Billboard Charts

Overview

Billboard is an American trade magazine owned by Penske Media Corp., known for its music charts that rank the top songs and albums in the United States based on radio airplay, physical sales, and streams. It's become the gold standard in the recording industry for what's driving pop culture.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • The artists with the most No. 1 singles

    Scoring a No. 1 single is a difficult task—less than 4% of the songs that have made Billboard’s Hot 100 chart have ever reached the top spot. This list breaks down the most elite hitmakers in Billboard history, including the Supremes, Taylor Swift, and the Beatles, who released an incredible 20 No. 1 singles.

  • Browse over a century of Billboard issues

    For a music nerd, there's nothing more fascinating than poring over the Billboard charts from past decades to see how music—and the way it's categorized—has evolved. This digital archive allows you to click through almost every issue of the magazine and, in the process, watch the gradual emergence of nearly every American musical trend of the past century.

  • Billboard began as an advertising industry magazine

    The magazine was initially “devoted to the interests of advertisers, poster printers, bill posters, advertising agents & secretaries of fairs.” While it occasionally tracked music via sheet music, record, and jukebox sales through the 1930s, it added its first true top 10 singles chart in 1940.

  • Billboard's first No. 1 single was Tommy Dorsey Orchestra's 'I'll Never Smile Again'

    The song was No. 1 on Billboard’s Best Selling Retail Records chart, the predecessor to the Hot 100. The chart only measured record copies sold, excluding other indicators of popularity, like sheet music sales or jukebox plays, that were used on other charts.

  • Billboard's early music charts were racially segregated

    In 1942, the publication introduced the Harlem Hit Parade chart, listing the top 10 records sold at select record stores in the majority-Black borough of New York. In 1945, it changed the chart’s name to Most Played Juke Box Race Records, using the music industry term (“race record”) that identified recordings by Black artists, even if they played music markedly similar to the white artists on the other charts.

  • Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs' 'Stay' is the shortest song ever to hit No. 1

    The single reached the top of Billboard's Hot 100 chart on November 21, 1960. At just 1:38, it's the shortest number one in Billboard's history. It also didn't last long at the top: It was replaced the following week by Elvis Presley's "Are You Lonesome Tonight?"

  • Although payola was made illegal in 1960, it likely continued on the Billboard charts through the '70s

    In his book “Uncharted Territory: What Numbers Tell Us about the Biggest Hit Songs and Ourselves,” music journalist Chris Dalla Riva argues that payola, the music industry term for undisclosed paid publicity, likely continued into the 1970s with the Billboard chart. Dalla Riva cites chart irregularities and reports about Bill Wardlow, Billboard’s then director of sales, who was a known booster for disco label Casablanca Records.

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