On-Demand Songs
The On-Demand Songs chart is published weekly by Billboard magazine in the United States. It is a component to the Streaming Songs chart.
According to Billboard, the On-Demand Songs chart ranks the top on-demand play request and plays from unlimited listener-controlled radio channels on leading music subscription services.[1]
The first On-Demand number-one song was "We Are Young" by Fun. featuring Janelle Monáe on March 24, 2012.
Chart achievements
Songs with the most weeks at number-one
- 13 weeks
- "Thrift Shop" – Macklemore & Ryan Lewis featuring Wanz (2013)
- 11 weeks
- "Uptown Funk" – Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars (2015)
- 10 weeks
- "Fancy" - Iggy Azalea featuring Charli XCX (2014)
- "Dark Horse" – Katy Perry featuring Juicy J (2014)
- 9 weeks
- "Work" – Rihanna featuring Drake (2016)
- "Sorry" – Justin Bieber (2015-2016)
- "Take Me to Church" – Hozier (2014-2015)
- 8 weeks
- "Royals" – Lorde (2013-2014)
- "Blurred Lines" – Robin Thicke featuring T.I. and Pharrell (2013)
- "Somebody That I Used to Know" – Gotye featuring Kimbra (2012)
- 7 weeks
- "Can't Feel My Face" – The Weeknd (2015)
- "Trap Queen" – Fetty Wap (2015)
- "See You Again" – Wiz Khalifa featuring Charlie Puth (2015)
- "Lights" – Ellie Goulding (2012)
- 6 weeks
- "Shake It Off" – Taylor Swift (2014)
- "The Monster" – Eminem featuring Rihanna (2013-2014)
- "Get Lucky" – Daft Punk featuring Pharrell Williams (2013)
- "Diamonds" – Rihanna (2012-2013)
- "Call Me Maybe" – Carly Rae Jepsen (2012)
Artists with the most number-one hits
- 1. Drake (4)
- 2. Maroon 5 (3)
- 2. Pharrell Williams (3)
- 2. Justin Bieber (3)
- 2. Rihanna (3)
- 3. Bruno Mars (2)
- 3. Fun. (2)
- 3. Katy Perry (2)
- 3. Macklemore & Ryan Lewis (2)
- 3. Wiz Khalifa (2)
Highest single-week On-Demand streams
- 20.4 million, "Hello" - Adele, November 2, 2015
- 19.0 million, "Work" - Rihanna featuring Drake, March 19, 2016
- 12.9 million, "Panda" - Desiigner, April 30, 2016
- 12.9 million, "Sorry" - Justin Bieber, November 23, 2015
- 12.7 million, "Pillowtalk" - Zayn, February 20, 2016
See also
References
- ↑ "On-Demand Songs Music Chart". Billboard.com.
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