The
Billboard 200' is a ranking of the 200
highest-selling music album and EPs in the United States
, published weekly by Billboard
magazine. It is frequently used to
convey the popularity of an artist
or groups of artists. Often, a recording
act will be remembered by its "number
ones", those of their albums that outsold all others during at
least one week.
The chart is based solely on sales (both at retail and digitally)
of albums in the United States. The sales tracking week begins on
Monday and ends on Sunday. A new chart is published the following
Thursday with an issue date of the following Saturday.
- Example:
- :Monday January 1 — sales tracking week begins
- :Sunday January 7 — sales tracking week ends
- :Thursday January 11 — new chart published, with issue date of
Saturday January 20.
Normally new products are released to the American market on
Tuesdays.
Digital downloads are
included in
Billboard 200 tabulation, as long as the
entire album is purchased as a whole. Albums that are not licensed
for retail sale in the United States (yet purchased in the U.S. as
imports) are not eligible to chart.
A long-standing policy which made
ineligible titles that are sold exclusively by specific retail
outlets, such as Wal-Mart
or Starbucks, was reversed on November 7, 2007, and
took effect in the issue dated November 17.
The current number-one album (as of the issue dated December 5,
2009) on the Billboard 200 is
Battle Studies by
John Mayer.
History
Billboard began an album chart in 1945. Initially only
five positions long, the album chart was not published on a weekly
basis, sometimes three to seven weeks passing before it was
updated. A biweekly (though with a few gaps), 15-position
Best-Selling Popular Albums chart appeared in 1955. With the
explosion of
rock and roll music,
Billboard premiered a weekly Best-Selling Popular Albums
chart on March 24, 1956. The position count varied anywhere from 10
to 30 albums. The first number-one album on the new weekly list was
Belafonte by
Harry
Belafonte. The chart was renamed to Best-Selling Pop Albums
later in 1956, and then to Best-Selling Pop LPs in 1957.
Beginning on May 25, 1959,
Billboard split the ranking
into two charts
Best-Selling Stereophonic LPs for
stereo albums (30 positions) and
Best-Selling Monophonic LPs for
mono albums (50 positions). These were renamed to
Stereo Action Charts (30 positions) and
Mono Action
Charts (40 positions) in 1960. In January 1961, they became
Action Albums—Stereophonic (15 positions) and
Action
Albums—Monophonic (25 positions). Three months later, they
became
Top LPs—Stereo (50 positions) and
Top
LPs—Monaural (150 positions).
On August 17, 1963 the stereo and mono charts were combined into a
150-position chart called
Top LPs. On April 1, 1967, the
chart was expanded to 175 positions, then finally to 200 positions
on May 13, 1967. In 1972 the album chart's title was changed to
Top LPs & Tapes; in 1984 it was retitled
Top 200
Albums; in 1985 it was retitled again to
Top Pop
Albums; in 1991 it became
The Billboard 200 Top
Albums; and it was given its current title of
The
Billboard 200 on March 14, 1992.
Catalog albums
In 1960,
Billboard began concurrently publishing album
charts which ranked sales of older or mid-priced titles. These
Essential Inventory charts were divided by stereo and mono
albums, and featured titles that had already appeared on the main
stereo and mono album charts. Mono albums were moved to the
Essential Inventory—Mono chart (25 positions) after
spending 40 weeks on the
Mono Action Chart, and stereo
albums were moved to the
Essential Inventory—Stereo chart
(20 positions) after 20 weeks on the
Stereo Action
Chart.
In January 1961, the
Action Charts became
Action
Albums—Monophonic (24 positions), and
Action
Albums—Stereophonic (15 positions). Albums appeared on either
chart for up to nine weeks, then were moved to an
Essential
Inventory list of approximately 200 titles, with no numerical
ranking. This list continued to be published until the consolidated
Top LPs chart debuted in 1963.
In 1982,
Billboard began publishing a
Midline
Albums chart which ranked older or mid-priced titles. The
chart held 50 positions and was published on a bi-weekly (and later
tri-weekly) basis.
On March 25, 1991
Billboard premiered the
Top Pop Catalog Albums chart. The
criteria for this chart were albums that were more than 18 months
old and had fallen below position 100 on the
Billboard
200. An album needed not have charted on the
Billboard
200 at all to qualify for catalog status.
Starting with the issue dated December 5, 2009, however, the
catalog limitations which removed albums over 18 months old, that
have dropped below position 100 and have no currently-running
single, from the
Billboard 200 was lifted, turning the
chart into an all-inclusive list of the 200 highest-selling albums
in the country (essentially changing
Top Comprehensive Albums into
the
Billboard 200). A new chart that keeps the previous
criteria for the
Billboard 200 (dubbed
Top Current Albums) was also
introduced in the same issue.
Holiday albums
Billboard has adjusted its policies for holiday albums
several times. Holiday albums were eligible for the main album
charts until 1963, when a
Christmas Albums list was
created. Albums appearing here were not listed on the
Top
LPs chart. In 1974 this rule was reverted and holiday albums
again appeared within the main list.
In 1982 the
Christmas Albums chart was resurrected, but a
title's appearance here did not disqualify it from appearing on the
Top Pop Albums chart. In 1994 the chart was retitled
Top Holiday Albums. As of 2006 the chart holds 50
positions and is run for several weeks during the
end-of-calendar-year holiday season. Its current policy allows
holiday albums to concurrently chart on the
Top Holiday
Albums list and the
Billboard 200, but only during
the album's first year of release. After a holiday album's first
year, it can return to
Top Holiday Albums in future years
but then is only eligible to concurrently appear on the
Top Pop
Catalog Albums chart.
Nielsen SoundScan
Since May 26, 1991, the
Billboard 200's positions have
been derived from
Nielsen
SoundScan sales data, contributed by approximately 14,000 music
sellers. Because these numbers are supplied by a subset of sellers
rather than
record labels, it is
common for these numbers to be substantially lower than those
reported by the
Recording Industry
Association of America when
Gold,
Platinum and Diamond album awards are announced (RIAA awards
reflect wholesale
shipments, not retail
sales).
Year-end charts
Billboard’s "chart year" runs from the first week of
December to the final week in November. This altered calendar
allows for
Billboard to calculate year-end charts and
release them in time for its final print issue on the last week of
December. Prior to Nielsen SoundScan, year-end charts were
calculated by an inverse-point system based solely on an album's
performance on the
Billboard 200 (for example, an album
would be given one point for a week spent at position 200, two
points for a week spent at position 199… up to 200 points for each
week spent at number one). Other factors including the total weeks
on the chart and at its peak position were calculated into an
album's year-end total.
After
Billboard began obtaining sales information from
Nielsen SoundScan, the year-end charts are now calculated by a very
straightforward cumulative total of yearlong sales. This gives a
more accurate picture of any given year’s best-selling albums, as a
title that hypothetically spent nine weeks at number one in March
could possibly have sold fewer copies than one spending six weeks
at number three in January. Interestingly, albums at the peak of
their popularity at the time of the November/December chart-year
cutoff many times end up ranked lower than one would expect on a
year-end tally, yet are ranked on the following year's chart as
well, as their cumulative points are split between the two
chart-years.
Uses
The
Billboard 200 can be helpful to
radio stations as an indication of the types of music
listeners are interested in hearing.
Retailers can also find it useful as a way to
determine which recordings should be given the most prominent
display in a store. Other outlets, such as
airline music services, also employ the
Billboard charts to determine their programming.
Limitations
The chart omits unit sales for listed albums and total recorded
sales, making it impossible to determine, for example, if the
number one album this week sold as well as the number one from the
same period in the prior year. It is also impossible to determine
the relative success of albums on a single chart; there is no
indication of whether the number one album sold thousands more
copies than number fifty, or only dozens more. All
music genres are combined, but there are
separate
Billboard charts for individual market segments.
The complete sales data broken down by location is made available,
but only in the form of separate SoundScan subscriptions. Declining
CD sales and the widespread sale of singles via the internet
further reduce the relevance of the Billboard 200.
Artist milestones
Most top-ten albums
Most number-one albums
Most cumulative weeks at number one
Album milestones
Most weeks at number-one
Most weeks on the top ten
Most weeks on the chart
- Note that totals are for the main albums chart only,
catalog chart totals are not factored in.
Biggest jumps to number-one
- (176-1) Life After
Death — The Notorious
B.I.G. (April 12, 1997)
- (173-1) Vitalogy — Pearl Jam (December 24, 1994)
- (156-1) In Rainbows —
Radiohead (January 19, 2008)
- (137-1) Ghetto D — Master P (September 20, 1997)
- (122-1) More Of The
Monkees — The Monkees (February
11, 1967)
- (112-1) MP Da Last Don —
Master P (June 20, 1998)
- (98-1) Beatles '65 —
The Beatles (January 9, 1965)
- (61-1) Help! — The Beatles (September 11, 1965)
- (60-1) Rubber Soul —
The Beatles (January 8, 1966)
- (53-1) Ballad of the
Green Berets — SSgt.
Barry Sadler (March 12,
1966)
Biggest drops from number-one
Additional milestones
- The first number one album of the SoundScan era (1991 to
present) is Time, Love
& Tenderness by Michael
Bolton.
- The only album to attain the pole position before and after the
May 25, 1991 introduction of SoundScan is R.E.M.'s album Out of Time.
- The first album to debut at number one was Captain Fantastic
and the Brown Dirt Cowboy by Elton
John. John repeated the same feat with the album Rock of the Westies - the second
album to debut at number one - making John the first artist to have
two consecutive studio albums debut at number one. Whitney Houston's second album Whitney was the first album by a female
artist to debut at number one.
- In the early 1960s, Bob Newhart had
the accomplishment of having the number one and number two albums
simultaneously on the Billboard 200, with The Button-Down
Mind and The Button-Down Mind Strikes Back! This feat
was equaled in 1991, with Guns N'
Roses Use Your Illusion
I and Use Your
Illusion II, and in 2004, with Nelly's Suit and
Sweat.
- As of 2008, Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon has
been on the charts for over 1,630 weeks, or approximately
thirty-one years. Consecutively, the album spent a record 741 weeks
on the Billboard 200. The other weeks were spent on the Top Pop
Catalog Albums chart. Its closest rival is Bob Marley's Legend,
checking in at over 975 weeks (Billboard 200 and Top
Pop Catalog Albums combined).
- Forever Your Girl by
Paula Abdul spent sixty-four consecutive
weeks on the Billboard 200 before hitting number one,
making it the longest time for an album to reach the number one
spot.
- At one point in early 1980s, all nine studio albums released to
that date by Led Zeppelin were on the
Billboard 200 chart, and is the most studio albums by a
single artist to chart at the same time.
- The only EP's to reach number one
on the chart are Alice in Chains's
Jar of Flies in 1994 and
Linkin Park and Jay-Z's collaboration EP, Collision Course in 2004.
- The Monkees are only band to have
had four number one albums in the same year. The Beatles had three different albums hit
number one in the same year. Six artists have had two different
albums hit number one in the same year: Led
Zeppelin, DMX, Jay-Z, Garth Brooks,
2Pac, and System of a Down.
- The only artists to have five consecutive albums debut at
number one are Dave Matthews
Band, Jay-Z, DMX, and Metallica.
- The issue dated July 11, 2009 was the first time any catalog
album outsold the number-one album on the Billboard 200.
Three of Michael Jackson's albums (Number Ones, The
Essential Michael Jackson and Thriller) claimed
positions 1-3 respectively on Top Pop Catalog Albums and
Top Comprehensive Albums in the week following Jackson's
death.
Sources
- Joel Whitburn Presents the
Billboard Albums, 6th edition, ISBN 0-89820-166-7
- Additional information obtained can be verified within
Billboard's online archive services and print editions of the
magazine.
References
- Fred Bronson's Chart Beat Chat for May 18,
2007
- U.S. Billboard News for Feb 04, 2009
See also
External links