Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Destiny’s Child, “Say My Name” (No. 1, Hot 100) What did late-‘90s/early-‘00s R&B artists do when they were heartbroken? Most ran to their nearest piano to pen a gutwrenching ballad.
    • NSYNC, “Bye Bye Bye” (No. 4, Hot 100) There’s no better way to say hello to a brand-new era than by saying “bye bye bye” to the past. This super-powered pop smash was the first single from *NSYNC’s landmark sophomore album No Strings Attached, on which the blockbuster boy band very publicly cut ties with their unscrupulous creator, late music and blimp impresario Lou Pearlman, to finally get their fair share of the pop pie.
    • Britney Spears, “Oops!… I Did It Again” (No. 9, Hot 100) How can you avoid a sophomore slump? Easy: Just reassemble the team who worked on your debut smash, squeeze on a red latex catsuit and shoot a video that’s truly out of this world.
    • Eminem feat. Dido, “Stan” (No. 51, Hot 100) Eminem has (correctly) been lambasted for his fealty to the actually f–ked-up f-word, but credit where credit’s due — at the turn of the century, no major rapper was going out of their way to convey matter-of-fact empathy for a jilted, pathological fan seeking a same-sex romantic connection.
    • Damian Marley, ‘Welcome to Jamrock’ The biggest hit by Bob Marley's youngest son concerns the distance between Jamaica's legend and legacy (echoed by the song's scratchy Eighties-era groove) and its violent reality.
    • Gorillaz, ‘Feel Good Inc.’ Somehow the Gorillaz needed a cartoon band to smuggle this seamless merger of Damon Albarn's melancholy Britpop and De La Soul's head-bobbing hip-hop into the mainstream.
    • Amy Winehouse, ‘Back to Black’ The melodrama was vintage Sixties girl-group-style, with gorgeous Spectorian wall of sound production by Mark Ronson. The sensibility was a bit more up-to-date.
    • Fleet Foxes, ‘White Winter Hymnal’ A single brief verse (repeated three times) about a snowy epiphany, some exquisite close harmonies, wordless falsetto doubled by understated surf guitar.
  1. People also ask

  2. Billboard Year-End Hot 100 singles of 2000. ... This is a list of Billboard magazine's Top Hot 100 songs of 2000. No. Title Artist(s) 1 ... "The Best Day"

    No.
    Title
    Artist (s)
    1
    2
    Santana featuring Rob Thomas
    3
    Santana featuring The Product G&B
    4
  3. Jan 26, 2024 · Top 10 Songs of 2000. Vertical Horizon – Everything You Want. N Sync – Bye Bye Bye. Creed – Higher. Matchbox Twenty – Bent. Macy Gray – I Try. 3 Doors Down – Kryptonite. Christina Aguilera – What A Girl Wants. Santana f/Rob Thomas – Smooth.

    • Number-one Entries
    • Statistics

    Key

    1. ♪   – Number-one single of the year

    Artists by total number of weeks at number one

    The following artists spent the most weeks at number one on the chart during the 2000s. A number of artists claimed number-one positions as either the lead artist or a featured artist. Rihanna's "Umbrella" featuring Jay-Z, for example, was counted for both artists because they are both credited on the single. This also applies to the subsequent statistics.

    Artists by total number of number-one entries

    While some artists appeared at number one as a solo artist and a member of a group, they were only counted as a solo artist. Justin Timberlake, for example, claimed the top spot with four singles credited as a solo singer and one single as part of 'N Sync, but was only counted separately from 'N Sync. 1. Note: For singer Beyoncé, if Destiny's Child is included, she would have eight number-one singles, surpassing Usherfor the most number-one singles for the decade. 2. Note: For singer Fergie,...

  4. 23. I Need to Know - Marc Anthony. 24. Get It On Tonite - Montell Jordan. 25. Incomplete - Sisqo. 26. I Try - Macy Gray. 27.

  5. This is a list of Billboard magazine's Top Hot 100 songs of 2000. Faith Hill's singles "Breathe" was the first country music recording to be ranked number on...

  1. People also search for