In 1947, Billboard magazine published a
chart ranking the top-performing songs in the United States in
African-American-oriented musical genres under the title of Most Played Juke Box Race Records; placings were based on a weekly survey among
jukebox operators.[1] The chart is considered to be part of the lineage of the magazine's multimetric
R&B chart,[2] which since 2005 has been published under the title
Hot R&B/Hip Hop Songs.[3] The term "
race records" was then in common usage for recordings by black artists.[4]
In the issue of Billboard dated January 4, two singles tied for the number-one position, both by
Louis Jordan and his
Tympany Five. That week's chart listed only five records, four of which were by Jordan.[1] The following week, "
Ain't Nobody Here but Us Chickens", one of the two songs which had shared the top spot in the year's first issue, held it in its own right, and remained atop the listing without interruption through the issue of Billboard dated April 19, a total of 16 consecutive weeks at number one. Jordan also spent short spells at number one with "
Texas and Pacific" and "Jack You're Dead", and 14 weeks in the top spot with "
Boogie Woogie Blue Plate". Those five songs spent a total of 40 weeks at number one during the year, or 41 if the week of January 4 is double-counted. Jordan was by far the most successful artist of the 1940s on Billboard's R&B charts. His tally of 18 chart-toppers was a record which would stand until the 1980s, and he spent 113 weeks at number one,[a] a record which would still stand in the 21st century.[5] Jordan's success fell away in the 1950s, but his music is considered to have been hugely influential on the development of both R&B and
rock and roll.[6]
Only three acts other than Jordan topped the chart during 1947, all of whom did so for the first time. In May,
Savannah Churchill and the Sentimentalists reached number one with "
I Want to Be Loved". It would prove to be the only number one for Churchill, whose R&B chart career was short-lived and had come to an end by 1949.[7] Her backing group the Sentimentalists would change their name to
the Four Tunes and achieve R&B and pop success until the mid-1950s, but without any further number ones.[8][9] In Churchill's second week at number one, her single tied for the top spot with "
Old Maid Boogie" by
Eddie Vinson and his Orchestra, the first chart-topper and indeed first chart entry for Vinson, nicknamed "Cleanhead"; as with Churchill, it would be the only number one of his chart career, which was short-lived.[10][11] In November, "
(Opportunity Knocks But Once) Snatch and Grab It" gave
Julia Lee and her Boy Friends their first number one;[12] the single was the year's final chart-topper.
a. ^ Jordan's first 16 number ones occurred at a time when Billboard published only one R&B chart. His final two number ones occurred during a period when the magazine published two charts and each topped both listings, but the figure of 113 weeks at number one does not double-count weeks when he topped both.[64]
b. ^ Two songs tied for the number one position.