List of number-one singles of 2007 (Canada)

From January 2007 to May 2007, the number-one singles in Canada were compiled by the American-based music sales tracking company, Nielsen SoundScan. The chart was compiled every Wednesday, and was published by Jam! Canoe on Thursdays.[1] On March 31, 2007, Billboard magazine created the Canadian Hot 100, a chart specifically designed for Canada and the first Hot 100 chart that Billboard created for a country outside the United States. The chart was made available for the first time via Billboard online services on June 7, 2007, and it served as the successor to the Canadian Digital Song Sales Chart.

Canadian Singles Chart: January 2007 – May 2007

U2's "The Saints Are Coming" spent 3 weeks at number-one, where it was then replaced by the band's "Window in the Skies", which spent another 8 weeks at number-one.
Thirty Seconds to Mars' "The Kill" reached number-one for two weeks in March.
Nine Inch Nails' "Survivalism" was number-one for 5 weeks, before the Canadian Singles Chart was replaced with the Canadian Hot 100.

The following lists the number-one best-selling singles in Canada in 2007 published in Billboard magazine under the Hits of the World section.[2] Only songs released as physical singles qualified for this chart during this time. During this period, the singles market in Canada was very limited in both scope and availability, and in many cases, these songs received little or no radio support. For tracks other than those by American Idol or Canadian Idol winners, sales were likely to be less than 1,000 per week. Nevertheless, this was the only singles chart Canadians had until June 2007, when the Canadian Hot 100 was made available to the public, succeeding the Canadian Digital Song Sales Chart.[3]

Note that Billboard publishes charts with an issue date approximately 7–10 days in advance.

Chart history

Issue dateTitleArtist
January 4"The Saints Are Coming"U2 and Green Day
January 11
January 17
January 25"Window in the Skies"U2
February 1
February 8
February 15
February 22
March 1
March 8
March 15
March 22"The Kill"Thirty Seconds to Mars
March 29
April 5"Don't Matter"Akon
April 12
April 19
April 26"Brianstorm"Arctic Monkeys
May 3"Survivalism"Nine Inch Nails
May 10
May 17
May 24
May 31

Canadian Hot 100: March 2007 – December 2007

Timbaland (pictured) earned three number-one singles in 2007. "Apologize", which featured OneRepublic, topped the Canadian Hot 100 for the last nine weeks of 2007, becoming the longest-running number-one single of the year.

The Canadian Hot 100 was launched on the issue dated March 31, 2007 and was made available for the first time via Billboard online services on June 7, 2007. It served as the successor to the Canadian Digital Song Sales Chart. The Canadian Hot 100 emulates the formula that drives the US Billboard Hot 100, which has mingled sales and radio data since its launch in 1958. Along with SoundScan's digital sales data, the new chart is driven by BDS' Canada All-Format Airplay, with a panel of more than 100 radio stations. The comprehensive radio panel includes the country's leading top 40, rock, country and adult contemporary stations.[3]

In 2007, eleven singles topped the Canadian Hot 100. Timbaland's "Apologize", featuring OneRepublic, was the longest-running chart-topping single of 2007; it was the number-one single for the last nine weeks of 2007, and the first four weeks in 2008. Rihanna's "Umbrella", featuring Jay-Z, stayed at number one for five straight weeks, while Avril Lavigne's "Girlfriend" and Maroon 5's "Makes Me Wonder" stayed at number one for four weeks. Timbaland was the only artist to have multiple number-one singles in 2007, and his singles were number-one for a combined 14 weeks.[4]

Note that Billboard publishes charts with an issue date approximately 7–10 days in advance.

Chart history

"Girlfriend" by Avril Lavigne (pictured) was the chart's first number-one single.
Rihanna (pictured)'s "Umbrella", which featured Jay-Z, topped the Canadian Hot 100 for five consecutive weeks.
"Big Girls Don't Cry" by Fergie (pictured) stayed in the number-one spot for three consecutive weeks in July.
Kanye West (pictured)'s "Stronger" stayed in the number-one spot for 3 weeks, and on the chart for 40 weeks.[5]
No.Issue dateSongArtist(s)Ref.
1March 31"Girlfriend"Avril Lavigne[6]
April 7[7]
April 14[8]
April 21[9]
2April 28"Give It to Me"Timbaland featuring Nelly Furtado and Justin Timberlake[10]
May 5[11]
3May 12"Makes Me Wonder"Maroon 5[12]
May 19[13]
May 26[14]
June 2[15]
4June 9"Umbrella"Rihanna featuring Jay-Z[16]
June 16[17]
June 23[18]
June 30[19]
July 7[20]
5July 14"Big Girls Don't Cry"Fergie[21]
July 21[22]
July 28[23]
6August 4"Hey There Delilah"Plain White T's[24]
7August 11"Beautiful Girls"Sean Kingston[25]
August 18[26]
reAugust 25"Hey There Delilah"Plain White T's[27]
September 1[28]
8September 8"The Way I Are"Timbaland featuring Keri Hilson[29]
September 15[30]
September 22[31]
9September 29"Stronger"Kanye West[32]
October 6[33]
10October 13"Gimme More"Britney Spears[34]
October 20[35]
reOctober 27"Stronger"Kanye West[36]
11November 3"Apologize"Timbaland featuring OneRepublic[37]
November 10[38]
November 17[39]
November 24[40]
December 1[41]
December 8[42]
December 15[43]
December 22[44]
December 29[45]

See also

References