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DBpedia 2016-04

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Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "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%. From 18 April 2004 to 29 May 2007 the sales/radio airplay split was 50:50. Downloads of songs were included from 29 May 2007. The reporting period is from Monday to Sunday, with the week's chart published the next Monday. Before 18 April 2004, the chart week was from Sunday to Saturday, with the chart published on Sunday. The first sales chart was published on 2 May 1975. Before this, a semi-official voting-based chart, published by the New Zealand Listener, ran from 1966 to 1970, while the 'Pop-o-meter' charts started in 1970 and finished in 1975, when the RIANZ became responsible for the publication of charts.A total of 171 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. \"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.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. Helen Reddy's \"Free and Easy\" was the first number-one in 1975. In 1966, the voting-based chart placed \"A Must to Avoid\" by Herman's Hermits as the first number-one."@en }

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