Billboard charts
On January 4, 1936, Billboard magazine published its first music hit parade and on July 20, 1940 the first Music Popularity Chart was calculated. Since 1958 the Hot 100 has been published, combining single sales and radio airplay.
Methodology of its charts
Currently, Billboard utilizes a system called Nielsen Soundscan to track sales of singles, albums, videos and DVDs. Essentially, it's a system that registers sales when the product is purchased at the cash register of SoundScan-enabled stores. Billboard also uses a system called Broadcast Data Systems, or BDS, which they own as a subsidiary, to track radio airplay. Each song has a musical "fingerprint" which, when played on a radio station that is contracted to use BDS, is detected. These detections are added up every week among all radio stations to determine airplay points. Arbitron statistics are also factored in to give "weight" to airplay based on audience size and time-of-day.
Each of Billboard's charts use this basic formula. What separates the charts is what stations or stores each chart uses - each musical genre having a core audience or retail group. Each genre's department at Billboard is headed up by a chart manager, who makes these determinations.
For many years, a song had to be commercially available as a single to be considered for any of Billboard's charts. At the time, instead of using SoundScan or BDS, Billboard obtained its data from manual reports filled out by radio stations and stores. In 1990, the country singles chart was the first chart to use SoundScan and BDS. They were followed by the Hot 100 and the R&B chart in 1991. Today, all of Billboard's charts use this technology.
Before September 1995, singles were allowed to chart in the week they first went on sale based on airplay points alone. The policy was changed in September 1995 to only allow a single to debut after a full week of sales on combined sales and airplay points. This allowed several tracks to debut at number one.
In December 1998, the policy was further modified to allow tracks to chart on the basis of airplay alone without a commercial release. This change was made to reflect the changing realities of the music business. Previous to this, several substantial radio and MTV hits had not appeared on the Billboard chart at all, because companies chose not to release them as standalone singles, in hopes that their unavailability would spur greater album sales. Not offering a popular song to the public as a single was unheard of before the 1970s. Among the many pre-1999 songs that had ended up in this Hot 100 limbo were Nirvana's "All Apologies," the Cardigans' "Lovefool," Smash Mouth's "Walking on the Sun," OMC's "How Bizarre," the Cowboy Junkies' "Sweet Jane," Harvey Danger's "Flagpole Sitta," Jamiroquai's "Virtual Insanity," Everclear's "Santa Monica," Stone Temple Pilots' "Interstate Love Song," Fastball's "The Way," the Smashing Pumpkins' "Disarm," Veruca Salt's "Seether," and The Cranberries' "Zombie," as well as numerous Green Day, Live, Offspring, No Doubt, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Mariah Carey, Alanis Morissette and Foo Fighters tracks.
Starting in 2005, Billboard changed its methodology to allow paid digital downloads from digital music stores such as iTunes to chart with or without the help of radio airplay.
A variety of charts
Originally, Billboard had separate charts for different measures of popularity, including disk jockey playings, juke box playings, and best selling records in stores. There was also a composite standing chart compiled by combining those, which gradually grew to become a top 100, the ancestor of the current Hot 100 chart. The juke box chart ceased publication after the June 17, 1957 issue, the disk jockey chart, after the July 28, 1958 issue, and the best seller chart, after the October 13, 1958 issue. The July 28, 1958 issue was also the last issue in which the composite chart was called the Top 100; the following week was the start of the Hot 100 title.
Currently, Billboard has many different charts with the Hot 100 and Billboard 200 being the most famous. Billboard also has charts for the following music styles: rock, country, dance, bluegrass, jazz, classical, R&B, rap, electronic, pop, latin, christian music, comedy albums, and even for ringtones for cell phones.
At year's end
At the end of each year, Billboard tallies the results of all of its charts, and the top single/album/artist(s) in each of those charts is awarded in the form of the annual Billboard Music Awards, held in December. The results are also published in Billboard's year-end issue, and heard on year-end edition of its American Top 40 and American Country Countdown radio broadcasts. The year-end charts cover a period from the first week of December of the previous year to the last week of November of the respective year.[1]
Airplay charts
Although the airplay charts are featured in Billboard, it can also be seen in its sister publication R&R, which also publishes the playlists for the stations that are monitored by BDS. Prior to this, the listings were featured in their predecessor Billboard Radio Monitor, which was a spin off weekly publication from Billboard. The magazine, originally called "Airplay Monitor," published its first issue on January 10, 1993 until its last issue on July 14, 2006, when VNU purchased rival trade Radio & Records and combined the two trades the following August.
Singles & Tracks
Billboard Hot 100
The Billboard Hot 100 is the United States music industry standard singles popularity chart issued weekly. Chart rankings are based on airplay and sales; the tracking-week for sales begins on Monday and ends on Sunday; while the airplay tracking-week runs from Wednesday to Tuesday. A new chart is compiled and officially released to the public by Billboard on Thursday. Each chart is dated with the "week-ending" date of the following Saturday.
Hot 100 Airplay
The Hot 100 Airplay is a chart released weekly which measures radio airplay, and is one of the three component charts, along with the Hot 100 Singles Sales and the Hot Digital Songs charts, that determine the chart positions of singles on the Billboard Hot 100.
Hot 100 Singles Sales
The Hot 100 Singles Sales (also known as Singles Sales) is a chart released weekly which measures sales of commercial singles and is one of three component charts, along with the Hot 100 Airplay and the Hot Digital Songs charts, that determine the chart positions of singles on the Billboard Hot 100.
Hot 100 Singles Recurrents
Hot 100 Singles Recurrents is a music chart which ranks singles that have reached Billboard recurrent criteria. Billboard describes a Hot 100 recurrent as a song which has spent twenty weeks on the Hot 100 and has fallen below position fifty. The scope of this chart is to highlight songs that continue to receive significant airplay on U.S. radio stations well past their peak in mainstream popularity, while keeping the turnover of the main Hot 100 chart as fresh and current as possible.
Hot 100 Recurrent Airplay
Hot 100 Recurrent Airplay follows the same recurrent rules as the Hot 100. When a song reaches recurrent status on the Hot 100, it is simultaneously removed from Hot 100 Airplay and moved to this chart.
Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles
Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles is a chart which is comprised of twenty-five positions that represent songs that are making progress to chart on the main singles chart, the Billboard Hot 100. Many times, singles halt their progress at this chart, and never debut on the Hot 100.
The Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart can also be seen as a twenty-five position addenum to the Hot 100, but the chart only represents the twenty-five songs below position number 100 which have not yet appeared on the Hot 100. If a song were to be ranked at number 99 but then declined the following week to a position that is comparable to number 105, it would not be eligible for the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart because it already appeared on the Hot 100.
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, formerly known as Top Soul Singles, Top Black Singles, and Top R&B Singles (before the hip-hop term was added in the late 1990s), is a chart used to track the success of popular music songs in urban, or primarily African-American, venues. Dominated over the years at various times by jazz, rhythm and blues, rock and roll, doo wop, soul, and funk, it is today dominated by contemporary R&B and hip-hop. It lists the most popular R&B and hip-hop songs, calculated weekly by airplay on rhythmic and urban radio stations and sales in urban record stores.
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay is the airplay component chart of Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks. It is not the R&B subset of Hot 100 Airplay, but rather a separate panel of R&B stations in urban markets used.
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles Sales
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles Sales is the sales component chart of Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks. It is not the R&B subset of Hot 100 Singles Sales, but rather a separate panel of sales of commercial singles in the urban market. Due to the decline of standard commercial CD singles for the urban market, the chart is most often filled with the sales of 12" Maxi Singles, a format popular in urban markets.
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Recurrents
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Recurrents chart follows the same recurrent rules as the Billboard Hot 100. Songs which have appeared on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks chart for twenty weeks and fallen below position fifty are moved to this chart.
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Recurrent Airplay
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Recurrent Airplay follows the same recurrent rules as the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay. When a song reaches recurrent status on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks, it is simultaneously removed from R&B/Hip-Hop Recurrent Airplay and moved to this chart.
Bubbling Under R&B/Hip-Hop Singles
Bubbling Under R&B/Hip-Hop Singles is a chart released weekly which is comprised of twenty-five positions that represent songs that are making progress to chart on the main R&B/hip-hop chart, Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks. Many times, singles halt their progress at this chart and never debut on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks chart.
Hot Rap Tracks
Hot Rap Tracks is a chart released weekly which lists the most popular rap songs, calculated weekly by airplay on rhythmic and urban radio stations and sales in hip-hop-focused or exclusive markets.
Adult R&B Airplay
Adult R&B Airplay is an airplay only chart which ranks the most-played songs on Adult R&B radio. These stations are designed as those whose core audience leans toward R&B/soul music as opposed to the more youth-oriented hip-hop/rhythmic tracks. This chart is a component to Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay.
Pop 100
The Pop 100 is a songs chart created in February 2005 which ranks songs based on mainstream radio airplay, singles sales, and digital downloads.
Pop 100 Airplay
Pop 100 Airplay is a weekly chart which measures mainstream radio airplay, and is one of the three component charts, along with Hot 100 Singles Sales and Hot Digital Songs, that determine the chart positions of singles on the Pop 100 chart.
Hot Digital Songs
Hot Digital Songs ranks the best-selling digital sales, which have been incorporated into many of Billboard's music single charts. It was decided to do so mainly because the digital market was more reliable than the unpopular commercial single-sales market.
Hot Digital Tracks
Hot Digital Tracks ranks the best selling digital tracks and is not to be confused with the Hot Digital Songs chart, which combines different versions of songs for a summarized figure (for example remixes, "explicit" or "clean" versions, and/or any other alternate versions can chart separately here, whereas all versions of the same track occupy only one position on Hot Digital Songs).
Top 40 Mainstream
Top 40 Mainstream (often also called Mainstream Top 40) is an airplay chart which is often mistaken and confused with the Pop 100 Airplay chart. Whereas the Top 40 Mainstream charts and Pop 100 Airplay both measure the airplay of songs played on Mainstream stations playing pop-oriented music, the Pop 100 Airplay (like the Hot 100 Airplay) measures airplay based on statistical impressions, while the Top 40 Mainstream uses the number of total detections.
Rhythmic Top 40
Rhythmic Top 40, also known as Rhythmic Contemporary Hit Radio and "Rhythmic Crossover", is a music radio format that includes of a mix of dance, upbeat rhythmic pop, hip-hop and R&B hits. While most rhythmic stations' playlists are comprised of that mentioned above, there are some tend to lean very urban with current hip-hop, urban pop and R&B hits that gain mainstream appeal.
Adult Top 40
Adult Top 40 is a format which is geared towards an adult audience who are not into Rock music, teen pop, dance music, hip-hop, modern rock or slower adult contemporary fare. The chart roughly corresponds to what is played on Hot Adult Contemporary stations.
Top 40 Adult Recurrents
Adult Contemporary
The Adult Contemporary chart (formerly known as Adult Contemporary Singles) lists the most popular songs which include adult contemporary and pop songs played on "lite-pop" and adult contemporary radio stations across the United States.
Adult Contemporary Recurrents
Modern Rock Tracks
Modern Rock Tracks is a music chart that has appeared in Billboard since September 10 1988. It lists the forty most-played songs on modern rock radio, most of which are alternative rock songs. The chart was introduced as a companion to the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart and its creation was prompted by the explosion of alternative music on American radio in the late 1980s.
Mainstream Rock Tracks
Mainstream Rock Tracks is a ranking of the most-played songs on mainstream rock radio stations, a category that includes stations that play primarily rock music but are not modern rock (i.e. alternative), which are counted in the Modern Rock Tracks chart. The two charts were formed in 1988 when Billboard split its album-oriented rock chart to reflect the increased specialization in radio station formats. Songs that charted on the AOR chart prior to this date are considered to have charted on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.
Hot Country Songs
Hot Country Songs is a 60-position chart which lists the most popular country songs, calculated weekly mostly by airplay and occasionally commercial sales. Currently, the chart does not count digital downloads towards chart tabulation.
The chart provides the information for the syndicated radio program, "American Country Countdown, however only the week's top forty songs are referenced.
Hot Country Singles Sales
Hot Country Recurrents
Hot Dance Club Play
Hot Dance Club Play is a weekly national survey of the songs that are most popular in U.S. dance clubs. It is compiled by Billboard exclusively from playlists submitted by nightclub disc jockeys who must apply and meet certain criteria to become "Billboard-reporting DJs."
Hot Dance Airplay
Hot Dance Airplay is a monitored dance music radio chart which came about as a result of the small but influential impact of dance music on the radio in the United States and the stations that program it. The chart made its debut on October 17, 2003 with "Just The Way You Are" by Milky being the first number one song.
Hot Dance Singles Sales
Hot Dance Singles Sales (formerly known as Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales) is a chart which measures the sale of commercially released singles in the dance music market, including remixes. It was formerly known as Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales, when the chart was restricted to sales of the 12" Maxi Single and CD Maxi Single format, but in recent years, singles only released in the CD Single format have apparently been counted too.
Hot Latin Tracks
Hot Latin Tracks is the most important music chart for Spanish language singles in the American music market. It was established by Billboard in the 1970s, when the music labels and the magazine realized that Spanish-language songs had a great potential in the American music market.
Latin Pop Airplay
Latin Regional Mexican Airplay
Latin Tropical Airplay
Latin Rhythm Airplay
The Latin Rhythm Airplay chart comprises of singles and tracks from artists who represent the Hispanic Rhythmic/Hurban genre, which includes Reggaeton, Hispanic R&B/Hip-Hop, Rhythmic Pop/Dance and crossovers from english-language and/or bilingual acts. This chart came about as a result of radio stations tapping into the growing second and third generation hispanic audience who wanted an spanish-speaking or bilingual alternative to the (english-language Mainstream, Rhythmic, and R&B/Hip-Hop) formats that they felt would repesent them.
Hot Christian Singles & Tracks
Hot Christian Adult Contemporary
Hot Gospel Tracks
Hot Videoclips
Hot Ringtones
Hot Ringtones is a weekly chart that first appeared in the November 6, 2004 issue of Billboard. The chart is comprised of twenty positions, and the songs are ranked by the weekly sales of their polyphonic ringtones for mobile phones. The data is collected from all major ringtone distributors and wireless carriers and represents over 90% market share. [2]
Canadian Singles Chart
Albums
The Billboard 200
The Billboard 200 is a listing of the 200 highest selling music albums in the United States, published weekly in Billboard magazine. It is frequently used to convey the popularity of an artist or groups of artists. Often, a musical group will be remembered by its "number ones", those of their albums that outsold all others during at least one week. The chart was first known as Top Pop Albums from the mid-1950s until 1983 when it changed its name to the Billboard 200.
Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums
Top R&B/Hip-Hop Catalog Albums
Top Country Albums
Top Country Catalog Albums
Top Bluegrass Albums
Top Electronic Albums
Top Electronic Albums is a twenty-five position albums chart published weekly which ranks the top selling electronic music albums in the United States.
Top Independent Albums
Top Pop Catalog Albums
Top Pop Catalog Albums is a weekly albums chart produced by Billboard magazine which ranks the best selling catalog titles, regardless of genre. Billboard defines a catalog title as one that is more than two years old and that has fallen below position 100 on the Billboard 200. Albums meeting this criteria are removed from the Billboard 200 and begin a new chart run on Top Pop Catalog Albums.
Top Internet Albums
Top Latin Albums
Top Latin Pop Albums
Top Regional Mexican Albums
Top Tropical Albums
Top Latin Rhythmic Albums
Top Rap Albums
Top Compilation Albums
Top Comedy Albums
Top Classical Albums
Top Classical Crossover Albums
Top Classical Budget Albums
Top Classical Midline Albums
Top Holiday Albums
Top Canadian Albums
Top Blues Albums
Top Christian Albums
Top Contemporary Jazz
Top Gospel Albums
Top Jazz Albums
Top Kid Audio
Top New Age Albums
Top Reggae Albums
Top World Music Albums
European Top 100 Albums
Top Soundtracks
Billboard Comprehensive Albums
Billboard Comprehensive Albums is a weekly albums chart produced by Billboard magazine that ranks the biggest selling albums in the United States regardless of the product's age or method of sales.
Albums which are over two years old (from the date of release) and have dropped below position 100 on The Billboard 200 are removed from that chart and placed on the Top Pop Catalog Albums chart.
Additionally, albums sold as an "exclusive" to a particular retail outlet (such as Wal-Mart or Starbucks) are not eligible for the Billboard 200.
Billboard Comprehensive Albums includes any album, old or new, sold anywhere. Generally, the Billboard Comprehensive Albums is nearly identical to the Billboard 200, with the exception of approximately twenty to thirty "catalog" albums that still sell well enough to be one of the top 200-selling albums in any given week.
Billboard Comprehensive Albums is not published in the print edition of Billboard magazine. Instead, it can be viewed via paid subscription to Billboard's online service.
Top Heatseekers
Top Heatseekers is a weekly albums chart introduced by Billboard magazine in 1993 whose purpose is to highlight sales by new and developing musical recording artists. Albums appearing on Top Heatseekers may also concurrently appear on The Billboard 200.
Top Heatseekers contains fifty chart positions. Although the chart's policies have changed slightly over the years, its current rules for an album's eligibility to enter Top Heatseekers are as follows (per Billboard):
"The best-selling albums by new and developing acts, defined as those who have never appeared in the top 100 of The Billboard 200. If a Heatseekers title reaches that level, it and the act's subsequent albums are immediately ineligible to appear on the Heatseekers chart."
Heatseekers/East North Central
Heatseekers/Mountain
Heatseekers/Northeast
Heatseekers/Pacific
Heatseekers/South Atlantic
Heatseekers/South Central
Heatseekers/West North Central
Home Videos
Top VHS Sales
Top Video Rentals
Top DVD Sales
Top Video Game Rentals
Top Kid Video
Top Music Video
Billboard Comprehensive Music Videos
Top Video Sales - Health & Fitness
Top Video Sales - Recreational Sports DVD
Further reading
- Durkee, Rob. "American Top 40: The Countdown of the Century." Schriner Books, New York City, 1999.
- Battistini, Pete, "American Top 40 with Casey Kasem The 1970s." Authorhouse.com, January 31, 2005. ISBN 1418410705.