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List of Billboard Adult Contemporary number ones of 2004
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List of Billboard Adult Contemporary number ones of 2004

Two male guitarists and a drummer performing on stage in front of a small crowd
Los Lonely Boys topped the chart for 10 weeks in 2004 with "Heaven".

Adult Contemporary is a chart published by Billboard ranking the top-performing songs in the United States in the adult contemporary music (AC) market. In 2004, ten different songs topped the chart in 52 issues of the magazine, based on weekly airplay data from radio stations compiled by Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems.

In the first issue of Billboard of the new year, the number one song was "Sending You a Little Christmas" by pianist Jim Brickman with vocals by Kristy Starling, which moved into the top spot that week.[1] It spent a single week at number one before being displaced by "Drift Away" by Uncle Kracker featuring Dobie Gray. Having already spent a lengthy run at number one in 2003, the song ultimately achieved a total of 28 weeks in the top spot, a new record for the AC chart.[2] The longest run at number one in 2004 was achieved by "Heaven" by Chicano rock group Los Lonely Boys,[3] which spent ten consecutive weeks atop the chart. The song with the highest total number of weeks at number one, however, was "100 Years" by John Ondrasik, known under the stage name Five for Fighting,[4] which spent twelve non-consecutive weeks in the top spot.

The only act to have more than one number one in 2004 was singer Josh Groban. He first topped the chart for four weeks in March and April with his version of the Secret Garden song "You Raise Me Up",[5] which he had performed at Super Bowl XXXVIII in February, in a special NASA commemoration for the previous year's Space Shuttle Columbia disaster,[6][7] as well as on a special edition of Oprah Winfrey's TV show.[8] He returned to number one in December with "Believe", taken from the soundtrack of the animated film The Polar Express,[9] which was the final chart-topper of the year. Although "Believe" received a Grammy Award for Best Song Written for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media,[10] was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song,[11] and topped the Adult Contemporary chart, it did not enter Billboard's all-genre chart, the Hot 100, at all.[12] None of 2004's AC number ones topped the Hot 100; the top of the all-genre chart was dominated during the year by R&B and hip hop acts such as Usher and Outkast.[13]

Chart history

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A young man with collar-length dark-hair wearing a dark suit and dark shirt
Josh Groban topped the chart with "You Raise Me Up", which he performed at Super Bowl XXXVIII.
American rock band Train spent three weeks at number one with their song "Calling All Angels".
A woman with long blonde hair wearing a floral-patterned shirt and jeans holding a microphone on a stage
Sheryl Crow topped the chart with her version of "The First Cut Is the Deepest".
American singer Five For Fighting spent 12 weeks at number one with his song "100 Years".
A young woman with long dark hair wearing a dark sleeveless t-shirt, holding a microphone
"This One's for the Girls" was a number one for country singer Martina McBride.
Key
Billboard ranked "White Flag" by Dido as the best-performing AC song of 2004, though it never reached the top position.[14]
Issue date Title Artist(s) Ref.
January 3 "Sending You a Little Christmas" Jim Brickman with Kristy Starling [1]
January 10 "Drift Away" Uncle Kracker featuring Dobie Gray [15]
January 17 [16]
January 24 "Calling All Angels" Train [17]
January 31 "Drift Away" Uncle Kracker featuring Dobie Gray [18]
February 7 "Calling All Angels" Train [19]
February 14 "Forever and for Always" Shania Twain [20]
February 21 "Calling All Angels" Train [21]
February 28 "Forever and for Always" Shania Twain [22]
March 6 [23]
March 13 "You Raise Me Up" Josh Groban [24]
March 20 [25]
March 27 [26]
April 3 [27]
April 10 "The First Cut Is the Deepest" Sheryl Crow [28]
April 17 "You Raise Me Up" Josh Groban [29]
April 24 [30]
May 1 "The First Cut Is the Deepest" Sheryl Crow [31]
May 8 "100 Years" Five for Fighting [32]
May 15 [33]
May 22 [34]
May 29 [35]
June 5 [36]
June 12 [37]
June 19 [38]
June 26 [39]
July 3 "This One's for the Girls" Martina McBride [40]
July 10 [41]
July 17 "100 Years" Five for Fighting [42]
July 24 [43]
July 31 [44]
August 7 "This One's for the Girls" Martina McBride [45]
August 14 [46]
August 21 [47]
August 28 [48]
September 4 [49]
September 11 [50]
September 18 "100 Years" Five for Fighting [51]
September 25 "This One's for the Girls" Martina McBride [52]
October 2 "Heaven" Los Lonely Boys [53]
October 9 [54]
October 16 [55]
October 23 [56]
October 30 [57]
November 6 [58]
November 13 [59]
November 20 [60]
November 27 [61]
December 4 [62]
December 11 "Believe" Josh Groban [63]
December 18 [64]
December 25 [65]

See also

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References

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