Madonna earns her record-extending 48th No. 1 on Billboard‘s Dance Club Songs chart (dated Aug. 31), as I Rise ascends 2-1.
The chart, and all rankings dated Aug. 31, will refresh on Billboard.com on Tuesday, Aug. 27.
With 48 toppers on Dance Club Songs, which measures reports submitted by a national sample of club DJs and which launched as a national survey in the Billboard issue dated Aug. 28, 1976, Madonna outpaces runner-up Rihanna (33 No. 1s), while Beyoncé and Janet Jackson follow with 22 and 20, respectively.
Rise is the second leader from Madonna’s album Madame X, following Medellín with Maluma. The song led the June 29-dated Dance Club Songs chart, while Madame X launched as Madonna’s ninth No. 1 on the Billboard 200 the same week.
Rise marks Madonna’s eighth consecutive Dance Club Songs No. 1, her longest such streak. (Katy Perry holds the record with 18 straight No. 1s in 2009-17.) Twice before, Madonna managed seven straight No. 1s, first with Causing C Commotion, from the Who’s That Girl soundtrack (1987), through Justify My Love, from her first greatest hits opus, The Immaculate Collection (1991), and then with Ray of Light‘s Nothing Really Matters (1999) through Music‘s Impressive Instant (2001). Madonna’s current run began with Give Me All Your Luvin’, featuring Nicki Minaj and M.I.A., from her 2012 set MDNA.
Rise was first remixed by Miami-based DJ Tracy Young, who has remixed a plethora of other Madonna tracks, including No. 1s Music, Hung Up and 4 Minutes (featuring Justin Timberlake and Timbaland). Young’s remix also propelled Rise onto the Dance/Mix Show Airplay chart (where it spent two weeks at No. 37 in July), marking Madonna’s first visit since Living For Love (No. 25, March 2015).
“Even after 20 plus years of creative collaboration, it is always an honor to work with Madonna,” Young tells Billboard. “When I heard the original version of I Rise, I immediately had the vision to create tempo for the inspirational song and connect the message of empowerment to the LGBTQ+ community, especially in celebration with the 50th anniversary of Pride. I asked Madonna if she’d let me remix it and she said yes, which was exciting. It always feels amazing when something I produce is well-received, and that will never be a feeling that gets old.”
Rise was also remixed for clubs by DJLW, Thomas Gold, Daybreakers and others.
In celebration of Madonna’s newest No. 1, here’s an updated look at her Dance Club Songs leaders. (Of note, at various points before Feb. 23, 1991, full albums were allowed to chart, which allowed for a full remix album of Madonna’s, You Can Dance, to reign. Plus, for titles that spent multiple weeks at No. 1, total frames in the lead are noted in parentheses.)
Madonna’s 48 Dance Club Songs No. 1s
1983, Holiday/Lucky Star (five weeks at No. 1)
1984, Like A Virgin (four)
1985, Material Girl
1985, Angel/Into The Groove
1987, Open Your Heart
1987, Causing a Commotion (Remix)
1988, You Can Dance (LP Cuts)
1989, Like A Prayer (two)
1989, Express Yourself (three)
1990, Keep It Together
1990, Vogue (two)
1991, Justify My Love (two)
1992, Erotica
1993, Deeper And Deeper
1993, Fever
1994, Secret (two)
1995, Bedtime Story
1997, Don’t Cry For Me Argentina
1998, Frozen (two)
1998, Ray Of Light (four)
1999, Nothing Really Matters (two)
1999, Beautiful Stranger (two)
2000, American Pie
2000, Music (five)
2001, Don’t Tell Me
2001, What It Feels Like For A Girl
2001, Impressive Instant (two)
2002, Die Another Day (two)
2003, American Life
2003, Hollywood
2003, Me Against The Music, Britney Spears feat. Madonna (two)
2004, Nothing Fails
2004, Love Profusion
2005, Hung Up (four)
2006, Sorry (two)
2006, Get Together
2006, Jump (two)
2008, 4 Minutes, Madonna feat. Justin Timberlake & Timbaland (two)
2008, Give It 2 Me
2009, Celebration
2012, Give Me All Your Luvin’, Madonna feat. Nicki Minaj & M.I.A.
2012, Girl Gone Wild
2012, Turn Up The Radio
2015, Living For Love
2015, Ghosttown
2015, B**** I’m Madonna, Madonna feat. Nicki Minaj
2019, Medellín, Madonna & Maluma
2019, I Rise
Bron: Billboard.com