ARIA Charts number-one digital tracks of 2008 | |
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Other Australian number-one charts of 2008 | |
albums | |
singles | |
urban singles | |
dance singles | |
club tracks | |
Top Australian singles and albums of 2008 | |
Triple J Hottest 100 | |
top 25 singles | |
top 25 albums |
The ARIA Digital Track Chart ranks the best-performing digital tracks of Australia. It is published by Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), an organisation who collects music data for the weekly ARIA Charts. [1] To be eligible to appear on the chart, the recording must be a single not an EP and only paid downloads counted from downloadable outlets.
Indicates number-one digital single of 2008 |
Issue date | Song | Artist(s) | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
7 January | "Apologize" | Timbaland featuring OneRepublic | [2] |
14 January | "Bleeding Love" | Leona Lewis | [3] |
21 January | [4] | ||
28 January | [5] | ||
4 February | [6] | ||
11 February | "Don't Stop the Music" | Rihanna | [7] |
18 February | [8] | ||
25 February | [9] | ||
3 March | [10] | ||
10 March | [11] | ||
17 March | "Low" | Flo Rida featuring T-Pain | [12] |
24 March | [13] | ||
31 March | [14] | ||
7 April | "Bubbly" | Colbie Caillat | [15] |
14 April | "4 Minutes" | Madonna featuring Justin Timberlake | [16] |
21 April | [17] | ||
28 April | [18] | ||
5 May | [19] | ||
12 May | [20] | ||
19 May | [21] | ||
26 May | "Sweet About Me" | Gabriella Cilmi | [22] |
2 June | [23] | ||
9 June | [24] | ||
16 June | "No Air" | Jordin Sparks featuring Chris Brown | [25] |
23 June | [26] | ||
30 June | [27] | ||
7 July | "I Kissed a Girl" | Katy Perry | [28] |
14 July | [29] | ||
21 July | [30] | ||
28 July | [31] | ||
4 August | [32] | ||
11 August | "Shake It" | Metro Station | [33] |
18 August | [34] | ||
26 August | "So What" | Pink | [35] |
1 September | [36] | ||
8 September | "Just Dance" | Lady Gaga | [37] |
15 September | "So What" | Pink | [38] |
22 September | [39] | ||
29 September | "I'm Yours" | Jason Mraz | [40] |
6 October | [41] | ||
13 October | [42] | ||
20 October | "Sex on Fire" | Kings of Leon | [43] |
27 October | [44] | ||
3 November | [45] | ||
10 November | [46] | ||
17 November | "Poker Face" | Lady Gaga | [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 | Lady Gaga | 8 |
2 | Madonna | 6 |
2 | Justin Timberlake | 6 |
3 | Katy Perry | 5 |
3 | Rihanna | 5 |
4 | Kings of Leon | 4 |
4 | Leona Lewis | 4 |
4 | Pink | 4 |
5 | Gabriella Cilmi | 3 |
5 | Flo Rida | 3 |
5 | T-Pain | 3 |
5 | Jordin Sparks | 3 |
5 | Chris Brown | 3 |
5 | Jason Mraz | 3 |
6 | Metro Station | 2 |
7 | Colbie Caillat | 1 |
7 | Timbaland | 1 |
7 | OneRepublic | 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.