These hits topped the Dutch Top 40 in 2007.
Issue Date | Song | Artist(s) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
6 January | "Cupido" | Jan Smit | [1] |
13 January | "Body to Body" | XYP | [2] |
20 January | "Window in the Skies" | U2 | [3] |
27 January | [4] | ||
3 February | "Het huis Anubis" | Nienke | [5] |
10 February | "All Good Things (Come to an End)" | Nelly Furtado | [6] |
17 February | [7] | ||
24 February | "Lauwe pis" | Theo Maassen | [8] |
3 March | [9] | ||
10 March | "Heartbreak Away" | Sharon Kips | [10] |
17 March | [11] | ||
24 March | [12] | ||
31 March | "Freefall" | Jeckyll & Hyde | [13] |
7 April | [14] | ||
14 April | "Op weg naar geluk" | Jan Smit | [15] |
21 April | "Tranen gelachen" | Guus Meeuwis | [16] |
28 April | [17] | ||
5 May | "Beautiful Liar" | Beyoncé and Shakira | [18] |
12 May | [19] | ||
19 May | [20] | ||
26 May | "Blijf bij mij" | André Hazes & Gerard Joling | [21] |
2 June | [22] | ||
9 June | [23] | ||
16 June | [24] | ||
23 June | [25] | ||
30 June | [26] | ||
7 July | [27] | ||
14 July | [28] | ||
21 July | [29] | ||
28 July | [30] | ||
4 August | [31] | ||
11 August | "Jij bent zo" | Jeroen van der Boom | [32] |
18 August | [33] | ||
25 August | "Relax, Take It Easy" | Mika | [34] |
1 September | [35] | ||
8 September | [36] | ||
15 September | [37] | ||
22 September | [38] | ||
29 September | [39] | ||
6 October | [40] | ||
13 October | "Bedankt mijn vriend" | André Hazes & André Hazes jr. | [41] |
20 October | [42] | ||
27 October | [43] | ||
3 November | "Dan volg je haar benen" | Jan Smit | [44] |
10 November | [45] | ||
17 November | [46] | ||
24 November | [47] | ||
1 December | "Don't Stop the Music" | Rihanna | [48] |
8 December | [49] | ||
15 December | "Eén wereld" | Jeroen van der Boom | [50] |
22 December | [51] | ||
29 December | "Apologize" | Timbaland presents OneRepublic | [52] |
Position | Nationality | Artist | Weeks #1 |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Netherlands | André Hazes | 14 |
2 | Netherlands | Gerard Joling | 11 |
3 | United Kingdom | Mika | 7 |
4 | Netherlands | Jan Smit | 6 |
5 | Netherlands | Jeroen van der Boom | 4 |
6 | Netherlands | Sharon Kips | 3 |
6 | United States | Beyoncé | 3 |
6 | Colombia | Shakira | 3 |
6 | Netherlands | André Hazes jr. | 3 |
7 | Ireland | U2 | 2 |
7 | Canada | Nelly Furtado | 2 |
7 | Netherlands | Theo Maassen | 2 |
7 | Netherlands | Jeckyll & Hyde | 2 |
7 | Netherlands | Guus Meeuwis | 2 |
7 | Barbados | Rihanna | 2 |
8 | Netherlands and United Kingdom | XYP | 1 |
8 | Netherlands | Nienke | 1 |
8 | United States | Timbaland | 1 |
8 | United States | OneRepublic | 1 |
"99 Luftballons" is a song by the German band Nena from their 1983 self-titled album. An English-language version titled "99 Red Balloons", with lyrics by Kevin McAlea, was also released on the album 99 Luftballons in 1984 after widespread success of the original in Europe and Japan. The English version is not a direct translation of the German original and contains lyrics with a somewhat different meaning. In the US, the English-language version did not chart, while the German-language recording became Nena's only US hit.
The Dutch Top 40 is a weekly music chart compiled by Stichting Nederlandse Top 40. It started as a radio program titled "Veronica Top 40", on the offshore station Radio Veronica in 1965. It remained "The Veronica Top 40" until 1974, when the station was forced to stop broadcasting. Joost den Draaijer was the initiator of the Top 40 in the Netherlands. The show is currently aired on Friday from 2 till 6 PM on Qmusic.
"Shine" is the second single taken from English pop group Take That's comeback album, Beautiful World (2006). It became Take That's sixth consecutive number one single and their tenth number-one overall, making them one of only seven acts in the history of the UK charts to have more than nine number one hits. The song is about former Take That member Robbie Williams' battle with depression.
"Ayo Technology" is the fourth single from 50 Cent's third album, Curtis. It was released on July 24, 2007. The song, featuring Justin Timberlake and vocals from Timbaland, who also produced the song along with Danja, has peaked at number five on the Billboard Hot 100. Internationally, the song peaked within the top ten of the charts in many countries, including Australia, Denmark and the United Kingdom. The song has since been covered by Milow, a Belgian singer-songwriter whose version was successful in a number of countries, including Belgium, Spain, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands. The song was also covered by Skyla, a British singer-songwriter whose version was popular in the dance genre and Katerine Avgoustakis, another Belgian singer, whose version was very successful in various Central and Eastern European countries, particularly in Poland.
"Everything" is a song recorded by Canadian-Italian singer Michael Bublé, and released on April 23, 2007, as the lead single from his third major-label studio album, Call Me Irresponsible.
"Apologize" is a song written by Ryan Tedder, which first appeared on Timbaland's second studio album Shock Value. It was then released as the third single from that album, along with the original recording by OneRepublic. It accordingly also served as the lead single for OneRepublic's debut album Dreaming Out Loud, produced by Greg Wells. Timbaland's version omits the guitar solo after the second verse in the original, and includes an extra line of percussion, new backing vocals, and added sound samples, in addition to sound mixing and a few other minor changes. The song was the biggest radio airplay hit in the history of the Mainstream Top 40 chart in North America, with 10,394 plays in one week, until its record was broken by Leona Lewis's "Bleeding Love", which was also co-written by Tedder. The song was a major hit internationally, reaching number one in 16 countries, including Australia, Austria, Canada, Germany, Italy, New Zealand, Sweden, Turkey, and the Netherlands, as well as staying at number one for eight consecutive weeks on the Billboard Pop 100 chart. The song peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100, staying in the top-10 for 25 weeks, and spent 13 weeks at number one in Canada.
"Shame, Shame, Shame" is a 1974 hit song written by Sylvia Robinson, performed by American disco band Shirley & Company and released on the Vibration label. The lead singer is Shirley Goodman, who was one half of Shirley and Lee, who had enjoyed a major hit 18 years earlier, in 1956, with the song "Let The Good Times Roll" for Aladdin Records. The male vocalist is Jesus Alvarez. The saxophone solo is by Seldon Powell, whose instrumental version, "More Shame", is the B-side.