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BILLBOARD HOT 100

 

Week ending August 13, 2022 | Tracking period: 7/29–8/4

 

TW LW PP WC Artist – Song

 

01 06 01 07 Beyonce ‒ Break My Soul

02 01 01 16 Lizzo ‒ About Damn Time

03 02 01 18 Harry Styles ‒ As It Was

04 03 03 30 Kate Bush ‒ Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)

05 05 01 14 Future feat. Drake & Tems ‒ Wait For U

06 04 01 17 Jack Harlow ‒ First Class

07 11 07 05 Steve Lacy ‒ Bad Habit

08 08 06 13 Bad Bunny & Chencho Corleone ‒ Me Porto Bonito

09 12 09 10 Nicky Youre & dazy ‒ Sunroof (BIGGEST AIRPLAY GAIN)

10 07 04 11 Harry Styles ‒ Late Night Talking

 

11 09 09 09 Post Malone feat. Doja Cat ‒ I Like You (A Happier Song)

12 10 01 81 Glass Animals ‒ Heat Waves

13 ** 13 01 Beyonce ‒ Cuff It (HOT SHOT DEBUT)

14 17 13 07 Luke Combs ‒ The Kind Of Love We Make

15 14 09 38 Morgan Wallen ‒ Wasted On You

16 16 05 13 Bad Bunny ‒ Titi Me Pregunto

17 18 01 56 The Kid LAROI & Justin Bieber ‒ Stay

18 13 03 41 Latto ‒ Big Energy

19 ** 19 01 Beyonce ‒ Alien Superstar

20 15 01 07 Drake feat. 21 Savage ‒ Jimmy Cooks

 

21 22 06 12 Morgan Wallen ‒ You Proof

22 ** 22 01 Beyonce ‒ Church Girl

23 24 23 08 OneRepublic ‒ I Ain't Worried

24 19 18 27 Em Beihold ‒ Numb Little Bug

25 25 25 10 Cole Swindell ‒ She Had Me At Heads Carolina

26 ** 26 01 Beyonce ‒ I'm That Girl

27 ** 27 01 Beyonce feat. BEAM ‒ Energy

28 21 08 08 Joji ‒ Glimpse Of Us

29 20 05 45 Justin Bieber ‒ Ghost

30 ** 30 01 Beyonce ‒ Cozy

 

31 23 20 35 Doja Cat ‒ Get Into It (Yuh)

32 26 04 13 Bad Bunny ‒ Moscow Mule

33 27 04 47 Ed Sheeran ‒ Shivers

34 30 26 11 Kane Brown ‒ Like I Love Country Music

35 28 28 09 Doja Cat ‒ Vegas

36 29 07 48 Elton John & Dua Lipa ‒ Cold Heart (PNAU Remix)

37 31 14 17 Lil Baby ‒ In A Minute

38 48 38 08 Tyler Hubbard ‒ 5 Foot 9

39 36 06 07 Drake ‒ Sticky

40 33 24 08 Bailey Zimmerman ‒ Rock And A Hard Place

 

41 ** 41 01 Beyonce ‒ Plastic Off The Sofa

42 37 35 14 Bailey Zimmerman ‒ Fall In Love

43 ** 43 01 Beyonce ‒ Virgo's Groove

44 34 25 15 Karol G ‒ Provenza

45 41 30 15 Zach Bryan ‒ Something In The Orange

46 44 34 13 Bad Bunny ‒ Efecto

47 ** 47 01 Beyonce ‒ Summer Renaissance

48 39 03 39 Kodak Black ‒ Super Gremlin

49 40 40 10 Jon Pardi ‒ Last Night Lonely

50 ** 50 01 NAV, Travis Scott & Lil Baby ‒ Never Sleep

 

51 ** 51 01 Beyonce ‒ Heated

52 32 32 18 Scotty McCreery ‒ Damn Strait

53 ** 53 01 Beyonce ‒ Thique

54 46 22 18 Parmalee ‒ Take My Name

55 ** 55 01 Beyonce feat. Grace Jones & Tems ‒ Move

56 45 13 05 Cardi B, Ye & Lil Durk ‒ Hot Shit

57 47 22 06 Charlie Puth feat. Jung Kook ‒ Left And Right

58 56 56 05 Jelly Roll ‒ Son Of A Sinner

59 54 14 13 Bad Bunny & Rauw Alejandro ‒ Party

60 53 47 10 SleazyWorld Go feat. Lil Baby ‒ Sleazy Flow

 

61 64 26 13 Bad Bunny & Bomba Estereo ‒ Ojitos Lindos

62 66 62 10 Hitkidd & Glorilla ‒ F.N.F. (Let's Go)

63 60 60 05 Marshmello & Khalid ‒ Numb

64 ** 64 01 Beyonce ‒ Pure/Honey

65 59 59 04 Yung Gravy ‒ Betty (Get Money)

66 67 66 08 Dylan Scott ‒ New Truck

67 58 06 13 Bad Bunny ‒ Despues de La Playa

68 62 55 08 Halsey ‒ So Good

69 ** 69 01 Beyonce ‒ America Has A Problem

70 ** 70 01 Beyonce ‒ All Up In Your Mind

 

71 61 61 05 Ingrid Andress & Sam Hunt ‒ Wishful Drinking

72 63 32 20 Jason Aldean ‒ Trouble With A Heartbreak

73 57 12 12 Post Malone feat. Roddy Ricch ‒ Cooped Up

74 73 18 13 Bad Bunny & Jhay Cortez ‒ Tarot

75 70 70 04 Burna Boy ‒ Last Last

76 75 75 07 Corey Kent ‒ Wild As Her

77 77 77 03 Tems ‒ Free Mind

78 74 74 05 Sia ‒ Unstoppable

79 69 04 14 Future ‒ Puffin On Zootiez

80 82 80 03 Mitchell Tenpenny ‒ Truth About You

 

81 71 71 07 Nate Smith ‒ Whiskey On You

82 90 82 02 Justin Moore ‒ With A Woman You Love

83 ** 83 01 Jax ‒ Victoria’s Secret

84 80 80 11 Imagine Dragons ‒ Bones

85 83 63 18 Russell Dickerson & Jake Scott ‒ She Likes It

86 86 86 03 Chris Young & Mitchell Tenpenny ‒ At The End Of A Bar

87 76 59 11 Quavo & Takeoff ‒ Hotel Lobby (Unc And Phew)

88 RE 88 02 Gabby Barrett ‒ Pick Me Up

89 ** 89 01 Nardo Wick ‒ Dah Dah DahDah

90 50 15 15 The Kid LAROI ‒ Thousand Miles

 

91 78 61 11 Carrie Underwood ‒ Ghost Story

92 84 73 09 Sam Smith ‒ Love Me More

93 85 12 13 Morgan Wallen ‒ Thought You Should Know

94 68 48 15 Ed Sheeran feat. Lil Baby ‒ 2step

95 81 14 07 Drake ‒ Massive

96 88 88 05 Stephen Sanchez ‒ Until I Found You

97 93 16 13 Bad Bunny ‒ Un Ratito

98 72 72 04 Jake Owen ‒ Best Thing Since Backroads

99 100 32 10 Bad Bunny & Tony Dize ‒ La Corriente

100 98 98 02 Bizarrap & Quevedo ‒ Bzrp Music Sessions, Vol. 52

 

OUT 35 16 24 Dove Cameron ‒ Boyfriend

OUT 38 05 36 Imagine Dragons x JID ‒ Enemy

OUT 42 08 45 Lil Nas X ‒ Thats What I Want

OUT 43 07 52 Doja Cat ‒ Woman

OUT 49 15 20 Megan Thee Stallion & Dua Lipa ‒ Sweetest Pie

OUT 51 22 20 Lil Durk feat. Gunna ‒ What Happened To Virgil

OUT 52 52 01 Billie Eilish ‒ TV

OUT 55 55 01 Megan Thee Stallion feat. Future ‒ Pressurelicious

OUT 65 65 01 John Rich ‒ Progress

OUT 79 79 01 Billie Eilish ‒ The 30th

OUT 87 07 11 Kendrick Lamar & Kodak Black ‒ Silent Hill

OUT 89 59 03 Moneybagg Yo ‒ See Wat I'm Sayin

OUT 91 91 01 Mac Miller ‒ Love Lost

OUT 92 29 09 Megan Thee Stallion ‒ Plan B

OUT 94 94 01 YoungBoy Never Broke Again ‒ Vette Motors

OUT 95 26 07 Pharrell Williams feat. 21 Savage & Tyler, The Creator ‒ Cash In Cash Out

OUT 96 67 08 Shakira & Rauw Alejandro ‒ Te Felicito

OUT 97 97 01 Russ & Ed Sheeran ‒ Are You Entertained

OUT 99 13 15 Lil Baby ‒ Right On

 

Bubbling Under

 

TW LW Artist – Song

 

01 01 Jackson Dean ‒ Don't Come Lookin'

02 ** $uicideBoy$ ‒ Matte Black

03 06 Old Dominion ‒ No Hard Feelings

04 02 Lee Brice ‒ Soul

05 ** $uicideBoy$ ‒ Genesis

06 ** Rod Wave ‒ Stone Rolling

07 11 Lil Uzi Vert ‒ For Fun

08 04 Cafune ‒ Tek It

09 07 Leah Kate ‒ 10 Things I Hate About You

10 ** Lil Zay Osama & Lil Durk ‒ **** My Cousin, Part II

11 03 Jordan Davis ‒ What My World Spins Around

12 ** $uicideBoy$ ‒ 1000 Blunts

13 08 Chris Stapleton ‒ Joy Of My Life

14 ** $uicideBoy$ ‒ ******* Your Culture

15 12 Central Cee ‒ Doja

16 ** Rosalia ‒ Despecha

17 ** Young Dolph ‒ Hall Of Fame

18 15 Kelsea Ballerini ‒ Heartfirst

19 17 AJR ‒ World's Smallest Violin

20 05 Kane Brown ‒ Grand

21 ** Quavo, Takeoff & Gucci Mane ‒ Us Vs. Them

22 ** $uicideBoy$ ‒ Escape From Babylon

23 20 PGF Nuk feat. Polo G ‒ Waddup

24 ** Marca Registrada + Junior H ‒ El Rescate

25 18 Ruth B ‒ Dandelions

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Beyonce’s ‘Break My Soul’ Soars to No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100

By Gary Trust | 08/08/2022

 

Beyoncé‘s “Break My Soul” bounds to No. 1, from No. 6, on the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart. The song marks the superstar’s eighth solo leader on the list. The track, which debuted at No. 15 six weeks earlier, is from her new LP Renaissance, which launches as her seventh No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart.

 

Concurrently, two songs ascend to the Hot 100’s top 10: Steve Lacy‘s “Bad Habit” (11-7), which also rises to the top of the Streaming Songs chart, and Nicky Youre and dazy’s “Sunroof” (12-9), marking all three acts’ first trips to the Hot 100’s top tier.

 

“Break My Soul,” released on Parkwood/Columbia Records, becomes the 1,140th No. 1 in the Hot 100’s 64-year history.

 

Airplay, sales & streams: “Soul” drew 61.7 million radio airplay audience impressions (up 8%) and 18.9 million streams (up 114%) and sold 13,000 downloads (up 113%) in the July 29-Aug. 4 tracking week, according to Luminate, as the song claims dual top Streaming and Sales Gainer honors on the Hot 100.

 

The track vaults 25-3 on Streaming Songs and holds at its No. 4 high on the Radio Songs chart.

 

In addition to its original version on Renaissance, “Soul” was available in six alternate forms during the tracking week: its Honey Dijon, Terry Hunter and will.i.am remixes; its Nita Aviance club mix; and a cappella and instrumental versions. (Its “The Queens Remix,” with Madonna and which shouts out a host of influential Black female entertainers, arrived Aug. 5, the first day of the tracking week for next week’s Billboard charts, dated Aug. 20.)

 

Beyoncé’s eighth solo Hot 100 No. 1: Beyoncé lands her eighth Hot 100 No. 1 as a soloist. Here’s a recap:

 

“Crazy in Love,” feat. Jay-Z, eight weeks at No. 1, beginning July 12, 2003

“Baby Boy,” feat. Sean Paul, nine, Oct. 4, 2003

“Check on It,” feat. Slim Thug, five, Feb. 4, 2006

“Irreplaceable,” 10, Dec. 16, 2006

“Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It),” four, Dec. 13, 2008

“Perfect” (Ed Sheeran duet with Beyoncé), five (on which she was credited; the song led for six weeks total), Dec. 23, 2017

“Savage” (Megan Thee Stallion feat. Beyoncé), one, May 30, 2020

“Break My Soul,” one week to-date, Aug. 13, 2022

 

Additionally, Destiny’s Child, with Beyoncé as a member, notched four Hot 100 No. 1s: “Bills, Bills, Bills” (for one week in 1999); “Say My Name” (three weeks, 2000); “Independent Women (Part 1)” (11, 2000-01); and “Bootylicious” (two, 2001).

 

Beyoncé’s 19-year span of solo Hot 100 No. 1s: From the first week at No. 1 on the Hot 100 for “Crazy in Love” through, now, the coronation of “Soul,” Beyoncé spans 19 years and one month of appearing atop the chart – the eighth-best mark in the ranking’s archives.

 

Longest Spans of Hot 100 No. 1s:

Mariah Carey – 31 years, five months, one week (Aug. 4, 1990-Jan. 8, 2022)

Cher – 28 years, five months (Nov. 6, 1971-April 3, 1999)

Beach Boys – 24 years, four months (July 4, 1964-Nov. 5, 1988)

Elton John – 24 years, 11 months, one week (Feb. 3, 1973-Jan. 10, 1998)

Michael Jackson – 22 years, 10 months, three weeks (Oct. 14, 1972-Sept. 2, 1995)

Stevie Wonder – 22 years, six months (Aug. 10, 1963-Feb. 8, 1986)

Rod Stewart – 22 years, four months (Oct. 2, 1971-Feb. 5, 1994)

Beyoncé – 19 years, one month (July 12, 2003-Aug. 13, 2022)

George Harrison – 17 years, three weeks (Dec. 26, 1970-Jan. 16, 1988)

Madonna – 15 years, nine months, one week (Dec. 22, 1984-Oct. 7, 2000)

 

Notably, in looking at acts’ group and solo careers combined, Beyoncé’s span of appearing atop the Hot 100 stretches over 23 years and three weeks, from the first week at No. 1 for Destiny’s Child’s “Bills, Bills, Bills” (July 17, 1999) through this week’s takeover on top for “Soul.” Similarly among the acts above, Cher’s career span including Sonny & Cher and her solo No. 1s would encompass (a record) 33 years, seven months and two weeks (1965-99); Michael Jackson’s Jackson 5 and solo output would span 25 years, seven months and a week (1970-95); and George Harrison’s time with The Beatles and as soloist would amount to a No. 1 span of 23 years, 11 months and two weeks (1964-88).

 

Meanwhile (as first noted when Megan Thee Stallion’s “Savage,” featuring Beyoncé, hit No. 1), Beyoncé and Mariah Carey are the only acts to place atop the Hot 100 in four distinct decades – the 1990s, 2000s, ’10s & ’20s for both – thanks to the former’s runs at No. 1 with Destiny’s Child in the ’90s and solo in the ’00s-’20s, and Carey’s reigns in each decade, including in the ’10s and ’20s with “All I Want for Christmas Is You.”

 

Beyoncé’s wait between Hot 100 No. 1s in lead roles: With “Soul,” Beyoncé scores her first Hot 100 No. 1 in a lead role in 13 years and seven months, since “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)” in 2009. That gap marks the longest among acts with lead billing on both bookending leaders since Cher, whose “Believe” ascended to the top of the chart in March 1999, a record 10 days shy of 25 years since she’d last led with “Dark Lady” in March 1974.

 

Seventh-most weeks at No. 1: Beyoncé boasts the seventh-most weeks spent atop the Hot 100, as “Soul” ups her count to 43 in her solo career.

 

Most Weeks at No. 1 on Hot 100:

87, Mariah Carey

60, Rihanna

59, The Beatles

54, Drake

50, Boyz II Men

47, Usher

43, Beyoncé

37, Michael Jackson

34, Adele

34, Elton John

34, Bruno Mars

 

Further, Destiny’s Child spent 17 weeks at No. 1 among their four Hot 100 leaders, making for 60 weeks at the summit for Beyoncé if we were to combine her solo and the group’s songs. (Among the acts above, Paul McCartney [89 weeks total; 30 solo], both George Harrison and John Lennon [65; six] and Ringo Starr [61; two] would also sport higher sums of weeks at No. 1 mixing their solo leaders and those by The Beatles with them as members, while Michael Jackson’s total would extend to 47, thanks to 10 weeks at No. 1 for the Jackson 5.)

 

A No. 1 ‘Show’-ing: “Break” indirectly brings a house classic to No. 1 on the Hot 100, as it contains elements of Robin S.’s “Show Me Love,” co-written by Allen George and Fred McFarlane. The latter two talents receive songwriting credit on “Break” and rank atop the chart as writers for the first time. “Show Me Love” hit No. 5 in June 1993.

 

Beyoncé is among the eight credited writers and four billed producers on “Break.”

 

‘Break’-ing down ‘Soul’ music at No. 1: Beyoncé’s new Hot 100 No. 1 marks the latest with the words “break” or “soul” in a song title. Here’s a recap of each:

 

“Don’t Break the Heart That Loves You,” Connie Francis, 1962

“Breaking Up Is Hard To Do,” Neil Sedaka, 1962

“Don’t Go Breaking My Heart,” Elton John & Kiki Dee, 1976

“Un-Break My Heart,” Toni Braxton, 1996-97

“Heartbreaker,” Mariah Carey feat. Jay-Z, 1999

“Break Your Heart,” Taio Cruz feat. Ludacris, 2010

“Break My Soul,” Beyoncé, 2022

 

“(You’re My) Soul and Inspiration,” The Righteous Brothers, 1966

“Crank That (Soulja Boy),” Soulja Boy Tell’em, 2007

“Break My Soul,” Beyoncé, 2022

 

(Beyoncé is, thus, the … sole … woman with a Hot 100 No. 1 with “soul” in its title, with all due … respect … to the Queen of Soul.)

 

No. 1 Hot 100, R&B/hip-hop, R&B & dance: As it reaches No. 1 on the Hot 100, “Soul” concurrently climbs to the top of the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot R&B Songs charts, which use the same multi-metric methodology as the Hot 100. Beyoncé adds her 10th No. 1 on the former and her third on the latter (which began in October 2012). The track also tops the multi-metric Hot Dance/Electronic Songs chart for a sixth week. “Soul” makes history as the first song to lead all four lists (dating to start of the youngest survey among them, Hot Dance/Electronic Songs, in January 2013).

 

“Break” dethrones Lizzo’s “About Damn Time” atop the Hot 100, after the latter, at No. 2, led the last two weeks. Still, “Time” tallies a fifth week at No. 1 on Radio Songs (93.9 million, up 3%).

 

Harry Styles’ former 10-week Hot 100 No. 1 “As It Was” slips 2-3. It adds a 10th week atop the Songs of the Summer chart, as it has led the seasonal survey, which tracks the biggest hits between Memorial Day and Labor Day, each week this summer.

 

Kate Bush’s “Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)” backtracks to No. 4 from its No. 3 Hot 100 high. Its revival sparked by its sync in the fourth season of Netflix’s Stranger Things, the song, originally released in 1985 (when it reached No. 30), tops the multi-metric Hot Rock & Alternative Songs, Hot Rock Songs and Hot Alternative Songs charts for a ninth week each.

 

Future’s “Wait for U,” featuring Drake and Tems, is stationary at No. 5 on the Hot 100, after a week at No. 1 beginning in its debut frame in May, as it rebounds for a second week atop the multi-metric Hot Rap Songs chart, and Jack Harlow’s “First Class” falls 4-6 on the Hot 100, following three weeks at No. 1 starting upon its debut in April.

 

Steve Lacy achieves his first Hot 100 top 10, as “Bad Habit” jumps 11-7, largely fueled by its coronation on Streaming Songs (2-1; 20 million, up 8%). It also drew 10 million in radio airplay audience (up 247%) and sold 800 downloads (up 26%) in the tracking week.

 

The song, which made Lacy a Hot 100 First-Timer when it debuted at No. 100 on the chart dated July 16, follows the Compton, Calif., native’s appearances as a recording artist on other Billboard charts, first as a member of The Internet and then via collaborations as a soloist alongside acts including Frank Ocean, Tyler, The Creator and Vampire Weekend. “Bad Habit” is from Lacy’s LP Gemini Rights, which bowed on multiple charts dated July 30, including at No. 1 on Top Rock & Alternative Albums, No. 3 on Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and No. 7 on the Billboard 200.

 

Bad Bunny and Chencho Corleone’s “Me Porto Bonito” repeats at No. 8 on the Hot 100, after reaching No. 6, and tops the multi-metric Hot Latin Songs chart for a 12th week.

 

Nicky Youre and dazy’s “Sunroof” rides 12-9 on the Hot 100, marking each act’s first top 10. It lifts 8-6 on Radio Songs (55.7 million, up 18%, as it wins the Hot 100’s top Airplay Gainer nod) and drew 8.6 million streams (up 6%) and sold 3,000 (up 21%) in the tracking week.

 

The team-up marks the first title to reach Billboard‘s charts for both artists, with Orange County, Calif., native Nicky Youre having received a DM from dazy on Instagram, spurring the song, which the former wrote and the latter produced.

 

Rounding out the Hot 100’s top 10, Harry Styles’ “Late Night Talking” dips 7-10, after it hit No. 4 upon its debut in June.

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