When We Reached the TOP of the USA Charts!
A List of Jamaican “Billboard Hot 100” Chart’s Number One Hits
Researched and compiled by Historian
A List of Jamaican “Billboard Hot 100” Chart’s Number One Hits
Researched and compiled by Historian
Jamaican popular music (ska, rock steady, reggae, and dancehall) have always found it rough going in making a major mark in the USA. Compared to our immense output of tracks over the past 50 years, the hits in the USA have been extremely few and far between. In fact, even the legendary Bob Marley, who I regard as the Third World’s only superstar, has never had a number one record on that all-important “Billboard Hot 100” chart!
The surprising fact is that we have had only about eight singles by Jamaican artists (if one includes Maxi Priest) that have made it all the way to the very top of the “Billboard Hot 100” chart.
The failure of Jamaican music in the USA, when one looks at the success of our music in parts of Europe and parts of Africa, is particularly frustrating when one considers the fact that the USA is the country with the world’s third largest population (right behind China and India), and thus th country with the world’s largest English-speaking population..
So, who have been the Jamaican artists whose record sales have been so successful that they’ve made it straight to the Number One slot on Billboard’s “Hot 100” chart?
We had early promises with recordings like Millie Small’s “My Boy Lollipop,” which cracked the Top 5 but failed to land the top spot, and Jimmy Cliff’s “Mother and Child Reunion,” which I think made the Top 10.
Jamaican No. 1 Billboard (Mainstream) Charts Hits
1974: “(Everybody Was) Kung Fu Fighting,” by Carl Douglas (a student in California at the time); spent two weeks in the number one slot in December. This was the first number one song in America by a Jamaican artist.
1990: “Close To You,” by Maxi Priest (British artist); spent one week at the top.
1994: “Here Comes the Hot Stepper,” by Ini Kamoze; spent two weeks in the number one slot in 1994.
2001: “It Wasn’t Me,” by Shaggy (featuring Rik Rok); two weeks at the top.
2001: “Angel of the Morning,” by Shaggy (featuring Rayvon); one week at the top.
2003: “Get Busy,” by Sean Paul; three weeks at number one slot in 2003
2006: “Temperature,” by Sean Paul; one week at the top
2007: “Beautiful Girls,” by Sean Kingston; spent four weeks at the top during the summer.
We often talk about Bob’s “Legend” album grossing diamond sales status (10 million or more units sold), but many forget that, unlike Shaggy’s “Hot Shot” album which shot straight to the top of the Billboard mainstream charts and achieved diamond sales status, Bob’s “Legend” album reached its diamond status over many years of gradual sales.
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