result of monitoring more than 100 stations representing rock, country, adult contemporary and Top 40 genres.[1][2]
The first number-one song of the Canadian Hot 100 was "Umbrella" by Rihanna featuring Jay-Z on June 16, 2007.[3] As of the issue for the week ending February 20, 2016, the Canadian Hot 100 has had 102 different number-one hits. Its current number-one is "Pillowtalk" by Zayn.
History
The chart was made available for the first time via Billboard online services on June 7, 2007 (issue dated June 16, 2007). With this launch, it marked the first time that Billboard created a Hot 100 chart for a country outside the United States. Billboard charts manager Geoff Mayfield announced the premiere of the chart, explaining "the new Billboard Canadian Hot 100 will serve as the definitive measure of Canada's most popular songs, continuing our magazine's longstanding tradition of using the most comprehensive resources available to provide the world's most authoritative music charts." The Billboard Canadian Hot 100 is managed by Paul Tuch, director of Canadian operations for Nielsen BDS, in consultation with Silvio Pietroluongo, Billboard's associate director of charts and manager of the Billboard Hot 100.[1]
Song achievements
Songs with most weeks at number one
- 16 weeks
- The Black Eyed Peas — "I Gotta Feeling" (2009)
- 15 weeks
- Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars — "Uptown Funk" (2015)
- 13 weeks
- Timbaland featuring OneRepublic — "Apologize" (2007–2008)
- Robin Thicke featuring T.I. and Pharrell — "Blurred Lines" (2013)
- 11 weeks
- Rihanna featuring Calvin Harris — "We Found Love" (2011–2012)
- OMI — "Cheerleader" (2015)
- 10 weeks
- Maroon 5 featuring Christina Aguilera — "Moves like Jagger" (2011)
- Pharrell Williams — "Happy" (2014)
- 9 weeks
- Madonna featuring Justin Timberlake — "4 Minutes" (2008)
- Katy Perry — "I Kissed a Girl" (2008)
- Lady Gaga — "Poker Face" (2008–2009)
- Flo Rida — "Right Round" (2009)
- The Black Eyed Peas — "Boom Boom Pow" (2009)
- Kesha — "Tik Tok" (2009–2010)
- Katy Perry featuring Snoop Dogg — "California Gurls" (2010)
Number-one debuts
- "Crack a Bottle" — Eminem, Dr. Dre and 50 Cent (February 21, 2009)[4]
- "Today Was a Fairytale" — Taylor Swift (February 20, 2010)[5]
- "Wavin' Flag" — Young Artists for Haiti (March 27, 2010)[6]
- "Not Afraid" — Eminem (May 22, 2010)[7]
- "California Gurls" — Katy Perry featuring Snoop Dogg (May 29, 2010)[8]
- "Hold It Against Me" — Britney Spears (January 29, 2011)[9]
- "Born This Way" — Lady Gaga (February 26, 2011)[10]
- "Part of Me" — Katy Perry (March 3, 2012)[11]
- "Boyfriend" — Justin Bieber (April 14, 2012)[12]
- "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together" — Taylor Swift (September 1, 2012)[13]
- "Roar" — Katy Perry (August 31, 2013)[14]
- "The Monster" — Eminem featuring Rihanna (November 16, 2013)[15]
- "Shake It Off" — Taylor Swift (September 6, 2014)[16]
- "What Do You Mean?" — Justin Bieber (September 19, 2015)[17]
- "Hello" — Adele (November 14, 2015)[18]
- "Pillowtalk" — Zayn (February 20, 2016)[19]
Artists with the most number-one hits
- 1. Katy Perry — 10
- 2. Rihanna — 9
- 3. Britney Spears — 6
- 4. Taylor Swift — 5
- 5. Lady Gaga — 4 (tie)
- 5. Flo Rida — 4 (tie)
- 5. Eminem — 4 (tie)
- 5. Pitbull — 4 (tie)
- 5. Bruno Mars — 4 (tie)
Artists with the most number of weeks at number one
- 1. Rihanna — 38
- 2. Katy Perry — 34
- 3. The Black Eyed Peas — 31
- 4. Bruno Mars — 25
- 5. Pharrell Williams — 23
- 6. Lady Gaga — 21 (tie)
- 6. Flo Rida — 21 (tie)
- 7. Maroon 5 — 20
- 8. Pitbull — 19
- 9. Kesha — 17
- 10. Taylor Swift — 16 (tie)
- 10. Wiz Khalifa — 16 (tie)
Self-replacement at number one
- The Black Eyed Peas — "Boom Boom Pow" → "I Gotta Feeling" (July 4, 2009)
- Taylor Swift — "Shake It Off" → "Blank Space" (November 29, 2014)
Other achievements
- Teenage Dream by Katy Perry is the album with most number-one singles (4).
- "I Gotta Feeling" by The Black Eyed Peas holds the record for the longest stay on the chart (76 weeks).
- "Sexy and I Know It" by LMFAO holds the record for largest gap between turns at #1, falling from the position on the week ending November 12, 2011 and returning the week ending January 7, 2012, a 9-week gap.
- 2012 has the record for the year with most number one songs on the chart with 17 different songs.
- Nikki Yanofsky was the youngest artist to top the Canadian Hot 100 at 16 years, 19 days old with the song "I Believe". She was also the first Canadian act to reach number one on the chart.
- "Counting Stars" by OneRepublic had the longest climb to number one taking 34 weeks to reach that peak.
- "Beautiful" by Eminem and "Out of the Woods" by Taylor Swift tie for the biggest drops off the Canadian Hot 100, both dropping off from #8.
- On the issue dated June 27, 2009, The Black Eyed Peas became the first act to simultaneously occupy the top two positions with "Boom Boom Pow" at number one and "I Gotta Feeling" at number two.[20]
- On the issue dated October 24, 2009, "3" by Britney Spears broke the record for the biggest jump to number one, leaping from number 86 to number one.[21]
- On the issue dated October 31, 2015, The Weeknd's "The Hills" reached the top spot seven weeks after "Can't Feel My Face", becoming the first time in Canadian Hot 100 history that an album's lead single hit #1 after the second single did.
- On the issue dated December 5, 2015, Justin Bieber became the artist with the most charting songs in the same week (18); He also became the artist with the most simultaneous Top 10 singles in the same week (4).[22]
Number-one singles
See also
- Canadian Singles Chart
- Canadian Albums Chart
- List of artists who reached number one on the Canadian Hot 100
- List of number-one singles (Canada)
- Charts archive from 1969 to 2009 in 5 yearly intervals
References
- 1 2 "Billboard Launches Canadian Hot 100 Chart". Billboard. June 7, 2007. Retrieved June 7, 2007.
- ↑ "Billboard's Canadian Hot 100 Now Incorporates Spotify Listening". Billboard. December 23, 2014. Retrieved December 23, 2014.
- ↑ Cohen, Jonathan (June 7, 2007). "Rihanna Tops Hot 100 And New Canadian Tally". Billboard. Retrieved June 7, 2007.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100: Week of February 21, 2009". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100: Week of February 20, 2010". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100: Week of March 27, 2010". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100: Week of May 22, 2010". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100: Week of May 29, 2010". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100: Week of January 29, 2011". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved January 27, 2011.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100: Week of February 26, 2011". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved February 17, 2011.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100: Week of March 3, 2012". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved February 23, 2012.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. April 14, 2012. Retrieved April 5, 2012.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100: Week of September 1, 2012". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved September 5, 2012.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. August 31, 2013. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. November 16, 2013. Retrieved November 7, 2013.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. September 6, 2014. Retrieved 2014-08-28.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. September 19, 2015. Retrieved 2015-09-09.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. November 14, 2015. Retrieved 2015-11-03.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100". Billboard. February 20, 2016. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100: Week of June 27, 2009". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
- ↑ "Canadian Hot 100: Week of October 24, 2009". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media. Retrieved January 19, 2011.
- ↑ "Canada Singles Top 100 (December 5, 2015)". acharts.co.
External links
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