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The following article lists the monthly number-one songs on the Mexican Selecciones Musicales chart from January 1950 to December 1960. The source for these charts is the book Musicosas: manual del comentarista de radio y televisión by Roberto Ayala, who was the director of the Selecciones Musicales magazine.
The following year-end charts were elaborated by Mejía Barquera, based on weekly charts that were published on the magazine Selecciones musicales as compiled on Roberto Ayala's 1962 book "Musicosas: manual del comentarista de radio y televisión"; those charts were, according to Ayala, based on record sales, jukebox plays, radio and television airplay, and sheet music sales [a]. [6]
"Canciones que México canta" ("Songs that Mexico sings"), which listed the Top 10 most popular Spanish-language songs in Mexico, and " Éxitos internacionales en México " ("International Hits in Mexico"), which listed the most popular songs in Mexico that were in languages other than Spanish.
"Canciones que México canta" ("Songs that Mexico sings"), which listed the Top 10 most popular Spanish-language songs in Mexico, and " Hit Parade ", which was a Top 10 of the most popular songs in Mexico that were in languages other than Spanish.
Los de la Noria featuring Calibre 50 81 "No pasa nada" Ha*Ash: 82 "El color de tus ojos" Banda MS 83 "Un adiós es de dos" Lamafia featuring Ricky Muñoz 84 "Merezco mucho más" Victoria la mala 85 "Azul" Zoé: 86 "Dime que sí" Edwin Luna y la Trakalosa de Monterrey 87 "Hielo" Zoé 88 "Voy a quererte tanto" Los de la noria 89 "Amigos con derechos"
The following year-end charts were elaborated by Mejía Barquera, based on weekly charts that were published on the magazines Radiolandia for the years 1944 to 1946 and Selecciones musicales for 1948 and 1949 (the latter were taken from Roberto Ayala's 1962 book "Musicosas: manual del comentarista de radio y televisión" which compiled the ...
"Canciones que México canta" ("Songs that Mexico sings"), which listed the Top 10 most popular Spanish-language songs in Mexico, and "Hit Parade", which was a Top 10 of the most popular songs in Mexico that were in languages other than Spanish. For reasons unknown, the magazine stopped publishing the "Hit Parade" chart in 1988 and wouldn't ...
In 2011, fourteen songs reached number one on the General chart. Of these, thirteen songs were entirely in Spanish, and only one was in English.Ten acts achieved their first number-one song in Mexico: Gloria Trevi, Alejandra Guzmán, La Adictiva Banda San José de Mesillas, Los Tigres del Norte, Reyli, Yuridia, Calibre 50, Maroon 5, Christina Aguilera and Jenni Rivera.