Billboard Music Awards
Billboard Music Awards | |
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Current: 2021 Billboard Music Awards | |
Awarded for | Outstanding chart performance |
Country | United States |
Presented by | Billboard |
First awarded | December 10, 1990 |
Website | billboardmusicawards |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | Fox (1990–2006) ABC (2011–2017) NBC (2018–present) |
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The Billboard Music Awards are honors given out annually by Billboard, a publication covering the music business and a music popularity chart. The Billboard Music Awards show had been held annually since 1990, with the exception of the years 2007 through 2010. The event was formerly staged in December[1] but since returning in 2011, it has been held in May.[2]
Awards process[]
other awards, such as the Grammy Award, which determine nominations as a result of the highest votes received by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, the Billboard Music Awards finalists are based on album and digital songs sales, streaming, radio airplay, touring, and social engagement. These measurements are tracked year-round by Billboard and its data partners, including MRC Data and Next Big Sound. The 2018 awards were based on the reporting period of April 8, 2017 through March 31, 2018.[3] Awards are given for the top album, artist and single in a number of different music genres.
Awards[]
# | Year | TV | Top Artist[4] | Top Male Artist | Top Female Artist | Top New Artist | Top Duo/Group | Top Hot 100 Song | Top Billboard 200 Album | Multiple wins | Host(s) | Venue | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1990 | Fox | not awarded | Phil Collins | Janet Jackson | "Hold On" by Wilson Phillips | not awarded | Janet Jackson (8 awards) |
Paul Shaffer & Morris Day with Jerome Benton |
Barker Hangar, Santa Monica, California | [5] | ||
2 | 1991 | Mariah Carey | "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" by Bryan Adams | Mariah Carey Mariah Carey |
Garth Brooks C+C Music Factory (5 awards) |
Paul Shaffer | [6] | ||||||
3 | 1992 | Kris Kross | "End of the Road" by Boyz II Men |
not awarded | Michael Jackson (3 awards) |
Phil Collins | Universal Amphitheater, Los Angeles |
[7] | |||||
4 | 1993 | Whitney Houston* | Whitney Houston | "I Will Always Love You" by Whitney Houston | The Bodyguard Soundtrack Whitney Houston |
Whitney Houston (11 awards) |
[8] | ||||||
5 | 1994 | not awarded | Snoop Dogg | Mariah Carey | Ace of Base | "The Sign" by Ace of Base | not awarded | Ace of Base (2 awards) |
Dennis Miller and Heather Locklear | [9] | |||
6 | 1995 | TLC | Real McCoy | "Gangsta's Paradise" by Coolio |
Cracked Rear View Hootie & the Blowfish |
TLC (3 awards) |
Jon Stewart | Coliseum, New York City |
[10] | ||||
7 | 1996 | Alanis Morissette | Alanis Morissette | Tony Rich | "Macarena" by Los del Río | not awarded | Mariah Carey (2 awards) |
Chris Rock | Hard Rock Hotel, Las Vegas | [11] | |||
8 | 1997 | LeAnn Rimes | LeAnn Rimes | Spice Girls | "Candle in the Wind 1997" by Elton John |
Spice Spice Girls |
Elton John (4 awards) |
David Spade | MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada | [12] | |||
9 | 1998 | Usher | Shania Twain | Next | Next | "Too Close" by Next | Titanic: Music from the Motion Picture Celine Dion |
Next (8 awards) |
Kathy Griffin and Andy Dick |
[13] | |||
10 | 1999 | Backstreet Boys | Ricky Martin | Britney Spears | Backstreet Boys | "Believe" by Cher | Millennium Backstreet Boys |
Backstreet Boys (4 awards) |
Kathy Griffin and Adam Carolla |
[14] | |||
11 | 2000 | Destiny's Child | Sisqó | Christina Aguilera | Sisqó | Destiny's Child | "Breathe" by Faith Hill | No Strings Attached NSYNC |
Sisqó (6 awards) |
Kathy Griffin and NSYNC |
[15] | ||
12 | 2001 | Shaggy | Destiny's Child | Lifehouse | Destiny's Child | "Hanging by a Moment" by Lifehouse |
1 The Beatles |
R. Kelly Tim McGraw (5 awards) |
Bernie Mac | [16] | |||
13 | 2002 | Nelly | Nelly | Ashanti | Ashanti | Creed | "How You Remind Me" by Nickelback |
The Eminem Show Eminem |
Ashanti (8 awards) |
Cedric the Entertainer | [17] | ||
14 | 2003 | 50 Cent | Christina Aguilera | not awarded | Get Rich or Die Tryin' 50 Cent |
R. Kelly (4 awards) |
Ryan Seacrest with Nick Lachey and Jessica Simpson | [18] | |||||
15 | 2004 | Usher | Usher | Alicia Keys | Outkast | "Yeah!" by Usher (feat. Lil Jon & Ludacris) |
Confessions Usher |
Usher (11 awards) |
Ryan Seacrest | [19] | |||
16 | 2005 | 50 Cent | Gwen Stefani | "We Belong Together" by Mariah Carey | The Massacre 50 Cent |
50 Cent Green Day (6 awards) |
LL Cool J | [20] | |||||
17 | 2006 | Chris Brown | Chris Brown | Rihanna | Chris Brown | Nickelback | "Bad Day" by Daniel Powter | Some Hearts Carrie Underwood |
Mary J. Blige (9 awards) |
No Host | [21] | ||
2007–2010 not held | |||||||||||||
18 | 2011 | ABC | Eminem | Eminem | Rihanna | Justin Bieber | The Black Eyed Peas | "Dynamite" by Taio Cruz | Recovery Eminem |
Eminem (6 awards) |
Ken Jeong | MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada | [22] |
19 | 2012 | Adele | Lil Wayne | Adele | Wiz Khalifa | LMFAO | "Party Rock Anthem" by LMFAO (feat. Lauren Bennett & GoonRock) |
21 Adele |
Adele (12 awards) |
Julie Bowen and Ty Burrell |
[23] | ||
20 | 2013 | Taylor Swift | Justin Bieber | Taylor Swift | One Direction | One Direction | "Somebody That I Used to Know" by Gotye (feat. Kimbra) | Red Taylor Swift |
Taylor Swift (8 awards) |
Tracy Morgan | [24] | ||
21 | 2014 | Justin Timberlake | Justin Timberlake | Katy Perry | Lorde | Imagine Dragons | "Blurred Lines" by Robin Thicke (feat. T.I. & Pharrell) | The 20/20 Experience Justin Timberlake |
Justin Timberlake (7 awards) |
Ludacris | [25] | ||
22 | 2015 | Taylor Swift | Sam Smith | Taylor Swift | Sam Smith | One Direction | "All About That Bass" by Meghan Trainor | 1989 Taylor Swift |
Taylor Swift (8 awards) |
Ludacris and Chrissy Teigen |
[26] | ||
23 | 2016 | Adele | Justin Bieber | Adele | Fetty Wap | "See You Again" by Wiz Khalifa (feat. Charlie Puth) | 25 Adele |
The Weeknd (8 awards) |
Ludacris and Ciara | T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada | [27] | ||
24 | 2017 | Drake | Drake | Beyoncé | Zayn Malik | Twenty One Pilots | "Closer" by The Chainsmokers (feat. Halsey) | Views Drake |
Drake (13 awards) |
Ludacris and Vanessa Hudgens |
[28] | ||
25 | 2018 | NBC | Ed Sheeran | Ed Sheeran | Taylor Swift | Khalid | Imagine Dragons | "Despacito" Luis Fonsi and Daddy Yankee (feat. Justin Bieber) |
DAMN Kendrick Lamar |
Ed Sheeran Kendrick Lamar (6 awards) |
Kelly Clarkson | MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada | [29] |
26 | 2019 | Drake | Drake | Ariana Grande | Juice Wrld | BTS | "Girls Like You" Maroon 5 (feat. Cardi B) |
Scorpion - Drake | Drake (12 awards) |
[30] | |||
27 | 2020 | Post Malone | Post Malone | Billie Eilish | Billie Eilish | Jonas Brothers | "Old Town Road" Lil Nas X (feat. Billy Ray Cyrus) |
When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? - Billie Eilish | Post Malone (9 awards) |
Dolby Theatre, Hollywood, California | |||
28 | 2021 | The Weeknd | The Weeknd | Taylor Swift | Pop Smoke | BTS | “Blinding Lights” The Weeknd |
“Shoot for the Stars, Aim for the Moon” – Pop Smoke | The Weeknd (10 awards) |
Nick Jonas | Microsoft Theater, Los Angeles, California |
- Whitney Houston won the award for "#1 World Artist".[8] This field shows winners of "Artist of the Year" (awarded from 1995 to 2006), and "Top Artist" (awarded since 2011).
Categories[]
From 1989 to 2006, the show had the same categories and category names every year. In 2011, for the first time, all of the awards were renamed to "Top [award title]". The "of the year" portion of each category title no longer exists, and many of the awards have been further renamed. Other awards, including both "crossover" awards (No. 1 Classical Crossover Artist and No. 1 Classical Crossover Album) were discontinued. As of 2017, there are two fan-voted categories.
Current categories[]
The general categories are Top Artist, Top Billboard 200 Album, Top Hot 100 Song and Top New Artist. These categories highlighted in each award and other categories are divided by genre.
- Top Artist
- Top New Artist
- Top Male Artist
- Top Female Artist
- Top Duo/Group
- Top Billboard 200 Artist
- Top Billboard 200 Album
- Top Hot 100 Artist
- Top Hot 100 Song
- Top Touring Artist
- Top Song Sales Artist (since 2016)
- Top Selling Album (since 2018)
- Top Selling Song (since 2016)
- Top Radio Songs Artist
- Top Radio Song
- Top Streaming Artist
- Top Streaming Song (Audio)
- Top Streaming Song (Video)
- Top R&B Artist
- Top R&B Male Artist (since 2018)
- Top R&B Female Artist (since 2018)
- Top R&B Album
- Top R&B Song
- Top R&B Tour (since 2017)
- Top Rap Artist
- Top Rap Male Artist (since 2018)
- Top Rap Female Artist (since 2018)
- Top Rap Album
- Top Rap Song
- Top Rap Tour (since 2017)
- Top Country Artist
- Top Country Male Artist (since 2018)
- Top Country Female Artist (since 2018)
- Top Country Duo/Group Artist (since 2018)
- Top Country Album
- Top Country Song
- Top Country Tour (since 2017)
- Top Rock Artist
- Top Rock Album
- Top Rock Song
- Top Rock Tour (since 2017)
- Top Latin Artist
- Top Latin Male Artist (since 2021)
- Top Latin Female Artist (since 2021)
- Top Latin Duo/Group (since 2021)
- Top Latin Album
- Top Latin Song
- Top Dance/Electronic Artist (since 2014)
- Top Dance/Electronic Album (since 2014)
- Top Dance/Electronic Song (since 2014)
- Top Christian Artist
- Top Christian Album
- Top Christian Song
- Top Gospel Artist (since 2016)
- Top Gospel Album (since 2016)
- Top Gospel Song (since 2016)
- Top Soundtrack (1993, 1998, 2000, 2006, 2015 – present)
- Top Social Artist (fan-voted)
- Billboard Chart Achievement (since 2015, fan-voted)
- Top Collaboration (since 2017, fan-voted)
Retired categories (1990–2017)[]
- Top Alternative Album
- Top Alternative Artist
- Top Alternative Song
- Top Classical Crossover Artist
- Top Classical Crossover Album
- Top Country Collaboration (2017)
- Top Dance Artist (until 2013)
- Top Dance Album (until 2013)
- Top Dance Song (until 2013)
- Top Digital Media Artist (until 2012)
- Top Digital Songs Artist (until 2015)
- Top Digital Song (until 2015)
- Top EDM Artist (until 2013)
- Top EDM Album (until 2013)
- Top EDM Song (until 2013)
- Top Independent Artists
- Top Independent Album
- Top Modern Rock Artist
- Top Modern Rock Track
- Top New Male Artist
- Top New Female Artist
- Top New Group/Band
- Top New Song
- Top Pop Song (until 2013)
- Top Pop Album (until 2013)
- Top Pop Artist (until 2013)
- Top Pop Punk Artist
- Top Rap Artist (until 2017)
- Top R&B Collaboration (2017)
- Top Rap Collaboration (2017)
- Top Rhythmic Top 40 Title
- Top Selling Single
- Top Soundtrack Single of the Year
- Milestone Award (2013, 2014)
Special awards[]
Artist Achievement Award[]
Artist of the Decade Award[]Millennium Award[]
Century Award[]
Icon Award[]
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Spotlight Award[]
Change Maker Award[]Other special awards[]
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Most wins[]
The record for most Billboard Music Awards won is held by Drake with 29. The record for most Billboard Music Awards won by a female artist is held by Taylor Swift who has won 25 awards.[58]
Rank | Artist | Number of awards |
---|---|---|
1 | Drake | 29 |
2 | Taylor Swift | 25 |
3 | Justin Bieber | 21 |
Mariah Carey | ||
4 | Garth Brooks | 19 |
The Weeknd | ||
5 | Adele | 18 |
Usher | ||
6 | Eminem | 17 |
7 | Whitney Houston | 16 |
8 | Beyoncé | 13 |
50 Cent | ||
9 | Carrie Underwood | 12 |
Rihanna | ||
R. Kelly | ||
10 | Destiny's Child | 11 |
Janet Jackson | ||
11 | Mary J. Blige | 10 |
Performances[]
Year | Performers (chronologically) |
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2011 |
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2012 |
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2013 |
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2014 |
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2015 |
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2016 |
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2017 |
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2018 |
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2019 |
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2020 |
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2021 |
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Broadcast[]
Since its inception (created by Rick Garson, Paul Flattery & Jim Yukich), the BMAs had been telecast on the Fox network; however due to contractual expirations and other unforeseen circumstances, the awards were cancelled for 2007. Plans for a new version of the awards in 2008 (in association with AEG Live) fell through, and the BMAs were not held until 2011.
On February 17, 2011, Billboard announced that it would bring the BMAs back to television, moving from its original home on Fox to its new network, ABC, on May 22, 2011.[59] A new award statuette was created by New York firm Society Awards. Dick Clark Productions, which is co-owned with Billboard, began producing the ceremony in 2014.[60] On November 28, 2017, it was announced that the Billboard Music Awards would be moving from ABC to NBC beginning in 2018 under a multi-year contract.[61]
The 2020 ceremony, originally scheduled for April 29, was postponed indefinitely on March 17 due to coronavirus-related public assembly concerns.[62] On August 14, 2020, it was announced that the 2020 ceremony had been rescheduled to October 14.
Ratings[]
Year | Day | Date | Network | 18–49 rating | Viewers (in millions) |
Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rating | Share | ||||||
1990 | Monday | December 10 | Fox | 14.50 | [63] | ||
1991 | December 9 | 11.60 | [64] | ||||
1992 | Wednesday | December 9 | 15.00 | [65] | |||
1993 | December 8 | 14.00 | [66] | ||||
1994 | December 7 | 11.10 | [67] | ||||
1995 | December 6 | 12.10 | [68] | ||||
1996 | December 4 | 11.60 | [69] | ||||
1997 | Monday | December 8 | 12.81 | [70] | |||
1998 | December 7 | 11.36 | [71] | ||||
1999 | Wednesday | December 8 | 12.12 | [72] | |||
2000 | Tuesday | December 5 | 5.4 | 14 | 11.40 | [73] | |
2001 | December 4 | 5.6 | 15 | 11.70 | [74] | ||
2002 | Monday | December 9 | 4.3 | 11 | 9.40 | [74] | |
2003 | Wednesday | December 10 | 4.6 | 12 | 9.81 | [74] | |
2004 | December 8 | 3.1 | 8 | 6.87 | [74] | ||
2005 | Tuesday | December 6 | 3.1 | 8 | 6.38 | [74] | |
2006 | Monday | December 4 | 2.7 | 7 | 6.09 | [74] | |
2007–2010 | N/A | Not held | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
2011 | Sunday | May 22 | ABC | 3.0 | 8 | 7.88 | [75] |
2012 | May 20 | 2.7 | 7 | 7.40 | [76] | ||
2013 | May 19 | 3.5 | 10 | 9.48 | [77] | ||
2014 | May 18 | 3.5 | 10 | 10.50 | [78] | ||
2015 | May 17 | 3.8 | 12 | 11.18 | [79] | ||
2016 | May 22 | 3.2 | 10 | 9.76 | [80][81] | ||
2017 | May 21 | 2.6 | 9 | 8.70 | [82][81] | ||
2018 | May 20 | NBC | 2.4 | 9 | 7.87 | [83][84] | |
2019 | Wednesday | May 1 | 2.1 | 10 | 8.01 | [85] | |
2020 | October 14 | 0.8 | 5 | 3.71 | [86] | ||
2021 | Sunday | May 23 | 0.7 | 4 | 2.77 | [87] |
See also[]
- Billboard Live Music Awards
- Billboard Japan Music Awards
- Billboard Latin Music Awards
- Billboard Women in Music
References[]
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External links[]
- Billboard Music Award
- Billboard (magazine)
- Fox Broadcasting Company original programming
- American annual television specials
- American Broadcasting Company original programming
- Television series by Dick Clark Productions
- Awards established in 1990
- Awards disestablished in 2007
- Awards established in 2011