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BILLBOARD HOT 100

 

Week ending September 17, 2022 | Tracking period: 9/2–9/8

 

TW LW PP WC Artist – Song

 

01 01 01 23 Harry Styles ‒ As It Was

02 02 02 10 Steve Lacy ‒ Bad Habit (BIGGEST AIRPLAY GAIN)

03 12 03 16 Harry Styles ‒ Late Night Talking (BIGGEST DIGITAL SALES GAIN)

04 05 04 15 Nicky Youre & dazy ‒ Sunroof

05 03 01 21 Lizzo ‒ About Damn Time

06 08 06 14 Post Malone feat. Doja Cat ‒ I Like You (A Happier Song)

07 07 01 04 Nicki Minaj ‒ Super Freaky Girl

08 14 08 13 OneRepublic ‒ I Ain't Worried

09 04 03 35 Kate Bush ‒ Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)

10 13 06 17 Morgan Wallen ‒ You Proof

 

11 10 01 19 Future feat. Drake & Tems ‒ Wait For U

12 11 06 18 Bad Bunny & Chencho Corleone ‒ Me Porto Bonito

13 16 05 18 Bad Bunny ‒ Titi Me Pregunto

14 15 13 12 Luke Combs ‒ The Kind Of Love We Make

15 09 01 12 Beyonce ‒ Break My Soul

16 18 01 22 Jack Harlow ‒ First Class

17 20 09 43 Morgan Wallen ‒ Wasted On You

18 19 01 86 Glass Animals ‒ Heat Waves

19 22 18 15 Cole Swindell ‒ She Had Me At Heads Carolina

20 25 20 14 Doja Cat ‒ Vegas

 

21 23 01 12 Drake feat. 21 Savage ‒ Jimmy Cooks

22 24 01 61 The Kid LAROI & Justin Bieber ‒ Stay

23 06 06 02 Elton John & Britney Spears ‒ Hold Me Closer

24 28 24 13 Tyler Hubbard ‒ 5 Foot 9

25 ** 25 01 Lil Baby ‒ Detox (HOT SHOT DEBUT)

26 26 08 13 Joji ‒ Glimpse Of Us

27 27 27 15 Jon Pardi ‒ Last Night Lonely

28 30 04 18 Bad Bunny ‒ Moscow Mule

29 32 03 46 Latto ‒ Big Energy

30 21 05 05 DJ Khaled feat. Drake & Lil Baby ‒ Staying Alive

 

31 33 31 09 Yung Gravy ‒ Betty (Get Money)

32 42 30 20 Zach Bryan ‒ Something In The Orange

33 34 05 50 Justin Bieber ‒ Ghost

34 35 04 52 Ed Sheeran ‒ Shivers

35 40 14 22 Lil Baby ‒ In A Minute

36 38 24 13 Bailey Zimmerman ‒ Rock And A Hard Place

37 47 22 11 Charlie Puth feat. Jung Kook ‒ Left And Right

38 39 34 18 Bad Bunny ‒ Efecto

39 43 39 10 Jelly Roll ‒ Son Of A Sinner

40 44 40 10 Marshmello & Khalid ‒ Numb

 

41 45 31 19 Bailey Zimmerman ‒ Fall In Love

42 ** 42 01 Yeat ‒ Talk

43 17 17 02 DJ Khaled feat. Rick Ross, Lil Wayne, JAY-Z, John Legend & Fridayy ‒ God Did

44 46 25 20 Karol G ‒ Provenza

45 50 45 10 Sia ‒ Unstoppable

46 81 46 02 David Guetta & Bebe Rexha ‒ I'm Good (Blue)

47 48 18 32 Em Beihold ‒ Numb Little Bug

48 58 48 16 Imagine Dragons ‒ Bones

49 54 48 06 Nardo Wick ‒ Dah Dah DahDah

50 59 50 06 Jax ‒ Victoria’s Secret

 

51 37 37 02 Karol G x Maldy ‒ Gatubela

52 69 43 06 The Weeknd ‒ Die For You

53 67 53 09 Burna Boy ‒ Last Last

54 70 54 08 Mitchell Tenpenny ‒ Truth About You

55 60 13 10 Cardi B, Ye & Lil Durk ‒ Hot Shit

56 61 56 08 Tems ‒ Free Mind

57 62 47 15 SleazyWorld Go feat. Lil Baby ‒ Sleazy Flow

58 63 54 13 Halsey ‒ So Good

59 64 59 07 Justin Moore ‒ With A Woman You Love

60 52 26 16 Kane Brown ‒ Like I Love Country Music

 

61 51 51 10 Ingrid Andress & Sam Hunt ‒ Wishful Drinking

62 65 14 18 Bad Bunny & Rauw Alejandro ‒ Party

63 75 63 05 Rosalia ‒ Despecha

64 73 49 15 Hitkidd & GloRilla ‒ F.N.F. (Let's Go)

65 71 65 02 JVKE ‒ Golden Hour

66 68 26 18 Bad Bunny & Bomba Estereo ‒ Ojitos Lindos

67 53 22 03 BLACKPINK ‒ Pink Venom

68 36 36 02 Lil Tjay ‒ Beat The Odds

69 56 06 12 Drake ‒ Sticky

70 80 69 07 Gabby Barrett ‒ Pick Me Up

 

71 82 65 12 Nate Smith ‒ Whiskey On You

72 74 06 18 Bad Bunny ‒ Despues de La Playa

73 29 29 02 DJ Khaled feat. Future & SZA ‒ Beautiful

74 84 63 23 Russell Dickerson & Jake Scott ‒ She Likes It

75 87 75 10 Stephen Sanchez ‒ Until I Found You

76 85 61 16 Carrie Underwood ‒ Ghost Story

77 ** 77 01 d4vd ‒ Romantic Homicide

78 97 78 04 Lizzo ‒ 2 Be Loved (Am I Ready)

79 72 32 03 Bailey Zimmerman ‒ Where It Ends

80 76 21 04 Rod Wave ‒ Alone

 

81 79 31 09 Bad Bunny ‒ Neverita

82 88 42 05 Brent Faiyaz ‒ All Mine

83 83 18 18 Bad Bunny & Jhay Cortez ‒ Tarot

84 93 84 04 Jordan Davis ‒ What My World Spins Around

85 92 85 03 Thomas Rhett feat. Riley Green ‒ Half Of Me

86 95 86 03 Manuel Turizo ‒ La Bachata

87 RE 08 08 Harry Styles ‒ Music For A Sushi Restaurant

88 RE 88 02 Jackson Dean ‒ Don't Come Lookin'

89 RE 89 02 Lee Brice ‒ Soul

90 89 10 05 benny blanco, BTS & Snoop Dogg ‒ Bad Decisions

 

91 ** 91 01 Rema & Selena Gomez ‒ Calm Down

92 91 04 19 Future ‒ Puffin On Zootiez

93 RE 93 02 Rosa Linn ‒ Snap

94 94 59 15 Quavo & Takeoff ‒ Hotel Lobby (Unc And Phew)

95 100 82 05 Bizarrap & Quevedo ‒ Bzrp Music Sessions, Vol. 52

96 96 12 18 Morgan Wallen ‒ Thought You Should Know

97 RE 76 03 Luke Bryan ‒ Country On

98 ** 98 01 Steve Lacy ‒ Static

99 ** 99 01 Armani White ‒ Billie Eilish.

100 ** 100 01 Romeo Santos & Justin Timberlake ‒ Sin Fin

 

OUT 41 07 52 Elton John & Dua Lipa ‒ Cold Heart (PNAU Remix)

OUT 49 49 01 DJ Khaled feat. Kanye West & Eminem ‒ Use This Gospel (Remix)

OUT 55 55 01 DJ Khaled feat. Juice WRLD ‒ Juice WRLD Did

OUT 57 57 01 DJ Khaled feat. Lil Durk, 21 Savage & Roddy Ricch ‒ Keep Going

OUT 66 66 01 DJ Khaled feat. Quavo & Takeoff ‒ Party

OUT 77 77 01 DJ Khaled feat. Nardo Wick & Kodak Black ‒ It Ain't Safe

OUT 78 78 01 DJ Khaled feat. Drake ‒ No Secret

OUT 86 86 01 DJ Khaled feat. Don Toliver & Travis Scott ‒ Let's Pray

OUT 88 42 04 Brent Faiyaz ‒ All Mine

OUT 90 19 05 Beyonce ‒ Alien Superstar

OUT 98 98 01 HARDY feat. Lainey Wilson ‒ Wait In The Truck

OUT 99 32 14 Bad Bunny & Tony Dize ‒ La Corriente

 

Bubbling Under

 

TW LW Artist – Song

 

01 01 Zach Bryan ‒ Oklahoma Smoke Show

02 07 Old Dominion ‒ No Hard Feelings

03 17 AJR ‒ World's Smallest Violin

04 ** Gorillaz feat. Tame Impala & Bootie Brown ‒ New Gold

05 ** Ice Spice ‒ Munch (Feelin' U)

06 15 Diddy & Bryson Tiller ‒ Gotta Move On

07 10 Cafune ‒ Tek It

08 ** GloRilla ‒ Blessed

09 11 Chris Stapleton ‒ Joy Of My Life

10 ** Finesse2Tymes ‒ Back End

11 RE Kelsea Ballerini ‒ Heartfirst

12 24 La Adictiva & Luis R. Conriquez ‒ JGL

13 RE Jimmie Allen ‒ Down Home

14 RE Carly Pearce ‒ What He Didn't Do

15 22 Zac Brown Band ‒ Out In The Middle

16 20 Kane Brown ‒ Grand

17 18 Dax ‒ Dear Alcohol

18 21 BRELAND feat. Lady A ‒ Told You I Could Drink

19 23 Ivan Cornejo & Eslabon Armado ‒ La Curiosidad

20 ** Rauw Alejandro, Lyanno & Brray ‒ Lokera

21 RE YG ‒ Toxic

22 ** Black Eyed Peas, Shakira + David Guetta ‒ Don't You Worry

23 ** Romeo Santos & Rosalia ‒ El Panuelo

24 RE Ivan Cornejo ‒ J.

25 RE Marca Registrada + Junior H ‒ El Rescate

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Harry Styles’ ‘As It Was’ Holds Atop Hot 100, ‘Late Night Talking’ Leaps to No. 3

By Gary Trust | 9/12/2022

 

Harry Styles‘ “As It Was” posts a 13th week at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart.

 

Meanwhile, Styles’ follow-up single, “Late Night Talking,” with both songs from his album Harry’s House, surges from No. 12 to a new No. 3 Hot 100 high, following the arrival of new versions of “Talking” made available for purchase in the tracking week. Styles becomes the first artist with two songs in the chart’s top three spots simultaneously this year.

 

“As It Was” concurrently returns to No. 1 on the Radio Songs chart after a 13-week break, the longest between reigns for a song in the list’s history.

 

Plus, OneRepublic‘s “I Ain’t Worried” jumps from No. 14 to No. 8 on the Hot 100, marking the band’s fourth top 10 and first since 2014. The Ryan Tedder-fronted act also becomes the latest to have notched top 10s in the 2000s, ’10s and ’20s, and one of just three groups to earn the honor.

 

“As It Was,” released on Erskine/Columbia Records, tallied 68.4 million radio airplay audience impressions (down 2%), 15.8 million streams (up 3%) and 3,000 downloads sold (down 13%) in the Sept. 2-8 tracking week, according to Luminate.

 

The single rebounds from No. 2 for a fifth week atop Radio Songs; rises 7-5 on Streaming Songs, after two weeks on top starting in its debut week in April; and drops 19-21 on Digital Song Sales, following a week in charge in May.

 

13 Weeks, 13 Songs

“As It Was” becomes one of just 13 songs in the Hot 100’s history, dating to the chart’s Aug. 4, 1958, inception, to reign for at least 13 weeks. It boasts the longest command since Lil Nas X’s “Old Town Road,” featuring Billy Ray Cyrus, ruled for a record 19 weeks in 2019.

 

Most Weeks Ever in Hot 100’s Top Two

“As It Was” breaks the record for the most weeks spent in the Hot 100’s top two positions, having logged 22 of its 23 weeks on the chart in the top two, from its April 16 debut through the newest, Sept. 17-dated survey.

 

Most Weeks in the Hot 100’s Top Two:

22, “As It Was,” Harry Styles, beginning April 16, 2022 (13 weeks at No. 1, 9 weeks at No. 2)

21, “Stay,” The Kid LAROI & Justin Bieber, Aug. 14, 2021 (7, 14)

19, “Old Town Road,” Lil Nas X feat. Billy Ray Cyrus, April 13, 2019 (19, 0)

18, “Uptown Funk!,” Mark Ronson feat. Bruno Mars, Jan. 17, 2015 (14, 4)

17, “Despacito,” Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee feat. Justin Bieber, May 27, 2017 (16, 1)

 

The Kid LAROI and Justin Bieber’s “Stay” added its 21st week in the Hot 100’s top two on the chart dated this April 9 – with Columbia having released the songs with the three longest runs in the Hot 100’s top two ranks, all since 2019.

 

No. 1 for 13 Weeks Over 23 Weeks

“As It Was” has now placed atop the Hot 100 for 13 weeks over a span of 23 weeks, from its debut through the current chart. (In its other 10 weeks on the list, it ranked at, as noted above, No. 2 for nine weeks, plus No. 3 for one frame.) The song extends the longest span of a title topping the tally in a single release cycle. (Overall, Mariah Carey’s 1994 carol “All I Want for Christmas Is You” holds the record for the longest stretch from a song’s first to its most recent week at No. 1: two years and three weeks [Dec. 21, 2019-Jan. 8, 2022]).

 

Record Return to No. 1 on Radio Songs

On the Radio Songs chart, “As It Was” rebounds to No. 1 after 13 weeks between Nos. 2 and 3, during which Jack Harlow’s “First Class” led for four frames and Lizzo’s “About Damn Time” ruled for nine. That’s easily the longest break between stints at the summit for a title since Radio Songs began in December 1990, surpassing three songs that each logged three-week gaps between No. 1 stays, most recently Drake’s “One Dance,” featuring WizKid and Kyla, in 2016.

 

Before that, two songs traded turns atop Radio Songs over 12 weeks in 2001, for three blocks at a time each: Alicia Keys’ “Fallin’ ” (Aug. 18-Sept. 1; Sept. 29-Oct. 13) and Jennifer Lopez’s “I’m Real,” featuring Ja Rule (Sept. 8-22; Oct. 20-Nov. 3). (Billboard‘s “Between the Bullets” column in the Oct. 20, 2001, issue dubbed the run of hand-offs a “hip-hop flip-flop.”)

 

With “As It Was” having first led Radio Songs beginning on the May 21 chart, as well as on the lists dated May 28, June 4 and 11 and now Sept. 17, it has reigned over a span of 18 weeks, the third-longest stretch of a song ranking at No. 1, after The Weeknd’s “Blinding Lights,” which ruled for 26 weeks over a span of 28 weeks (2020), and Goo Goo Dolls’ “Iris,” which led for 18 weeks over a 19-week span (1998).

 

Talking ‘Talking’

Meanwhile, Styles’ “Late Night Talking” surges 12-3 on the Hot 100, besting its previous No. 4 peak set upon its June 4 debut, concurrent that week with the No. 1 Billboard 200 launch of parent LP Harry’s House (with 521,000 equivalent album units, the largest week for an album this year).

 

“Talking” holds at its No. 4 high on Radio Songs (62 million, up 3%) and bounds 40-28 on Streaming Songs (9.2 million, up 8%), while sporting a 731% gain to 15,000 sold, digital and physical singles combined, as it wins the Hot 100’s top Sales Gainer award. On Sept. 2, the song was released in Styles’ official webstore with new digital artwork, along with an instrumental version for download (both for the standard $1.29) and the original version on cassette ($17.98), 7-inch vinyl ($15.98) and CD ($10.98).

 

Thanks to “As It Was” and “Talking,” Styles is the first artist this year to claim two of the Hot 100’s top three in a single week, and the first since Drake dominated with a record nine simultaneous top 10s, including the entire top five, on the Sept. 18, 2021, chart.

 

Steve Lacy’s “Bad Habit” holds at its No. 2 Hot 100 high, as it posts a fourth week at No. 1 on Streaming Songs (20 million, down 2%) and earns the Hot 100’s top Airplay Gainer nod (32.8 million, up 19%). It also leads the multi-metric Hot Rock & Alternative Songs, Hot Rock Songs and Hot Alternative Songs charts for a third week each and the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot R&B Songs charts for a second frame each, a week after it became the first song to rule all five lists (dating to October 2012, when Billboard‘s main genre-based song charts adopted the Hot 100’s methodology).

 

Elsewhere in the Hot 100’s top five, Nicky Youre and dazy’s “Sunroof” rises 5-4 for a new best and Lizzo’s “About Damn Time” descends 3-5, after two weeks at No. 1 beginning in late July.

 

Post Malone’s “I Like You (A Happier Song),” featuring Doja Cat, climbs 8-6 for a new Hot 100 high and Nicki Minaj’s “Super Freaky Girl” repeats at No. 7, three weeks after it roared in at No. 1, as it leads the multi-metric Hot Rap Songs chart for a fourth week.

 

OneRepublic’s “I Ain’t Worried” charges 14-8 on the Hot 100, with 39.4 million in radio airplay audience (up 4%), 12.8 million streams (up 7%) and 6,000 sold (down 8%).

 

The band notches its fourth Hot 100 top 10 and first since 2014, when “Counting Stars” hit No. 2. The group also reached No. 8 with “Good Life” (2011) and No. 2 as featured on its breakthrough hit “Apologize” by Timbaland (2007). OneRepublic becomes the 18th act with top 10s in the 2000s, ’10s and ’20s – and one of just three groups in those ranks, joining Coldplay and Maroon 5. (A week earlier, Britney Spears added her name to the list of all such acts with the debut of her and Elton John’s “Hold Me Closer”).

 

“Worried” is the first Hot 100 top 10 from the Top Gun: Maverick soundtrack, released in May; the set’s “Hold My Hand” by Lady Gaga reached No. 49 in June, as well as No. 2 on Digital Song Sales and No. 33 on Radio Songs. (The original Top Gun soundtrack yielded Berlin’s No. 1 ballad “Take My Breath Away,” which led the list dated Sept. 13, 1986, plus Kenny Loggins’ No. 2-peaking “Danger Zone” and Loverboy’s No. 12 hit “Heaven in Your Eyes” the same year.)

 

Rounding out the Hot 100’s top 10, Kate Bush’s “Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)” falls 4-9, after hitting No. 3, and Morgan Wallen’s “You Proof” re-enters the region, rising 13-10, after it debuted at its No. 6 high on the May 28 chart; the latter leads the multi-metric Hot Country Songs chart for a fourth week.

'DESPECHÁ' hitting a new peak again after the drop last week, hooray *.* Shame her Romeo Santos collab was overshadowed by the Justin Timberlake one grabbing the Hot 100 scrape instead, but ah well, Bubbling Under is better than nothing ~

 

Gorillaz rather close to entering as well! Was thinking that surely would have been their first US chart entry in a long time if it made it but surprised to learn they had a #85 hit with 'Humility' as recently as 2018, only 4 places lower than that charted in the UK. (The last hit before that though goes all the way back to 'DARE').

I think "New Gold" would've been the first credited Tame Impala chart entry too, with the asterisk on "SKELETONS" in 2018 since Travis Scott wasn't doing credits.

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