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The Billboard Digital Song Sales chart is a chart that ranks the most downloaded songs in the United States. Its data is compiled by Nielsen SoundScan based on each song's weekly digital sales, which combines sales of different versions of a song by an act for a summarized figure. In 2021, 28 acts reached number one (including features) with 22 ...
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. 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 ...
The chart is based on each song's weekly physical and digital sales collectively, the amount of airplay it receives on American radio stations, and its streams on online digital music platforms. Twenty-four acts reached number one in 2021, nine of whom earned their first number-one single: Olivia Rodrigo , Daniel Caesar , Giveon , Silk Sonic ...
The Weeknd, Taylor Swift, and Drake Shutterstock (3) Sing it loud! The 2021 Billboard Music Awards brought the noise and the applause when Nick Jonas hosted the Sunday, May 23, show from Microsoft ...
Issue date Song Artist(s) Weekly streams January 2 "All I Want for Christmas Is You" Mariah Carey: 54.9 million [2]: January 9 22.7 million [3]: January 16 "Mood" 24kGoldn featuring Iann Dior
Psychedelic soul, leftfield pop en español and breakthrough SoCal hip-hop lead our picks for the only playlist you need for 2021. The 100 best songs of 2021 Skip to main content
1 A remix of Ariana Grande's "34+35" that features Doja Cat and Megan Thee Stallion helped to bring the song back into the top ten, to its peak position of number 2, on January 30, 2021, and all three artists were credited on the song that week. [5] As of the February 6, 2021 chart, Grande returned to being the only artist credited. [11]
Another accolade of a successful song was a position on the "Honor Roll of Hits", introduced on March 24, 1945, initially as a 10-song list, [11] later expanded to 30 songs, which ranked the most popular songs by combining record and sheet sales, disk jockey, and jukebox performances as determined by Billboard's weekly nationwide survey. [12]