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Views was the sixth number-one album in Canadian rapper Drake's career. It topped the chart for 13 weeks as the longest reigning number one album of 2016, and was the most consumed album of the year, and the second best-selling album. Rihanna gained her second number one album with her eighth studio album, Anti, which spent two weeks atop the ...
At the end of a year, Billboard will publish an annual list of the 100 most successful songs throughout that year on the Hot 100 chart based on the information. For 2016, the list was published on December 8, calculated with data from December 5, 2015 to November 26, 2016.
This page lists the albums that reached number-one on the overall Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, the R&B Albums chart (which was re-created in 2013), and the Rap Albums chart in 2016. The R&B Albums and Rap Albums charts partly serve as distillations of the overall R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.
Its data, published by Billboard magazine and compiled by Nielsen SoundScan, is based collectively on each single's weekly physical and digital sales, as well as airplay and streaming. During 2016, ten singles reached number one on the Hot 100; an eleventh single, "Hello" by Adele, began its run at number one in November 2015. [1]
Issue date Song Artist(s) Weekly streams January 2 "Sorry" Justin Bieber: 23.7 million [2]: January 9 24.4 million [3]: January 16 23.2 million [4]: January 23 20 million [5]: January 30
Here's the complete list of winners at the 2016 Billboard Music Awards from the Sunday ceremony in Las Vegas.
Top Country Albums is a chart that ranks the top-performing country music albums in the United States, published by Billboard. In 2016, 22 different albums topped the chart; placings were based on electronic point of sale data from retail outlets. [1]
This is a list of number-one albums in the United States by year from the main Billboard albums chart, currently called the Billboard 200. Billboard first began publishing an album chart on March 24, 1945. The chart expanded to 200 positions on the week ending May 13, 1967, and adopted its current name on March 14, 1992.