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This page lists the songs that reached number-one on the overall Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, the R&B Songs chart (which was created in 2012), and the Hot Rap Songs chart in 2015. The R&B Songs and Rap Songs charts partly serve as distillations of the overall R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.
For 2015, the list was published on December 9, calculated with data from December 6, 2014, to November 28, 2015. [1] The funk track "Uptown Funk" by British producer Mark Ronson, featuring American singer Bruno Mars, who co-wrote and voiced the lyrics was named the number 1 song of 2015, despite being released in late 2014. It spent the ...
List of top 10 albums with the highest first-week consumption (sales + streaming + track equivalent), as of October 6, 2015 in the US. Number Album Artist 1st-week consumption 1st-week position Refs 1 If You're Reading This It's Too Late: Drake: 535,000 1 [332] 2 What a Time to Be Alive: Drake & Future: 375,000 1 [333] 3 To Pimp a Butterfly ...
There's a feel-good story somewhere in all of these 10 songs, which will all sound great throughout 2015 and beyond. Check out our unranked list of the 10 best songs of 2015 (so far): Fetty Wap ...
50 Cent was named the number-one Rap Songs artist of the 2000s by Billboard. Hot Rap Songs is a record chart published by the music industry magazine Billboard which ranks the most popular hip hop songs in the United States. Introduced by the magazine as the Hot Rap Singles chart in March 1989, the chart was initially based solely on reports from a panel of selected record stores of weekly ...
Drake nearly broke the Internet with the release of the 'Hotline Bling' music video, and Justin Bieber had fans grooving with his 'Sorry' dance video. 11 most buzzworthy music videos of 2015 Skip ...
Hot Rap Songs is a record chart published by the music industry magazine Billboard that ranks the most popular hip hop songs in the United States. 77 songs topped Hot Rap Songs in the 2010s. The first number-one song of the decade was "Empire State of Mind" by Jay-Z featuring Alicia Keys. [1]
The 1980s were hip-hop’s first full decade as a documented musical genre on record, and from ’80 to ’89, rap grew from single to albums, from party songs to social commentary, from simple ...