The Dance Club Songs chart is a weekly chart exclusively published by Billboards in the United States. It is a national survey of the most popular songs in nightclubs across the country and compiled from reports from national sample disc jockeys. Launched as a Top 30 Disco Action chart on August 28, 1976, it became the first chart by Billboard to document the popularity of dance music. From the beginning, some artists have made notes and garnered many achievements. In January 2017, Billboard proclaimed Madonna as the most successful artist in chart history, ranking first on the list of 100 best dance artists of all time; he also holds the record for number one songs, with 46. Katy Perry holds the record for having 18 songs in sequence number one. Perry's third studio album, Teenage Dream (2010), became the first album in graphics history to produce at least seven number one songs between 2010-12, a recording held only until Rihanna's eighth studio album Anti also produced seven chart toppers until 2016-17. Rihanna is the only artist to reach five number one songs in a calendar year.
The first number one song on the Dance Club Songs chart for the August 28, 1976 issue was "You Should Be Dancing" by Bee Gees; spent five weeks on the chart and was the only number one song of the group. The number one song currently on the Dance Club Songs charts for the 16th of June 2018 edition is "Wavey" by CLiQ featuring Alika.
Video Dance Club Songs
Histori
Dance Club Songs has undergone several incarnations since it was founded in 1974. Initially the top ten list of tracks that garnered the largest audience response at the New York City discotheque, the graph began on October 26, 1974 under the title Disco Action. The graph continues to show playlists from different cities across the country from week to week. Billboard continued to run regional and city-specific graphics throughout 1975 and 1976 until the issue of 28 August 1976, when thirty positions of the National Disco Action Top 30 were aired. This quickly expanded into a forty position, then in 1979, the graph expanded to sixty positions, then eighty, and eventually reached 100 positions from 1979 to 1981, when it was reduced to eighty again.
During the first half of the 1980s, the chart retained eight slots until March 16, 1985 when the Disco charts were split and renamed. Two charts appear: Hot Dance/Disco , ranking a club game (fifty positions), and Singing-Maxi Dance Music/Singles Sales , which ranks 12 inches (or maxi-single) sales (also fifty positions, now reduced to ten and only available through Billboard.biz).
Only Hot Dance Club Songs are still in existence today. In 2003
On January 26, 2013, Billboard added a new chart, Dance/Electronic Songs , which tracks 50 of the most popular Dance and Electronics songs and songs based on digital single sales, streaming, radio broadcasts , and club games as reported on Dance/Electronic Digital Songs, Dance/Electronic Streaming Songs, and Dance Club Songs charts. Radio plays are not limited to those calculated on the Airplay Dance/Mix Show chart.
Maps Dance Club Songs
Statistics and Record World data âââ ⬠<â â¬
Although the disco chart begins to report popular songs at New York City's nightclubs, Billboard expanded the scope to showcase several weekly charts highlighted in cities like San Francisco, San Diego, Boston, Los Angeles, Miami, Phoenix, Detroit and Houston (among others). During this time, Billboard rival publications Record World were the first to compile a dance chart that incorporates clubs playing at the national level. Noted Billboard statistician Joel Whitburn has since "adopted" Record World s chart data from the week between 29 March 1975 and 21 August 1976 to Billboard history play club. For sustainability, the National Record World's chart was incorporated into the Whitburn's With the issue of 28 August 1976, Billboard aired its own National Disco Action Top 30 chart and their data was used from this date.
Artist achievement
Top 10 All-Time Artists (1976- 2016 )
Most numbers
Most sequential numbers
Most of the numbers in a calendar year
The fastest collection of the first 10-digits
Song achievement
Climb the shortest to number one
The longest guess to number one
Foot Records
- 1 Total summers include two titles that reached number one during the time span where World Records' used dance chart data (see "Statistics and Record World data "). Some Billboard Summer credits columnists with just 15 numbers.
- 2 Eight of 11 weeks-in-number-one for "Bad Luck" is during the time span where Record World ' graph data is used (see "Statistics and Record World data").
See also
- List of dance singles dance singles number one
- List of artists who reached number one on the Club Dance Songs A song.
- Artist with the most number in the US Club Dance Club's song
References
External links
- Billboard Online
- Billboard Dance Club Playlist is currently
Source of the article : Wikipedia