This is a list of the songs that reached number one in Mexico in 1972, according to Billboard magazine with data provided by Radio Mil. [1] Also included are the number-one songs according to the Record World magazine.
Issue date | Song | Artist(s) | Label | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
January 8 | "Porque yo te amo" | Sandro de América | CBS | [2] |
January 22 | "Rosas rojas" | Massimo Ranieri | [3] | |
February 5 | "No tengo dinero" | Juan Gabriel | RCA | [4] |
February 12 | [5] | |||
February 19 | ||||
March 4 | "Them Changes" | Buddy Miles | Mercury | [6] |
March 11 | "Desiderata" | Arturo Benavides | Warner Bros. | [7] |
March 18 | [8] | |||
March 25 | [9] | |||
April 1 | [10] | |||
April 8 | [11] | |||
April 15 | ||||
April 22 | [12] | |||
April 29 | "Corazón de roca" | Los Fresno | Capitol | |
May 13 | [13] | |||
June 3 | [14] | |||
June 10 | "No se ha dado cuenta" | Roberto Jordán | RCA | [15] |
June 17 | "Puppy Love" | Donny Osmond | MGM | [16] |
June 24 | [17] | |||
July 1 | ||||
July 8 | [18] | |||
July 15 | [19] | |||
July 22 | "Verónica" | Víctor Yturbe "El Pirulí" | Philips | |
July 29 | [20] | |||
August 5 | [21] | |||
August 12 | [22] | |||
August 19 | [23] | |||
August 26 | "¿Por qué?" | Los Baby's | Peerless | [24] |
September 2 | [25] | |||
September 9 | [26] | |||
September 16 | ||||
September 23 | [27] | |||
September 30 | [28] | |||
October 14 | "Miénteme" | Víctor Yturbe "El Pirulí" | Philips | [29] |
October 28 | [30] | |||
November 18 | "Beautiful Sunday" | Daniel Boone | Musart | [31] |
November 25 | "Miénteme" | Víctor Yturbe "El Pirulí" | Philips | [32] |
December 9 | "Volverá el amor" | Virginia López | GAS | [33] |
December 16 | "Río rebelde" | Julio Iglesias | Polydor | [34] |
December 23 | [35] | |||
Number-one artists:
Country of origin | Number of artists | Artists |
---|---|---|
Mexico | 6 | Arturo Benavides |
Juan Gabriel | ||
Los Baby's | ||
Los Fresno | ||
Roberto Jordán | ||
Víctor Yturbe "El Pirulí" | ||
United States | 2 | Buddy Miles |
Donny Osmond | ||
Argentina | 1 | Sandro de América |
Italy | 1 | Massimo Ranieri |
Puerto Rico | 1 | Virginia López |
Spain | 1 | Julio Iglesias |
United Kingdom | 1 | Daniel Boone |
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 |
---|---|---|
Mexico | 6 | "¿Por qué?" |
"Corazón de roca" | ||
"Miénteme" | ||
"No se ha dado cuenta" | ||
"No tengo dinero" | ||
"Verónica" | ||
Argentina | 2 | "Porque yo te amo" |
"Río rebelde" | ||
United States | 2 | "Desiderata" |
"Them Changes" | ||
Canada | 1 | "Puppy Love" |
Italy | 1 | "Rosas rojas" ("Rose rosse") |
Venezuela | 1 | "Volverá el amor" |
United Kingdom | 1 | "Beautiful Sunday" |
Issue date | Song | Artist(s) | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
January 1 | "Rosa marchita" | Roberto Jordán | [36] |
March 4 | [37] | ||
March 18 | "No tengo dinero" | Juan Gabriel | [38] |
April 29 | [39] | ||
June 3 | "No se ha dado cuenta" | Roberto Jordán | [40] |
July 8 | [41] | ||
July 22 | [42] | ||
August 19 | [43] | ||
September 30 | "Popcorn" | Hot Butter | [44] |
November 11 | "¿Por qué?" | Los Baby's | [45] |
December 2 | [46] | ||
December 23 | [47] | ||
"Without You" is a song written by Pete Ham and Tom Evans of British rock group Badfinger, and first released on their 1970 album No Dice. The power ballad has been recorded by over 180 artists, and versions released as singles by Harry Nilsson (1971), T. G. Sheppard (1983) and Mariah Carey (1994) became international best-sellers. The Nilsson version was included in 2021's Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. Paul McCartney once described the ballad as "the killer song of all time".
"Popcorn" is an instrumental composed by Gershon Kingsley in 1969 for the album Music to Moog By on Audio Fidelity Records label. The Moog synthesizer instrumental became a worldwide hit, first in 1972 when a version by Hot Butter was released. Since then, multiple versions of the piece have been produced and released, including those by Vyacheslav Mescherin, Anarchic System, Popcorn Makers, the Boomtang Boys, M & H Band, Crazy Frog and The Muppets.
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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.
"I'm Too Sexy" is a song by British pop band Right Said Fred, released in July 1991 as their debut single from their first album, Up (1992). The song was written by band members and brothers Fred Fairbrass and Richard Fairbrass with Rob Manzoli and peaked at number two on the UK Singles Chart. Outside the United Kingdom, it topped the charts in seven countries, including Australia, Canada, Ireland, and the United States.
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"The Greatest Love of All" is a song written by Michael Masser, who composed the music, and Linda Creed, who wrote the lyrics. It was originally recorded in 1977 by George Benson, who made the song a substantial hit, peaking at number two on the US Hot Soul Singles chart that year, the first R&B chart top-ten hit for Arista Records. The song was written and recorded to be the main theme of the 1977 film The Greatest, a biopic of the boxer Muhammad Ali, and is performed during the opening credits.