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List of number-one singles from the 2000s (New Zealand)
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In New Zealand, the Recording Industry Association of New Zealand (RIANZ) compiles the top forty singles chart each week. Sales of songs determined 75% of the sorting information, and radio airplay figures were responsible for 25%.[1] From 18 April 2004 to 29 May 2007 the sales/radio airplay split was 50:50.[1][2] Downloads of songs were included from 29 May 2007.[3] The reporting period is from Monday to Sunday, with the week's chart published the next Monday.[4] Before 18 April 2004, the chart week was from Sunday to Saturday, with the chart published on Sunday.[5] Afterwards, the chart week was from Monday to Sunday, with the charts published on Monday. This meant there was a one-day charting period for 18 April 2004, with the next chart published on 19 April 2004. As a result, Usher spent three weeks and one day at number one with "Yeah!" instead of four complete weeks.

A total of 170 singles topped the chart in the 2000s, including 23 by New Zealand artists. Twenty artists had three or more number-one singles; the most successful was Akon, whose seven number-ones totalled twenty-three weeks on top of the chart. Chris Brown, Eminem, and the Black Eyed Peas each had five of their singles go to number one.
Scribe's double A-side "Stand Up"/"Not Many" spent the longest at number one, with twelve weeks. This is the most weeks at number one ever by a New Zealander, and the second most for any song, after Boney M.'s "Rivers of Babylon" had fourteen weeks in the top spot in 1978.[6] "Axel F", by Crazy Frog, and "Brother", by Smashproof and Gin Wigmore each had eleven weeks at the top spot. "Brother" broke the record for the longest consecutive number-one reign by a New Zealand artist, previously set by "Sailing Away" by All of Us in 1986.[7]
On 29 May 2006, "Crazy" by Gnarls Barkley replaced "Hips Don't Lie" by Shakira and Wyclef Jean at the top of the chart, and became the 500th number-one single in the RIANZ New Zealand Singles Chart's history.[6]
The source for this decade is the Recorded Music NZ chart, the chart history of which can be found on the Recorded Music NZ website or Charts.nz.[8][9]
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2001





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2003




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2009




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Artists with the most number-one songs
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These totals includes singles when the artist is "featured"; that is, not the main artist

- Excluded statistics
- ^A This excludes band members' individual number-ones. "Beep", by will.i.am, and Fergie's "London Bridge" and "Big Girls Don't Cry" also reached number one.
- ^B This excludes "Independent Women Part I", by Beyoncé's former band, Destiny's Child.
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Most weeks at number-one




See also
- New Zealand Top 50 Singles of 2000
- New Zealand Top 50 Singles of 2001
- New Zealand Top 50 Singles of 2002
- New Zealand Top 50 Singles of 2003
- New Zealand Top 50 Singles of 2004
- New Zealand Top 50 Singles of 2005
- New Zealand Top 50 Singles of 2006
- New Zealand Top 50 Singles of 2007
- New Zealand Top 50 Singles of 2008
- New Zealand Top 50 Singles of 2009
- Music of New Zealand
- List of UK Singles Chart number ones of the 2000s
- List of Billboard number-one singles
Notes
- Annual charts are sourced from the RIANZ website:
- "Annual Top 50 Singles Chart 2010" Archived 2011-07-24 at the Wayback Machine
- Whether or not a song is of New Zealand origin is determined by the RMNZ
- In April 2004, the chart publication date shifted from Sunday to Monday. Therefore there was a one-day chart period for 18 – 19 April 2004.
References
Bibliography
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