Streaming Songs
The Streaming Songs chart is released weekly by Billboard magazine and lists each week's top streamed radio songs, on-demand songs and videos on leading online music services in the United States.[1] The chart represents one of the three components, along with airplay (Hot 100 Airplay) and sales (Hot Digital Songs and Hot Singles Sales), that determine the chart positions of songs on the Billboard Hot 100, which ranks the most popular songs in the United States.[2]
Billboard editorial director Bill Werde said that "Harlem Shake"'s success prompted them to enact the chart policy after two years of discussions with YouTube".[2] The first number-one song on the chart was "Thrift Shop" by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis featuring Wanz on January 19, 2013.[3]
Chart achievements
Songs with the most weeks at number-one
- 14 weeks
- 13 weeks
- "Wrecking Ball" – Miley Cyrus (2013-2014)
- "Fancy" – Iggy Azalea featuring Charli XCX (2014)
- "Despacito" – Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber (2017)
- 12 weeks
- "Uptown Funk" – Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars (2015)
- "Closer" – The Chainsmokers featuring Halsey (2016)
- 11 weeks
- "We Can't Stop" – Miley Cyrus (2013)
- 10 weeks
- "All About That Bass" – Meghan Trainor (2014-2015)
- "Watch Me" – Silentó (2015)
- "Bad and Boujee" – Migos featuring Lil Uzi Vert (2016-2017)
Highest single-week streams
- 103 million, "Harlem Shake" – Baauer (March 2, 2013)
- 69.6 million, "Despacito" – Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber (June 17, 2017)
- 67.4 million, "Humble." – Kendrick Lamar (May 6, 2017)
- 61.6 million, "Hello" – Adele (November 14, 2015)
- 55.9 million, "Black Beatles" – Rae Sremmurd featuring Gucci Mane (December 10, 2016)
- 53.9 million, "I'm the One" – DJ Khaled featuring Justin Bieber, Quavo, Chance the Rapper and Lil Wayne (May 20, 2017)
- 51.0 million, "DNA." – Kendrick Lamar (May 6, 2017)
- 50.8 million, "Shape of You" – Ed Sheeran (March 25, 2017)
- 50.0 million, "Bad and Boujee" – Migos featuring Lil Uzi Vert (February 18, 2017)
- 46.5 million, "Work" – Rihanna featuring Drake (March 12, 2016)
Source:[6]
Artists with the most number-one singles
- 1. Justin Bieber (4)
- 2. Miley Cyrus (3)
- 3. Katy Perry (2)
- 3. PSY (2)
- 3. Taylor Swift (2)
- 3. Rihanna (2)
- 3. Drake (2)
Artists with the most weeks at number-one
- 1. Miley Cyrus (25)
- 2. Justin Bieber (24)
- 3. Desiigner (14)
- 4. Iggy Azalea (13) (tie)
- 4. Charli XCX (13) (tie)
- 4. Luis Fonsi (13) (tie)
- 4. Daddy Yankee (13) (tie)
- 8. Bruno Mars (12) (tie)
- 8. Mark Ronson (12) (tie)
- 8. The Chainsmokers (12) (tie)
- 8. Halsey (12) (tie)
See also
References
- ↑ "Streaming Songs Chart". Billboard.com.
- 1 2 "Harlem Shake's YouTube bump sends it to No 1 in US". The Guardian.
- ↑ "Streaming Songs Chart". Billboard.com.
- ↑ "The Weeknd No. 1 on Hot 100, Drake's 'Hotline Bling' Bounds to No. 2". Billboard.
- ↑ "Sia's 'Cheap Thrills' Takes No. 1 on Hot 100 From Drake". Billboard.
- ↑ "Rihanna & Drake's 'Work' Leads Hot 100 for Second Week". Billboard.