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This is a list of number-one dance airplay hits as recorded by Billboard magazine's Dance/Mix Show Airplay chart, a weekly national survey of popular songs based on radio airplay from Dance-formatted radio stations in the United States, as compiled by Billboard exclusively from monitored airplay as tracked by Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems.
Download QR code; Print/export ... Year-end most popular songs based radio airplay. [1] Issue date Song ... David Guetta's Festival Mix [18] May 1 [19] May 8 [20 ...
Indicates best charting dance/mix show airplay single of 2020 ... Year-end most popular songs based radio airplay. [1] Issue date Song ... 2020 in music; List of ...
The later RBDS standard implemented in the U.S. assigned the same meanings to codes 0, 1 and 31, but made no attempt to match the rest of the original RDS plan and created its own list for codes 2–22 and 30, [11] including commercially important (in the U.S.) radio formats such as top 40, religious, country, jazz and R&B which were not in the ...
Dance/Mix Show Airplay (formerly Hot Dance Airplay) is a monitored electronic dance music radio chart that is published weekly by Billboard magazine. The chart came about as a result of the small but influential impact of electronic dance music on the radio in the United States and the stations that program it.
This is a list of songs in the music industry that have peaked at number-one on the Radio & Records singles chart.It was created in 1973, and monitored the most popular singles in terms of popular radio play that were based on and/or compiled from a panel consisting of Top 40/CHR stations in the United States (and Canada during the Radio & Records years from 1973 to 1994) that served as reporters.
Radio edits often shorten a long song to make it more commercially viable for radio stations. The normal length for songs played on the radio is between three and five minutes. The amount of cut content differs, ranging from a few seconds to nearly half of the song. It is common for radio edits to have shortened intros and/or outros.
In August 2006 Billboard dropped both the "top 40" and "CHR" name from the rhythmic title after its sister publication Billboard Radio Monitor merged with Radio & Records to become the "New" R&R as part of their realignment of format categories. The move also ended confusion among the radio stations who report to their panels, which was ...