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This is a list of artists with the most number-ones on the U.S. ''Billboard'' Dance Club Songs chart (13 or more). Madonna currently holds the record for the most number-one songs in the 38 year history of the chart, with 46 and is the artist with the most number-ones of any ''Billboard'' chart. The only other artists to have achieved more than 20 chart toppers are Beyoncé (22) and Rihanna (23). Janet Jackson has accumulated 19 number-ones during her career, while Mariah Carey and Donna Summer both have 17 to their name. Kristine W and Jennifer Lopez have 16 apiece, while Katy Perry has generated a record-holding 15 consecutive number-one hits. Whitney Houston, Lady Gaga, Kylie Minogue and Enrique Iglesias, each have 13. ==First: Madonna (46)== American singer, songwriter, and producer Madonna has achieved a record-extending 46 number-one songs on the U.S. ''Billboard'' Dance Club Songs chart. In addition to this feat, she also holds the record for the most chart hits, the most top-twenty hits, the most top-ten hits and the most total weeks at number one. She is the only living and active artist to continue charting at Dance Club Songs, spanning 33 years, the longest of any artist on this chart. Madonna's first two dance chart entries, "Everybody" in 1982 and "Burning Up" in 1983, both peaked at number three. Her first chart-topper came later in 1983, when the double-sided 12-inch single "Holiday"/"Lucky Star" spent five weeks at the summit. This remains as Madonna's longest-running number-one. Her second album ''Like a Virgin'' produced three chart-toppers during 1984—1985: Like a Virgin", "Material Girl" and "Angel"/"Into the Groove". "Into the Groove", originally recorded for the film ''Desperately Seeking Susan'', was later added to the ''Like a Virgin'' album when it was re-issued in non-U.S. territories. "Open Your Heart" and "Causing a Commotion" (from the soundtrack ''Who's That Girl'') were both number-ones in 1987. The remix album ''You Can Dance'' topped the club songs chart in 1988 (''Billboard'' policy at the time allowed full albums or EPs to chart). Madonna closed out the 1980s with three more number-ones from her album ''Like a Prayer'': "Like a Prayer", "Express Yourself" and "Keep It Together" (in early 1990). "Vogue" became Madonna's eleventh dance number-one in 1990, followed by "Justify My Love" in 1991. Her ''Erotica'' album produced three more chart-toppers ("Erotica", "Deeper and Deeper" and "Fever"). By the time the ''Bedtime Stories'' album spun off two more number-ones ("Secret" and "Bedtime Story"), Madonna had more number-ones than any other artist in the history of the chart. Dance remixes of "Don't Cry for Me Argentina", from the ''Evita'' soundtrack, gave Madonna her eighteenth number-one in 1997. In the late 1990s she continued to top the chart with "Frozen", "Ray of Light", "Nothing Really Matters" and "Beautiful Stranger". A cover version of Don McLean's "American Pie" hit number one in 2000. Madonna's ''Music'' album became the first from the artist to produce four number-one dance hits: "Music", "Don't Tell Me", "What It Feels Like for a Girl" and "Impressive Instant". She bested this with her ''American Life'' album, with seven singles released during 2002—2004, five of which reached number one ("Die Another Day", "American Life", "Hollywood", "Nothing Fails" and "Love Profusion"). In the midst of this string, Madonna had another chart-topper — her only as a featured artist — on Britney Spears's "Me Against the Music" in 2003. She again produced four chart-toppers from an album, when "Hung Up", "Sorry", "Get Together" and "Jump" (from ''Confessions on a Dance Floor'') became dance number-ones during 2005—2006. A collaboration with Justin Timberlake, "4 Minutes", became Madonna's thirty-eighth number-one in 2008, followed by "Give It 2 Me" (both from the ''Hard Candy'' album). A career retrospective, ''Celebration'', gave her a record-extending 40th number-one ("Celebration"), plus three more during 2012, all from the ''MDNA'' album: "Give Me All Your Luvin'" (featuring Nicki Minaj and M.I.A.), "Girl Gone Wild" and "Turn Up the Radio". Madonna has collected three number-one songs from her thirteenth studio album, ''Rebel Heart''. "Living for Love" became her forty-fourth number-one for the chart issue dated March 7, 2015. ''Billboard'' noted that it was a "historic" milestone, as Madonna tied with country singer George Strait for the most number-ones of any ''Billboard'' chart, who accumulated the same tally on the U.S. Hot Country Songs chart between 1982 and 2009.〔 "Living for Love" also bought the singer's total amount of U.S. number-ones across all ''Billboard'' charts to 173, which includes multiple rankings.〔 "Ghosttown" became her record-breaking forty-fifth chart topper for the issue dated May 30, 2015, breaking her tie with Strait and becoming the act with the most number-one hits on a singular ''Billboard'' chart. At the time, Madonna had garnered more number-ones on the chart than Rihanna and Beyoncé combined (22 each).〔 It ascended to the peak with remixes by Don Diablo, Armand Van Helden and Mindskap.〔 "Bitch I'm Madonna featuring Nicki Minaj has become her record-extending forty-sixth chart topper in August 2015, and is currently number-one. It is Madonna's second collaboration with Minaj to reach the summit, following "Give Me All Your Luvin in 2012, and Minaj's fifth song in total to hit number-one.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Artists with the most number-ones on the U.S. dance chart」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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