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Gaga made her debut in August 2008 with the studio album The Fame, which peaked at number two in the United States, where it was subsequently certified triple Platinum, while topping the charts in Austria, Canada, Germany, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.
Gaga is the longest-reigning act of Billboard ' s Dance/Electronic Albums chart with 244 weeks at number one, while The Fame (2008) holds the record for the most time on top in the chart's history, with 175 non-consecutive weeks.
Pop singer Lady Gaga's "Just Dance" featuring Colby O'Donis and "Poker Face" made her the first artist in nine years (since Christina Aguilera) whose first two consecutive singles topped the chart. Kelly Clarkson's "My Life Would Suck Without You" went from 97 on the chart to number one, the biggest leap to the top in Hot 100 history.
The Billboard Hot 100 is a singles chart published by Billboard that measures the most popular singles in the United States, based on sales (physical and digital), online streaming, and radio airplay. Throughout the history of the Hot 100 and its predecessor charts, many songs have set records for longevity, popularity, or number of hit singles ...
"Disease" debuted at number 14 on the Billboard Global 200 chart, becoming Gaga's second top-20 entry on the chart in 2024, following "Die with a Smile". [45] In the United States, it debuted at number 27 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart dated November 9, 2024, marking her twenty-seventh top-forty song on the chart.
During this time, Billboard rival publication Record World compiled a nationwide dance chart. Noted Billboard statistician Joel Whitburn has since "adopted" Record Worlds chart data from the weeks between March 29, 1975, and August 21, 1976, into Billboards club play history. Billboard columnists, however, only credit Summer with 16 number-ones.
A song that topped multiple pre-Hot 100 charts is counted only once towards the artist's total. The ° symbol indicates that all or part of an artist's total includes number-ones occurring on any of the pre-Hot 100 chart(s) listed above (January 1, 1955 through July 28, 1958).
Following the theatrical release of Top Gun: Maverick, the song reached a new peak of number 49 in its fifth week on the chart. [61] Additionally, the song peaked at number 19 on the Billboard Mainstream Top 40 chart, number 12 on the Billboard Adult Pop Airplay chart, and number nine on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart.