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The chart is published weekly and songs are ranked according to airplay impressions and volume of streams, sales and club spins, and tracked by Nielsen SoundScan, Nielsen BDS, BDS from streaming services including Spotify and Xbox Music, and from a United States-wide select panel of 140 DJs. [1]
Hyperpop (sometimes called bubblegum bass) [1] is a loosely defined electronic music movement [2] [3] and microgenre [4] that predominantly originated in the United Kingdom during the early 2010s. It is characterised by an exaggerated or maximalist take on popular music , [ 3 ] and typically integrates pop and avant-garde sensibilities while ...
The Dance/Electronic Songs chart has been published weekly by Billboard since January 2013. [1] It is their first chart to be published that ranks the most popular dance and electronic songs according to audience impressions, digital downloads, streaming and club play and it was introduced following an increase in the genre's popularity in the United States.
Apricots" scored Top-50 entries in both the UK's Official Singles Chart [14] and Billboard's Dance/Electronic Songs Chart, was named Billboard's #1 dance track of 2020, [15] hit #1 on the UK's Shazam chart, and spent 10 weeks on the BBC Radio 1 playlist. [16] The album was nominated for Best Irish Album of 2021 for the Choice Music Prize. [17]
Euphoria is a series of dance music compilations that debuted on the Telstar Records label in early 1999. [1] During the first year, Euphoria focused primarily on trance music until mid-2000 when Euphoria released the first chill-out album in the series and the first hard house album in late 2000. [ 2 ]
Electronic dance music (EDM), [1] also referred to as club music, is a broad range of percussive electronic music genres originally made for nightclubs, raves, and festivals. It is generally produced for playback by DJs who create seamless selections of tracks, called a DJ mix, by segueing from one recording to another. [2]
Over the past five years, U.S. streams of emo music have increased 130%, and streams of pop punk music have increased nearly 125% on Spotify, the music streaming platform says.
Spotify added to the popular "lo-fi beats" wave by generating "Spotified genres", including "Chill Hits", "Bedroom Pop" playlists, and promoting numerous "chill pop" artists. [2] In 2015, a form of downtempo music tagged as "chillhop" or "lo-fi hip hop" became popular among YouTube music streamers.