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  1. Harlem Hit Parade – 1942 to February 10, 1945. Juke Box Race Records – February 17, 1945 to June 17, 1957. Billboard's "Best Sellers" – May 22, 1948 to October 13, 1958. Rhythm & Blues – June 25, 1949 to November 23, 1963. Billboard's "Jockeys" – January 22, 1955 to October 13, 1958. Hot R&B – October 20, 1958 to November 23, 1963.

  2. the week’s most popular current r&b songs across all genres, ranked by streaming activity data by online music sources tracked by luminate, radio airplay audience impressions as measured by ...

  3. 1. The Love You Save. Jackson 5. The Love You Save. 2. The Tears Of A Clown. Smokey Robinson & The Miracles. The Tears Of A Clown. 3.

    No.
    Song Artist
    Title
    1
    The Love You Save Jackson 5
    2
    The Tears Of A Clown Smokey Robinson & ...
    3
    I Want You Back The Jackson 5
    4
    ABC Jackson 5
  4. Jun 7, 2021 · R&B Music Guide: The Evolution of Rhythm and Blues. For decades, the Billboard Hot 100 and Top 40 charts have been populated with rhythm and blues, an American musical genre first developed by Black artists in the mid-twentieth century.

  5. The R&B Best Sellers in Stores chart ranked records based on their "current national selling importance at the retail level", based on a survey of record retailers "with a high volume of sales in rhythm and blues records". The Most Played R&B by Jockeys listing ranked songs based on the "number of plays on disk jockey radio shows" according to ...

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  7. History. Beginning in 1942, Billboard published a chart of bestselling African-American music, first as the Harlem Hit Parade, then as Race Records.Then in 1949, Billboard began publishing a Rhythm and Blues chart, which entered "R&B" into mainstream lexicon.

  8. 4 days ago · rhythm and blues, term used for several types of postwar African-American popular music, as well as for some white rock music derived from it. The term was coined by Jerry Wexler in 1947, when he was editing the charts at the trade journal Billboard and found that the record companies issuing Black popular music considered the chart names then in use (Harlem Hit Parade, Sepia, Race) to be ...

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