List of UK Dance Singles Chart number ones of 2011

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The UK Dance Chart is a chart that ranks the biggest-selling singles that are released in the United Kingdom. The chart is compiled by the Official Charts Company,[1] and is based on both physical and digital single sales.

Summary[]

The year 2011 began with The Black Eyed Peas continuing their reign at the top of the UK Dance Chart with the first single from The Beginning, "The Time (Dirty Bit)". The single originally reached the top spot on 13 November 2010, spending seven consecutive weeks at the peak; with another two consecutive weeks in 2011.

The reign was ended when David Guetta and Rihanna's collaborative single "Who's That Chick?" climbed to the peak on 16 January 2011, having spent six consecutive weeks at the number two spot. The single spent two weeks at the peak, before being replaced by the fourth single from Chase & Status' second studio album No More Idols, "Blind Faith" – which also featured soul singer Liam Bailey. Having spent three consecutive weeks at the top spot, "Blind Faith" was replaced by "Who's That Chick?"; which returned to the top spot for another two weeks. 6 March saw a fourth single reach the spot when Tiësto's collaboration with Diplo and Busta Rhymes, "C'mon (Catch 'em by Surprise)" climbed to the top spot, where it currently spends a second week.

On 20 March, The Black Eyed Peas returned to the top spot with second single from The Beginning, "Just Can't Get Enough". The single spent two consecutive weeks at the peak, bringing the band's total of 2011 to four weeks. 4 April saw dance-duo LMFAO climb to the number-one spot with "Party Rock Anthem". The track, which also featured Lauren Bennet and GoonRock, marks the duo's second number-one dance hit after "(Let the Bass Kick) in Miami" with Chuckie topped the chart in January 2010. The single remained at the peak for nine consecutive weeks, also managing to climb to the peak on the UK Singles Chart on 17 April, where it remained for four weeks.

The nine-week reign of LMFAO was ended when Romanian artist Alexandra Stan topped the chart with debut single "Mr. Saxobeat" on 4 June. However, the single was pushed to number 2 the following week when British rapper Example scored his first dance number-one single with "Changed the Way You Kiss Me" – which also topped the singles chart and independent chart. After four weeks at the peak, Example was replaced by producer DJ Fresh and the commercial breakthrough "Louder". The single, which featured vocals from Sian Evans topped the chart with impressive sales of 140,571 copies – also topping the UK chart.

Five weeks later saw the dethroning of "Louder" – with dubstep group Nero taking its place atop the chart. The group also topped the UK chart with third single "Promises" despite selling an underwhelming 46,700 copies. A string on one-week number-ones followed Nero, with Emeli Sandé and Calvin Harris each spending a week at the summit with "Heaven" and "Feel So Close" on 21 August and 28 August respectively. 4 September saw Example claim a second number-one single of the year, with single "Stay Awake".

Having spent three weeks at the summit of the chart, "Stay Awake" was dethroned on 25 September – when Calvin Harris reclaimed the number-one with single "Feel So Close". The following week saw Spanish DJ Sak Noel claim his first number-one with the chart-topping "Loca People". Following a midweek release from Rihanna, the lead single from the sixth studio album Talk That Talk, "We Found Love" debuted at number-one on both the singles and dance chart. The track, which features production from Calvin Harris sold 87,573 copies in just under four days. The single dominated the charts worldwide in late 2011, spending eight consecutive weeks atop the Billboard Hot 100, six non-consecutive weeks atop the UK Singles Chart and eleven consecutive weeks atop the UK Dance Chart. On its twelfth week charting (25 December), "We Found Love" was dethroned by "Levels" from DJ Avicii.

Number-ones[]

The Black Eyed Peas held off competition in early 2011 with lead single from The Beginning, "The Time" continuing its reign at number-one. The hit's successor, "Just Can't Get Enough" also saw success when it reached the peak.
LMFAO reached new success in 2011, when international hit "Party Rock Anthem" spent nine weeks atop the chart; also spending four weeks at the summit on the singles chart.
Example achieved two number-one singles in 2011 – the first in May with "Changed the Way You Kiss Me" and the second in September with "Stay Awake".
Popstar Rihanna dominated late 2011 with the Calvin Harris produced "We Found Love". The track spent eleven consecutive weeks at the summit, also spending six non-consecutive weeks at the number-one spot on the singles chart.
Key
dagger Best-selling dance single of the year
Date Single Artist(s) Sales Ref.
2 January "The Time (Dirty Bit)" The Black Eyed Peas 76,972 [2]
9 January 36,106 [3]
16 January "Who's That Chick?" David Guetta
featuring Rihanna
28,628 [4]
23 January N/A [5]
30 January "Blind Faith" Chase & Status
featuring Liam Bailey
52,853 [6]
6 February N/A [7]
13 February N/A [8]
20 February "Who's That Chick?" David Guetta
featuring Rihanna
N/A [9]
27 February N/A [10]
6 March "C'mon (Catch 'em by Surprise)" Tiësto vs. Diplo
featuring Busta Rhymes
19,689 [11]
13 March N/A [12]
20 March "Just Can't Get Enough" The Black Eyed Peas 20,058 [13]
27 March 45,451 [14]
3 April "Party Rock Anthem" dagger LMFAO
featuring Lauren Bennett
& GoonRock
53,657 [15]
10 April 69,893 [16]
17 April [A] 91,421 [17]
24 April [A] 85,744 [18]
1 May [A] 73,076 [19]
8 May [A] 64,508 [20]
15 May 57,229 [21]
22 May 49,300 [22]
29 May 44,703 [23]
4 June "Mr. Saxobeat" Alexandra Stan 47,765 [24]
11 June [A] "Changed the Way
You Kiss Me
"
Example 115,046 [25]
19 June [A] 75,252 [26]
26 June 59,443 [27]
3 July 54,030 [28]
10 July [A] "Louder" DJ Fresh
featuring Sian Evans
140,571 [29]
17 July 79,083 [30]
24 July 57,212 [31]
31 July N/A [32]
7 August 34,622 [33]
14 August [A] "Promises" Nero 46,700 [34]
21 August "Heaven" Emeli Sandé 63,659 [35]
28 August "Feel So Close" Calvin Harris 87,845 [36]
4 September [A] "Stay Awake" Example 73,402 [37]
11 September 48,854 [38]
18 September N/A [39]
25 September "Feel So Close" Calvin Harris N/A [40]
2 October [A] "Loca People" Sak Noel 75,161 [41]
9 October [A] "We Found Love" Rihanna
featuring Calvin Harris
87,573 [42]
16 October [A] 106,553 [43]
23 October [A] 92,689 [44]
30 October 85,453 [45]
6 November 82,089 [46]
13 November [A] 79,834 [47]
20 November [A] 66,941 [48]
27 November [A] 79,804 [49]
4 December 51,961 [50]
11 December 38,665 [51]
18 December N/A [52]
25 December "Levels" Avicii N/A [53]

Notes[]

  • A – The single was simultaneously number-one on the singles chart.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "About Us – Who We Are – The Charts We Compile". The Official Charts Company. Retrieved 15 May 2010. Dance (Singles & Albums)
  2. ^ 2 January 2011
  3. ^ 9 January 2011
  4. ^ 16 January 2011
  5. ^ 23 January 2011
  6. ^ 30 January 2011
  7. ^ 6 February 2011
  8. ^ 13 February 2011
  9. ^ 20 February 2011
  10. ^ 27 February 2011
  11. ^ 6 March 2011
  12. ^ 13 March 2011
  13. ^ 20 March 2011
  14. ^ 27 March 2011
  15. ^ 3 April 2011
  16. ^ 10 April 2011
  17. ^ 17 April 2011
  18. ^ 24 April 2011
  19. ^ 1 May 2011
  20. ^ 8 May 2011
  21. ^ 15 May 2011
  22. ^ 22 May 2011
  23. ^ 29 May 2011
  24. ^ 4 June 2011
  25. ^ 11 June 2011
  26. ^ 19 June 2011
  27. ^ 26 June 2011
  28. ^ 3 July 2011
  29. ^ 10 July 2011
  30. ^ 17 July 2011
  31. ^ 24 July 2011
  32. ^ 31 July 2011
  33. ^ 7 August 2011
  34. ^ 14 August 2011
  35. ^ 21 August 2011
  36. ^ 28 August 2011
  37. ^ 4 September 2011
  38. ^ 11 September 2011
  39. ^ 18 September 2011
  40. ^ 25 September 2011
  41. ^ 2 October 2011
  42. ^ 9 October 2011
  43. ^ 16 October 2011
  44. ^ 23 October 2011
  45. ^ 30 October 2011
  46. ^ 6 November 2011
  47. ^ 13 November 2011
  48. ^ 20 November 2011
  49. ^ 27 November 2011
  50. ^ 4 December 2011
  51. ^ 11 December 2011
  52. ^ 18 December 2011
  53. ^ 25 December 2011

External links[]

Retrieved from ""