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June 24, 2000 Enrique Iglesias "Be With You" 3 859 July 15, 2000 Vertical Horizon "Everything You Want" 1 860 July 22, 2000 Matchbox Twenty "Bent" 1 861 July 29, 2000 NSYNC "It's Gonna Be Me" 2 862 August 12, 2000 Sisqó "Incomplete" 2 863 August 26, 2000 Janet "Doesn't Really Matter" 3 864 September 16, 2000 Madonna "Music" 4 865 October 14, 2000
Artists like Britney, Beyoncé, and more answered the call for amazing music that lifted your spirits. These 21 hits were definitely on your go-to playlist while you were preparing to party. 1 ...
As the decade progressed, a growing trend in the music industry was to promote songs to radio without the release of a commercially available singles in an attempt by record companies to boost albums sales. Because such a release was required to chart on the Hot 100, many popular songs that were hits on top 40 radio never made it onto the chart.
The 2000s in rock radio in the United States saw a continued blurring of the playlists among mainstream rock and alternative rock stations. Every track that was ranked by Billboard as the number-one song of the year on its Mainstream Rock Tracks chart during the decade was also a top-five hit on the Alternative Songs chart, most of which topped both charts.
Songs stayed on the chart for a long time and fewer songs made it on the chart. Ten songs had runs at number one of ten weeks or longer during the 1990s, with the longest coming from "Touch, Peel and Stand" by Days of the New at 16 weeks. ("Higher" by Creed spent 17 weeks at the top of the chart but its last couple of weeks ran into the year 2000).
This is a list of singles that charted in the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100 during 2000. Destiny's Child, 'N Sync, and Christina Aguilera each had three top-ten hits in 2000, tying them for the most top-ten hits during the year.
From Beyoncé and Taylor Swift to Adele and classics like Etta James and Otis Redding, Insider ranked the best romantic songs across the decades.
Mainstream Top 40 is compiled from airplay on radio stations which play a wide variety of music, not just "pure pop", which Billboard defines as "melodic, often synth-driven, uptempo fare". [2] During the 1990s, mainstream top 40 went from R&B dominating the airwaves (and thus the charts) in the early 1990s to rock and alternative music ...