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A record chart, also known as a music chart, is a method of ranking music judging by the popularity during a given period of time. Although primarily a marketing or supermarketing tool like any other sales statistic, they have become a form of popular media culture in their own right. Record charts are compiled using a variety of criteria.
A record chart, in the music industry, also called a music chart, is a ranking of recorded music according to certain criteria during a given period. Many different criteria are used in worldwide charts, often in combination.
Open content music database. 45,520,390 [19] 3,258,314 [19] 2,371,603 [19] GPL/LGPL/PD/CC BY-NC-SA. Free API [20] and XML data dumps. [21] MusicID: Official charts and indicative revenue data going back to 1900 [22] Aggregator of chart data from sources such as Billboard, OCC and more [23] Rate Your Music: Music database, community ratings ...
The Official UK Charts Company Limited (formerly Music Industry Chart Services Limited), [2] trading as the Official Charts Company (OCC) or the Official Charts (formerly the Chart Information Network [3]), is a British inter-professional organisation that compiles various official record charts in the United Kingdom, Ireland and France.
This page serves as a guideline for formatting tables of record chart information in music-related articles. Specifics about which charts should be included are common to the tables, article prose, and discography tables, and guidance about what charts to include may be found in WP:Record charts.
A musician who plays any instrument with a keyboard. In Classical music, this may refer to instruments such as the piano, pipe organ, harpsichord, and so on. In a jazz or popular music context, this may refer to instruments such as the piano, electric piano, synthesizer, Hammond organ, and so on. Klangfarbenmelodie (Ger.)
The US music industry standard song popularity chart; Bubbling Under Hot 100: 25 Ranks the top 25 songs below #100 that have not previously appeared on the Hot 100. Positions do not directly correspond to positions 101–125 of an extended Hot 100, but many sources use this notation; Radio Songs: airplay (audience) 50
Topics dealing with albums, songs (including singles and tracks) and other areas within the music industry covered in Billboard magazine and its rankings of such items in its various charts. Subcategories