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In New Zealand, the Recording Industry Association of New Zealand (RIANZ) compiles the top forty singles chart each week. Sales of songs determined 75% of the sorting information, and radio airplay figures were responsible for 25%. [1] From 18 April 2004 to 29 May 2007 the sales/radio airplay split was 50:50.
The Great New Zealand Songbook: Sony 8 Platinum x7 3 May 2009 Big Country: Sony 1 Gold 29 June 2009 Now That's What I Call Music 30: EMI 8 Platinum 6 July 2009 Music from the Breeze: EMI 6 Gold 31 August 2009 Hits for Kids: Sony 2 — 12 October 2009 The Great New Zealand Songbook: Sony 2 Platinum x7 26 October 2009 Now That's What I Call Music ...
Jamaican musician Shaggy attained his first and sole number-one single in New Zealand with "Boombastic", which reached number one for two nonconsecutive weeks. American rapper Coolio topped the New Zealand Singles Chart for nine weeks with "Gangsta's Paradise"; it was the third longest-running chart-topper during the 1990s in New Zealand.
Titanic: Music from the Motion Picture: Soundtrack / James Horner: 29 March 1998 Aquarium: Aqua: 4 April 1998 12 April 1998 Titanic: Music from the Motion Picture: Soundtrack / James Horner: 19 April 1998 26 April 1998 Days of the New: Days of the New: 3 May 1998 Let's Talk About Love: Celine Dion: 10 May 1998 Mezzanine: Massive Attack: 17 May ...
This is the Recorded Music NZ list of number-one albums in New Zealand during the 2000s decade. Hayley Westenra's international debut album Pure charted at number one for 20 weeks. Four of the number one albums of the year have been from New Zealand artists: Bic Runga, Brooke Fraser, Fat Freddy's Drop, and Billy T James.
Singer-songwriters Bic Runga and Sharon O'Neil, who each have 4 songs in the list. Herbs, who feature 4 times on the list. Music journalist Bruce Sergent notes that the list is highly skewed towards the 1980s and 90s to the detriment of earlier music, with notable omissions including Howard Morrison, Dinah Lee, and Ray Columbus & the Invaders. [1]
The Official Aotearoa Music Charts, formerly the Official New Zealand Music Chart (Māori: Te Papa Tātai Waiata Matua o Aotearoa), is the weekly New Zealand top 40 singles and albums charts, issued weekly by Recorded Music NZ (formerly Recording Industry Association of New Zealand). The Music Chart also includes the top 40 Hot Singles chart ...
Channel X is a New Zealand classic alternative music station owned by MediaWorks. The station can be heard in 16 markets across New Zealand, and online through MediaWorks's streaming platform, rova. [1] The station plays uninterrupted music from the 1990s to 2010s with occasional one-liners or station IDs. [2]