Chart Beat
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Lauren Daigle’s “Thank God I Do” reaches its 20th week atop Billboard’s streaming-, airplay- and sales-based Hot Christian Songs chart (dated Sept. 30). With its latest week at the summit, Daigle becomes the first soloist with two No. 1s to have reigned for at least 20 weeks each; her crossover smash “You Say” dominated for a record 132 frames beginning in July 2018.
Daigle’s current No. 1 becomes one of seven hits to have led Hot Christian Songs for at least 20 weeks since the list launched in June 2003.
Longest-leading Hot Christian Songs No. 1s:
132 weeks, “You Say,” Lauren Daigle, beginning in July 2018
61 weeks, “Oceans (Where Feet May Fail),” Hillsong United, beginning in June 2013
37 weeks, “What a Beautiful Name,” Hillsong Worship, beginning in February 2017
26 weeks, “Something in the Water,” Carrie Underwood, beginning in October 2014
24 weeks, “In Jesus’ Name (God of Possible),” Katy Nichole, beginning in March 2022)
23 weeks, “Word of God Speak,” MercyMe, beginning in August 2003
20 weeks (to date), “Thank God I Do,” Lauren Daigle, beginning in May 2023
Notably, six of the seven longest-leading Hot Christian Songs No. 1s feature female lead singers. In addition to Daigle, Underwood and Nichole’s titles, Hillsong United’s “Oceans” sports lead vocals by Taya Smith and Brooke Ligertwood is out front on sister act Hillsong Worship’s “What a Beautiful Name.”
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“Thank God I Do” awarded Daigle her sixth Hot Christian Songs No. 1, the most among women. (Overall, MercyMe leads with 13 No. 1s.)
The song tallied 5.3 million in all-format airplay audience, 2.2 million official streams and 1,000 downloads sold Sept. 15-21, according to Luminate. It dominated Christian Digital Song Sales for 23 weeks, Christian Streaming Songs for 10 weeks and Christian Airplay for one frame.
Daigle co-authored the piano ballad with Jason Ingram, while Jeff Bhasker, P!nk and Nate Ruess are also credited as writers, as the song contains elements of P!nk’s “Just Give Me a Reason,” featuring Ruess (which the three co-penned), a three-week No. 1 on the all-genre multi-metric Billboard Hot 100 in 2013.
Cortez Crowns Gospel
On Gospel Airplay, Zacardi Cortez rolls up his sixth No. 1 with “Lord Do It for Me (Live in Memphis).” The song, which he co-wrote, increased by 6% in plays during the latest tracking week.
Cortez, based in Houston, last led the chart with “You’ve Been Good to Me” for three weeks starting in November 2022. He first reigned as featured, with Shawn McLemore, on James Fortune & FIYA’s 19-week No. 1 “I Believe” in 2010-11.
Cortez ties for the sixth-most No. 1s on Gospel Airplay, which began in 2005. Kirk Franklin and Tamela Mann lead with 10 apiece.
It was clear right away in December 2022 that SZA‘s sophomore album SOS represented a commercial leveling-up for the R&B superstar, with the set moving over 300,000 units in its first frame and spending 10 total weeks atop the Billboard 200 albums chart. But perhaps even more telling has been how she’s continued to dominate in the nine months since — a run capped this week by her scoring two simultaneous top five hits on the Billboard Hot 100.
“Snooze,” her slow-growing second smash from SOS, hits a new peak of No. 3 this week on the Hot 100, thanks in large part to a boost from a new acoustic version of the song featuring pop icon Justin Bieber. And “Slime You Out,” her long-awaited collab with hip-hop behemoth Drake, debuts atop the chart, despite some negative fan responses in its first week.
What’s the biggest reason she’s been able to maintain such success this long after SOS‘ release? And where does she rank currently among the globe’s biggest pop stars? Billboard staffers discuss these questions and more below.
1. Drake scores his 12th No. 1 and on the Hot 100 and SZA scores her second this week thanks to their new collab “Slime You Out.” Does the song’s initial success mean more to (or about) either artist right now?
Hannah Dailey: I think this feat is definitely more of a triumph for SZA. It’s a testament to how quickly and magnificently her career is exploding, especially given how she only scored her first ever No. 1 with “Kill Bill” just a few months ago. That first Hot 100-topper proved how fast she’s on the rise, while this second one just goes to show that she isn’t leaving the top of the heap anytime soon.
Kyle Denis: For Drake, the success of “Slime You Out” is a simple reminder that he’s still in a space where he can sneeze and get a top five hit. For SZA, this is just further proof that she’s in an imperial phase right now. Between the ubiquity of the SOS singles, successful featured turns on tracks from Travis Scott and Lizzo (and now Drake), and a smash world tour — she’s got the Midas touch.
Jason Lipshutz: For anyone doubting Drake’s chart dominance this long into his career — and after a little over a calendar year since his last chart-topper — “Slime You Out” debuting at No. 1 on the Hot 100 should quell any anxieties about his staying power. While “Slime You Out” features an assist from SZA for an added dose of blockbuster appeal, the song is also a moody, downbeat sneer towards an ex — but no matter, it’s still the biggest song in the country. More than a decade into his run, Drake still possesses the power to turn any type of song into a smash.
Heran Mamo: I think it means more about Drake and means more to SZA. Having one of the first singles from For All the Dogs debut at No. 1 shortly before the album comes out is a good indicator that he’s creating enough buzz in time for its release. And for Drake, this is sort of like checking off something from a to-do list, because he’s had at least one song from his last few solo projects go No. 1: “Jimmy Cooks” (2022’s Honestly, Nevermind); “Way 2 Sexy” (2021’s Certified Lover Boy); “Toosie Slide” (2020’s Dark Lane Demo Tapes); and “God’s Plan,” “Nice for What” and “In My Feelings” (2018’s Scorpion). “Slime You Out” shows The Boy that he’s still hitting the mark every time. And he might be hitting an even bigger one soon: Drake needs only one more No. 1 to tie Michael Jackson as the male solo artist with the most No. 1s in Hot 100 history.
Andrew Unterberger: Drake certainly had more to lose if this song didn’t go to No. 1; after both his solo “Search & Rescue” and his 21 Savage team-up “Rich Flex” debuted at No. 2, to not secure the top spot with his much-hyped SZA teamup would’ve surely made him look at least slightly vulnerable commercially for the first time in a long time. But I think it says more about SZA that her added juice was needed to get this song over the hump; it wasn’t all that long ago that Drake having a SZA feature would’ve seemed more like a career favor for the latter artist.
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2. The song’s debut comes while the majority of the public response surrounding the song has seemingly been fairly negative. Was a No. 1 debut just inevitable for the first team-up between two artists at this commercial level — or has the criticism of the song just been a silent majority drowning out the majority of listeners who have actually embraced the song?
Hannah Dailey: I think this phenomenon is majorly due to that one yikes-inducing Drake lyric – “Whipped and chained you like American slaves” – which has opened the song up to a lot of controversy online. And with any controversial song, for better or worse, people are going to tune in.
Kyle Denis: I think a No. 1 debut was definitely inevitable at some level. As for the song’s reception? Given that it hasn’t completely collapsed on streaming a week after its debut, I’d say that there definitely seems to be more than enough listeners who like the song just fine. To that point, it’s been some years since Drake put out a (close to) universally acclaimed project yet he’s still consistently one of the most-consumed artists in the world. Middling public reception hasn’t seriously negatively impacted the commercial performance of a Drake song in years, and it wasn’t going to happen now – especially with one of the year’s biggest stars as a guest on the track.
Jason Lipshutz: The No. 1 debut does feel like an inevitability. I’m sure “Slime You Out” has its fans, but it’s hard to believe that a five-minute track that’s cynical in approach and hook-less in structure is the most surefire choice for a single uniting two powerhouse artists. Sometimes, those details simply don’t matter if two artists are prominent enough and launch their collaboration at the perfect moment; or Drake and SZA, “Slime You Out” was too big to fail.
Heran Mamo: It was ultimately inevitable given their combined star power and romantic history: Drake rapped “‘Cause I used to date SZA back in ’08” on “Mr. Right Now” from Metro Boomin and 21 Savage’s 2020 joint album Savage Mode II, and that’s just one example of the two referencing each other and each other’s music in songs. Having two superstar exes on the same track for the first time ever was the perfect recipe for a No. 1. Even Halle Berry chiming in about how she didn’t approve of the single’s cover art — which is from her getting slimed at the 2012 Nickelodeon’s Kids’ Choice Awards — probably helped garner extra listeners.
I also feel like the controversial nature of “Slime You Out” has helped others gravitate toward it: Fans are arguing that the song is neither Drake nor SZA’s best work and his “Whipped and chained you like American slaves” bar is distasteful, but SZA’s verse and Drizzy’s fourth verse, where he runs through a full-year cycle of what a woman goes through, remain highlights. Whether you love it or hate it, it’s all you can talk about, which is probably the only thing Drake cares about, and that’s why we’re here.
Andrew Unterberger: Let’s see where the song is in a few weeks. I didn’t see “Search & Rescue” hanging around the Hot 100 as long as it did, which ultimately made for decent evidence that people liked the song more than its lukewarm initial reception suggested. If “Slime” Toosie Slides out of the top 40 by Halloween, though, then it’ll be a pretty good sign that it was indeed just the hype of its two A-list artists linking on record for the first time that allowed it to debut on top. (I suspect it will be.)
3. Meanwhile, SZA’s “Snooze” has also crept into the chart’s top five for the first time, reaching No. 3 in its 41st week on the listing. Outside of the Justin Bieber remix — which helps give it a final boost this week — what do you think the biggest reason is for the song’s slow-burning success?
Hannah Dailey: Is it a cop out to say I honestly think it’s just a really good song? SOS is clearly still on rotation for a lot of people, and I suspect that “Snooze” simply grew organically on listeners who started to single it out while listening to the album on repeat.
Kyle Denis: “Snooze” was always a standout on SOS; I remember many people immediately latching onto that one even in the thick of the “Kill Bill” craze earlier this year. For a song to stick around for close to an entire calendar year and patiently wait for its moment in the limelight after five prior hit singles from the same parent album means that it’s genuinely connecting with audiences. I think the fact that this wasn’t a remix-revives-song-from-the-dead situation speaks to that point; “Snooze” had already spent a handful of weeks in the top 10 before the Justin Bieber remix, and the original solo version is still driving the majority of the song’s overall consumption.
Jason Lipshutz: “Snooze” has benefitted from the continued goodwill toward SOS, which, nine months after its release, now looks likely to become one of the most beloved full-lengths of the decade. The album remains in the top 10 of the Billboard 200 chart 41 weeks into its run, and after “Kill Bill” translated that listenership into streaming playlist placement and radio play, now it’s the follow-up’s turn to continue representing SOS on those platforms. I wouldn’t be surprised if “Snooze” is followed by another hit or two from SOS — that’s how resonant SZA’s second album has proven to be.
Heran Mamo: Being serviced to (and succeeding at) rhythmic, R&B/hip-hop and pop radio over the last few months has definitely played a huge role. Our senior R&B/hip-hop charts and data analyst Trevor Anderson wrote it best: “Radio gains, in turn, push the single to new peaks on multiple multimetric charts.” With a major radio push coming from different angles, “Snooze” was able to steadily climb up the Hot 100, Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and more charts. At that point, nobody can sleep on that song anymore.
Andrew Unterberger: Timing really is everything with songs like this. Credit to SZA and her RCA team for pushing all the right buttons on “Snooze”: They promoted it to radio at the right time, released the music video at the right time, and now dropped this Bieber remix at the right time. The song is more of a gradual creeper than an immediate show-stopper, so they were wise to play the long game with it — and they’ve played it perfectly for over half a year now.
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4. Despite SZA’s SOS technically coming out in late 2022, it’s still proving weekly to be one of the most impactful releases on 2023, at a time when albums rarely cast shadows that long. What’s something she has done with the SOS promo cycle that you think has really allowed her album and its singles to have such a pronounced and elongated impact?
Hannah Dailey: I think her consistency with hopping on songs with other artists in the months since SOS dropped has really helped keep her name at the forefront of consciousness in both pop culture and pop music. She’s always been an avid collaborator, but now it’s effectively doubling as unofficial promo for SOS.
Kyle Denis: I think elongating the pre-release cycle really helped lay the foundation for the longevity of SOS. It took two years just to get from the release of the record’s oldest song — “Good Days” — to the full album, so there’s a level of investment in the world of SOS that towers over records with more truncated cycles. With each new music video teasing the next single, SZA was able to keep fans engaged while also prepping audiences’ ears and anticipation for those tracks. That strategy routinely resulted in lofty debuts and substantial longevity once singles like “Shirt” and its accompanying music videos finally arrived.
With LANA — a deluxe version – on the way, the SOS cycle could extend well into next summer. I think the most important element of this promo cycle, however, is SZA’s ability to make sure her pop culture presence is ubiquitous but not overbearing.
Jason Lipshutz: In hindsight, SZA’s tour in support of SOS — which kicked off in the U.S. in February, traveled to Europe in the spring and is now back in North America through October — continued the momentum from the December album release to get SZA in arenas within a matter of weeks and demonstrate why these new songs deserved to reach her largest audiences yet. “Kill Bill” was already a hit by the time the SOS Tour kicked off, but taking the album on the road relatively soon after its release, and reaching so many markets across 2023, has no doubt helped the album sustain that success.
Heran Mamo: I think supply and demand is a huge factor here. The demand for new music from SZA had reached a boiling point by the time she actually dropped SOS, and we know she isn’t the type of artist to be dropping again soon. So if this is what’s going to be satisfying fans for the next few years, she’s going to stretch the album out for as long as possible. In the nine-month period following SOS’ release, she’s released three of the songs as singles, with accompanying music videos, and gone on tour – allowing the fans to connect with the music in a more intimate way. The way she gave us her all while making this album is the way she’s giving us her all while promoting it.
Andrew Unterberger: It’s hard to think of too many artists in the past half-decade that have allowed their singles room to breathe as effectively as SZA has. Each of the major hits that have come from SOS — whether before or after the album’s release — has been given the solo spotlight for months, without SZA crowding it by rushing out the next radio single or music video or remix. She allows singles to exist as their own mini-eras, and fans are happy to live in them as long as she lets them. (It also helps, of course, that the songs are each strong enough to support such lengthy runs.)
5. Is SZA one of the 10 biggest pop stars in the world right now?
Hannah Dailey: I would say so, barring how inventive and genre-bending her music itself is. On top of the recent chart accomplishments we already discussed, she’s one of the most-streamed artists on Spotify right now in spite of there being nine months separating her from the release of SOS, and she’s a name that other top 10 pop stars want to collaborate with (Drake, Justin Bieber, Doja Cat).
Kyle Denis: Easily. If we’re talking 10 biggest pop stars who are currently touring and actively promoting an album cycle? She’s top five.
Jason Lipshutz: Definitely. Other artists have deeper catalogs and more secure statuses as solo hitmakers, but there aren’t many artists right now with a discography as impeccable, or a mass approval rating as high. Hopefully SZA won’t take another six years to release a new album, but whenever she does, that will immediately become the most anticipated album of that year.
Heran Mamo: Yes. Her recent success with SOS has been unavoidable, even if you weren’t a fan of hers before or you’re not the biggest R&B fan. And we’ve seen R&B stars like Usher, The Weeknd and Beyoncé crossover to become pop stars. I think SZA is following that trajectory, and SOS marked the beginning of her crossover moment.
Andrew Unterberger: Unquestionably. The real question is if there are any current superstars — outside of her “Slime” partner and pop’s official QB1 — who can be definitively ranked above her at this point.
Peso Pluma, Gabito Ballesteros and Junior H’s “Lady Gaga” rises 3-1 on Billboard’s Hot Latin Songs chart (dated Sept. 30). The song, one of 17 tracks from Pluma’s Top Latin Albums No. 1 Génesis, gives Ballesteros and Junior H their first champ on the chart. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, […]
Blink-182’s “One More Time” becomes the band’s first No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot Trending Songs chart, powered by X, bowing atop the Sept. 30-dated tally.
Billboard’s Hot Trending charts, powered by X, track global music-related trends and conversations in real-time across X, viewable over either the last 24 hours or past seven days. A weekly, 20-position version of the chart, covering activity from Friday through Thursday of each week, posts alongside Billboard’s other weekly charts on Billboard.com each Tuesday, with the latest tracking period running Sept. 15-21.
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“One More Time” is the second song released from Blink-182’s album of the same name, to be released Oct. 20 as its first since 2019’s Nine and first since Tom DeLonge rejoined the band. The track premiered Sept. 21.
Concurrently, “One More Time” debuts at No. 44 on the streaming-, airplay- and sales-based Hot Rock & Alternative Songs list with 2.8 million radio audience impressions, 1.4 million official U.S. streams and 2,000 downloads, according to Luminate.
A third song from One More Time, “More Than You Know,” also reaches Hot Trending Songs, debuting at No. 15. The lead single, “Edging,” led Billboard’s Alternative Airplay survey for 13 weeks beginning in November 2022.
Blink-182 reigns on Hot Trending Songs over EVNNE, whose “Trouble” starts at No. 2. The K-pop boyband was formed in 2023, with its debut EP, Target: Me, released Sept. 19.
Kim Petras’ “Problematique,” the title track from her second album of 2023, rounds out the top three.
Keep visiting Billboard.com for the constantly evolving Hot Trending Songs rankings, and check in each Tuesday for the latest weekly chart.
Wet and Sadie Jean both score their first-ever appearances on the Billboard Hot 100 chart (dated Sept. 30), thanks to collaborations with Rod Wave on his new album, Nostalgia.
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The set debuts at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with 137,000 equivalent album units earned in its opening week (Sept. 15-21), according to Luminate. It earns Rod Wave his third leader, after 2021’s SoulFly and 2022’s Beautiful Mind. He joins Taylor Swift as the only acts with new No. 1s on the chart in each of the last three years.
Brooklyn-based indie pop trio Wet debuts at No. 40 on the Hot 100 with its Rod Wave collab “Nostalgia.” The title track and opening song on the new LP enters with 11.1 million official U.S. streams in its opening week. It also begins at No. 13 on Hot Rap Songs and No. 15 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs.
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Wet first appeared on a Billboard chart in 2016 with its debut full-length LP, Don’t You, released on Columbia Records. The set reached No. 76 on the Billboard 200, as well as No. 3 on Vinyl Albums, No. 7 on Alternative Albums and No. 11 on Top Rock & Alternative Albums.
The trio is comprised of Marty Sulkow, Joe Valle and Kelly Zutrau, who met when Valle and Sulkow were students at New York University and Zutrau was at Cooper Union. The act has released two additional albums: Still Run in 2018 (also through Columbia) and Letter Blue in 2021 (via AWAL). Most recently, the group released its seven-song EP Pink Room in July 2022. Along with Rod Wave, Wet has also collaborated with Blood Orange (“Bound”), D’Angelo (“Cruisin’ ”), Fred Again.. (“Kelly [End of a Nightmare]”), Jim-E Stack (“Old Bone”) and Toro y Moi (“Monte Carlo”), among others.
Sadie Jean lands on the Hot 100 for the first time thanks to her Rod Wave team-up “2018.” The song, which samples Jean’s breakthrough 2021 track “WYD Now?,” debuts at No. 61 with 8.9 million U.S. streams. It also starts at No. 21 on Hot Rap Songs and No. 25 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs.
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The pop singer-songwriter had appeared on one ranking before this week: She reached No. 35 on the Emerging Artists chart in December 2021, when she was a sophomore at New York University’s Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music. She debuted on the strength of “WYD Now?,” as the track went viral on TikTok ahead of its release at the time, thanks to a snippet she posted on her account. The song continued to grow when Jean issued an “open verse challenge” encouraging users to duet the video with their own verse. The track has since been used in over 112,000 clips on the platform to date. (Activity on TikTok is not included in Billboard‘s charts except for the newly launched TikTok & Billboard Top 50.)
Outside of “WYD Now?,” for which Jean also released a remix with Zai1k and Zakhar last year, she has served up three other solo songs: “Locksmith” in October 2022, “Just Because” this May and “16” in August. She has also collaborated with Wrabel on “Hurts Like Hell,” released in August 2022.
Foo Fighters score a chart-topping triple on Billboard’s rock radio charts as “Under You” ascends to No. 1 on the Rock & Alternative Airplay, Alternative Airplay and Mainstream Rock Airplay lists dated Sept. 30. Thanks to the new champ, the Dave Grohl-fronted group extends its record for the most leaders on Rock & Alternative Airplay.
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“Under You” climbs from No. 2 to crown Rock & Alternative Airplay following a 13% jump to 7.5 million in audience in the week ending Sept. 21, according to Luminate. With the rise, it ends the 20-week reign of Linkin Park’s “Lost,” which tied the Foo Fighters’ own 2011 hit “Rope” for the second-longest reign in the chart’s history. The pair trails only Imagine Dragons’ “Radioactive,” which dominated for 24 weeks in 2013, as the title with the most weeks at No. 1 since the list began in 2009.
As “Under You” hits the top, it extends the Foos’ record for the most No. 1s by any artist on the Rock & Alternative Airplay chart, which reflects reach on all rock formats. Here’s a look at the current standings:
11, Foo Fighters6, Cage The Elephant6, Green Day6, twenty one pilots5, The Black Keys5, Imagine Dragons
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On Alternative Airplay, “Under You” likewise advances from the runner-up rank to lead the list. The coronation comes after a 6% increase in weekly plays that made the single the most-played song on U.S. monitored alternative rock radio stations in the week ending Sept. 21. The new champ secures Foo Fighters their 12th No. 1 on Alternative Airplay, lifting the band into a three-way tie with Green Day and Linkin Park for second place on the overall count. Red Hot Chili Peppers, with 15 leaders, claim top honors.
(Earlier this month, Foo Fighters were revealed as the No. 1 act upon the Alternative Airplay chart’s 35th anniversary.)
Plus, “Under You” jumps 4-1 to capture the top slot on Mainstream Rock Airplay thanks to a 13% surge in weekly plays that translates to the song’s status as the most-played track on U.S. monitored mainstream rock radio stations for the week. The new No. 1 pushes Foo Fighters to their 13th chart-topper on the radio ranking, matching them with Van Halen for a joint share of the fourth-most among all acts since the list launched in 1981. Shinedown heads the leaderboard with 18 No. 1s, with Three Days Grace (17) next up and Five Finger Death Punch (14) third.
“Under You” appears on Foo Fighters’ latest LP, But Here We Are, released in June. The set (the band’s first studio effort since the death of drummer Taylor Hawkins in 2022) topped the Alternative Albums chart for one week, peaked at No. 2 on Top Rock & Alternative Albums and became the band’s 10th top 10 on the all-genre Billboard 200.
Four weeks ago, Paul Russell arrived on Billboard‘s charts for the first time, and now he achieves another distinction as he scores his first appearance on the Billboard Hot 100 (dated Sept. 30).
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Russell’s breakthrough viral hit “Lil Boo Thang,” released Aug. 18 via Arista Records, debuts at No. 99 with 9.6 million radio airplay audience impressions (up 46%), 4 million U.S. streams (up 11%) and 4,000 downloads sold in the Sept. 15-21 tracking week, according to Luminate.
The feel-good song also rises 30-27 on Pop Airplay, 32-28 on Adult Pop Airplay and 33-28 on Rhythmic Airplay.
Likely sparking further gains, the track’s official music video premiered Friday (Sept. 22).
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“Lil Boo Thang” interpolates the Emotions’ classic hit “Best of My Love,” which was written by Maurice White and Al McKay of Earth, Wind & Fire. The song spent five weeks at No. 1 on the Hot 100 in 1977 and finished as Billboard’s No. 3 year-end Hot 100 song that year. White and McKay are both credited as writers on Russell’s song.
Russell, from Texas and now based in Los Angeles, first teased a snippet of “Lil Boo Thang” in a June 28 TikTok that has since garnered more than 10 million views and launched over 190,000 creations from fans who’ve paired it with other clips. He later repurposed the post on Instagram Reels, where it has generated another 10 million views and launched over a million creations. That virality helped Russell land a deal with Arista. (Activity on TikTok is not included in Billboard‘s charts except for the newly launched TikTok & Billboard Top 50.)
“First and foremost, ‘Lil Boo Thang’ is meant to be a good time,” Russell told Billboard ahead of the full track’s release. “When I wrote it, I was stressed out on a Thursday afternoon, so I just turned on some of the music that makes me happy and imagined that I was celebrating something. I think what makes the song special is the fact that so many of us are ready to just forget about whatever is happening around us and enjoy the good things in life — not just thinking back to good times in the past but creating new ones in the present day.”
Outside of “Lil Boo Thang,” Russell has released two LPs: Via Text with Ruslan in 2018, and Once in a Dry Season in 2019.
Two weeks after making her first-ever Billboard chart appearance, Kenya Grace achieves another first, as she debuts on the Billboard Hot 100 chart (dated Sept. 30) for the first time. Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news The singer-songwriter, born in South African and raised in the U.K., […]
Olivia Rodrigo spends an eighth total week, and a second consecutively, at No. 1 on the Billboard Artist 100 chart (dated Sept. 30) thanks to the continued success of her new album, Guts.
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The set drops to No. 2 on the Billboard 200 with 134,000 equivalent album units earned in its second week, according to Luminate. It debuted on top a week earlier with 302,000 units, becoming her second leader after her first album, Sour, in 2021.
All 12 songs from Guts concurrently chart on the Billboard Hot 100 for a second straight week, led by “Vampire” at No. 7, after two nonconsecutive weeks at No. 1. Here’s a recap.
Olivia Rodrigo on the Sept. 30-dated Hot 100:
No. 7, “Vampire”
No. 13, “Bad Idea Right?”
No. 21, “Get Him Back!”
No. 36, “All-American Bitch”
No. 52, “The Grudge”
No. 59, “Lacy”
No. 62, “Making the Bed”
No. 63, “Logical”
No. 65, “Love Is Embarrassing”
No. 66, “Ballad of a Homeschooled Girl”
No. 83, “Pretty Isn’t Pretty”
No. 96, “Teenage Dream”
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Among other Artist 100 chart moves, Rod Wave jumps 52-3 on the strength of his new album Nostalgia. The set launches at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 (137,000 units), becoming his third leader, following SoulFly in 2021 and Beautiful Mind in 2022. The rapper-singer also places 18 songs on the Hot 100, a personal weekly-best, led by “Call Your Friends” and “Come See Me” at Nos. 18 and 19, respectively.
Plus, Mitski re-enters the Artist 100 at No. 9, nearly matching her No. 8 peak, thanks to her new album The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We. The LP starts at No. 12 on the Billboard 200 (32,000 units).
The Artist 100 measures artist activity across key metrics of music consumption, blending album and track sales, radio airplay and streaming to provide a weekly multi-dimensional ranking of artist popularity.
Rod Wave has a huge week on Billboard’s charts. On top of scoring his third career No. 1 album on the Billboard 200 (dated Sept. 30) with his new set Nostalgia, all 18 songs from the album land on the Billboard Hot 100, including eight in the top 40. Explore Explore See latest videos, charts […]