This is a list of the songs that reached number one in Mexico in 1964, according to Billboard magazine with data provided by Audiomusica. [1]
Issue Date | Song | Artist(s) | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
January 4 | "Parabá Papá" | Rocío Dúrcal | [2] |
January 11 | [3] | ||
January 18 | "Magia blanca" | Los Hermanos Carrión | [4] |
February 1 | [5] | ||
February 8 | "If I Had a Hammer" | Trini López | |
February 15 | "Dominique" | Las Hermanas Alegrìa/Los Dominic's/Angélica María/Sor Sonrisa | [6] |
February 22 | [7] | ||
February 29 | [8] | ||
March 7 | [9] | ||
March 14 | [10] | ||
March 21 | |||
March 28 | "Entrega total" | Javier Solís | [11] |
April 4 | [12] | ||
April 11 | |||
April 18 | "If I Had a Hammer" | Trini López | [13] |
April 25 | "Las cerezas" | Los Hermanos Carrión | [14] |
May 2 | [15] | ||
May 9 | [16] | ||
May 30 | [17] | ||
June 6 | "Entrega total" | Javier Solís | [18] |
June 13 | "Tijuana" | The Persuaders | [19] |
June 20 | |||
June 27 | [20] | ||
July 4 | |||
July 11 | [21] | ||
July 18 | [22] | ||
July 25 | [23] | ||
August 1 | [24] | ||
August 8 | [25] | ||
August 15 | [26] | ||
August 22 | |||
August 29 | [27] | ||
September 5 | [28] | ||
September 12 | [29] | ||
September 19 | [30] | ||
September 26 | [31] | ||
October 3 | [32] | ||
October 10 | "¡Cómo te extraño, mi amor!" | Leo Dan | |
October 17 | [33] | ||
October 24 | [34] | ||
October 31 | [35] | ||
November 7 | [36] | ||
November 14 | [37] | ||
November 21 | [38] | ||
November 28 | |||
December 5 | [39] | ||
December 12 | [40] | ||
December 19 | "La pollera colorá" | Carmen Rivero y su Conjunto | [41] |
December 26 | [42] | ||
Number-one artists:
Country of origin | Number of artists | Artists |
---|---|---|
Mexico | 5 | Los Hermanos Carrión |
Los Dominic's | ||
Angélica María | ||
Javier Solís | ||
Carmen Rivero y su Conjunto | ||
United States | 2 | Trini López |
The Persuaders | ||
Spain | 1 | Rocío Dúrcal |
Belgium | 1 | Sor Sonrisa |
Argentina | 1 | Leo Dan |
Number-one compositions (it denotes the country of origin of the song's composer[s]; in case the song is a cover of another one, the name of the original composition is provided in parentheses):
Country of origin | Number of compositions | Compositions |
---|---|---|
United States | 3 | "Magia blanca" ("Devil Woman") |
"If I Had a Hammer" | ||
"Tijuana Surf" | ||
Spain | 1 | "Parabá papá" |
Belgium | 1 | "Dominique" |
Italy | 1 | "Las cerezas" ("Le ciliege") |
Mexico | 1 | "Entrega total" |
Argentina | 1 | "¡Cómo te extraño, mi amor!" |
Colombia | 1 | "La pollera colorá" |
"Baby Love" is a song by American music group the Supremes from their second studio album, Where Did Our Love Go. It was written and produced by Motown's main production team Holland–Dozier–Holland and was released on September 17, 1964.
Dance Club Songs is a chart published weekly by Billboard magazine in the United States. It is a national review of club disc jockeys set lists to determine the most popular songs being played in nightclubs across the country. It was launched as the Disco Action Top 30 chart on August 28, 1976, and became the first chart by Billboard to document the popularity of dance music. The first number-one song on the chart for the issue dated August 28, 1976, was "You Should Be Dancing" by the Bee Gees, spending five weeks atop the chart and the group's only number-one song on the chart.
"Fever" is a song written by Eddie Cooley and Otis Blackwell, who used the pseudonym John Davenport. It was originally recorded by American R&B singer Little Willie John for his debut album, Fever (1956), and released as a single in April of the same year. The song topped the Billboard R&B Best Sellers in the US and peaked at number 24 on the Billboard pop chart. It was received positively by music critics and included on several lists of the best songs during the time it was released.
"I'm Real" is the name of two songs recorded by American actress and singer Jennifer Lopez, both primarily for her second studio album J.Lo (2001). The original song was released as the album's fourth single; Ja Rule of Murder Inc. Records wrote and was featured on a newly-written song with completely different lyrics and production titled "I'm Real (Murder Remix)", which was featured on a re-issue of J.Lo in July 2001, on Lopez's remix album J to tha L–O! The Remixes (2002), and on Ja Rule's third studio album Pain Is Love (2001).
Justin Drew Bieber is a Canadian singer. Bieber is recognized for his genre-melding musicianship and global influence in modern-day popular music. He was discovered by American record executive Scooter Braun and signed with RBMG Records in 2008, gaining recognition with the release of his debut seven-track EP My World (2009) and soon establishing himself as a teen idol.
Min Yoon-gi, known professionally by his stage names Suga and Agust D, is a South Korean rapper, songwriter and record producer. Under Big Hit Music, he debuted as a member of the South Korean boy band BTS in 2013. His first solo mixtape, Agust D, was released in 2016 and re-released in 2018 to digital download and streaming platforms, reaching number three on Billboard's World Albums Chart. In 2020, he released his second solo mixtape, D-2; it peaked at number 11 on the US Billboard 200, number seven on the UK Albums Chart, and number two on Australia's ARIA Album Chart. According to the Korea Music Copyright Association, Suga has songwriting and production credits on over 100 songs, including Suran's "Wine", which peaked at number two on the Gaon Music Chart and won Best R&B at the 2017 Melon Music Awards.
Philippines Songs is a music record chart in the Philippines, compiled by Billboard since February 2022. The chart is updated every Tuesday on Billboard's website. The chart was announced on February 14, 2022, as part of Billboard's Hits of the World chart collection, ranking the top 25 songs weekly in more than 40 countries around the globe. This is the first local Billboard chart in the Philippines since the discontinuation of the Philippine Hot 100 along with four other charts after Billboard Philippines ceased its operation for an undisclosed reason on January 15, 2018.