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BILLBOARD HOT 100

 

Week ending August 19, 2023 | Tracking period: 8/4–8/10

 

TW LW PP WC Artist – Song

 

01 01 01 28 Morgan Wallen ‒ Last Night

02 02 02 20 Luke Combs ‒ Fast Car

03 04 03 14 Taylor Swift ‒ Cruel Summer (BIGGEST SALES & STREAMING GAIN)

04 06 03 49 Rema & Selena Gomez ‒ Calm Down

05 07 04 08 Gunna ‒ Fukumean

06 09 01 06 Olivia Rodrigo ‒ Vampire

07 10 07 11 Dua Lipa ‒ Dance The Night

08 08 07 07 Nicki Minaj, Ice Spice & Aqua ‒ Barbie World (BIGGEST AIRPLAY GAIN)

09 12 01 30 Miley Cyrus ‒ Flowers

10 15 10 35 SZA ‒ Snooze

 

11 13 02 13 Lil Durk feat. J. Cole ‒ All My Life

12 03 03 02 Travis Scott feat. Drake ‒ Meltdown

13 20 02 22 Taylor Swift feat. Ice Spice ‒ Karma

14 22 14 04 Billie Eilish ‒ What Was I Made For?

15 ** 15 01 Doja Cat ‒ Paint The Town Red (HOT SHOT DEBUT)

16 24 14 19 Jelly Roll ‒ Need A Favor

17 33 17 14 Bailey Zimmerman ‒ Religiously

18 31 01 42 Taylor Swift ‒ Anti-Hero

19 29 01 35 SZA ‒ Kill Bill

20 32 03 36 Metro Boomin, The Weeknd & 21 Savage ‒ Creepin'

 

21 21 01 04 Jason Aldean ‒ Try That In A Small Town

22 11 11 02 Travis Scott ‒ I Know ?

23 37 09 23 Morgan Wallen ‒ Thinkin' Bout Me

24 05 05 02 Travis Scott feat. Playboi Carti ‒ FE!N

25 41 17 21 Fifty Fifty ‒ Cupid

26 39 05 25 Toosii ‒ Favorite Song

27 18 07 03 Travis Scott, Bad Bunny & The Weeknd ‒ K-POP

28 30 01 04 Jung Kook feat. Latto ‒ Seven

29 26 26 02 Travis Scott feat. SZA & Future ‒ Telekinesis

30 44 25 08 Noah Kahan & Post Malone ‒ Dial Drunk

 

31 42 04 21 Eslabon Armado x Peso Pluma ‒ Ella Baila Sola

32 45 23 29 Jordan Davis ‒ Next Thing You Know

33 48 15 26 Luke Combs ‒ Love You Anyway

34 50 07 52 Morgan Wallen ‒ Thought You Should Know

35 35 13 17 Post Malone ‒ Chemical

36 51 36 13 Kane Brown ‒ Bury Me In Georgia

37 47 37 14 Justin Moore & Priscilla Block ‒ You, Me, & Whiskey

38 52 11 21 Yng Lvcas x Peso Pluma ‒ La Bebe

39 71 39 07 Lainey Wilson ‒ Watermelon Moonshine

40 54 02 18 Drake ‒ Search & Rescue

 

41 57 13 10 Latto feat. Cardi B ‒ Put It On Da Floor Again

42 59 05 17 Grupo Frontera x Bad Bunny ‒ Un x100to

43 60 43 05 Myke Towers ‒ LaLa

44 19 19 02 Travis Scott ‒ My Eyes

45 74 45 17 David Kushner ‒ Daylight

46 17 17 02 Travis Scott feat. Rob49 & 21 Savage ‒ Topia Twins

47 63 35 07 Peso Pluma, Gabito Ballesteros & Junior H ‒ Lady Gaga

48 64 48 12 David Guetta, Anne-Marie & Coi Leray ‒ Baby Don't Hurt Me

49 RE 01 37 Taylor Swift ‒ Blank Space

50 66 50 14 Doechii feat. Kodak Black ‒ What It Is (Block Boy)

 

51 58 41 03 Ice Spice ‒ Deli

52 61 08 12 Bad Bunny ‒ Where She Goes

53 62 04 17 Ice Spice & Nicki Minaj ‒ Princess Diana

54 69 52 10 Young Nudy feat. 21 Savage ‒ Peaches & Eggplants

55 43 43 02 Tyler Childers ‒ In Your Love

56 40 36 12 Post Malone ‒ Mourning

57 65 33 14 Kaliii ‒ Area Codes

58 72 53 13 Jon Pardi ‒ Your Heart Or Mine

59 79 31 03 Chris Stapleton ‒ White Horse

60 70 26 07 Fuerza Regida ‒ Sabor Fresa

 

61 91 61 08 HARDY ‒ Truck Bed

62 73 19 20 Ed Sheeran ‒ Eyes Closed

63 76 05 05 Taylor Swift ‒ I Can See You (Taylor's Version) (From The Vault)

64 16 16 02 Travis Scott ‒ Thank God

65 75 43 06 Peso Pluma & Grupo Frontera ‒ Tulum

66 77 48 05 NewJeans ‒ Super Shy

67 86 43 10 The Weeknd, Playboi Carti & Madonna ‒ Popular

68 ** 68 01 Usher, Summer Walker & 21 Savage ‒ Good Good

69 83 14 24 Morgan Wallen ‒ Everything I Love

70 14 14 02 Travis Scott ‒ Hyaena

 

71 23 23 02 Travis Scott feat. Teezo Touchdown ‒ Modern Jam

72 84 65 12 DaBaby ‒ Shake Sumn

73 93 56 12 Miley Cyrus ‒ Jaded

74 81 22 11 Lil Durk feat. Morgan Wallen ‒ Stand By Me

75 78 73 03 Charli XCX ‒ Speed Drive

76 82 69 16 Yahritza y Su Esencia x Grupo Frontera ‒ Fragil

77 85 34 12 Fuerza Regida ‒ TQM

78 RE 78 03 Thomas Rhett ‒ Angels Don't Always Have Wings

79 100 79 04 That Mexican OT, Paul Wall & DRODi ‒ Johnny Dang

80 95 27 19 Old Dominion ‒ Memory Lane

 

81 94 64 03 Diplo, Jessie Murph & Polo G ‒ Heartbroken

82 ** 82 01 Grupo Frontera & Grupo Firme ‒ El Amor de Su Vida

83 55 55 02 Offset & Cardi B ‒ Jealousy

84 96 19 07 Young Thug feat. Drake ‒ Oh U Went

85 38 38 02 Travis Scott feat. James Blake & 21 Savage ‒ Til Further Notice

86 RE 86 03 Zach Bryan ‒ Oklahoma Smoke Show

87 27 27 02 Travis Scott ‒ Sirens

88 RE 85 08 Jelly Roll & Lainey Wilson ‒ Save Me

89 28 28 02 Travis Scott ‒ God's Country

90 92 87 03 Ryan Gosling ‒ I'm Just Ken

 

91 97 62 19 Coco Jones ‒ ICU

92 34 34 02 Travis Scott feat. Young Thug ‒ Skitzo

93 25 25 02 Travis Scott & Beyonce ‒ Delresto (Echoes)

94 RE 44 16 Tyler, The Creator feat. Kali Uchis ‒ See You Again

95 98 66 10 Sexyy Red & Tay Keith & Nicki Minaj ‒ Pound Town 2

96 RE 77 06 Peso Pluma & Jasiel Nunez ‒ Lagunas

97 68 47 03 Post Malone ‒ Overdrive

98 99 31 10 Bizarrap & Peso Pluma ‒ Bzrp Music Sessions, Vol. 55

99 RE 42 15 Zach Bryan feat. Maggie Rogers ‒ Dawns

100 RE 63 06 Peso Pluma ‒ Rubicon

 

OUT 36 36 01 Travis Scott feat. The Weeknd & Swae Lee ‒ Circus Maximus

OUT 46 46 01 Travis Scott feat. Westside Gunn ‒ Lost Forever

OUT 49 49 01 Travis Scott feat. Kid Cudi ‒ Looove

OUT 53 53 01 Travis Scott feat. Yung Lean & Dave Chappelle ‒ Parasail

OUT 56 56 01 Post Malone ‒ Enough Is Enough

OUT 67 67 01 Post Malone ‒ Something Real

OUT 80 80 01 Drake & Central Cee ‒ On The Radar Freestyle

OUT 87 87 01 Post Malone ‒ Too Cool To Die

OUT 88 88 01 Post Malone ‒ Don't Understand

OUT 89 89 01 Ivan Cornejo ‒ Aqui Te Espero

OUT 90 90 01 Post Malone ‒ Novacandy

 

Bubbling Under

 

TW LW Artist – Song

 

01 03 Dominic Fike ‒ Mona Lisa

02 08 Bakar ‒ Hell N Back

03 12 Karol G ‒ Amargura

04 07 Warren Zeiders ‒ Pretty Little Poison

05 05 Dave & Central Cee ‒ Sprinter

06 11 Cole Swindell ‒ Drinkaby

07 16 Tim McGraw ‒ Standing Room Only

08 22 Teddy Swims ‒ Lose Control

09 13 Burna Boy ‒ Sittin' On Top Of The World

10 09 Chris Young ‒ Looking For You

11 20 Zach Bryan ‒ Sun To Me

12 RE Chris Brown ‒ Summer Too Hot

13 18 Dylan Scott ‒ Can't Have Mine

14 19 Laufey ‒ From The Start

15 23 Noah Kahan ‒ Stick Season

16 ** Carin Leon ‒ Primera Cita

17 ** NLE Choppa ‒ It's Getting Hot

18 14 Nate Smith ‒ World On Fire

19 RE Lauren Daigle ‒ Thank God I Do

20 ** Zach Bryan ‒ Revival

21 ** Halle ‒ Angel

22 RE Parker McCollum ‒ Burn It Down

23 RE Faye Webster ‒ I Know You

24 06 Lizzo ‒ Pink

25 ** EZ Mil & Eminem ‒ Realest

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Morgan Wallen’s ‘Last Night’ Claims 16th Week Atop Hot 100, the Most Ever for a Non-Collaboration

By Gary Trust | 08/14/2023

 

Morgan Wallen’s “Last Night” adds a 16th week at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart. The song breaks out of a tie with Harry Styles’ “As It Was” for the sole longest No. 1 run for a non-collaboration, while overall tying for the second-longest reign in the Hot 100’s 65-year history.

 

Plus, SZA’s “Snooze” jumps from No. 15 to No. 10 on the Hot 100, becoming her eighth career top 10, and the fifth on her album SOS.

 

Wallen’s “Last Night,” released on Big Loud/Mercury/Republic Records, drew 59.6 million radio airplay audience impressions (down 11%) and 26.3 million streams (down 2%) and sold 5,000 downloads (down 22%) in the Aug. 4-10 tracking week, according to Luminate.

 

As “Last Night” leads the Hot 100 for a 16th week, it surpasses Harry Styles’ “As It Was,” from 2022, for the longest command ever for a song by an act with no accompanying artists.

 

Among all songs, “Last Night” matches the second-longest rule in the Hot 100’s history, which dates to the chart’s Aug. 4, 1958, inception.

 

Longest-Leading Billboard Hot 100 No. 1s:

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

16 (to date), “Last Night,” Morgan Wallen, March 18, 2023

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, “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

 

“Last Night” also passes “As It Was” for the longest No. 1 Hot 100 stay of the 2020s so far. Here’s an updated look at the longest-leading hits each decade (with songs, on average, having logged longer No. 1 runs since Luminate data began contributing to the chart in late 1991).

 

Longest-Leading Billboard Hot 100 No. 1s by Decade:

2020s: 16 weeks (to date), “Last Night,” 2023

2010s: 19 weeks, “Old Town Road,” Lil Nas X feat. Billy Ray Cyrus, 2019

2000s: 14 weeks, “I Gotta Feeling,” The Black Eyed Peas, 2009 / “We Belong Together,” Mariah Carey, 2005

1990s: 16 weeks, “One Sweet Day,” Mariah Carey & Boyz II Men, 1995-96

1980s: 10 weeks, “Physical,” Olivia Newton-John, 1981-82

1970s: 10 weeks, “You Light Up My Life,” Debby Boone, 1977

1960s: 9 weeks, “Hey Jude,” The Beatles, 1968 / “The Theme From A Summer Place,” Percy Faith and His Orchestra, 1960

1950s: 9 weeks, “Mack the Knife,” Bobby Darin, 1959

 

“Last Night” first led the Hot 100 in March, becoming Wallen’s initial No. 1 on the chart, and has logged a record-tying five distinct stays on top: March 18; April 15-22; May 6-July 8; July 22; and Aug. 12-19.

 

The song rebounds to No. 1, from No. 3, for an 18th week atop the Streaming Songs chart; rises 7-4 following a week atop Digital Song Sales; and dips 4-6, after reaching No. 2, on Radio Songs.

 

The single also tops Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart, which employs the same multi-metric methodology as the Hot 100, for a 25th week, the sole fourth-longest domination since the chart became an all-encompassing genre ranking in 1958; Bebe Rexha and Florida Georgia Line’s “Meant to Be” spent a record 50 weeks at No. 1 in 2017-18.

 

“Last Night,” which crowned the Country Airplay chart for eight weeks and crossed over to No. 5 peaks on both Pop Airplay and Adult Pop Airplay, additionally claims an 11th week atop Billboard’s Songs of the Summer chart, having led each week since the list returned. (Meanwhile over the weekend, Wallen made news for his hairstyle change. Mull it over here.)

 

Luke Combs’ cover of Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car” notches a fifth week at its No. 2 Hot 100 high.

 

Notably, after topping Country Airplay for five weeks, “Fast Car” leads Adult Pop Airplay for a second frame and becomes Combs’ first top 10 on Pop Airplay (12-10). It’s the first song by a lead solo male to have hit No. 1 on both Country Airplay and Adult Pop Airplay and reached the Pop Airplay top 10; among all acts, four songs previously achieved the feat, as it follows Gabby Barrett’s “I Hope” (featuring Charlie Puth on its pop remix; 2020); “Meant To Be” (2018); Lady A’s “Need You Now” (2009-10); and Faith Hill’s “Breathe” (1999-2000).

 

Taylor Swift’s “Cruel Summer” pushes to a new No. 3 Hot 100 high, from No. 4, four years after its release on her 2019 album Lover, as it’s now being promoted as a single, while she has been performing the song on her The Eras Tour. It likewise climbs to new No. 3 bests on both Radio Songs (68.1 million, up 6%) and Digital Song Sales (7,000, up 85%), while rebounding 19-5, also a new highpoint, on Streaming Songs (18.2 million, up 14%), as it wins the Hot 100’s Sales and Streaming Gainer awards.

 

Rema and Selena Gomez’s “Calm Down” ascends 6-4 on the Hot 100, after reaching No. 3, as it posts an eighth week atop Radio Songs (88 million, down 1%). It tops the Billboard U.S. Afrobeats Songs chart for a milestone 50th week, extending the longest reign since the ranking began over a year ago.

 

Gunna’s “Fukumean” lifts 7-5 on the Hot 100, after hitting No. 4, while ruling the multi-metric Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Songs charts for a fourth week each.

 

Olivia Rodrigo’s “Vampire” rises 9-6 on the Hot 100, five weeks after it debuted as her third No. 1; Dua Lipa’s “Dance the Night” twirls 10-7 for a new high; Nicki Minaj and Ice Spice’s “Barbie World,” with Aqua, holds at No. 8, after reaching No. 7, as it takes top Airplay Gainer honors (26.1 million, up 54%); and Miley Cyrus’ “Flowers” returns to the top 10 (12-9), after it led for eight weeks beginning in January.

 

Rounding out the Hot 100’s top 10, SZA’s “Snooze” surges 15-10, with 61.9 million in radio reach and 1,000 sold (each sum essentially even week-over-week) and 10.4 million streams (down 1%).

 

The song is SZA’s eighth career Hot 100 top 10 and the fifth on her album SOS, after “Kill Bill,” which led for a week in April, marking her first No. 1; “Nobody Gets Me” (No. 10, December 2022, concurrent with the set’s launch atop the Billboard 200 albums chart); “I Hate U” (No. 7, December 2021); and “Good Days” (No. 9, February 2021).

 

SZA has also hit the Hot 100’s top 10 as featured on Doja Cat’s “Kiss Me More” (No. 3, July 2021); with Kendrick Lamar on “All the Stars” (No. 7, March 2018); and as featured on Maroon 5’s “What Lovers Do” (No. 9, November 2017).

 

Meanwhile, Babyface is one of the co-writers and co-producers of “Snooze.” The legendary talent, who has notched five Hot 100 top 10s as a recording artist and first reached the region in the 1980s, places in the top 10 as a writer for the first time since Drake’s “Fair Trade,” featuring Travis Scott, hit No. 3 in September 2021. “Fair Trade” samples Charlotte Day Wilson’s 2019 single “Mountains,” which Babyface co-wrote.

 

Apart from samples, Babyface appears in the Hot 100’s top 10 with a newly composed song for the first time since P!nk’s “Most Girls,” which he produced and co-wrote, hit No. 4 in November 2000. (That also marked his last top 10 rank as a producer until “Snooze.”)

I kind of forgot 'Snooze' was still hanging around so high in the chart so felt a bit random to see it making the top 10 but happy to see!

 

A little surprised that they've bothered allowing 'Blank Space' to re-enter but still one of her best songs so why not x

 

:') at 'Last Night' overtaking the #1 longevity of 'As It Was' but it looks like this will be its last week barring anything unforeseen. Would have tied the overall record if not for three weeks of mass downloads from BTS fans and/or MAGA types.

:') at 'Last Night' overtaking the #1 longevity of 'As It Was' but it looks like this will be its last week barring anything unforeseen. Would have tied the overall record if not for three weeks of mass downloads from BTS fans and/or MAGA types.
it's giving "the South shall rise again" :')
A little surprised that they've bothered allowing 'Blank Space' to re-enter but still one of her best songs so why not x

 

well, math is math, I don't see the space here for bothering or not.

 

If I looked correctly, "Style" wasn't far much to re-enter as well. If the excitement continue, it may re-enter next week (it did on Canadian Chart, along with Blank Space)

Edited by jszmiles

I'm under the impression that it's always a case by case basis if they allow recurrent songs to rechart again (otherwise you'd surely see songs going recurrent then returning a week or two later due to fluctuating back into the top 25 / 50 all the time). 'Blank Space' getting popular enough to be in the top 50 again is more just an uplift of her entire catalogue in general (and I guess more specifically '1989' since the TV announcement) rather than being specifically for the song so I wouldn't have been surprised if they decided to not allow it to chart again.
Yeah I've always wondered about the specifics. Like, I don't know the full tally, but at least on Spotify, "Something In The Orange" has gained for the past 3 weeks in a row (including during the week Travis Scott unceremoniously booted it). It makes me wonder how high would it have to actually get before they let it back on. Even so, it's just promising the further possibility of more fringe cases where Billboard's recurrency rules just aren't prepared for these lengthy ascents.
Yeah I've always wondered about the specifics. Like, I don't know the full tally, but at least on Spotify, "Something In The Orange" has gained for the past 3 weeks in a row (including during the week Travis Scott unceremoniously booted it). It makes me wonder how high would it have to actually get before they let it back on. Even so, it's just promising the further possibility of more fringe cases where Billboard's recurrency rules just aren't prepared for these lengthy ascents.

 

 

I think it was stopped promoted on Radio that's why it had to be moved to recurrent after Travis' album tracks pushed it down below top 25

I think it was stopped promoted on Radio that's why it had to be moved to recurrent after Travis' album tracks pushed it down below top 25

Oh, I get why it was booted out, but my query was what threshold is needed to get back onto the chart, as I'd suspect it would've jumped back into the top 25 the week after, but evidently that's not good enough.

Oh, I get why it was booted out, but my query was what threshold is needed to get back onto the chart, as I'd suspect it would've jumped back into the top 25 the week after, but evidently that's not good enough.

 

yeah it is very rare to see track into top 25. I mean I don't get why some can comeback to top 50 and some can only comeback if have enough points for top 25.... I think the main rule for "52-weeks tracks" to see track coming back is that it should still be playlisted.... its not needed for already re-current like Blank Space which went up in current H100....

 

on canadian chart, even August and Style are charting in top 50.

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