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Two singles by Faith Evans (pictured) from her 1998 album Keep the Faith—"Love Like This" and "All Night Long"—appeared on the Year-End list at numbers 58 and 74, respectively. Evans was also featured on "Heartbreak Hotel", which appeared at number four on the list. This is a list of Billboard magazine's Top Hot 100 songs of 1999. [1]
TLC's third album, Fanmail, the year's top selling hip-hop album, [4] remained at number one for five weeks and won the Grammy Award for Best R&B Album at the 42nd Grammy Awards. [5] I Am…, the third studio album by rapper Nas, stayed at the top of the chart for two weeks and has been certified double platinum by the RIAA. [6]
June 12 15 "808" Blaque: 8 June 12 4 June 5 "That Don't Impress Me Much" Shania Twain: 7 June 12 4 June 12 "Chanté's Got a Man" Chanté Moore: 10 June 12 2 June 19 "I Want It That Way" Backstreet Boys: 6 June 26 11 June 26 "Last Kiss" Pearl Jam: 2 June 26 10 "The Hardest Thing" 98 Degrees: 5 July 3 3 July 3 "It's Not Right but It's Okay ...
This is her first album (and song) to achieve this. The album spent 6 weeks on number 1 and a total of 103 weeks on the Billboard 200 Charts. It's number 16 on the Billboard list "Best Female Albums of all time" and number 41 on the Billboard list "Best Albums of all time".
Adult Contemporary is a chart published by Billboard ranking the top-performing songs in the United States in the adult contemporary music (AC) market. In 1999, six different songs topped the chart in 52 issues of the magazine, based on weekly airplay data from radio stations compiled by Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems. In the first fifty weeks ...
The 1999 countdown marks the first time Australia was the most represented nation in the Hottest 100. A record of 52 songs were by Australian artists. This record was equaled in the 2007 countdown, and broken in 2014. This is also the first Hottest 100 in which the top 3 songs were from Australian artists.
Totally Hits was a series of various artists compilation albums released in collaboration with BMG and Warner Music Group, intending to showcase some of the most popular hit songs of the time. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The series was intended to rival EMI and UMG 's Now That's What I Call Music! series.
The Best of Mantronix 1985–1999; The Best of Me (Bryan Adams album) The Best of N2Deep; The Best of Salt-N-Pepa; The Best of Simon and Garfunkel; The Best of the Band, Vol. II; Best of the Early Years (They Might Be Giants album) The Best of the Vanguard Years (John Fahey album) The Best of UFO: Gold Collection; The Best of Vanilla Ice; Best ...