Madonna’s Official Top 40 Biggest Selling Singles
She made it through the wilderness, somehow she made it through… and 34 years after her very first hit Holiday, Madonna still gets everybody talking.
There’s plenty to say about her performances, her fashion sense, her pushing of boundaries and buttons when it comes to sex and ageing and religion and art, but to do any of that, Madonna has needed one thing – her massive collection of hits.
And what a back catalogue it is - her Top 40 biggest sellers alone amounts to over 15 million singles sales.
Jump to the full Top 40, or stick with us as we look over her Top 10, and, yes, we’re doing it in reverse order…
10. Beautiful Stranger (1999)
Outselling seven of Madonna’s chart-toppers is this William Orbit-produced slice of kitsch perfection, from the movie Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me.
Possibly the greatest Number 1 that never was for Madge, Beautiful Stranger had strong first-week sales of over 135,000 copies, but could not compete with S Club 7’s debut – Bring It All Back beat her to it, and denied Beautiful Stranger a place in chart history.
SALES: 535,000
CHART FACT: This was the ninth time Madonna had seen a single stall at Number 2 – she’s had 12 runners-up in total.
MADGE FACT: Madonna has only performed this song on tour once, during the Drowned World Tour in 2001.
> See Beautiful Stranger's entire chart run
9. Frozen (1998)
Now that’s what you call a comeback. After a few years off having her first baby Lourdes and making Evita – which won her a Golden Globe – Madonna returned with a new attitude and an album full of trance bangers and trippy beats.
Lead single Frozen was the perfect introduction and kicked off her work with William Orbit, who’d go on to collaborate with her on two further albums.
SALES: 556,000
CHART FACT: Frozen was Madonna’s first Number 1 in eight years – she hadn’t enjoyed a chart-topper since Vogue in 1990.
MADGE FACT: Madonna didn't really go brunette in the video for Frozen; it was a wig. The video was filmed in bright sunshine in the Californian desert, with the 1998 equivalent of about a million Instagram filters over the top to make it look colder.
> Track Frozen's chart progress
8. True Blue (1986)
In many ways, Madonna’s most overlooked Number 1, True Blue came right bang in the middle of the star’s ‘imperial phase’. Written for and about her then-husband Sean Penn, True Blue is very much the unloved stepchild of Madonna’s back catalogue - she rarely performs it on tour.
It didn’t put off anybody buying it, though. While it was Number 1 for just a week, True Blue has outsold some of her more famous Number 1s, including poor old Vogue, which just misses the Top 10.
SALES: 557,000
CHART FACT: True Blue was knocked off Number 1 by EastEnders’ star Nick Berry’s anthem Every Loser Wins. I guess he was proven right that week at least.
> Take a look at the True Blue album's incredible 66-week first run in the Top 40
7. Like A Prayer (1989)
Madonna’s show-stopper and an instant classic, Like A Prayer was the centre of huge controversy upon release – all in a day’s work for Madge, really. A video featuring burning crosses and a violent murder was always going to grab some attention, and thanks to a well-known soft drinks firm pulling the plug on an advertising campaign featuring the song, its notoriety took it all the way to Number 1.
Also, Madonna hair fans, this was the first time she had led a new album campaign as a brunette. She’d do it only once more, on American Life in 2003.
SALES: 614,00
CHART FACT: Like A Prayer spent three weeks at Number 1 before being toppled by the Bangles’ Eternal Flame.
MADGE FACT: The saint who Madonna snogs in the church is widely, and mistakenly, believed to be based on Jesus. That's not true. He's actually supposed to be St. Martin de Porres, the patron saint of those seeking interracial harmony, which makes perfect sense when you watch the video.
> Did you know three versions of Like A Prayer have charted? Check them out
6. Hung Up (2005)
When you start to count up Madonna’s comebacks and reinventions, you run out of fingers pretty quickly. Following what you might call a lukewarm reception to previous album American Life, Madonna decided it was time to crank up the disco beats and fill dance floors up and down the country, which she did with Hung Up, the lead from Confessions On A Dance Floor.
Featuring a mega-famous sample of Abba’s Gimme Gimme Gimme, Hung Up gave Madonna her biggest global hit in years, showed there was plenty of time for us all to get fit enough to buy a leotard and, more importantly, put Madge back at Number 1 where she belonged.
SALES: 626,000
CHART FACT: Hung Up was Madonna’s first Number 1 to spend more than a week at the top since Vogue in 1990.
MADGE FACT: Madonna had a nasty fall from her horse not long before the video was shot and broke her arm and some ribs. She said when she was dancing her arm felt like it was "flapping like a chicken wing". Hung Up's video had a kind of sequel, with the Sorry video picking up where Hung Up left off. Madonna hadn't done this since 1995, when You'll See carried on the story of the Take A Bow video.
> Don't hesitate… look up Hung Up's chart run
Top 5! Are you ready? I’m waaaaaiting…
5. Papa Don’t Preach (1986)
Madonna’s first Number 1 from her classic True Blue album was one of her first major brushes with controversy. Papa Don’t Preach, which told the story of a pregnant teenage girl, angered both anti-abortion and pro-choice campaigners, but political wrangling aside, it was a brilliant pop song.
Madonna’s second Number 1, it ruled the Official Singles Chart for three weeks of summer 1986.
SALES: 651,000
CHART FACT: Papa Don’t Preach ended Wham’s reign at the top with Edge Of Heaven. It was eventually dispatched by Chris de Burgh’s romantic slow-dance classic The Lady In Red.
MADGE FACT: Madonna resurrected her famous 'Italians Do It Better' T-shirt on her 2004 Re-Invention Tour, sometimes switching out the nationality depending on where she was.
> Track Papa Don't Preach's chart run
4. Holiday (1984, 1985, 1990)
The tune where it all began, which was so popular, she released it three times. Landing at Number 6 in winter 1984 and scoring Madonna her first Top 10, the song went on to bigger success the following year. Released in summer, which makes much more sense when you think about it – it’s about taking some time off, after all – Holiday zoomed to Number 2.
Madge obviously thought she might as well have another crack at Number 1 with Holiday, and so in 1991 released it again – as Madonna’s greatest hits mania was in full swing with the release of The Immaculate Collection. This time, it reached Number 5, but three entries in the Top 10 for the same song isn’t bad at all, really.
SALES: 718,000
CHART FACT: So who kept Holiday off the top? Well, it was the lady herself! One week in 1985, Holiday sat at Number 2 right behind Into The Groove at the top of the Official Singles Chart.
MADGE FACT: In the rarely seen official video for Holiday – that we imagine Madonna would probably rather pretend never happened – Madge's brother Christopher can be seen dancing on the left. They'd later have a huge falling out when Christopher wrote a tell-all book, but she's confirmed they're speaking again now.
> Nosey at every single chart hit called Holiday
3. Crazy For You (1985, 1991)
Madonna’s most successful ballad is officially this track that never actually appeared on any of her studio albums. Taken from the frankly dodgy movie Vision Quest – which would later be renamed Crazy For You for reasons we’re sure aren’t that hard to work out – Crazy For You saw Madge slow things down in the middle of the Madonna mania of the mid-eighties and reach Number 2.
Crazy For You was another of her old tunes that got a chance to chart again, coming out again in 1991 and, remarkably, hitting Number 2 once more.
SALES: 782,000
CHART FACT: On its first run, Crazy For You was kept off Number 1 by Sister Sledge’s Frankie. On its return to Number 2 in 1991, it was kept at bay by two records.
The Simpsons’ Do The Bartman (!) held it off first of all, then a rerelease of The Clash’s Should I Stay Or Should I Go leapfrogged over her to take the top spot.
MADGE FACT: Gambler was featured in Vision Quest too.
> Look up Crazy For You in our chart archive
2. Like A Virgin (1984)
This is the one where everything changed for Madonna and she began to resemble the unstoppable force that would dominate pop in the Eighties. The Nile Rodgers-produced track didn’t just kick off the campaign for Madonna’s second album of the same name, Like A Virgin was also the first of an incredible run of 36 consecutive Top 10 entries. No star has bettered that yet.
Also incredible is that Madonna’s second biggest selling single wasn’t even a Number 1 – a question commonly incorrectly guessed in pub quizzes – it reached Number 3.
SALES: 832,000
CHART FACT: Like A Virgin was the 18th bestselling single of 1984.
MADGE FACT: Nile Rodgers, who produced the Like A Virgin album, has said that he was hoping to work with Madonna throughout her career, but his girlfriend didn't get on with actor Sean Penn, who ended up being the first Mr Madonna.
> Check out Madonna's rivals for the top spot
1. Into The Groove (1985)
It’s only right that the song that should rule them all is Her Madgesty’s very first Number 1, the song that started off a run of 13 Number 1 singles, more than any other female artist in British chart history.
Soundtracking Madonna’s big-screen debut in Desperately Seeking Susan, Into The Groove was a huge hit over summer 1985. Despite not having a proper video and thanks in part to not being available on Madonna’s Like A Virgin album – until a reissue solved that problem later on – Into The Groove stormed to the top of the Official Singles Chart and refused to budge for a month.
While Into The Groove may not hold the same affection for many as Holiday or Crazy For You still do, it still pretty much sums up Madonna’s whole ethos. “Only when I’m dancing can I feel this free,” she sings, barely pausing for breath, and she hasn’t stopped busting a move since.
An anthem fit for a queen, Into The Groove takes the throne – it’s her biggest selling song, and you can’t argue with that.
SALES: 878,000. Yep, that’s right, it’s not a million-seller. Madonna is one of the most successful acts of all time to still not nab a million-selling single.
CHART FACTS: Into The Groove is tied with Vogue and 4 Minutes for her longest stint at Number 1 – four weeks. It knocked Eurythmics’ There Must Be An Angel (Playing With My Heart) off the top. It was eventually toppled by UB40 and Chrissie Hynde with their cover of I Got You Babe.
Into The Groove also managed to keep Madonna herself off Number 1 – the rerelease of Holiday sat right behind it from 11–17 August 1985. Coincidentally, that was the week of Madonna’s 27th birthday.
> See the full Top 100 from that week
MADGE FACT: Into The Groove would later feature in a jeans commercial, with a guest appearance from Missy Elliott and with refreshed lyrics. Missy would later team up with Madonna, Britney and Christina on that MTV VMAs performance in 2003.
Other notable entries
Madonna’s 1990 Number 1 Vogue just misses a Top 10 placing, landing at Number 11 with over 530,000 sales.
Her most recent chart-topper 4 Minutes FT Justin Timberlake is just behind it at 12, with 507,000 copies sold.
Material Girl, a Number 3 hit in 1985 thanks to one of her most iconic videos, has to settle for 16th, with over 385,000 sales.
Justify My Love, which was pretty saucy back in the day, and launched Madonna's first greatest hits album The Immaculate Collection, comes in 23rd with 275,500 sales. The Immaculate Collection is one of the biggest-selling albums of all time.
Fan-favourite Gambler, which Madonna doesn’t seem to be that fond of and can be very hard to track down, finishes 25th, with a sales tally of 270,000. Its sandwiched between two of Madonna’s hugely overlooked hits Dress You Up and Angel, which both reached Number 5 despite having no video! The power of Madonna in 1985 – if you'd have been able to bottle it, you'd have ruled the world.
Madonna’s collaboration with Britney Spears, Me Against The Music, scrapes into the Top 40 at Number 39, but if you’re a Madonna purist and want to know which Madge solo effort Me Against The Music has pushed into 41st place? Well, it’s bad news for Erotica. That lands just outside.
Madonna’s biggest selling single not to go Top 10? That honour belongs to Lucky Star – a Number 14 hit in 1984 and finishing 42nd on her countdown.
> Take a look at Madonna's full chart archive
Madonna's Official Top 40 best-selling songs
TRACK | CHART PEAK | YEAR | |
1 | INTO THE GROOVE | 1 | 1985 |
2 | LIKE A VIRGIN | 3 | 1984 |
3 | CRAZY FOR YOU | 2 | 1985/1990 |
4 | HOLIDAY | 2 | 1984/1985/1990 |
5 | PAPA DON'T PREACH | 1 | 1986 |
6 | HUNG UP | 1 | 2005 |
7 | LIKE A PRAYER | 1 | 1989 |
8 | TRUE BLUE | 1 | 1986 |
9 | FROZEN | 1 | 1998 |
10 | BEAUTIFUL STRANGER | 2 | 1999 |
11 | VOGUE | 1 | 1990 |
12 | 4 MINUTES | 1 | 2007 |
13 | LA ISLA BONITA | 1 | 1987 |
14 | MUSIC | 1 | 2000 |
15 | AMERICAN PIE | 1 | 2000 |
16 | MATERIAL GIRL | 3 | 1985 |
17 | DON'T CRY FOR ME ARGENTINA | 3 | 1996 |
18 | WHO'S THAT GIRL | 1 | 1987 |
19 | BORDERLINE | 2 | 1986 |
20 | YOU'LL SEE | 5 | 1995 |
21 | RAY OF LIGHT | 2 | 1998 |
22 | LIVE TO TELL | 2 | 1986 |
23 | JUSTIFY MY LOVE | 2 | 1990 |
24 | DRESS YOU UP | 5 | 1985 |
25 | GAMBLER | 4 | 1985 |
26 | ANGEL | 5 | 1985 |
27 | OPEN YOUR HEART | 4 | 1986 |
28 | DEAR JESSIE | 5 | 1989 |
29 | HANKY PANKY | 2 | 1990 |
30 | SORRY | 1 | 2006 |
31 | DIE ANOTHER DAY | 3 | 2002 |
32 | CAUSING A COMMOTION | 4 | 1987 |
33 | CHERISH | 3 | 1989 |
34 | DON'T TELL ME | 4 | 2000 |
35 | EXPRESS YOURSELF | 5 | 1989 |
36 | THE POWER OF GOOD-BYE | 6 | 1998 |
37 | GIVE IT 2 ME | 7 | 2008 |
38 | THIS USED TO BE MY PLAYGROUND | 3 | 1992 |
39 | ME AGAINST THE MUSIC (WITH BRITNEY SPEARS) | 2 | 2003 |
40 | RAIN | 7 | 1993 |
©2015 Official Charts Company . All rights reserved.
Look back through all of Madonna's single and album artwork in our gallery below:
[Gallery Module]
Join the conversation by joining the Official Charts community and dropping comment.
Already registered?
Log in
No account?
Register
NN
Nu No
This article is actually quite old!
6 years old already!
As 2023 Madonna is celebrating 40 years from her first album and also 65 anniversary in August!
Isn't it time for us to get an update on Madonna best selling songs in UK? Especailly since with streams this certainly changed a lot. Plus she already have 5 singles that passed 1 million chart sales units!
So many singles have been digitally available since! Including "Gambler" that despite being lost is now finally available on iTunes and streaming platforms. I'm pretty sure it did sold something more since it's digital release.
Probably there are some changes and probably you could also do a TOP 65 instead a TOP 40 this time around? So many TOP 10's information missing!
Unfortunally pure sales recently are low and even vinyl releases despite good are quite low addition compared to streaming equivalent numbers (I know "Erotica" 2022 vinyl released added at least 10k units to that single physical sales but most streaming numbers are way bigger than that).
T
Tyler
Loved that Madonna song that was called Ghosttown. I'm surprised that didn't make the cut. She needs to make an album with that great sound that's in that song. It just gets into your soul.
Steven Pickup
This Used To Be My Playground is bought an cassingle (lol), this IS the worst Madonna single EVER.
BTW I hated Keep It Together, however the remix...loved it!
NN
Nu No
I have it in CD-single - it's good.
Anna Nekrylova
BTW, I highly doubt INTO THE GROOVE is her best selling. If it is than why does it have only Gold certification by BPI? While according to BPI only Hung Up has sold more than 600k in the UK. Who's right?
INTO THE GROOVE, LIKE A VIRGIN, CRAZY FOR YOU, HOLIDAY, PAPA DON'T PREACH - are their sales inflated or Madonna just wasn't given BPIs right?
Anna Nekrylova
Personally I think all her 00s singles are 10 times better than her 80s. Don't Tell Me and upper all have at least Silver certification by BPI. I was shocked to find "Express Yourself" doesn't have it yet. OMG!
EXPRESS YOURSELF - it's so humiliating not to have even a Silver from it(((
THE POWER OF GOOD-BYE - why, God? It's better than "Frozen", and it was Grammy-nominated (100%)
GIVE IT 2 ME - the same! Only it's better than "4 Minutes". Was also Grammy-nominated (maybe)
THIS USED TO BE MY PLAYGROUND - was also Golden Globe-nominated.
RAIN - the best video in the 90s and the most beautiful song from Erotica album! So Karen Carpenter-vibe)
So, these songs are her greatest loosers. If someone wants to fight for freedom and join the revolution they can go and buy THESE records above.
#39 ME AGAINST THE MUSIC (WITH BRITNEY SPEARS) - you can save money. It's like bees against honey meaning rock against drugs. I have no idea how much did BMG paid Madge. Please, tell! And that kiss at VMA, too. I bet Madonna regrets her "giving her power through kiss" to Britney. Just kidding.
Marcus Andre
Please, put all her 40 single sales for us!!!!
Anna Nekrylova
You can check BPI site to have a clue.
GC
Graham Clarke
True Blue. Performed on her latest tour. Not ignored.
Glasgow1975
Article was written before that tour happened. They update the sales figures every year, but just repost the same text.
GC
Graham Clarke
Then they should update the text too. Lazy journalism.
Glasgow1975
Agreed.
GC
Graham Clarke
More.. your top 40 countdown has Holiday and Crazy For You re-releases as 1990. No. Was 1991.
R
RICARDO
take a bow was #1 for 9 weeks in the top 40 DONT UNDERSTAND??
Spencer Quintanilha
In the US. Take a Bow peaked at #16 in the UK
ML
Mick Lynch
Is 'Rebel Heart' not Madonna's 14th Studio album? I would consider 'Im Breathless' a studio album. Its certainly not a soundtrack album, and all the songs on it are studio recordings, and it did contain 'Vogue' after all?????
B
Brian
"I'm Breathless" was specifically recorded to tie in with Tracy. It wasn't Madonna making an album just to make an album, which is what would be considered a studio album. It's much more a piece of marketing that also conveniently worked as a place to park "Vogue", which was not recorded for the project but was originally going to be the B side to "Keep it Together".
ML
Mick Lynch
tks Brian. we'll agree to disagree lol. i suppose its whatever side of the fence your sitting on. tks for the reply.
GC
Graham Clarke
Agreed. I'm Breathless was a studio album. All unique songs. Three of them may have made a soundtrack, but all recorded to make a new album.
de Sascha
It's still a complete Madonna album.
I mean let's take Whitney Houston's marketing Bodyguard Soundtrack. In this case it's counted as a complete Whitney Album, though, not all songs are sung by her.
But I'm Breathless is quite a different story, it's all Madonna.
Ricky Manwife Greaves
I would agree but It's a soundtrack so not considered a studio album I also think You Can Dance and Something to Remember should be classed as greatest hits!
Michael51202800
I know Madonna said in an old interview that I'm Breathless is a Madonna Album, because there is a real Tracy Soundtrack. I don't know why other albums don't count! The average joe sees Madonna-Who's that Girl, You Can Dance, I'm Breatless, Immaculate Collection, GHV2, Evita, Something To Remember, Remixed and Revisted, Celebration, etc... I'm assuming she recorded them in a studio. It's an Album to me! If Whitney Gets Bodyguard, Madonna gets her extras....
Elizabeth Taylor
I respect European markets... But, this list proves why AMERICA is the best market in music imo... This list is terrible imo... VOGUE is a masterpiece. Why is a MASTERPIECE sitting at number 11. WTF???
Spencer Quintanilha
But in the UK hung up became #1 and in the US just #7...
MT
my thoughts
Yeah, The UK is better, Madonna has 63 top 10 singles there
Glasgow1975
Because it sold less copies. Until very recently the UK Chart was based solely on sales, radio has never been a component.
NN
Nu No
"Hung Up" was #01 on Billboard Download Chart for 2 weeks and 13 weeks #01 on Billboard Single Sales Chart but the song was not getting any airplay.
In UK charts were based only on sales (now have streaming too) but in US they always had airplay too. "Hung Up" didn't have any airplay at first but radios saw the song sitting for 2 weeks on all Single Sales and Download charts and played it a few times - eventually peaking #42 on US airplay.
After "American Life" Madonna was banned by US radios ("American Life" was #01 in single sales in US but peaked #68 on airplay - that's why Hot 100 peak is #37). She did peak TOP 20 on US airplay charts twice later with "4 Minutes" (because of Justin Timberlake) and "Give Me All Your Luvin" (the week of release due to Superbowl the song was played almost every hour during the 4 days before the game as she was performing and singing it).
aidan morris
i took me forever to realize this is a UK thing and not american since like a virgin was her first number 1 hit
LeeRyder
Like A Virgin was #1 for 6 weeks... but True Blue was not. Who wrote this?
JoeS7
This is about the UK chart. It's written by the official UK charts company.
Patrick Cremeans
This isn't about the US. READ you idiot.
K
KK
Take A Bow, anyone?? WTF?
JoeS7
Take A Bow was only a moderate hit worldwide and peaked at #16 in the UK, ending her streak of 34 consecutive top 10s.
aidan morris
yeah i was scratching my head too.
Uwe B
Take a Bow is wonderful of course. The first time I heard it I was shocked by its beauty.
I think Like a Prayer will make it.
I voted for another Song of personal reasons.
GC
Graham Clarke
Still shocks me. That and Ghosttown. How did this happen.
de Sascha
And me! Very strange Ghosttown didn't chart at all?!
Andii
It did if you use the good old sales chart rather than this streaming nonsense they came up with from 2014 on. From the last album, Living for Love made #17 (http://www.officialcharts.com/charts/singles-sales-chart/20150301/7509/) and Ghosttown made #65 (http://www.officialcharts.com/charts/singles-sales-chart/20150322/7509/). It actually had two runs, coming in at #65, leaving the top #100, then climbing slowly back up again to a second peak of #70. Maybe if she'd promoted it, it would have done even better. No sign of BIM, but I may have missed it as I have to look at each individual chart, as they don't list them on her page.
Ricky Manwife Greaves
Moderate Hit? 7 weeks at number 1 in the US! More than any other M
single
Michael51202800
Ghost town tanked, because it wasn't her first single..... Livin for Love, just didn't match the video, her vocals are too old lady, talking proper! No intro, i think Livin for love is awesome. Just like celebration: I don't recognize you with your clothes on! Plus radio stations don't want to support her because of The American Life ! A shame I think Madonna still has her 'A "game, but radio will only play Holiday, Vogue and Express Yourself. Sorry for bashing Living for Love and Celebration, but I've edit them without the voice tracks. Just like Bobby Brown he was popular with small rap, but time has passed and radio stations have edit his rap out.... Stick with vocals! It only works for Vogue!
Michael51202800
Ghost Town was one of the best vocals ever! She really showed no support for the song. She really only seemed into Livin' for Love and I'm Madonna!
Glasgow1975
US Chart history means zero in an article about her UK Chart history. TAB was her biggest UK flop since her initial few singles. It ended her unbroken run of 34 top ten hits. Back then music wasn't a worldwide homogeneous market. Billboard was very much into R&B and hip hop, whilst the UK had a much more diverse chart heavily into dance and electronica. Bedtime Story hit no.3, TAB no.16. In the US BS was ignored, and TAB was no.1 for weeks.
NN
Nu No
She used "Livin' for Love" to promote the album but she did sing more songs in US and Italy when doing her first promo tour.
"Ghosttown" she did once live at iHeart Radio in US when the single was released.
" I'm Madonna" she did at Jimmy Fallon but can't remember her promoting that song more when was released as single (the album did returned to US iTunes at #19 when she went to the show).
She did no promo in UK - she only did the Brit Awards... crazy!
If she did more promo for her album releases she would sell more. This is not the 80's and 90's. She needs to do TV Shows and sing live.
NN
Nu No
Moderate hit WORLDWIDE because it peaked #16 in UK and was not very different around the world. Peaked just #17 on European Hot 100, #15 in Australia and #09 in New Zealand.
The only countries where "Take a Bow" peaked #01 were US, Canada and Poland (so 3 countries worldwide - not that much). Only peaked TOP 3 in another 2 countries as was #02 in Italy and #03 in Finland and in most countries missed the TOP 10 or even TOP 20 (peaked just at #25 in France and #34 in Netherlands).
"Secret" was a much bigger worlwide hit peaking #01 in Canada, Finland and Switzerland, #02 in France and Poland, #03 in US and Italy - In UK and Australia peaked #05. Was #04 in European Hot 100.
But "Secret" even being a much bigger hit than "Take a Bow" was still not one of Madonna TOP 40 best selling singles in UK.
Here you can see how different the music tastes and music markets from UK and US are (and rest of Europe it's even more different as UK it's the European music market most similar to US).
Mainlander
Billboard wasn't "into R&B and hip hop", it reflected radio airplay and sales at the time.
Glasgow1975
Obviously. Since Billboard isn't in fact a sentient being. I used 'Billboard' as short-handed for US taste.
NN
Nu No
It wasn't the first single in France and Italy and didn't tank there.
Madonna did sang Ghosttown at San Remo festival in Italy to promote it. If only she had promoted the song on UK TV as well I'm sure it would have been at least a TOP 40 Hit.