These are the Billboard magazine Hot Dance Club Play number one hits of 1978.
Issue date | Song | Artist |
---|---|---|
January 7 | Once Upon a Time... (all cuts) | Donna Summer |
January 14 | ||
January 21 | "Supernature"/ "Give Me Love"/ "Love Is Here" | Cerrone |
January 28 | ||
February 4 | ||
February 11 | ||
February 18 | "Let's All Chant"/ "Love Express" | Michael Zager Band |
February 25 | "Dance Little Dreamer"/ "Risky Changes" | Bionic Boogie |
March 4 | ||
March 11 | ||
March 18 | "Romeo and Juliet" | Alec R. Costandinos & the Syncophonic Orchestra |
March 25 | Come into My Heart (all cuts) | USA European Connection |
April 1 | ||
April 8 | Voyage (all cuts) | Voyage |
April 15 | ||
April 22 | ||
April 29 | "If My Friends Could See Me Now"/ "Gypsy Lady"/ "Runaway Love" | Linda Clifford |
May 6 | ||
May 13 | ||
May 20 | ||
May 27 | ||
June 3 | "Last Dance"/ "After Dark"/ "Thank God It's Friday"/ "Take It to the Zoo" | Donna Summer/ Pattie Brooks/ Love & Kisses/ Sunshine |
June 10 | ||
June 17 | ||
June 24 | ||
July 1 | ||
July 8 | ||
July 15 | "Boogie Oogie Oogie" | A Taste of Honey |
July 22 | ||
July 29 | ||
August 5 | "Hot Shot" | Karen Young |
August 12 | ||
August 19 | "Dance (Disco Heat)"/ "You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)" | Sylvester |
August 26 | ||
September 2 | ||
September 9 | ||
September 16 | ||
September 23 | ||
September 30 | "Keep on Jumpin'"/ "In the Bush" | Musique |
October 7 | ||
October 14 | Instant Replay (all cuts) | Dan Hartman |
October 21 | "MacArthur Park Suite" | Donna Summer |
October 28 | ||
November 4 | ||
November 11 | ||
November 18 | ||
November 25 | "Le Freak"/ "I Want Your Love"/ "Chic Cheer" | Chic |
December 2 | ||
December 9 | ||
December 16 | ||
December 23 | ||
December 30 | ||
This is a list of songs that have peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and the magazine's national singles charts that preceded it. Introduced in 1958, the Hot 100 is the pre-eminent singles chart in the United States, currently monitoring the most popular singles in terms of popular radio play, single purchases and online streaming.
Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles is a chart published weekly by Billboard magazine in the United States. The chart lists the top songs that have not yet charted on the main Billboard Hot 100. Chart rankings are based on radio airplay, sales, and streams. In its initial years, the chart listed 15 positions, but expanded to as many as 36 during the 1960s, particularly during years when over 700 singles made the Billboard Hot 100 chart. From 1974 to 1985, the chart consisted of 10 positions; since 1992, the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart has listed 25 positions.
Frank Mills is a Canadian pianist and recording artist, best known for his solo instrumental hit "Music Box Dancer".
"Go Home" is a song by Stevie Wonder, released as the second single from his twentieth studio album, In Square Circle (1985). The song showcased the narrator's plea to a young woman to go home, though the girl tries to get the narrator to stay with her. In the US, the song peaked at #2 on the Billboard R&B chart and #10 on the Billboard Hot 100 and, to date, is Wonder's last song to reach the US top ten on the Hot 100. "Go Home" also topped both the Billboard dance chart and the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart.
"Too Much, Too Little, Too Late" is a song performed by singers Johnny Mathis and Deniece Williams, written by Nat Kipner and John Vallins. The single was a comeback of sorts for Mathis, because his last U.S. top 10 hit had been 1963’s "What Will Mary Say" and his last U.S. #1 hit had been 1957's "Chances Are."
"One Nation Under a Groove" is a 1978 song by Funkadelic, the title track from their album of the same name. It has endured as a dance funk classic and is probably Funkadelic's most widely known song. "One Nation Under a Groove" was Funkadelic's first million selling single, as well as the third million selling single for the P-Funk organization overall.
"Take Your Time (Do It Right)" is the debut single by American R&B group the S.O.S. Band. It was released as the lead single from their debut studio album, S.O.S. (1980) on March 18, 1980 through Tabu Records, three months before the album's release.
"I'll Be Good to You" is a 1976 hit song by R&B duo the Brothers Johnson. George Johnson, one of the two Johnson brothers in the band, wrote the song after deciding to commit to a relationship with one woman, instead of dating several at a time. While George was recording a demo for the song, family friend Senora Sam came by and added some lyrics. Brothers Johnson producer and mentor Quincy Jones heard the song, liked it, and convinced George to sing lead on the finished track. Released from their debut album, Look Out for #1, it was a top-ten hit on the Billboard Hot Singles Charts, peaking at number three, and a number one song on the Billboard R&B Charts during the summer of 1976. The single was later certified gold by the RIAA.
"You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)" is a song by American disco/R&B singer Sylvester. It was written by James Wirrick and Sylvester, and released by Fantasy Records as the second single from the singer's fourth album, Step II (1978). The song was already a largely popular dance club hit in late 1978, as the B-side of his previous single "Dance (Disco Heat)", before it was officially being released in December. It rose to the number one position on the US Billboard Dance Club Songs chart. Music critic Robert Christgau has said the song is "one of those surges of sustained, stylized energy that is disco's great gift to pop music".
"Always and Forever" is an R&B song written by Rod Temperton and produced by Barry Blue. It was first recorded by the British-based multinational funk-disco band Heatwave in 1976. Released as a single on 3 December 1977, the song is included on Heatwave's debut album Too Hot to Handle (1976) and has been covered by numerous artists, becoming something of a standard.
Australian-American singer Helen Reddy (1941–2020), often referred to as the "Queen of 70s Pop", recorded 18 studio albums, seven of which have achieved sales of 500,000 units in the US for which they were awarded Gold certification by the Recording Industry Association of America. One of those seven, I Am Woman, eventually went Platinum by reaching sales of one million copies, and her first compilation album, Helen Reddy's Greatest Hits, was awarded Double Platinum status in 1992 for hitting the two million sales mark. The respective US and Canadian album charts in Billboard and RPM magazine each had appearances by 10 of these LPs during the 1970s.
"Happy Heart" is a song written by James Last and Jackie Rae. Versions of the song by Petula Clark and Andy Williams charted simultaneously in 1969 and had their best showings on Billboard magazine's Easy Listening chart, where Clark peaked at number 12 and Williams spent two weeks at number 1.
Smooth Talk is the debut album, released in 1977 by R&B singer Evelyn "Champagne" King by RCA Records and produced by Theodore Life. It contains singles "Shame", also one of King's signature songs, and "I Don't Know If It's Right", both of which were hits in the United States and Canada. Outside North America in music charts, "Shame" performed modestly in a few European countries, while the latter performed poorly in British and New Zealand charts.