The Billboard Hot 100 is a chart that ranks the best-performing singles of the United States. Published by Billboard magazine, the data are compiled by Nielsen SoundScan based collectively on each single's weekly physical sales, and airplay. In 2001, there were 14 singles that topped the chart, [1] in 52 issue dates. Although 15 singles claimed the top position throughout the year, group Destiny's Child's "Independent Women Part I" is credited in 2000, and is thus excluded.[ citation needed ]
During the year, 12 acts had achieved a first U.S. number-one single, namely: Shaggy, Ricardo "RikRok" Ducent, OutKast, Mystikal, Crazy Town, Rayvon, Lil' Kim, Mýa, Pink, Alicia Keys, Ja Rule, Mary J. Blige, and Nickelback. Destiny's Child, Usher and Shaggy had two number-one singles in 2001.
Janet Jackson's "All for You" is the longest-running single of the year, staying at number one for seven consecutive weeks. [1] 2001 is the first year since 1993 that there has not been at least one number-one hit with a double-digit run. [1] "All for You" is also responsible to give to Jackson the tenth Hot 100 number one of her career; making her the fourth female artist with most number ones in the rock era. [2] Other singles that had a multiple chart run includes Alicia Keys' "Fallin'" and Mary J. Blige's "Family Affair"; both stayed atop for six weeks. [1]
The #1 song of 2001, "Hanging by a Moment" by Lifehouse, never reached #1 on the weekly charts. |
No. | Issue date | Song | Artist(s) | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
867 | January 6 | "Independent Women" | Destiny's Child | [3] [4] |
January 13 | [5] [6] | |||
January 20 | [7] [8] | |||
January 27 | [9] [10] | |||
868 | February 3 | "It Wasn't Me" | Shaggy featuring Ricardo "RikRok" Ducent | [11] [12] |
February 10 | [13] [12] | |||
869 | February 17 | "Ms. Jackson" | OutKast | [14] [15] |
870 | February 24 | "Stutter" | Joe featuring Mystikal | [16] [17] |
March 3 | [18] [17] | |||
March 10 | [19] [20] | |||
March 17 | [21] [22] | |||
871 | March 24 | "Butterfly" | Crazy Town | [23] [24] |
872 | March 31 | "Angel" | Shaggy featuring Rayvon | [25] [26] |
re | April 7 | "Butterfly" | Crazy Town | [27] [28] |
873 | April 14 | "All for You" | Janet Jackson | [29] [30] |
April 21 | [31] [32] | |||
April 28 | [33] [34] | |||
May 5 | [35] [36] | |||
May 12 | [37] [38] | |||
May 19 | [39] [40] | |||
May 26 | [41] [42] | |||
874 | June 2 | "Lady Marmalade" | Christina Aguilera, Lil' Kim, Mýa and Pink | [43] [44] |
June 9 | [45] [46] | |||
June 16 | [47] [48] | |||
June 23 | [49] [50] | |||
June 30 | [51] [52] | |||
875 | July 7 | "U Remind Me" | Usher | [53] [54] |
July 14 | [55] [56] | |||
July 21 | [57] [58] | |||
July 28 | [59] [60] | |||
876 | August 4 | "Bootylicious" | Destiny's Child | [61] [62] |
August 11 | [63] [64] | |||
877 | August 18 | "Fallin'" | Alicia Keys | [65] [66] |
August 25 | [67] [68] | |||
September 1 | [69] [70] | |||
878 | September 8 | "I'm Real (Murder Remix)" | Jennifer Lopez featuring Ja Rule | [71] [72] |
September 15 | [73] [74] | |||
September 22 | [75] [76] | |||
re | September 29 | "Fallin'" | Alicia Keys | [77] [78] |
October 6 | [79] [80] | |||
October 13 | [81] [82] | |||
re | October 20 | "I'm Real (Murder Remix)" | Jennifer Lopez featuring Ja Rule | [83] [84] |
October 27 | [85] [86] | |||
879 | November 3 | "Family Affair" | Mary J. Blige | [87] [88] |
November 10 | [89] [90] | |||
November 17 | [91] [92] | |||
November 24 | [93] [94] | |||
December 1 | [95] [96] | |||
December 8 | [97] [98] | |||
880 | December 15 | "U Got It Bad" | Usher | [99] [100] |
881 | December 22 | "How You Remind Me" | Nickelback | [101] [102] |
December 29 | [103] [104] | |||
Position | Artist | Weeks at No. 1 |
---|---|---|
1 | Janet Jackson | 7 |
2 | Destiny's Child | 6 |
Alicia Keys | ||
Mary J. Blige | ||
5 | Christina Aguilera | 5 |
Lil' Kim | ||
Mýa | ||
Pink | ||
Jennifer Lopez | ||
Ja Rule | ||
Usher | ||
12 | Joe | 4 |
Mystikal | ||
14 | Shaggy | 3 |
15 | Ricardo 'RikRok' Ducent | 2 |
Crazy Town | ||
Nickelback | ||
18 | OutKast | 1 |
Rayvon |
Destiny's Child was an American musical girl group whose final lineup comprised Beyoncé Knowles, Kelly Rowland, and Michelle Williams. The group began their musical career as Girl's Tyme, formed in 1990 in Houston, Texas. After years of limited success, the original quartet comprising Knowles, Rowland, LaTavia Roberson, and LeToya Luckett were signed in 1997 to Columbia Records as Destiny's Child. The group was launched into mainstream recognition following the release of the song "No, No, No" and their best-selling second album, The Writing's on the Wall (1999), which contained the number-one singles "Bills, Bills, Bills" and "Say My Name", alongside successful singles "Bug a Boo" and "Jumpin', Jumpin'". Despite critical and commercial success, the group was plagued by internal conflict and legal turmoil, as Roberson and Luckett attempted to split from the group's manager Mathew Knowles, citing favoritism of Knowles and Rowland.
"Independent Women Part I" is a song recorded by American group Destiny's Child for the soundtrack to the film adaptation of the 1970s television series Charlie's Angels. It was written and produced by production duo Poke & Tone, consisting of Samuel Barnes and Jean-Claude Olivier, along with Cory Rooney, and group member Beyoncé Knowles. The song was later included on the group's third studio album Survivor (2001). "Independent Women" was Destiny's Child's first single to feature vocals from group member Michelle Williams and the only single to feature Farrah Franklin, who was no longer in the group when the single was released.
American R&B girl group Destiny's Child has released five studio albums, five compilation albums, two remix albums, one extended play, twenty-three singles, including four as featured artists and two promotional singles, and three video albums.
"Soldier" is a song recorded by American group Destiny's Child, featuring American rappers T.I. and Lil Wayne, for the group's final studio album Destiny Fulfilled (2004). The artists wrote the song with Sean Garrett and Rich Harrison who produced it with the latter co-produced it with Beyoncé. A Southern hip hop mid-tempo song, it lyrically describes each member's favorite type of male love interest. The song was released as the second single from Destiny Fulfilled on November 9, 2004, by Columbia Records and Sony Urban Music.
This is the singles discography for Glee.