This is a list of the French SNEP Top 100 Singles [1] and Top 150 albums [2] number-ones of 2003.
Week | Issue date | Artist(s) | Single |
---|---|---|---|
1 | January 4 | Star Academy 2 | "Paris Latino" |
2 | January 11 | ||
3 | January 18 | ||
4 | January 25 | ||
5 | February 1 | Alphonse Brown | "Le Frunkp" |
6 | February 8 | ||
7 | February 15 | ||
8 | February 22 | ||
9 | March 1 | ||
10 | March 8 | ||
11 | March 15 | ||
12 | March 22 | Nolwenn Leroy | "Cassé" |
13 | March 29 | ||
14 | April 5 | Chimène Badi | "Entre nous" |
15 | April 12 | ||
16 | April 19 | Florent Pagny | "Ma liberté de penser" |
17 | April 26 | ||
18 | May 3 | ||
19 | May 10 | ||
20 | May 17 | ||
21 | May 24 | ||
22 | May 31 | Lorie | "Sur un air latino" |
23 | June 7 | Pascal Obispo | "Fan" |
24 | June 14 | Lorie | "Sur un air latino" |
25 | June 21 | DJ BoBo | "Chihuahua" |
26 | June 28 | ||
27 | July 5 | ||
28 | July 12 | ||
29 | July 19 | ||
30 | July 26 | ||
31 | August 2 | ||
32 | August 9 | ||
33 | August 16 | ||
34 | August 23 | ||
35 | August 30 | Jocelyne Labylle, Cheela, Jacob Desvarieux and Passi | "Laisse parler les gens" |
36 | September 6 | ||
37 | September 13 | ||
38 | September 20 | Lorna | "Papi chulo... (te traigo el mmmm...)" |
39 | September 27 | Tragédie | "Hey Oh" |
40 | October 4 | ||
41 | October 11 | ||
42 | October 18 | ||
43 | October 25 | ||
44 | November 1 | ||
45 | November 8 | ||
46 | November 15 | Linkup | "Mon étoile" |
47 | November 22 | ||
48 | November 29 | ||
49 | December 6 | Tragédie | "Hey Oh" |
50 | December 13 | Star Academy 3 | "L'Orange" / "Wot" |
51 | December 20 | ||
52 | December 27 |
Week | Issue Date | Artist | Album |
---|---|---|---|
1 | January 4 | Star Academy 2 | Star Academy chante les tubes des années 80 |
2 | January 11 | ||
3 | January 18 | ||
4 | January 25 | Carla Bruni | Quelqu'un m'a dit |
5 | February 1 | ||
6 | February 8 | ||
7 | February 15 | Massive Attack | 100th Window |
8 | February 22 | Les Enfoirés | La Foire aux Enfoirés |
9 | March 1 | ||
10 | March 8 | Nolwenn Leroy | Nolwenn |
11 | March 15 | Hélène Ségara | Humaine |
12 | March 22 | ||
13 | March 29 | Céline Dion | One Heart |
14 | April 5 | ||
15 | April 12 | Florent Pagny | Ailleurs land |
16 | April 19 | ||
17 | April 26 | Madonna | American Life |
18 | May 3 | Florent Pagny | Ailleurs land |
19 | May 10 | ||
20 | May 17 | ||
21 | May 24 | ||
22 | May 31 | ||
23 | June 7 | Jean-Jacques Goldman | Un tour ensemble |
24 | June 14 | Radiohead | Hail to the Thief |
25 | June 21 | Jean-Jacques Goldman | Un tour ensemble |
26 | June 28 | ||
27 | July 5 | Norah Jones | Come Away with Me |
28 | July 12 | ||
29 | July 19 | ||
30 | July 26 | ||
31 | August 2 | ||
32 | August 9 | ||
33 | August 16 | ||
34 | August 23 | ||
35 | August 30 | ||
36 | September 6 | ||
37 | September 13 | ||
38 | September 20 | IAM | Revoir un printemps |
39 | September 27 | Muse | Absolution |
40 | October 4 | Dido | Life for Rent |
41 | October 11 | ||
42 | October 18 | Céline Dion | 1 fille & 4 types |
43 | October 25 | ||
44 | November 1 | ||
45 | November 8 | Johnny Hallyday | Parc des Princes 2003 |
46 | November 15 | Céline Dion | 1 filles & 4 types |
47 | November 22 | Britney Spears | In the Zone |
48 | November 29 | M | Qui de nous deux |
49 | December 6 | ||
50 | December 13 | Tragédie | Tragédie |
51 | December 20 | Star Academy 3 | Les Meilleurs Moments |
52 | December 27 |
This is the ten best-selling singles and albums in 2003. [3] [4]
Pos. | Artist | Title |
---|---|---|
1 | DJ BoBo | "Chihuahua" |
2 | Tragédie | "Hey Oh" |
3 | J. Labylle and Cheela featuring J. Desvarieux & Passi | "Laisse parler les gens" |
4 | Chimène Badi | "Entre Nous" |
5 | Alphonse Brown | "Le Frunkp" |
6 | Lorie | "Sur un air latino" |
7 | Hermes House Band and DJ Ötzi | "Live Is Life" |
8 | Florent Pagny | "Ma Liberté de penser" |
9 | Diam's | "DJ" |
10 | Multi-interprètes | "We Will Rock You (remix)" |
Pos. | Artist | Title |
---|---|---|
1 | Norah Jones | Come Away with Me |
2 | Florent Pagny | Ailleurs land |
3 | Carla Bruni | Quelqu'un m'a dit |
4 | Kyo | Le Chemin |
5 | Céline Dion | 1 fille & 4 types |
6 | Les Enfoirés | La Foire aux Enfoirés |
7 | Dido | Life for Rent |
8 | Calogero | Calogero |
9 | Hélène Ségara | Humaine |
10 | Evanescence | Fallen |
Innocent Eyes is the debut studio album by Australian singer Delta Goodrem, released in Australia on 24 March 2003. It was later released in the United Kingdom on 30 June 2003. Goodrem co-wrote most of the material, excluding "Throw It Away", "Lost Without You" and "Butterfly". The album features two self-penned songs, "In My Own Time" and "Will You Fall for Me". Goodrem worked with writers and producers such as: Audius Mtawarira, Bridget Benenate, Cathy Dennis, Eliot Kennedy, Gary Barlow, Jarrad Rogers, Kara DioGuardi, Vince Pizzinga and others to create the album with a collection of piano-based pop and ballad tracks.
"In da Club" is a song by American rapper 50 Cent from his debut studio album Get Rich or Die Tryin' (2003). Written by 50 Cent alongside producers Dr. Dre and Mike Elizondo, the song, which uses an unconventional off-beat rhythm, was released on January 7, 2003 as the album's lead single and peaked at number one on the US Billboard Hot 100, becoming 50 Cent's first number-one single.
The Documentary is the commercial debut studio album by American rapper the Game. It was released on January 18, 2005, by Aftermath Entertainment, G-Unit Records, and Interscope Records. The record serves as his major-label debut, preceded by his independently released debut Untold Story in 2004. In 2001, while the Game was in hospital recovering from a shooting, he decided to pursue a career in music. He released the mixtape, "Q.B. 2 Compton" under his then record label "Get Low Recordz" in 2002, which was later discovered by Dr. Dre and led to him signing the Game to his label, Aftermath Entertainment. The album includes production from high-profile producers such as Dr. Dre, Kanye West, Scott Storch and Timbaland, among others, and guest appearances from 50 Cent, Eminem, Nate Dogg and Faith Evans, among others. This would be the Game's only album on Aftermath and G-Unit Records, as he left the label later in 2006 after a feud began between him and fellow G-Unit label-mate 50 Cent.
"Candy Shop" is the second single by rapper 50 Cent from his second commercial album, The Massacre (2005). It features Olivia and was written by 50 Cent and the song's producer, Scott Storch. The single was released through Interscope Records, Eminem's Shady Records, Dr. Dre's Aftermath Entertainment, and 50 Cent's G-Unit Records.
"These Words" is a song by British singer-songwriter Natasha Bedingfield. It was written by Steve Kipner, Andrew Frampton, Wayne Wilkins and Bedingfield for her 2004 debut album, Unwritten. The song is the album's opening track, and was released as its second single. "These Words" details Bedingfield's lack of inspiration and her reaction to pressure from her record label to produce a hit song.
Grégory Jean-Paul Lemarchal, known professionally as Grégory Lemarchal, was a French singer who rose to fame by winning the fourth series of the reality television show Star Academy, which was broadcast on the TF1.
"Say It Right" is a song by Canadian singer Nelly Furtado from her third studio album, Loose (2006). It was written by Furtado, Tim "Timbaland" Mosley, and Nate "Danja" Hills, with Furtado crediting the Eurythmics' song "Here Comes the Rain Again" as her inspiration. The song was released as the third single from Loose on 31 October 2006 by Geffen Records and Mosley Music Group; in Europe, it was released as the fourth.
"Sous le vent" is a song by Canadian singers Garou and Celine Dion from Garou's debut album, Seul (2000). It was written by Jacques Veneruso and produced by Erick Benzi, with additional production by Humberto Gatica and Aldo Nova. "Sous le vent" was released as the album's third single on 29 October 2001. The song became a hit in Francophone countries, topping the charts in France, Belgium's Wallonia, and Quebec, and reaching number two in Switzerland. It was also certified Diamond in France and Platinum in Belgium and Switzerland. In 2005, "Sous le vent" was included on Dion's greatest hits album, On ne change pas.
The discography of German music band Tokio Hotel consists of seven studio albums, three live albums, four EPs, two compilation albums, thirty-six singles, thirty-nine music videos, seven lyric videos, five video albums and one movie. Tokio Hotel was formed in 2001 in Magdeburg, Germany, by singer Bill Kaulitz, guitarist Tom Kaulitz, bassist Georg Listing and drummer Gustav Schäfer. The group's debut single, "Durch den Monsun", entered the German singles chart at Number 15 on 20 August 2005, and reached Number 1 the following week. It also reached Number 1 on the Austrian singles chart. It was followed up with the single "Schrei", which failed to match the success of "Durch den Monsun"; its highest chart position was Number 3 in Austria. The band released their debut album, Schrei, on 19 September 2005. It topped the charts in Germany and Austria, and was certified Platinum by the German and Austrian affiliates of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) and by the Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique (SNEP) in France. In 2006, a third and fourth single, "Rette mich" and "Der letzte Tag", were released; both reached Number 1 in Germany and Austria. The lead single from Tokio Hotel's second album, Zimmer 483, was "Übers Ende der Welt", released on 26 January 2007. It became Tokio Hotel's fourth single to have reached Number 1 on the German and Austrian charts. Zimmer 483 was released on 23 February 2007, and reached the top spot on the German albums chart. The album's second single, "Spring nicht", was released on 7 April, charting at Number 3 in Germany, 7 in Austria, and 21 in Switzerland. Zimmer 483 was certified gold in three countries.
Avant que l'ombre... à Bercy is the fourth live album by Mylène Farmer, released on 4 December 2006.
"De temps en temps" is a 2007 song recorded by the French singer Grégory Lemarchal. It was released as the first single from his posthumous album, La Voix d'un ange, on 11 June 2007. The song was very successful in France and Belgium (Wallonia), topping the singles charts.