Posted September 28, 20222 yr BILLBOARD HOT 100 Week ending October 1, 2022 | Tracking period: 9/16–9/22 TW LW PP WC Artist – Song 01 01 01 25 Harry Styles ‒ As It Was 02 02 02 12 Steve Lacy ‒ Bad Habit 03 05 03 16 Post Malone feat. Doja Cat ‒ I Like You (A Happier Song) 04 04 04 17 Nicky Youre & dazy ‒ Sunroof 05 03 01 06 Nicki Minaj ‒ Super Freaky Girl 06 06 06 19 Morgan Wallen ‒ You Proof 07 08 07 15 OneRepublic ‒ I Ain't Worried 08 14 08 14 Luke Combs ‒ The Kind Of Love We Make 09 07 01 23 Lizzo ‒ About Damn Time 10 10 01 21 Future feat. Drake & Tems ‒ Wait For U 11 09 03 18 Harry Styles ‒ Late Night Talking 12 11 06 20 Bad Bunny & Chencho Corleone ‒ Me Porto Bonito 13 13 05 20 Bad Bunny ‒ Titi Me Pregunto 14 15 14 16 Doja Cat ‒ Vegas (BIGGEST AIRPLAY GAIN) 15 16 09 45 Morgan Wallen ‒ Wasted On You 16 18 16 17 Cole Swindell ‒ She Had Me At Heads Carolina 17 17 01 88 Glass Animals ‒ Heat Waves 18 20 01 14 Drake feat. 21 Savage ‒ Jimmy Cooks 19 12 03 37 Kate Bush ‒ Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God) 20 19 01 24 Jack Harlow ‒ First Class 21 25 21 22 Zach Bryan ‒ Something In The Orange 22 24 22 15 Tyler Hubbard ‒ 5 Foot 9 23 23 01 63 The Kid LAROI & Justin Bieber ‒ Stay 24 31 24 04 David Guetta & Bebe Rexha ‒ I'm Good (Blue) 25 ** 25 01 BLACKPINK ‒ Shut Down (HOT SHOT DEBUT) 26 21 01 14 Beyonce ‒ Break My Soul 27 27 08 15 Joji ‒ Glimpse Of Us 28 26 06 04 Elton John & Britney Spears ‒ Hold Me Closer 29 36 29 02 Chris Brown ‒ Under The Influence 30 22 22 02 Kane Brown & Katelyn Brown ‒ Thank God 31 28 04 20 Bad Bunny ‒ Moscow Mule 32 39 31 21 Bailey Zimmerman ‒ Fall In Love 33 30 30 11 Yung Gravy ‒ Betty (Get Money) 34 45 34 03 d4vd ‒ Romantic Homicide 35 32 14 24 Lil Baby ‒ In A Minute 36 33 05 52 Justin Bieber ‒ Ghost 37 38 24 15 Bailey Zimmerman ‒ Rock And A Hard Place 38 40 38 12 Sia ‒ Unstoppable 39 37 37 12 Jelly Roll ‒ Son Of A Sinner 40 29 03 48 Latto ‒ Big Energy 41 35 27 17 Jon Pardi ‒ Last Night Lonely 42 34 05 07 DJ Khaled feat. Drake & Lil Baby ‒ Staying Alive 43 42 42 17 Hitkidd & GloRilla ‒ F.N.F. (Let's Go) 44 41 22 13 Charlie Puth feat. Jung Kook ‒ Left And Right 45 43 40 12 Marshmello & Khalid ‒ Numb 46 49 43 08 The Weeknd ‒ Die For You 47 44 34 20 Bad Bunny ‒ Efecto 48 50 48 08 Jax ‒ Victoria’s Secret 49 47 47 18 Imagine Dragons ‒ Bones 50 70 50 14 Nate Smith ‒ Whiskey On You 51 54 51 11 Burna Boy ‒ Last Last 52 52 52 10 Tems ‒ Free Mind 53 51 51 15 Halsey ‒ So Good 54 56 51 12 Ingrid Andress & Sam Hunt ‒ Wishful Drinking 55 58 47 17 SleazyWorld Go feat. Lil Baby ‒ Sleazy Flow 56 62 56 04 JVKE ‒ Golden Hour 57 74 22 05 BLACKPINK ‒ Pink Venom (BIGGEST DIGITAL SALES GAIN) 58 53 37 04 Karol G x Maldy ‒ Gatubela 59 69 59 12 Stephen Sanchez ‒ Until I Found You 60 71 60 04 Jackson Dean ‒ Don't Come Lookin' 61 85 13 06 Beyonce ‒ Cuff It 62 ** 62 01 Omar Apollo ‒ Evergreen 63 66 63 02 YoungBoy Never Broke Again ‒ Put It On Me 64 55 54 10 Mitchell Tenpenny ‒ Truth About You 65 65 63 07 Rosalia ‒ Despecha 66 59 48 08 Nardo Wick ‒ Dah Dah DahDah 67 61 14 20 Bad Bunny & Rauw Alejandro ‒ Party 68 67 67 06 Lizzo ‒ 2 Be Loved (Am I Ready) 69 RE 69 02 Armani White ‒ Billie Eilish. 70 60 26 20 Bad Bunny & Bomba Estereo ‒ Ojitos Lindos 71 68 68 02 Lil Baby ‒ Freestyle 72 75 42 07 Brent Faiyaz ‒ All Mine 73 78 73 06 Jordan Davis ‒ What My World Spins Around 74 72 31 11 Bad Bunny ‒ Neverita 75 80 75 05 Thomas Rhett feat. Riley Green ‒ Half Of Me 76 79 63 25 Russell Dickerson & Jake Scott ‒ She Likes It 77 48 42 03 Yeat ‒ Talk 78 82 61 18 Carrie Underwood ‒ Ghost Story 79 87 08 10 Harry Styles ‒ Music For A Sushi Restaurant 80 99 80 03 HARDY feat. Lainey Wilson ‒ Wait In The Truck 81 73 06 20 Bad Bunny ‒ Despues de La Playa 82 94 82 03 Steve Lacy ‒ Static 83 57 26 18 Kane Brown ‒ Like I Love Country Music 84 64 25 03 Lil Baby ‒ Detox 85 86 85 05 Manuel Turizo ‒ La Bachata 86 81 59 09 Justin Moore ‒ With A Woman You Love 87 89 76 05 Luke Bryan ‒ Country On 88 92 88 03 Rema & Selena Gomez ‒ Calm Down 89 88 18 20 Bad Bunny & Jhay Cortez ‒ Tarot 90 RE 69 08 Gabby Barrett ‒ Pick Me Up 91 ** 91 01 Little Big Town ‒ Hell Yeah 92 RE 75 09 Corey Kent ‒ Wild As Her 93 ** 93 01 BLEU & Nicki Minaj ‒ Love In The Way 94 63 13 12 Cardi B, Ye & Lil Durk ‒ Hot Shit 95 ** 95 01 Steve Lacy ‒ Dark Red 96 98 12 20 Morgan Wallen ‒ Thought You Should Know 97 93 32 05 Bailey Zimmerman ‒ Where It Ends 98 ** 98 01 EST Gee feat. Jack Harlow ‒ Backstage Passes 99 97 93 04 Rosa Linn ‒ Snap 100 91 36 04 Lil Tjay ‒ Beat The Odds OUT 46 25 21 Karol G ‒ Provenza OUT 76 50 03 NAV, Travis Scott & Lil Baby ‒ Never Sleep OUT 77 77 01 Yeat feat. Lil Uzi Vert ‒ Flawless OUT 83 17 03 DJ Khaled feat. Rick Ross, Lil Wayne, JAY-Z, John Legend & Fridayy ‒ God Did OUT 84 06 13 Drake ‒ Sticky OUT 90 90 01 Ghost ‒ Mary On A Cross OUT 95 95 01 YoungBoy Never Broke Again ‒ Purge Me OUT 96 21 05 Rod Wave ‒ Alone OUT 100 100 01 Zach Bryan ‒ Burn, Burn, Burn Bubbling Under TW LW Artist – Song 01 ** Montell Fish ‒ Hotel 02 ** Kodak Black ‒ Walk 03 02 Zach Bryan ‒ Oklahoma Smoke Show 04 ** Koe Wetzel ‒ Cabo 05 08 Ice Spice ‒ Munch (Feelin' U) 06 12 AJR ‒ World's Smallest Violin 07 ** Megan Moroney ‒ Tennessee Orange 08 09 Hailey Whitters ‒ Everything She Ain't 09 19 Tory Lanez ‒ The Color Violet 10 ** EST Gee feat. Future ‒ Shoot It Myself 11 20 Jimmie Allen ‒ Down Home 12 06 BRELAND ‒ For What It's Worth 13 18 Chris Stapleton ‒ Joy Of My Life 14 ** BLACKPINK ‒ Typa Girl 15 10 Lewis Capaldi ‒ Forget Me 16 13 Cafune ‒ Tek It 17 15 Diddy & Bryson Tiller ‒ Gotta Move On 18 RE Koe Wetzel ‒ Creeps 19 16 Rauw Alejandro, Lyanno & Brray ‒ Lokera 20 17 Carly Pearce ‒ What He Didn't Do 21 03 Kane Brown ‒ Grand 22 ** Bailey Zimmerman ‒ Never Leave 23 22 Finesse2Tymes ‒ Back End 24 RE Zac Brown Band ‒ Out In The Middle 25 RE YG ‒ Toxic
September 28, 20222 yr Author Harry Styles’ ‘As It Was’ Tops Hot 100 for 15th Week – Longest Reign Ever for a British Act By Gary Trust | 09/26/2022 Harry Styles‘ “As It Was” logs a 15th week at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart. Only three songs have led longer over the survey’s 64-year history, while “As It Was” claims outright the longest reign for a song by a British artist, as well as by an act with no accompanying artists. Styles also sports the rare achievement of holding the No. 1 spot on the Hot 100 while starring in the top movie at the box office, as Don’t Worry Darling premiered as the weekend’s top film domestically. Meanwhile, Luke Combs adds his second Hot 100 top 10, as the country star’s “The Kind of Love We Make” jumps from No. 14 to No. 8. “As It Was,” released on Erskine/Columbia Records, tallied 66 million radio airplay audience impressions (down 2%), 13.5 million streams (down 6%) and 3,000 downloads sold (up 13%) in the Sept. 16-22 tracking week, according to Luminate. The single scores a seventh week atop the Radio Songs chart; dips 6-9 on Streaming Songs, after two weeks on top starting in its debut week in April; and rebounds 24-15 on Digital Song Sales, following a week in the lead in May. “As It Was” now solely boasts the fourth-longest reign in the Hot 100’s history, dating to the chart’s Aug. 4, 1958, inception. It has achieved the longest command since Lil Nas X’s “Old Town Road,” featuring Billy Ray Cyrus (also on Columbia), ruled for a record 19 weeks in 2019. Most Weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100: 19, “Old Town Road,” Lil Nas X feat. Billy Ray Cyrus, beginning April 13, 2019 16, “Despacito,” Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee feat. Justin Bieber, May 27, 2017 16, “One Sweet Day,” Mariah Carey & Boyz II Men, Dec. 2, 1995 15 (to date), “As It Was,” Harry Styles, April 16, 2022 14, “Uptown Funk!,” Mark Ronson feat. Bruno Mars, Jan. 17, 2015 14, “I Gotta Feeling,” The Black Eyed Peas, July 11, 2009 14, “We Belong Together,” Mariah Carey, June 4, 2005 14, “Candle in the Wind 1997″/”Something About the Way You Look Tonight,” Elton John, Oct. 11, 1997 14, “Macarena (Bayside Boys Mix),” Los Del Rio, Aug. 3, 1996 14, “I’ll Make Love to You,” Boyz II Men, Aug. 27, 1994 14, “I Will Always Love You,” Whitney Houston, Nov. 28, 1992 Further, “As It Was” breaks out of a tie for the longest Hot 100 domination among singles by artists with no accompanying acts, as it passes the 14-week leaders above by The Black Eyed Peas, Mariah Carey, Elton John, Los Del Rio, Boyz II Men and Whitney Houston. With Styles from Redditch, Worcestershire, England, “As It Was” surpasses Ronson and John’s hits listed above for the longest Hot 100 rule ever by a British artist. (In the rundown below, * denotes British artists on songs with multiple acts.) Most Weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 by British Artists: 15 (to date), “As It Was,” Harry Styles, beginning April 16, 2022 14, “Uptown Funk!,” Mark Ronson* feat. Bruno Mars, Jan. 17, 2015 14, “Candle in the Wind 1997″/”Something About the Way You Look Tonight,” Elton John, Oct. 11, 1997 12, “Shape of You,” Ed Sheeran, Jan. 28, 2017 10, “Easy on Me,” Adele, Oct. 30, 2021 10, “One Dance,” Drake feat. WizKid & Kyla*, April 23, 2016 10, “Hello,” Adele, Nov. 14, 2015 10, “We Found Love,” Rihanna feat. Calvin Harris*, Nov. 12, 2011 10, “Physical,” Olivia Newton-John, Nov. 21, 1981 9, “Hey Jude,” The Beatles, Sept. 28, 1968 Most Weeks Ever in Hot 100’s Top Two & Top Three “As It Was” extends its record for the most weeks spent in the Hot 100’s top two positions, having logged 24 weeks, of its 25 total weeks on the chart, in the top two, from its April 16 debut at No. 1 through the newest, Oct. 1-dated survey. The song also extends its mark for the most weeks, 25, tallied in the Hot 100’s top three in the chart’s history. “As It Was” is additionally the first song ever to spend its first 25 weeks on the Hot 100 all in the top three. “As It Was” has now topped the Hot 100 for 15 weeks over a span of 25 weeks, from its debut through the current chart. (In its other 10 weeks on the list, it ranked at No. 2 for nine weeks and No. 3 for one frame.) The song extends the longest span of a title leading the list 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]). On the Radio Songs chart, “As It Was” has led for seven weeks over a span of 20 weeks, the second-longest span of a song ranking at No. 1. The Weeknd’s “Blinding Lights” ruled for 26 weeks over a stretch of 28 weeks (2020). Meanwhile, Styles can celebrate having the top song and starring in the top movie in the U.S. While “As It Was” holds atop the Hot 100, Don’t Worry Darling premiered with a weekend-winning $19.2 million domestically in theaters. The film stars — in addition to Styles and others — Chris Pine, Florence Pugh and Olivia Wilde, the latter of whom also directed and co-produced it. Such a double domination is rare, with Styles following such notable examples as Prince, whose five-week Hot 100 reign in 1984 with “When Doves Cry” coincided with the rule in theaters of Purple Rain, and Eminem, whose “Lose Yourself” controlled the Hot 100 for 12 weeks in 2002-03, aligning with his box office-topping acting debut in parent film 8 Mile. (Going back to Back to the Future, Huey Lewis made a comical cameo in the 1985 blockbuster, which reigned as the top movie as his and The News’ “The Power of Love” [not Marty McFly’s version …] led the Hot 100.) Steve Lacy’s first Hot 100 top 10 “Bad Habit” spends a fourth week at its No. 2 high, with 37.8 million in airplay audience (up 10%), 19.6 million streams (essentially even week-over-week) and 2,000 sold (up 39%). The track rebounds from No. 2 for a fifth week at No. 1 on Streaming Songs; becomes Lacy’s first Radio Songs top 10, surging 13-8; and debuts at No. 37 on Digital Song Sales. “Bad Habit” leads the multi-metric Hot Rock & Alternative Songs, Hot Rock Songs and Hot Alternative Songs charts for a fifth week each and the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot R&B Songs charts for a fourth frame each, having become the first song to rule all five rankings (dating to October 2012, when Billboard‘s main genre-based song charts adopted the Hot 100’s methodology). Post Malone’s “I Like You (A Happier Song),” featuring Doja Cat, rises 5-3 for a new Hot 100 best; Nicky Youre and Dazy’s “Sunroof” holds at its No. 4 high; and Nicki Minaj’s “Super Freaky Girl” drops 3-5, after it soared in at No. 1 on the Aug. 27 chart, as it tops the multi-metric Hot Rap Songs chart for a sixth week. Morgan Wallen’s “You Proof” keeps at its No. 6 Hot 100 highpoint, while leading the multi-metric Hot Country Songs chart for a sixth week, and OneRepublic’s “I Ain’t Worried” ascends 8-7 for a new top rank. Luke Combs notches his second Hot 100 top 10, as “The Kind of Love We Make” bounds 14-8 with 32.7 million in airplay audience (up 5%), 13.9 million streams (up 13%) and 3,000 sold (up 8%). Combs previously hit the Hot 100’s top 10 with “Forever After All,” which debuted at its No. 2 peak in November 2020 (the highest entrance ever for a core country male soloist). Thanks to Wallen’s “You Proof” and Combs’ “The Kind of Love We Make,” two top 10 Hot Country Songs hits place in the Hot 100’s top 10 together. The tracks rank at No. 1 (for a sixth week, as noted above) and No. 2 on Hot Country Songs (after four weeks on top), respectively. The songs combine for the fourth such double-up in just over two years – after none had occurred in over 20 years, since May 13, 2000, when Faith Hill’s “Breathe” and Lonestar’s “Amazed” ranked at Nos. 3 and 10 on the Hot 100, respectively. Here’s a recap of the five most recent instances of Hot Country Songs top 10s sharing space in the Hot 100’s top 10, with Wallen, Combs and Gabby Barrett factoring into two each: Oct. 1, 2022: “You Proof,” Morgan Wallen (No. 6 on the Hot 100), “The Kind of Love We Make,” Luke Combs (No. 8) Nov. 27, 2021: “All Too Well (Taylor’s Version),” Taylor Swift (No. 1), “Fancy Like,” Walker Hayes (No. 10) Nov. 7, 2020: “Forever After All,” Combs (No. 2), “I Hope,” Gabby Barrett feat. Charlie Puth (No. 6) Aug. 29, 2020: “7 Summers,” Wallen (No. 6), “I Hope” (No. 10) May 13, 2000: “Breathe,” Faith Hill (No. 3), “Amazed,” Lonestar (No. 10) Notably, unlike the four most recent team-ups until this week, both “Proof” and “Kind” appear in the Hot 100’s top 10 without the assistance of pop/adult radio promotion. “All Too Well,” “Fancy Like” and “I Hope,” as well as “Breathe” and “Amazed,” all drew multi-format airplay support. Wallen and Combs’ latest hits are both scaling the tier largely thanks to their streaming and country radio strength, as they rank at Nos. 5 and 7, respectively, on Streaming Songs and Nos. 3 and 2, respectively, on the Country Airplay chart. Rounding out the Hot 100’s top 10, Lizzo’s “About Damn Time” descends 7-9, after two weeks at No. 1 beginning in late July, and Future’s “Wait for U,” featuring Drake and Tems, repeats at No. 10, following a week on top in its debut frame in May.
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