Music History Daily
# The Day Prince Crashed the Billboard Charts (Literally All of Them) **June 4, 2016** On this date, something utterly unprecedented happened in music chart history. Prince Rogers Nelson—the Purple One, His Royal Badness, the Artist Formerly (and Currently Again) Known as Prince—posthumously *obliterated* the Billboard Hot 100 chart in a way that had never been seen before and will likely never be witnessed again. Just six weeks after his shocking death on April 21, 2016, Prince achieved what can only be described as a supernatural chart invasion. On June 4, Billboard announced that Prince had placed an absolutely mind-boggling **TWENTY singles** simultaneously on the Hot 100 chart. To put this in perspective, this was more than any artist had ever achieved at one time, living or dead. But wait—it gets more purple-reignish: Five of those tracks debuted in the Top 10 *at the same time*. We're talking "Purple Rain" (#4), "When Doves Cry" (#8), "Little Red Corvette" (#9), "Let's Go Crazy" (#9 tie), and "1999" (#10). The Beatles, during their initial invasion of American charts, had never done this. Michael Jackson at his peak hadn't done this. Nobody had. The chart domination extended beyond the Hot 100. Prince simultaneously held **19 positions** on the Billboard 200 albums chart, meaning nearly 10% of the entire chart belonged to one funky little man from Minneapolis. His "The Very Best Of Prince" compilation shot to #2, while "Purple Rain" landed at #4, more than three decades after its original release. This wasn't just nostalgia or a streaming bump—this was a collective global realization of what had been lost. Fans old and new flooded streaming services and digital retailers, desperate to own pieces of the catalog Prince had fought so fiercely to control during his lifetime. The irony was palpable: Prince, who had battled record labels, written "SLAVE" on his face, and changed his name to an unpronounceable symbol to escape contractual obligations, was now generating massive posthumous revenue for those very systems. What made this moment particularly special was that it represented the complete breadth of Prince's artistry. The charting songs weren't just his mainstream hits—deep cuts and album tracks were making their way onto the charts alongside the radio classics, showing that listeners were diving deep into his catalog, discovering the full scope of his genius. The streaming era, which Prince had been skeptical about (he'd pulled his music from Spotify in 2015), had become the vehicle for his most impressive chart achievement. It was as if the universe was having the last laugh—or perhaps Prince was, from wherever purple clouds gather in the afterlife. This June 4th moment captured something more profound than chart statistics: it was a global memorial service conducted through streaming services and downloads, millions of people simultaneously processing grief by pressing play on the songs that had soundtracked their lives. Every stream was a prayer, every download a candle lit. So today, we remember June 4, 2016, when Prince reminded the music industry—even in death—that nobody, but *nobody*, did it better. He'd spent a lifetime defying expectations, breaking rules, and rewriting what was possible. Naturally, he saved one more record-breaking moment for after he'd left the building. Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today to get through this thing called charts. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
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