ARIA Charts number-one dance singles of 2003 | |
---|---|
Other Australian number-one charts of 2003 | |
albums | |
singles | |
Top Australian singles and albums of 2003 | |
Triple J Hottest 100 | |
top 25 singles | |
top 25 albums |
The ARIA Dance Chart is a chart that ranks the best-performing dance singles of Australia. It is published by Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), an organisation who collect music data for the weekly ARIA Charts. To be eligible to appear on the chart, the recording must be a single, and be "predominantly of a dance nature, or with a featured track of a dance nature, or included in the ARIA Club Chart or a comparable overseas chart". [1]
Issue date | Song | Artist(s) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
6 January | "The Ketchup Song (Aserejé)" | Las Ketchup | [2] |
13 January | [3] | ||
20 January | [4] | ||
27 January | [5] | ||
3 February | [6] | ||
10 February | [7] | ||
17 February | [8] | ||
24 February | "Billie Jean" | The Soundbluntz | [9] |
3 March | "One of My Kind" | Rogue Traders | [10] |
10 March | [11] | ||
17 March | "Tu es foutu (You Promised Me)" | In-Grid | [12] |
24 March | [13] | ||
31 March | [14] | ||
7 April | [15] | ||
14 April | [16] | ||
21 April | "American Life" | Madonna | [17] |
28 April | "Tu es foutu (You Promised Me)" | In-Grid | [18] |
5 May | [19] | ||
12 May | "Rock Your Body" | Justin Timberlake | [20] |
19 May | [21] | ||
26 May | [22] | ||
2 June | "I Begin to Wonder" | Dannii Minogue | [23] |
9 June | [24] | ||
16 June | [25] | ||
23 June | "Who Said (Stuck in the UK)" | Planet Funk | [26] |
30 June | [27] | ||
7 July | [28] | ||
14 July | [29] | ||
21 July | "Hollywood" | Madonna | [30] |
28 July | "Satisfaction" | Benny Benassi presents the Biz | [31] |
4 August | [32] | ||
11 August | [33] | ||
18 August | [34] | ||
25 August | [35] | ||
1 September | [36] | ||
8 September | "Rubberneckin'" (Paul Oakenfold remix) | Elvis Presley | [37] |
15 September | [38] | ||
22 September | [39] | ||
29 September | [40] | ||
6 October | [41] | ||
13 October | [42] | ||
20 October | [43] | ||
27 October | [44] | ||
3 November | "Slave to the Music" | Nick Skitz | [45] |
10 November | "Slow" | Kylie Minogue | [46] |
17 November | "Me Against the Music" | Britney Spears featuring Madonna | [47] |
24 November | [48] | ||
1 December | [49] | ||
8 December | [50] | ||
15 December | [51] | ||
22 December | [52] | ||
29 December | [53] |
Position | Artist | Weeks at No. 1 |
---|---|---|
1 | Madonna | 9 |
2 | Elvis Presley | 8 |
3 | Britney Spears | 7 |
3 | In-Grid | 7 |
3 | Las Ketchup | 7 |
4 | Benny Benassi | 6 |
5 | Planet Funk | 4 |
6 | Dannii Minogue | 3 |
6 | Justin Timberlake | 3 |
7 | Rogue Traders | 2 |
8 | Kylie Minogue | 1 |
8 | Nick Skitz | 1 |
8 | The Soundbluntz | 1 |
So Fresh is an Australian compilation album series. It began in 2000, as a joint venture from Sony, BMG and Universal, replacing the prior Hit Machine series, which ran from 1993 to 2000. Since 2000, So Fresh albums have been released four times per year, named after each season, consisting of current hit songs from artists signed to Sony, BMG or Universal.