How many songs have ever achieved "Number 1 with a Bullet"?

When was the first known use of the term “Number 1 with a Bullet”? How many songs have actually achieved this feat?

Thirty-four singles have debuted at number one on ther Billboard Hot 100. I don’t know when the phrase was first used, though.

Edit… and I just learned that that’s not even what the bullet indicates! :smack:

Ah, so what does it indicate? The only time I recall hearing the term was in a Frank Zappa song, which I don’t remember the name of.

It signifies a song in the number 1 spot that’s still building momentum.

I’m pretty sure songs that are not in the number 1 slot can also get a bullet if they are moving up more quickly than some baseline metric.
From here:

Too late to edit, but here’s more

In 1975 the Pete Wingfield song “Eighteen with a Bullet” hit number 18 on the US Billboard pop chart- with a bullet

Well if they debuted at Number 1 then they definitely had the bullet! Good info!

A quick check reveals that I have downloaded (or even heard of)…None of them.

Small correction: I’ve heard the Elton John redo. Didn’t like it, but I heard it.

[Moderating]

Moving from GQ to CS.

Holy crap, seriously.

Some of those artists are people I’ve only ever even heard of because they do commercials for Target and/or soft drinks.

FWIW, and perhaps informing somewhat my above statement, I am only familiar with the phrase “number one with a bullet” from the AC/DC song “Back in Black,” which made it to number 37 on the Hot 100.

If that list is complete, note that the oldest song on the list is from 1995. I know that Billboard has regularly revised the formula for their charts, and that, in the 1990s, as record companies stopped releasing singles, Billboard de-emphasized sales in their chart in favor of airplay.

It suggests that, under the old formulas (in which sales played a role), it was difficult, if not impossible, for a song to premiere on the chart at #1. If you look back at charts from the 1970s and 1980s, you see that even the biggest hit songs took a few weeks to work their way up the charts.

Wow, what an interesting humblebrag. If I didn’t know any better, I’d think you were proud of not knowing things that are common knowledge.

I believe you may be referring to “What Kind of Girl Do You Think We Are”, which can be found on the album Fillmore East – June 1971.

From this website, you can find the lyrics:

These girls wouldn’t let just anybody
Spew on their vital parts
They want a guy from a group with a
Big hit single in the charts

Funny you should mention it:
Our new single just made the charts this week
With a bullet! With a bullet!

Not one of those songs is from before 1995. That just seems wrong to me.

As kenobi 65 pointed out above, the methodology for compiling the charts changed @1991. Before that, to have a big hit you had to both be selling a lot of copies of the physical 45, plus have solid airplay in every region of the country.

With singles becoming rare, they changed it to be mostly airplay based. Before then, it would be near impossible to have a single both selling big and getting airplay across the country the week it was first released. A lot of songs did not chart as high as they should have due to smaller labels not having the distribution to get a song across the country simultaneously.

And after 1991, you had artists like Madonna gaming the system to get higher chart rankings by releasing physical singles to boost chart position, when most other artist had quit releasing them.

I knew it first from here. In this case, it was a literal bullet.

Maybe that’s true. I’ll say this though for my specific case; at the ripe old age of fifty, I put a lot of effort into hearing new music, seeing bands, exploring lots of different genres. But I guess there’s a gaping hole when it comes to top 40 pop, cause I knew only a very very few of those songs.

Six. That’s all I knew.

I’m 55, do nothing to keep up on current music except have children that are younger than I am. I don’t listen to the radio. When in my car with my husband we listen to 60’s on 60, 70’s on 70, 80’s on 80, Grooveline and Soultown on satellite radio and I know about 20 of those songs. 3 of them are from movies-- one being the biggest moneymaker ever until Marvel. Never heard of any of them? I don’t know how that’s even possible. But good on silenus if that’s how he likes it.