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K-pop Hot 100

South Korean record chart From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The K-pop Hot 100 was a music singles chart in South Korea, launched by Billboard in conjunction with Billboard Korea (빌보드코리아) on August 25, 2011. It is the second Asian Billboard chart after the Japan Hot 100.[1] The chart used the same multimetric methodology as the US Hot 100 and rankings were compiled based on Hanteo Chart data, streaming and download data from Naver VIBE, and domestic radio and television music playback data.[2] Updates were published on Billboard Korea's website every Tuesday, and appeared on billboard.com the following day.[2]

Silvio Pietroluongo, Billboard's Director of Charts, called the launch "a milestone event", as it would "provide the Korean music market with what we believe is Korea's most accurate and relevant song ranking." Pietroluongo further stated that they were "excited to be expanding Billboard's globally recognized Hot 100 chart franchise into this country, and look forward to enhancing the K-Pop Hot 100 chart in the near future with additional data as well as creating new charts that showcase the breadth of Korean music".[3] Due to the Korean market having a more active distribution of digital music compared to physical album sales at the time of the chart's launch, initial rankings solely reflected digital sales from major music sites, as well as downloads from mobile service sites, weighted using Billboard's industry-standard formula. Weekly rankings were simultaneously announced in the United States and Korea on billboard.com in the international chart section of billboard.biz, in print editions of Billboard magazine, and also on the Billboard Korea website, billboard.co.kr.[1][3] The first number-one song on the chart was "So Cool" by Sistar, on the issue dated September 3, 2011.[4] Billboard suspended the chart in the United States effective the May 17, 2014 issue, but the final issue published was actually dated June 21.[5] The Korean version of the chart was subsequently discontinued as of the July 16 issue date.[6]

On December 20, 2017, Billboard officially announced the reactivation of the K-pop Hot 100, and the relaunch of the Billboard Korea website. Chart updates also resumed on billboard.com.[7] The first issue of the reestablished chart was for the period May 29–June 4, 2017.[8] Billboard suspended the Korean version of the chart without notice in 2022, effective the April 23 issue.[9] The US edition of the chart was subsequently discontinued, effective the April 30 issue date. "Love Dive" by Ive was the final song to rank at number-one.[10]

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Hot 100 number-one singles

Achievement by artists

Artists with most number-one hits

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Artists with most weeks at number one (all songs)

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Artists with most number-one debuts (all songs)

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Artists with most songs in top ten within the same week

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Achievement by songs

Number-one debuts

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Songs with most weeks at number one

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Songs with most weeks in Top 10 (2011–2014)

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Year-end charts

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Source:[104][105]

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Notes

  1. Songs are listed oldest to newest.
  2. The final recorded chart update published by US Billboard was the issue dated June 21, 2014.[5] Billboard Korea published two more chart issues after that date, and was then discontinued. The final two song entries listed for 2014 are the number-one debuts per those issues.
  3. Billboard resumed the K-pop 100 in 2017 with the issue dated December 30, but marked all 100 songs on the ranking as "New",[65] likely to indicate the chart's restart, rather than 100 debuts, since many of the songs listed were released and charting prior to that date. To avoid any possible confusion for readers, the Billboard Korea chart issue is used for "Heart Shaker"'s debut instead.
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References

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