List of Billboard Hot 100 chart achievements and milestones
This is a comprehensive listing which highlights significant achievements and milestones based upon Billboard magazine's singles charts, most notably the Billboard Hot 100. This list spans the period from the issue dated January 1, 1955 to present. The Billboard Hot 100 began with the issue dated August 4, 1958, and is currently the standard popular music chart in the United States.
Prior to the creation of the Hot 100, Billboard published four singles charts: "Best Sellers in Stores", "Most Played by Jockeys", "Most Played in Jukeboxes" and "The Top 100". These charts, which ranged from 20 to 100 slots, were phased out at different times between 1957 and 1958. Though technically not part of the Hot 100 chart history, their data are included for computational purposes, and to avoid unenlightening or misleading characterizations. All items listed below are from the Hot 100 era, unless otherwise noted (pre-Hot 100 charts).
All-Time Hot 100 achievements (1958–2013)
In 2008, for the 50th anniversary of the Hot 100, Billboard magazine compiled a ranking of the 100 best-performing songs on the chart over the 50 years, along with the best-performing artists.[1][2] In 2013, Billboard revised the rankings for the chart's 55th anniversary edition.[3] Shown below are the top 10 songs and top 10 artists over the 55-year period of the Hot 100, through August 2013. Also shown are the artists placing the most songs on the overall "all-time" top 100 song list.
Top 10 songs of All-Time (1958–2013)
Rank | Single | Year(s) released | Artist(s) | Peak and duration |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "The Twist" | Chubby Checker | #1 for 3 weeks | |
2 | "Smooth" | Santana featuring Rob Thomas | #1 for 12 weeks | |
3 | "Mack the Knife" | Bobby Darin | #1 for 9 weeks | |
4 | "How Do I Live" | LeAnn Rimes | #2 for 4 weeks | |
5 | "Party Rock Anthem" | LMFAO featuring Lauren Bennett & GoonRock | #1 for 6 weeks | |
6 | "I Gotta Feeling" | The Black Eyed Peas | #1 for 14 weeks | |
7 | "Macarena (Bayside Boys mix)" | Los Del Rio | #1 for 14 weeks | |
8 | "Physical" | Olivia Newton-John | #1 for 10 weeks | |
9 | "You Light Up My Life" | Debby Boone | #1 for 10 weeks | |
10 | "Hey Jude" | The Beatles | #1 for 9 weeks |
* — re-released
Source:[4]
Top 10 artists of All-Time (1958–2013)
Rank | Artist |
---|---|
1 | The Beatles |
2 | Madonna |
3 | Elton John |
4 | Elvis Presley |
5 | Mariah Carey |
6 | Stevie Wonder |
7 | Janet Jackson |
8 | Michael Jackson |
9 | Whitney Houston |
10 | The Rolling Stones |
Source:[5]
Artists with the most songs on Billboard's Top 100 Hits of All-Time (1958–2013)
NOTE: Paul McCartney would have 5 songs if including his Beatles work and solo work together.
Source:[4]
Song milestones
Most weeks at number one
- 16 weeks
- Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men — "One Sweet Day" (1995–96)
- 14 weeks
- Whitney Houston — "I Will Always Love You" (1992–93)
- Boyz II Men — "I'll Make Love to You" (1994)
- Los del Río — "Macarena" (Bayside Boys mix) (1996)
- Elton John — "Candle in the Wind 1997" / "Something About the Way You Look Tonight" (1997–98)
- Mariah Carey — "We Belong Together" (2005)
- The Black Eyed Peas — "I Gotta Feeling" (2009)
- Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars — "Uptown Funk" (2015)
- 13 weeks
- Boyz II Men — "End of the Road" (1992)
- Brandy and Monica — "The Boy Is Mine" (1998)
- 12 weeks
- Santana featuring Rob Thomas — "Smooth" (1999–2000)
- Eminem — "Lose Yourself" (2002–03)
- Usher featuring Lil Jon and Ludacris — "Yeah!" (2004)
- The Black Eyed Peas — "Boom Boom Pow" (2009)
- Robin Thicke featuring T.I. and Pharrell — "Blurred Lines" (2013)
- Wiz Khalifa featuring Charlie Puth — "See You Again" (2015)
- 11 weeks
- Elvis Presley — "Hound Dog" / "Don't Be Cruel" (1956) (Pre-Hot 100: "Best Sellers in Stores" and "Most Played in Jukeboxes" charts)
- All-4-One — "I Swear" (1994)
- Toni Braxton — "Un-Break My Heart" (1996–97)
- Puff Daddy and Faith Evans featuring 112 — "I'll Be Missing You" (1997)
- Destiny's Child — "Independent Women Part I" (2000–01)
- 10 weeks
- McGuire Sisters — "Sincerely" (1955) (Pre-Hot 100: "Most Played by Jockeys" chart)
- Pérez Prado — "Cherry Pink and Apple Blossom White" (1955) (Pre-Hot 100: "Best Sellers in Stores" chart)
- Debby Boone — "You Light Up My Life" (1977)
- Olivia Newton-John — "Physical" (1981–82)
- Santana featuring The Product G&B — "Maria Maria" (2000)
- Ashanti — "Foolish" (2002)
- Nelly featuring Kelly Rowland — "Dilemma" (2002)
- Kanye West featuring Jamie Foxx — "Gold Digger" (2005)
- Beyoncé — "Irreplaceable" (2006–07)
- Flo Rida featuring T-Pain — "Low" (2008)
- Rihanna featuring Calvin Harris — "We Found Love" (2011–12)
- Pharrell Williams — "Happy" (2014)
- Adele — "Hello" (2015–16)[6]
Source:[7]
Most weeks at number two (without hitting number one)
- 10 weeks
- Foreigner — "Waiting for a Girl Like You" (1981–82)
- Missy Elliott — "Work It" (2002–03)
- 9 weeks
- Donna Lewis — "I Love You Always Forever" (1996)
- Shania Twain — "You're Still the One" (1998)
- 8 weeks
- Shai — "If I Ever Fall in Love" (1992–93)
- Deborah Cox — "Nobody's Supposed to Be Here" (1998–99)
- Brian McKnight — "Back at One" (1999–2000)
- Mario Winans featuring Enya and P. Diddy — "I Don't Wanna Know" (2004)
- Ed Sheeran —"Thinking Out Loud" (2015)
Source:[8]
Most total weeks in the top ten
- 32 weeks – LeAnn Rimes — "How Do I Live" (1997–98)
- 31 weeks – Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars — "Uptown Funk" (2014–15)
- 30 weeks – Santana featuring Rob Thomas — "Smooth" (1999–2000)
- 29 weeks – LMFAO featuring Lauren Bennett and GoonRock — "Party Rock Anthem" (2011–12)
- 28 weeks – Jewel — "Foolish Games" / "You Were Meant for Me" (1997–98)
- 26 weeks – Savage Garden — "Truly Madly Deeply" (1997–98)
- 25 weeks – Chubby Checker — "The Twist" (1960 and 1962), Toni Braxton — "Un-Break My Heart" (1996–97), Timbaland featuring OneRepublic — "Apologize" (2007–08), OneRepublic — "Counting Stars" (2013–14), Meghan Trainor — "All About That Bass" (2014–15),[9] Fetty Wap — "Trap Queen" (2015)
The total weeks displayed in this section are total weeks the song was charted inside the top 10 portion of the chart, instead of total weeks spent on the chart. Only songs that spent 25 weeks or more in the top 10 are considered for inclusion in this section.
Most total weeks on the Hot 100
- 87 weeks – Imagine Dragons — "Radioactive" (2014)[10]
- 79 weeks – Awolnation — "Sail" (2014)[10]
- 76 weeks – Jason Mraz — "I'm Yours" (2009)[10]
- 69 weeks – LeAnn Rimes — "How Do I Live" (1998)[10]
- 68 weeks – LMFAO featuring Lauren Bennett and GoonRock — "Party Rock Anthem" (2012),[10] OneRepublic — "Counting Stars" (2014)
- 65 weeks – Jewel — "Foolish Games" / "You Were Meant for Me" (1998), Adele — "Rolling in the Deep" (2012)[10]
- 64 weeks – Carrie Underwood — "Before He Cheats" (2007)[10]
- 62 weeks – Lifehouse — "You and Me" (2006), The Lumineers — "Ho Hey" (2013)[10]
The year displayed is the year the songs ended their respective chart runs.
Number-one debuts
- Michael Jackson — "You Are Not Alone" (September 2, 1995)
- Mariah Carey — "Fantasy" (September 30, 1995)
- Whitney Houston — "Exhale (Shoop Shoop)" (November 25, 1995)
- Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men — "One Sweet Day" (December 2, 1995)
- Puff Daddy and Faith Evans featuring 112 — "I'll Be Missing You" (June 14, 1997)
- Mariah Carey — "Honey" (September 13, 1997)
- Elton John — "Candle in the Wind 1997" / "Something About the Way You Look Tonight" (October 11, 1997)
- Céline Dion — "My Heart Will Go On" (February 28, 1998)
- Aerosmith — "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing" (September 5, 1998)
- Lauryn Hill — "Doo Wop (That Thing)" (November 14, 1998)
- Clay Aiken — "This Is the Night" (June 28, 2003)
- Fantasia — "I Believe" (July 10, 2004)
- Carrie Underwood — "Inside Your Heaven" (July 2, 2005)
- Taylor Hicks — "Do I Make You Proud" (July 1, 2006)
- Britney Spears — "3" (October 24, 2009)
- Eminem — "Not Afraid" (May 22, 2010)
- Kesha — "We R Who We R" (November 13, 2010)
- Britney Spears — "Hold It Against Me" (January 29, 2011)
- Lady Gaga — "Born This Way" (February 26, 2011)
- Katy Perry — "Part of Me" (March 3, 2012)
- Baauer — "Harlem Shake" (March 2, 2013)[11]
- Taylor Swift — "Shake It Off" (September 6, 2014)[12]
- Justin Bieber — "What Do You Mean?" (September 19, 2015)[13]
- Adele — "Hello" (November 14, 2015)[14]
- Zayn — "Pillowtalk" (February 20, 2016)[15]
Source:[16]
Biggest jump to number one
- 97–1 – Kelly Clarkson — "My Life Would Suck Without You" (February 7, 2009)[17]
- 96–1 – Britney Spears — "Womanizer" (October 25, 2008)[18]
- 80–1 – T.I. featuring Rihanna — "Live Your Life" (October 18, 2008)[19]
- 78–1 – Eminem, Dr. Dre and 50 Cent — "Crack a Bottle" (February 21, 2009)[20]
- 72–1 – Taylor Swift — "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together" (September 1, 2012)[21]
- 71–1 – T.I. — "Whatever You Like" (September 6, 2008)[22]
- 64–1 – Maroon 5 — "Makes Me Wonder" (May 12, 2007)
- 60–1 – Rihanna featuring Drake — "What's My Name?" (November 20, 2010)[23]
- 58–1 – Flo Rida — "Right Round" (February 28, 2009)[24]
- 53–1 – Rihanna — "Take a Bow" (May 24, 2008)[25]
- 53–1 – Taio Cruz featuring Ludacris — "Break Your Heart" (March 20, 2010)[26]
- 53–1 – Taylor Swift featuring Kendrick Lamar — "Bad Blood" (June 6, 2015)[27]
Changes in when the eligibility of a single first begins, as well as more accurate digital download totals, have made abrupt chart jumps more commonplace. From 1955–2001, under Billboard's previous methodologies, only two singles ascended directly to #1 from a previous position beneath the Top 20: The Beatles' "Can't Buy Me Love", which jumped from #27 to the top slot in April 1964, and Brandy and Monica's "The Boy Is Mine" which jumped from #23 to #1 in June 1998.
Biggest single-week upward movements
- 97–1 (96 positions) – Kelly Clarkson — "My Life Would Suck Without You" (February 7, 2009)[28]
- 96–1 (95 positions) – Britney Spears — "Womanizer" (October 25, 2008)[29]
- 94–3 (91 positions) – Beyoncé and Shakira — "Beautiful Liar" (April 7, 2007)[30]
- 95–7 (88 positions) – Akon featuring Eminem — "Smack That" (October 14, 2006)[31]
- 97–9 (88 positions) – Drake featuring Nicki Minaj — "Make Me Proud" (November 5, 2011)[32]
- 96–11 (85 positions) – Carrie Underwood — "Cowboy Casanova" (October 10, 2009)[33]
- 100–15 (85 positions) – A. R. Rahman and Pussycat Dolls featuring Nicole Scherzinger — "Jai Ho! (You Are My Destiny)" (March 14, 2009)[34]
- 85–2 (83 positions) – Katy Perry — "Roar" (August 31, 2013)[35]
- 86–4 (82 positions) – Zac Efron, Drew Seeley and Vanessa Anne Hudgens — "Breaking Free" (February 11, 2006)[36]
- 93–12 (81 positions) – Matchbox Twenty — "How Far We've Come" (September 22, 2007)[37]
Under Billboard's previous methodologies, jumps of this magnitude were rare. One exception was Jeannie C. Riley's "Harper Valley PTA," which advanced 74 slots in August 1968;[38] this upward acceleration went unmatched for 30 years, but has been surpassed over a dozen times since 2006. Changes in when the eligibility of a single first begins, as well as more accurate digital download totals, have made abrupt chart jumps more commonplace.
Longest climbs to number one
- 33rd week – Los del Río — "Macarena (Bayside Boys Mix)" (1995–96)[39]
- 31st week – Lonestar — "Amazed" (1999–2000)
- 30th week – John Legend — "All of Me" (2013–14)[40]
- 27th week – Creed — "With Arms Wide Open" (2000)
- 26th week – Vertical Horizon — "Everything You Want" (2000)
- 25th week – UB40 — "Red Red Wine" (1988)
- 23rd week – Patti Austin and James Ingram — "Baby, Come to Me" (1983)
- 22nd week – Vangelis — "Chariots of Fire" (1982), Lady Gaga featuring Colby O'Donis — "Just Dance" (2008–09)
- 21st week – Nick Gilder — "Hot Child in the City" (1978), Robert John — "Sad Eyes" (1979), Outkast — "The Way You Move" (2003–04), Adele — "Set Fire to the Rain" (2011–12)
Biggest single-week downward movements
- 17–96 (79 positions) – Javier Colon — "Stitch by Stitch" (July 23, 2011)[41]
- 21–99 (78 positions) – Jordan Smith – "Somebody to Love" (January 2, 2016)[42]
- 16–93 (77 positions) – 5 Seconds of Summer — "Amnesia" (July 26, 2014)[43]
- 17–92 (75 positions) – Justin Bieber — "Die in Your Arms" (June 23, 2012)[44]
- 23–96 (73 positions) – Colbie Caillat — "I Do" (March 5, 2011)[45]
- 21–94 (73 positions) – Justin Bieber — "Never Let You Go" (March 27, 2010)[46]
- 21–94 (73 positions) – Glee Cast — "Empire State of Mind" (October 16, 2010)[47]
- 16–89 (73 positions) – Jonas Brothers — "Pushin' Me Away" (August 9, 2008)[48]
- 13–86 (73 positions) – Justin Timberlake and Matt Morris featuring Charlie Sexton — "Hallelujah" (February 20, 2010)[49]
- 20–92 (72 positions) – The Beatles — "The Beatles Movie Medley" (June 5, 1982)[50]
Source:[51]
Biggest drops off the Hot 100
- From #9 – Soko — "We Might Be Dead by Tomorrow" (April 5, 2014)[52]
- From #11 – Jonas Brothers — "A Little Bit Longer" (August 30, 2008),[52][53] Taylor Swift — "Mean" (November 13, 2010),[54] One Direction — "Diana" (December 14, 2013),[55] Mariah Carey — "All I Want for Christmas is You" (January 16, 2016)†[56]
- From #12 – Lady Gaga — "Hair" (June 11, 2011),[57] One Direction — "Midnight Memories" (December 14, 2013)[55]
- From #13 – Taylor Swift — "State of Grace" (November 10, 2012),[58] Justin Bieber — "Heartbreaker" (November 2, 2013)[59]
- From #14 – Michael Jackson — "Billie Jean" (June 14, 2014)††,[60] Matt McAndrew — "Wasted Love" (January 10, 2015)[61]
† — A recurring holiday song charting during the Christmas season.
†† — "Billie Jean" by Michael Jackson reappeared on the Hot 100 for one week in 2014, and the above reflects the re-entry only. When the song originally charted in 1983, it fell off the chart from a much lower position.
Prior to 2008, the biggest drop off the Hot 100 was "Nights in White Satin" by The Moody Blues, which ranked at #17 in its final week on the chart in December 1972. This high drop-off position was matched in January 1975 by "Junior's Farm" by Paul McCartney and Wings. The record went unchallenged for more than three decades, but every title listed above achieved its drop-off after just one week on the Hot 100, with the exceptions of Justin Bieber's "Heartbreaker" (two weeks) and Mariah Carey's "All I Want for Christmas is You" (four weeks in its 2015–16 run). "Nights in White Satin" and "Junior's Farm" dropped off after 18 and 12 weeks, respectively.
Source:[62]
Number-one songs covered by different artists
- "Go Away Little Girl" — Steve Lawrence (1963) and Donny Osmond (1971)
- "The Loco-Motion" — Little Eva (1962) and Grand Funk (1974)
- "Please Mr. Postman" — The Marvelettes (1961) and The Carpenters (1975)
- "Venus" — Shocking Blue (1970) and Bananarama (1986)
- "Lean on Me" — Bill Withers (1972) and Club Nouveau (1987)
- "You Keep Me Hangin' On" — The Supremes (1966) and Kim Wilde (1987)
- "When a Man Loves a Woman" — Percy Sledge (1966) and Michael Bolton (1991)
- "I'll Be There" — The Jackson 5 (1970) and Mariah Carey (1992)
- "Lady Marmalade" — Labelle (1975) and Christina Aguilera / Lil' Kim / Mýa / Pink (2001)
Non-English language number-ones
- "Nel Blu Dipinto Di Blu (Volare)" — Domenico Modugno (Italian – August 18, 1958 for five non-consecutive weeks )
- "Sukiyaki" — Kyu Sakamoto (Japanese – June 15, 1963 for three weeks)
- "Dominique" — The Singing Nun (French – December 7, 1963 for four weeks)
- "Rock Me Amadeus" — Falco (English/German – March 29, 1986 for three weeks)
- "La Bamba" — Los Lobos (Spanish – August 29, 1987 for three weeks)
- "Macarena (Bayside Boys Mix)" — Los del Río (English/Spanish – August 3, 1996 for fourteen weeks)
Instrumental number-ones
- "The Happy Organ" — Dave "Baby" Cortez (May 11, 1959 for one week)
- "Sleepwalk" — Santo and Johnny (September 21, 1959 for two weeks)
- "Theme from A Summer Place" — Percy Faith (February 22, 1960 for nine weeks)
- "Wonderland by Night" — Bert Kaempfert (January 9, 1961 for three weeks)
- "Calcutta" — Lawrence Welk (February 13, 1961 for two weeks)
- "Stranger on the Shore" — Mr. Acker Bilk (May 26, 1962 for one week)
- "The Stripper" — David Rose (July 7, 1962 for one week)
- "Telstar" — The Tornados (December 22, 1962 for three weeks)
- "Love Is Blue" — Paul Mauriat (February 10, 1968 for five weeks)
- "Grazing in the Grass" — Hugh Masekela (July 20, 1968 for two weeks)
- "Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet" — Henry Mancini (July 28, 1969 for two weeks)
- "Frankenstein" — The Edgar Winter Group (May 26, 1973 for one week)
- "Love's Theme" — Love Unlimited Orchestra (February 9, 1974 for one week)
- "TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia)" — MFSB and The Three Degrees † (April 20, 1974 for two weeks)
- "Pick Up the Pieces" — Average White Band † (February 22, 1975 for one week)
- "The Hustle" — Van McCoy and the Soul City Symphony † (July 26, 1975 for one week)
- "Fly, Robin, Fly" — Silver Convention † (November 29, 1975 for three weeks)
- "Theme from S.W.A.T." — Rhythm Heritage (February 28, 1976 for one week)
- "A Fifth of Beethoven" — Walter Murphy and the Big Apple Band (October 9, 1976 for one week)
- "Gonna Fly Now" — Bill Conti † (July 2, 1977 for one week)
- "Star Wars Theme/Cantina Band" — Meco (October 1, 1977 for two weeks)
- "Rise" — Herb Alpert (October 20, 1979 for two weeks)
- "Chariots of Fire" — Vangelis (May 8, 1982 for one week)
- "Miami Vice Theme" — Jan Hammer (November 9, 1985 for one week)
- "Harlem Shake" — Baauer † (March 2, 2013 for five weeks)
† — Contains vocal part, but is considered an instrumental. See Instrumental#Borderline cases for more.
Artist achievements
Most number-one singles
Number of singles |
Artist | Biggest number-one |
---|---|---|
The Beatles | "Hey Jude"[65] | |
|
Elvis Presley (Pre-Hot 100 charts and Hot 100) | "Don't Be Cruel / Hound Dog"[66][67] |
Mariah Carey | "We Belong Together"[68] | |
|
Michael Jackson | "Say Say Say" (duet with Paul McCartney)[69] |
Rihanna[70] | "We Found Love" (featuring Calvin Harris)[71] | |
|
The Supremes | "Love Child"[72] |
Madonna | "Like a Virgin"[73] | |
Whitney Houston | "I Will Always Love You"[74] | |
|
Stevie Wonder | "Ebony and Ivory" (duet with Paul McCartney)[75] |
Janet Jackson | "That's the Way Love Goes"[76] |
- The biggest number-one listed by each artist reflects its overall performance on the Hot 100, as calculated by Billboard, and may not necessarily be the single which spent the most weeks at #1 for the artist, such as Madonna's "Like a Virgin" (six weeks at #1, compared to seven for "Take a Bow") and Michael Jackson's duet with Paul McCartney, "Say Say Say" (six weeks at #1, compared to seven for both his solo singles "Billie Jean" and "Black or White").
- Billboard now credits the dual #1 Presley single "Don't Be Cruel/Hound Dog" as a single chart entity. "Don't Be Cruel/Hound Dog" spent 11 weeks at #1, Hound Dog for 6 weeks, Don't Be Cruel for 5 weeks. Many chart statisticians however, such as Joel Whitburn still lists Presley as having 18 number ones.
Most cumulative weeks at number one
Weeks at number one |
Artist |
---|---|
|
Elvis Presley† |
Mariah Carey | |
|
The Beatles |
|
Rihanna |
|
Boyz II Men |
|
Usher |
|
Michael Jackson |
|
Beyoncé |
|
Elton John |
|
Janet Jackson |
Katy Perry |
- *† Pre-Hot 100 charts and Hot 100. Presley is sometimes credited with an "80th week" that occurred when "All Shook Up" spent a ninth week on top of the "Most Played in Jukeboxes" chart. Although Billboard's chart statistician Joel Whitburn still counts this 80th week based on preexisting research, Billboard magazine itself has since revised its methodology and officially credits Presley with 79 weeks.[80]
- *Much of Presley's total factors in pre-Hot 100 data. If counting from the August 1958 Hot 100 inception, Presley totaled 22 weeks at #1.
Source:[77]
Most consecutive number-one singles
Number of singles |
Artist | First hit and date | Final hit and date | Streak-breaking song |
---|---|---|---|---|
Whitney Houston | "Saving All My Love for You" (October 26, 1985) |
"Where Do Broken Hearts Go" (April 23, 1988) |
"Love Will Save the Day" (#9 – August 27, 1988) | |
|
The Beatles | "I Feel Fine" (December 26, 1964) |
"We Can Work It Out" (January 8, 1966) |
"Nowhere Man" (#3 – March 26, 1966) |
Bee Gees | "How Deep Is Your Love" (December 24, 1977) |
"Love You Inside Out" (June 9, 1979) |
"He's A Liar" (#30 – October 24, 1981) | |
|
Elvis Presley | "A Big Hunk o' Love" (August 10, 1959) |
"Surrender" (March 20, 1961) |
"I Feel So Bad" (#5 – May 1961) |
The Supremes | "Where Did Our Love Go" (August 22, 1964) |
"Back in My Arms Again" (June 12, 1965) |
"Nothing but Heartaches" (#11 – September 4, 1965) | |
Michael Jackson | "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" (with Siedah Garrett) (September 19, 1987) |
"Dirty Diana" (July 2, 1988) |
"Another Part of Me" (#11 – September 10, 1988) | |
Mariah Carey | "Vision of Love" (August 4, 1990) |
"Emotions" (October 12, 1991) |
"Can't Let Go" (#2 – January 25, 1992) | |
"Fantasy" (September 30, 1995) |
"My All" (May 23, 1998) |
"When You Believe" (with Whitney Houston) (#15 – January 30, 1999) | ||
Katy Perry | "California Gurls" (featuring Snoop Dogg) (June 19, 2010) |
"Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.)" (August 17, 2011) |
"The One That Got Away" (#3 – January 7, 2012) |
NOTE: Houston's Thinking About You is not counted as intrerupting the streak, as it never appeared on the Hot 100, due to not being released to Pop radio. Likewise Perry's Not Like the Movies and Circle the Drain were only promotional singles, not radio singles.
Sources:[81][82][83][84][85][86][86][87]
Most consecutive years charting a number-one single
Number of years |
Artist | First number-one hit and week | Final number-one hit and final week |
---|---|---|---|
Mariah Carey | "Vision of Love" (August 4, 1990) |
"Thank God I Found You" (February 19, 2000) | |
|
Elvis Presley (Pre-Hot 100 charts and Hot 100) | "Heartbreak Hotel" (March 17, 1956) |
"Good Luck Charm" (April 28, 1962) |
The Beatles | "I Want to Hold Your Hand" (February 1, 1964) |
"The Long and Winding Road" (June 20, 1970) | |
|
The Supremes | "Where Did Our Love Go" (August 22, 1964) |
"Someday We'll Be Together" (December 27, 1969) |
Lionel Richie | "Endless Love" (August 15, 1981) |
"Say You, Say Me" (January 11, 1986) |
Most number-one singles in a calendar year
Number of singles | Artist | Year charted | Singles |
---|---|---|---|
| The Beatles | "I Want to Hold Your Hand", "She Loves You", "Can't Buy Me Love", "Love Me Do", "A Hard Day's Night", "I Feel Fine" | |
| "I Feel Fine", "Eight Days a Week", "Ticket to Ride", "Help!", "Yesterday" | ||
Elvis Presley (Pre-Hot 100 charts) | "Heartbreak Hotel", "I Want You, I Need You, I Love You", "Hound Dog" / "Don't Be Cruel", "Love Me Tender" | ||
| "Too Much", "All Shook Up", "(Let Me Be Your) Teddy Bear", "Jailhouse Rock" | ||
The Supremes | "Come See About Me", "Stop! In the Name of Love", "Back in My Arms Again", "I Hear a Symphony" | ||
Jackson 5 | "I Want You Back", "ABC", "The Love You Save", "I'll Be There" | ||
George Michael | "Faith", "Father Figure", "One More Try", "Monkey" | ||
Usher | "Yeah!", "Burn", "Confessions Part II", "My Boo" | ||
Rihanna | "Rude Boy", "Love the Way You Lie", "What's My Name?", "Only Girl (In the World)" |
Chart notes: If counting Presley's dual hit song "Don't Be Cruel/Hound Dog" separately then Elvis has 5 for 1956. Some Presley songs included here charted #1 on Cashbox, but not on the Billboard Top 100, the precursor to the Billboard Hot 100.
Most top 10 singles
Number of singles |
Artist |
---|---|
|
Madonna |
|
Elvis Presley (Pre-Hot 100 charts and Hot 100) |
|
The Beatles |
|
Michael Jackson |
|
Stevie Wonder |
|
Elton John |
Janet Jackson | |
Mariah Carey | |
Rihanna | |
The Rolling Stones | |
Whitney Houston | |
Paul McCartney |
Note: If Paul McCartney's solo work and work with the Beatles were combined, he would top this list with 57 top ten hits
Most consecutive weeks in the top 10
Number of weeks |
Artist | Year(s) charted |
Singles |
---|---|---|---|
|
Katy Perry | |
"California Gurls" (featuring Snoop Dogg), "Teenage Dream", "Firework", "E.T." (featuring Kanye West), "Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.)" |
|
Ace of Base | |
"All That She Wants", "The Sign", "Don't Turn Around" |
|
Rihanna | |
"Love the Way You Lie" (Eminem featuring Rihanna), "Only Girl (In the World)", "What's My Name?" (featuring Drake), "S&M" |
|
The Weeknd | |
"Earned It", "Can't Feel My Face", "The Hills" |
Santana | |
"Smooth" (featuring Rob Thomas), "Maria Maria" (featuring The Product G&B) | |
Mariah Carey | |
"Fantasy", "One Sweet Day" (with Boyz II Men), "Always Be My Baby" |
Most top 40 singles
- 114 - Elvis Presley (Pre-Hot 100 charts included)
- 64 - Lil Wayne
- 58 - Elton John
- 51 - Glee Cast
- 50 - The Beatles, Taylor Swift
- 49 - Madonna
- 46 - Stevie Wonder
- 44 - James Brown
- 43 - Aretha Franklin
Notes: Presley is credited by Billboard for having 90 Top 40 chart entries which still ranks him first. However, if including his career before the Hot 100 inception, Presley is credited with 114 Top 40 entries.
Most Hot 100 entries
- 207 - Glee Cast
- 149 - Elvis Presley (Pre-Hot 100 and Hot 100 included)
- 128 - Lil Wayne
- 104 - Drake
- 91 - James Brown
- 83 - Jay-Z
- 78 - Chris Brown
- 75 - Ray Charles
- 73 - Aretha Franklin
- 71 - The Beatles
Source:[101][102][103][104][105][106]
Notes: *Elvis Presley has charted 149 singles on Billboard if tracking his entire career which predates the 1958 Hot 100. If tracking begins after the 1958 inception of the Hot 100, Presley only has 108.
Self-replacement at number one
- Elvis Presley — "Hound Dog" / "Don't Be Cruel" → "Love Me Tender" (October 27, 1956) ("Best Sellers in Stores" and "Most Played by Jockeys" charts)
- The Beatles † — "I Want to Hold Your Hand" → "She Loves You" (March 21, 1964); "She Loves You" → "Can't Buy Me Love" (April 4, 1964)
- Boyz II Men — "I'll Make Love to You" → "On Bended Knee" (December 3, 1994)
- Puff Daddy — "I'll Be Missing You" (Puff Daddy and Faith Evans featuring 112) → "Mo Money Mo Problems" (The Notorious B.I.G. featuring Puff Daddy and Mase) (August 30, 1997)
- Ja Rule — "Always on Time" (Ja Rule featuring Ashanti) → "Ain't It Funny" (Jennifer Lopez featuring Ja Rule) (March 9, 2002)
- Nelly — "Hot in Herre" → "Dilemma" (Nelly featuring Kelly Rowland) (August 17, 2002)
- OutKast — "Hey Ya!" → "The Way You Move" (OutKast featuring Sleepy Brown) (February 14, 2004)
- Usher— "Yeah!" (Usher featuring Lil Jon and Ludacris) → "Burn" (May 22, 2004); "Burn" → "Confessions Part II" (July 24, 2004)
- T.I. — "Whatever You Like" → "Live Your Life" (T.I. featuring Rihanna) (October 18, 2008); "Whatever You Like" → "Live Your Life" (November 15, 2008)
- The Black Eyed Peas — "Boom Boom Pow" → "I Gotta Feeling" (July 11, 2009)
- Taylor Swift — "Shake It Off" → "Blank Space" (November 29, 2014)
- The Weeknd — "Can't Feel My Face" → "The Hills" (October 3, 2015)[107]
- Justin Bieber — "Sorry" → "Love Yourself" (February 13, 2016)[95]
† The Beatles are the only act in history to have three consecutive, self-replacing #1s.
Source:[108]
Simultaneously occupying the top two positions
- Elvis Presley: October 20 – November 3, 1956 (Pre-Hot 100 charts)
- "Hound Dog" / "Don't Be Cruel"
- "Love Me Tender" ("Best Sellers in Stores" and "Most Played by Jockeys" charts)
- The Beatles: From February 22, 1964 until April 25, 1964 the Beatles held the top two positions, with various singles. In some of the weeks, the band held the top three or top four slots, the only act in chart history to do so. On April 4, 1964, The Beatles occupied the entire top five.[109]
- Bee Gees: March 18 – April 15, 1978
- Puff Daddy: August 9 – 30, 1997
- "I'll Be Missing You" (Puff Daddy and Faith Evans featuring 112)
- "Mo Money Mo Problems" (The Notorious B.I.G. featuring Puff Daddy and Mase)
- Ja Rule: March 9 – 23, 2002
- "Ain't It Funny" (Jennifer Lopez featuring Ja Rule)
- "Always on Time" (Ja Rule featuring Ashanti)
- Ashanti: April 20 – May 18, 2002
- "Foolish"
- "What's Luv?" (Fat Joe featuring Ashanti)
- Nelly: August 10 – 31, 2002
- "Hot in Herre"
- "Dilemma" (Nelly featuring Kelly Rowland, songs switched positions on August 17, 2002)
- OutKast: December 20, 2003 – February 7, 2004
- "Hey Ya!"
- "The Way You Move" (OutKast featuring Sleepy Brown)
- Usher: June 26 – July 3, 2004; July 17, 2004
- 50 Cent: April 16 – 30, 2005
- "Candy Shop" (50 Cent featuring Olivia)
- "Hate It or Love It" (The Game featuring 50 Cent)
- Mariah Carey: September 10, 2005
- Akon:
- December 2, 2006
- "I Wanna Love You" (Akon featuring Snoop Dogg)
- "Smack That" (Akon featuring Eminem)
- April 14, 2007
- "Don't Matter"
- "The Sweet Escape" (Gwen Stefani featuring Akon)
- T.I.: October 18, 2008; November 1 – 29, 2008
- "Live Your Life" (T.I. featuring Rihanna)
- "Whatever You Like" (songs switched positions several times)
- "Boom Boom Pow"
- "I Gotta Feeling" (songs switched positions on July 11, 2009)
- Pharrell Williams: June 29[112] – July 27, 2013
- "Blurred Lines" (Robin Thicke featuring T.I. and Pharrell)
- "Get Lucky" (Daft Punk featuring Pharrell Williams)
- "Fancy" (Iggy Azalea featuring Charli XCX)
- "Problem" (Ariana Grande featuring Iggy Azalea)
- The Weeknd: September 26, 2015[118]
- "Sorry"
- "Love Yourself" (songs switched positions on February 13, 2016)
Simultaneously three or more singles in the top 10
- The Beatles: February 29 – May 2, 1964 (Note: The Beatles had as many as five in the top ten April 4–11, 1964)
- "I Want to Hold Your Hand"
- "She Loves You"
- "Please Please Me"
- "Twist and Shout"
- "Can't Buy Me Love"
- "Do You Want to Know a Secret"
- The Bee Gees: February 25 – March 4, 1978
- "How Deep Is Your Love"
- "Stayin' Alive"
- "Night Fever"
- Ashanti: March 30 – April 6, 2002
- "Always On Time" (Ja Rule featuring Ashanti)
- "What's Luv?" (Fat Joe featuring Ashanti)
- "Foolish"
- 50 Cent:
- May 31 – June 7, 2003
- "In Da Club"
- "21 Questions" (50 Cent featuring Nate Dogg)
- "Magic Stick" (Lil' Kim featuring 50 Cent)
- February 19 – April 30, 2005; May 14 – 21, 2005 (Note: 50 Cent had as many as four in the top ten April 2–9, 2005)
- "Disco Inferno"
- "How We Do" (The Game featuring 50 Cent)
- "Candy Shop" (50 Cent featuring Olivia)
- "Hate It or Love It" (The Game featuring 50 Cent)
- "Just a Lil Bit"
- May 31 – June 7, 2003
- Usher: June 5 – July 10, 2004
- "Yeah!" (Usher featuring Lil Jon & Ludacris)
- "Burn"
- "Confessions Part II"
- Akon: May 5, 2007 and May 19, 2007
- "The Sweet Escape" (Gwen Stefani featuring Akon)
- "Don't Matter"
- "I Tried" (Bone Thugs-n-Harmony featuring Akon)
- T-Pain: November 3 – December 29, 2007 (Note: All four titles below were in the top ten November 24 – December 8, 2007)
- "Good Life" (Kanye West featuring T-Pain)
- "Cyclone" (Baby Bash featuring T-Pain)
- "Kiss Kiss" (Chris Brown featuring T-Pain)
- "Low" (Flo Rida featuring T-Pain)
- Chris Brown: April 5, 2008 and May 10, 2008 (Note: The first two titles below were in the top ten on both charts)
- "With You"
- "No Air" (Jordin Sparks & Chris Brown)
- "Shawty Get Loose" (Lil Mama featuring Chris Brown & T-Pain)
- "Forever"
- Lil Wayne: September 27, 2008
- "Got Money" (Lil Wayne featuring T-Pain)
- "Can't Believe It" (T-Pain featuring Lil Wayne)
- "Swagga Like Us" (Jay-Z & T.I. featuring Kanye West & Lil Wayne)
- Adele: March 3, 2012
- "Rolling in the Deep"
- "Someone Like You"
- "Set Fire to the Rain"
- Iggy Azalea: August 30, 2014
- "Fancy" (Iggy Azalea featuring Charli XCX)
- "Problem" (Ariana Grande featuring Iggy Azalea)
- "Black Widow" (Iggy Azalea featuring Rita Ora)
- Ariana Grande: August 30, 2014
- "Problem" (Ariana Grande featuring Iggy Azalea)
- "Bang Bang" (Jessie J, Ariana Grande & Nicki Minaj)
- "Break Free" (Ariana Grande featuring Zedd)
- Justin Bieber: December 5, 2015 – February 6, 2016[120]
Posthumous number-ones
- Otis Redding (d. December 10, 1967) — "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" (March 16, 1968)
- Janis Joplin (d. October 4, 1970) — "Me and Bobby McGee" (March 20, 1971)
- Jim Croce (d. September 20, 1973) — "Time in a Bottle" (December 29, 1973)
- John Lennon (d. December 8, 1980) — "(Just Like) Starting Over" (December 27, 1980)
- The Notorious B.I.G. (d. March 9, 1997) — "Hypnotize" (May 3, 1997) and "Mo Money Mo Problems" (August 30, 1997)
- Soulja Slim (d. November 26, 2003) — "Slow Motion" (Juvenile featuring Soulja Slim) (August 7, 2004)
- Static Major (d. February 25, 2008) — "Lollipop" (Lil Wayne featuring Static Major) (May 3, 2008)
Source:[122]
Age records
- Louis Armstrong (age 62 years, 279 days) is the oldest artist to top the Hot 100. He set that record with "Hello, Dolly!" on May 9, 1964.
- Cher (age 52 years, 297 days) is the oldest female artist to top the Hot 100. She set the record with "Believe" on March 13, 1999. The previous record holder was Grace Slick of Starship, who was 47 years, 156 days old when their hit "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" began its two-week reign on April 4, 1987.
- Michael Jackson (age 11 years, 155 days) is the youngest artist to top the Hot 100. He achieved the record, as part of the Jackson 5, with "I Want You Back" on January 31, 1970.
- Stevie Wonder (age 13 years, 89 days) is the youngest solo artist to top the Hot 100. He set the record with "Fingertips Pt. 2" on August 10, 1963.
- Little Peggy March (age 15 years, 50 days) is the youngest female artist to top the Hot 100. The song which established this record for her was "I Will Follow Him", which reached #1 on April 27, 1963.
- Fred Stobaugh (age 96 years, 23 days) is the oldest living artist to chart on the Hot 100. He was featured on the Green Shoe Studio song "Oh Sweet Lorriane", which ranked at #42 on September 14, 2013.[123] The previous record was held by Tony Bennett, who was 85 years, 59 days old when his song "Body and Soul", a duet with Amy Winehouse, ranked at #87 on October 1, 2011.
- French-born Jordy Lemoine (age 5 years, 156 days) is the youngest artist to chart on the Hot 100. He established the record when his song "Dur dur d'être bébé! (It's Tough to Be a Baby)", where he is credited simply as Jordy, entered the chart on June 19, 1993.[124][125]
Gap records
- The longest gap between #1 hits on the Hot 100 for an artist is 24 years, 355 days by Cher. Her single "Believe" hit #1 on March 13, 1999, her first time on top since "Dark Lady" on March 23, 1974.
- Cher also holds the record gap between first and most recent #1 on the Hot 100 over the longest period of time: 33 years, 232 days. The first of three weeks at #1 for "I Got You Babe" by Sonny & Cher was August 14, 1965. The last week at #1 for Cher's "Believe" was April 3, 1999.
- The record for the longest wait from an artist's Hot 100 debut entry to its first #1 belongs to Santana, with 30 years between the time he first cracked the Hot 100 with "Jingo" (October 25, 1969) and the first of 12 weeks at #1 with "Smooth," featuring Rob Thomas (October 23, 1999).
- When the Tony Bennett and Amy Winehouse duet "Body and Soul" debuted at #87 for the week of October 1, 2011,[126] Bennett became the artist with the longest overall span of singles on the Hot 100 — 53 years, 58 days on account of his single "Young and Warm and Wonderful" which appeared at #59 on the very first edition of the Hot 100, dated August 4, 1958.
Album achievements
Most number-one singles from one album
Artist | Album | Year | Number of Singles |
---|---|---|---|
Michael Jackson | Bad | | |
Katy Perry | Teenage Dream | | |
Various artists † | Saturday Night Fever | | |
Whitney Houston | Whitney | | |
George Michael | Faith | ||
Paula Abdul | Forever Your Girl | | |
Janet Jackson | Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 | | |
Mariah Carey | Mariah Carey | | |
Usher | Confessions | |
Source:[127]
† Saturday Night Fever generated number-one singles for two different artists: "How Deep Is Your Love", "Stayin' Alive" and "Night Fever" by the Bee Gees; and "If I Can't Have You" by Yvonne Elliman.
† Katy Perry's Teenage Dream: The Complete Confection was a reissue of the Teenage Dream album, and featured an additional single, "Part Of Me", which peaked at Number One on the Billboard Hot 100. This brings her actual total to six. However, this does not count since the single comes from a reissue of the album and not the original.[128]
Most top ten singles from one album
Artist | Album | Year | Number of Singles |
---|---|---|---|
Michael Jackson | Thriller | | |
Bruce Springsteen | Born in the U.S.A. | | |
Janet Jackson | Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 | | |
Michael Jackson | Bad | | |
George Michael | Faith | ||
Janet Jackson | Janet. | | |
Katy Perry | Teenage Dream | | |
Lionel Richie | Can't Slow Down | | |
Janet Jackson | Control | | |
Genesis | Invisible Touch | ||
Madonna | True Blue | ||
Huey Lewis and the News | Fore! | ||
Whitney Houston | Whitney | | |
Paula Abdul | Forever Your Girl | | |
Bobby Brown | Don't Be Cruel | ||
New Kids on the Block | Hangin' Tough | ||
Bon Jovi | New Jersey | ||
Milli Vanilli | Girl You Know It's True | | |
Various artists † | Waiting to Exhale | | |
Fergie | The Dutchess | | |
The Black Eyed Peas | The E.N.D. | | |
Taylor Swift | 1989 | | |
Source:[129]
† Waiting to Exhale generated top ten singles for five different artists: "Exhale (Shoop Shoop)" and "Count on Me" by Whitney Houston (the latter with CeCe Winans), "Not Gon' Cry" by Mary J. Blige, "Sittin' Up in My Room" by Brandy, and "Let It Flow" by Toni Braxton.
Other album achievements
- Janet Jackson's Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 has the most top 5 singles, with 7.[130]
- Taylor Swift's Speak Now is the only album to have all its songs chart on the Hot 100, also giving Swift the record for most entries off one album, with 14.[131]
NOTE: Numbers listed here are, per Billboard's rules,[132] over one release.
Producer achievements
Producers with the most number-one singles
Number of singles |
Producer(s) | Best known for producing | Biggest number-one hit and date |
---|---|---|---|
George Martin | The Beatles | "Hey Jude"[133] (September 28, 1968) | |
Max Martin | Britney Spears, Katy Perry, Kelly Clarkson, Pink, Taylor Swift | "Dark Horse" [134] (February 8, 2014) | |
|
Steve Sholes (Pre-Hot 100 charts and Hot 100) |
Elvis Presley | "Hound Dog/Don't Be Cruel" (August 18, 1956) |
Jimmy Jam, Terry Lewis | Janet Jackson | "That's the Way Love Goes"[76] (May 15, 1993) | |
Dr. Luke | Katy Perry, Kelly Clarkson, Kesha, Miley Cyrus | "Tik Tok"[135] (January 2, 2010) |
Songwriter achievements
Songwriters with the most number-one singles
Number of singles |
Songwriter | Best known writing for | Biggest number-one hit and date |
---|---|---|---|
Paul McCartney | The Beatles | "Hey Jude"[133] (September 28, 1968) | |
John Lennon | The Beatles | "Hey Jude"[133] (September 28, 1968) | |
Max Martin | Katy Perry, Britney Spears, Kelly Clarkson, Pink, Taylor Swift | "Dark Horse"[134] (February 8, 2014) | |
Mariah Carey | herself | "We Belong Together"[68] (June 4, 2005) | |
|
Barry Gibb | Bee Gees, Andy Gibb | "How Deep Is Your Love"[139] (December 24, 1977) |
Dr. Luke | Katy Perry, Kesha, Miley Cyrus | "Tik Tok" (Jan 2, 2010) |
Source:[137][138][140][141][142]
Most number-one singles in a calendar year
Number of singles |
Songwriter(s) | Year | Number-one hits (in chronological order) |
---|---|---|---|
|
John Lennon Paul McCartney |
1964 | The Beatles — "I Want to Hold Your Hand"†, "She Loves You"†, "Can't Buy Me Love"†, "Love Me Do" Peter and Gordon — "A World Without Love" The Beatles — "A Hard Day's Night", "I Feel Fine"††† |
Barry Gibb †† | 1978 | Bee Gees — "How Deep Is Your Love", "Stayin' Alive"† Andy Gibb — "(Love Is) Thicker Than Water"† Bee Gees — "Night Fever"† Yvonne Elliman — "If I Can't Have You"† Andy Gibb — "Shadow Dancing" Frankie Valli — "Grease" | |
|
Lamont Dozier Brian Holland Eddie Holland |
1965 | The Supremes — "Come See About Me", "Stop! In the Name of Love", "Back in My Arms Again"† Four Tops — "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)"† The Supremes — "I Hear a Symphony" |
John Lennon ††† Paul McCartney ††† |
1965 | The Beatles — "I Feel Fine", "Eight Days a Week", "Ticket to Ride", "Help!", "Yesterday" ††† | |
Robin Gibb Maurice Gibb |
1978 | Bee Gees — "How Deep Is Your Love", "Stayin' Alive", "Night Fever"† Yvonne Elliman — "If I Can't Have You"† Andy Gibb — "Shadow Dancing" |
† Chronologically sequential, replacing each other at #1
†† Holds all-time record of writing the most consecutively charted (self-replacing) #1 songs on the Hot 100, with 4.
††† Hold all-time record of writing the most consecutive #1 A-side singles, with 6. Record includes these five 1965 A-sides and "We Can Work It Out", which hit #1 in January 1966.
Selected additional Hot 100 achievements
- The first #1 song on the Hot 100 was "Poor Little Fool" by Ricky Nelson (August 4, 1958).
- The #1 song in the first week Billboard incorporated sales and airplay data from Nielsen SoundScan and Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems was "Set Adrift on Memory Bliss" by P.M. Dawn (November 30, 1991).
- The #1 song in the first week Billboard allowed songs without a commercial single release to chart on the Hot 100 was "I'm Your Angel" by R. Kelly and Céline Dion (December 5, 1998). Though the song was making its first appearance on the Hot 100 that week, Billboard did not consider it a debut at #1, since it appeared on unpublished test charts prior to the allowance of airplay-only songs on the main chart.[143] "I'm Your Angel" also entered the Hot 100 Singles Sales chart that week at #1,[144] so it would have been ineligible to chart on the Hot 100 before then.
- The first "airplay-only" song to reach #1 (no points from a commercial single release) was "Try Again" by Aaliyah (June 17, 2000).
- Justin Bieber holds the record for the most entries in the Hot 100 during a one-week period, with 17 on the December 5, 2015 chart.[145] The Beatles had held the record for nearly 51 years, occupying 14 positions on the Hot 100 dated April 11, 1964, unequalled until Drake tied the tally on March 7, 2015, nine months prior to Bieber's record-setter.[146] Taylor Swift holds the record by a female artist with 11 entries on the Hot 100 for the week of November 13, 2010.[147]
- Bieber also holds the record for the most debuting entries on a Hot 100 chart by any artist, with 13 on December 5, 2015.[145]
- The Beatles are the only artists to simultaneously hold the top 2 spots on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart and Billboard 200 albums chart. They achieved this feat for nine consecutive weeks, from February 29, 1964, to April 25, 1964. For the first five weeks of that run, through March 28, 1964, "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and "She Loves You" were the #1 and #2 singles (which swapped positions during March 1964), while Meet the Beatles! and Introducing... The Beatles held the top 2 spots on the albums charts. For the remaining weeks of the run, "Can't Buy Me Love" and their cover of "Twist and Shout" were the #1 and #2 singles, while Meet the Beatles! and Introducing... The Beatles continued their reign as the top 2 albums.[148][149]
- Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb, John Lennon, and Paul McCartney hold the record of writing all of the Top 3 singles for one week. The Gibbs co-wrote the top 3 singles for the week of March 18, 1978 – #1 "Night Fever" and #2 "Stayin' Alive" for the Bee Gees, and #3 "Emotion" for Samantha Sang. Lennon and McCartney co-wrote the top 3 singles for the week of March 14, 1964 - #1 "I Want to Hold Your Hand", #2 "She Loves You", and #3 "Please Please Me", all for The Beatles. They continued this record the following week of March 21, 1964, when "She Loves You" switched places with "I Want to Hold Your Hand".
- The Black Eyed Peas hold the record for the longest uninterrupted time at #1 on the Hot 100, a total of 26 consecutive weeks from April to October 2009. "Boom Boom Pow" spent the first 12 weeks on top, with "I Gotta Feeling" taking over for the remaining 14 weeks.[150] Prior to August 2009, Usher held this record, spending 19 consecutive weeks on top of the chart in 2004 with "Yeah!" (12 weeks at #1) and "Burn" (first 7 of its 8 total weeks at #1).[151]
- Taylor Swift holds the all-time record for most top ten debuts on the Hot 100, with 12.[152][153]
- On December 4, 2010, Rihanna's "Only Girl (In the World)" reached the top spot two weeks after "What's My Name?", becoming the first time in Hot 100 history that an album's debut single hit #1 after the second single did.[154]
See also
- List of Billboard Hot 100 chart achievements by decade
- List of number-one hits (United States)
- List of best-charting music artists in the U.S.
- List of artists who reached number one in the United States
References
- ↑ "Hot 100 Anniversary: Find Out The Top Songs Of All Time". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media, Inc). 2008-10-10. Retrieved 2015-01-15. This contains the heading of the article only, no charts.
- ↑ This site contains the Hot 100's top 100 songs of all-time in the 50th anniversary edition in 2008.
- ↑ "Hot 100 55th Anniversary Central". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media, Inc). 2013-08-02. Retrieved 2015-01-15.
- 1 2 Bronson, Fred (2013-08-02). "Hot 100 55th Anniversary: The All-time Top 100 Songs". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media, Inc). Retrieved 2015-01-02.
- ↑ "Hot 100 55th Anniversary By The Numbers: Top 100 Artists, Most No. 1s, Biggest No. 2s & More". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media, Inc). 2013-08-02. Retrieved 2015-01-15.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (2016-01-04). "Adele's 'Hello' Tops Hot 100 for 10th Week as Twenty One Pilots Fly to Top 10". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media, Inc). Retrieved 2016-01-04.
- ↑ Lipshutz, Jason (2015-04-02). "'Uptown Funk!,' 'Macarena' & More: The Longest-Leading No. 1s Ever on the Hot 100". Billboard (Prometheus Global Media). Retrieved 2015-04-02.
- ↑ Letkemann, Jessica (2012-11-15). "Biggest No. 2 Hits Ever: The Top 40 Hot 100 Tunes To Not Hit No. 1". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media, Inc). Retrieved 2012-11-15.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (2015-01-21). "Mark Ronson, Bruno Mars Top Hot 100, Maroon 5 Debuts at No. 8". Billboard. Retrieved 2015-01-21.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Trust, Gary (May 9, 2014). "Imagine Dragons' 'Radioactive' Ends Record Billboard Hot 100 Run". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved 2014-05-09.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (2013-02-20). "Baauer's 'Harlem Shake' Debuts Atop Revamped Hot 100". Billboard. Retrieved 2013-02-20.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (September 3, 2014). "Taylor Swift's 'Shake It Off' Holds At No. 1 On Hot 100". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved September 3, 2014.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (September 8, 2015). "Justin Bieber Scores First Hot 100 No. 1 With Debut of 'What Do You Mean?'". Billboard. Retrieved September 8, 2015.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (November 2, 2015). "Adele Says 'Hello' to No. 1 Hot 100 Debut; First Song to Sell 1 Million Downloads in a Week". Billboard. Retrieved November 2, 2015.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (February 8, 2016). "Zayn's 'Pillowtalk' Debuts at No. 1 on Hot 100'". Billboard. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
- ↑ "Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 Debuts, a Guide". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. February 23, 2012. Retrieved February 25, 2012.
- ↑ Silvio Pietroluongo (Jan 28, 2009). "Kelly Clarkson Breaks Record For Hot 100 Jump". Billboard. Retrieved 2009-01-28.
- ↑ Caulfield, Keith (2008-10-08). "T.I. Maintains No. 1 Album While Britney Spears Zooms to No. 1 on the Hot 100". Billboard magazine. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
- ↑ Caulfield, Keith (2008-10-08). "T.I.'s 'Paper Trail' Leads To No. 1 On The Billboard 200". Billboard magazine. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
- ↑ Pietroluongo, Silvio (2009-02-11). "Eminem's 'Bottle' Breaks Digital Record". Billboard magazine. Retrieved 2009-02-11.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (2012-08-22). "Taylor Swift Scores First-Ever No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100 With 'Never'". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media, Inc). Retrieved 2012-08-22.
- ↑ Pietroluongo, Silvio (2008-08-27). "T.I. Sets New Record With Hot 100 No. 1 Jump". Billboard magazine. Retrieved 2008-08-27.
- ↑ Pietroluongo, Silvio (2010-11-03). "Rihanna's 'What's My Name?' Rockets to No. 1 on Hot 100". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media, Inc). Retrieved 2010-11-10.
- ↑ Silvio Pietroluongo (February 18, 2009). "Flo Rida Topples Single-Week Download Mark". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media, Inc). Retrieved 2009-02-18.
- ↑ Pietroluongo, Silvio (2008-05-14). "Rihanna's 'Bow' Soars 52 Spots To Lead Hot 100". Billboard magazine. Retrieved 2008-05-14.
- ↑ Pietroluongo, Silvio (2010-03-10). "Taio Cruz Cruises To Record No. 1 Jump on Hot 100". Billboard (Nielsen Business Media, Inc). Retrieved 2010-03-10.
- ↑ "Taylor Swift's 'Bad Blood' Blasts to No. 1 on Hot 100".
- ↑ "Hot 100: Week of February 7, 2009 (Biggest Jump)". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
- ↑ "Hot 100: Week of October 25, 2008 (Biggest Jump)". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
- ↑ "Hot 100: Week of April 7, 2007 (Biggest Jump)". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
- ↑ "Hot 100: Week of October 14, 2006 (Biggest Jump)". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (October 26, 2011). "Adele's 'Someone Like You' Holds No. 1 on Hot 100 for Fifth Week; Rihanna, Drake on the Rise". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved 2011-10-26.
- ↑ "Hot 100: Week of October 10, 2009 (Biggest Jump)". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
- ↑ "Hot 100: Week of March 14, 2009 (Biggest Jump)". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (2013-08-21). "Robin Thicke No. 1, Katy Perry No. 2 On Hot 100". Billboard. Retrieved 2013-08-21.
- ↑ "Hot 100: Week of February 11, 2006 (Biggest Jump)". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
- ↑ "Hot 100: Week of September 22, 2007 (Biggest Jump)". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
- ↑ "Hot 100: Week of August 31, 1968 (Biggest Jump)". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (Aug 4, 2009). "Backwards Bullets: This Week In Charts 1996". Billboard. Retrieved 2009-01-28.
- ↑ Trust, Gary (2014-05-07). "John Legend's 'All Of Me' Tops Hot 100, Ariana Grande Debuts At No. 3". Billboard. Retrieved 2014-05-07.
- ↑ "Hot 100: Week of July 23, 2011 (Biggest Fall)". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
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Additional sources
- Fred Bronson's Billboard Book of Number 1 Hits, 5th Edition (ISBN 0-8230-7677-6)
- Christopher G. Feldman, The Billboard Book of No. 2 Singles (ISBN 0-8230-7695-4)
- Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles 1955–2008 (ISBN 0-89820-180-2)
- Joel Whitburn Presents the Billboard Pop Charts, 1955–1959 (ISBN 0-89820-092-X)
- Joel Whitburn Presents the Billboard Hot 100 Charts: The Sixties (ISBN 0-89820-074-1)
- Joel Whitburn Presents the Billboard Hot 100 Charts: The Seventies (ISBN 0-89820-076-8)
- Joel Whitburn Presents the Billboard Hot 100 Charts: The Eighties (ISBN 0-89820-079-2)
- Joel Whitburn Presents the Billboard Hot 100 Charts: The Nineties (ISBN 0-89820-137-3)
- Joel Whitburn Presents the Billboard Hot 100 Charts: The 2000s (ISBN 0-89820-182-9)
- Additional information obtained can be verified within Billboard's online archive services and print editions of the magazine.
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