Lil Uzi Vert has 22 songs on the latest Hot 100.
Pi’erre Bourne (real name Jordan Timothy Jenks) debuts at No. 1 on Billboard‘s Hot 100 Producers chart (dated March 28), thanks to four production credits on the latest Billboard Hot 100.
All four songs, which he solely produced, are on the deluxe edition of Lil Uzi Vert‘s new LP Eternal Atake, which, sparked by the new version (featuring 14 new tracks), logs its second week atop the Billboard 200 with 247,000 equivalent album units, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data.
Here’s a look at all four of Bourne’s production credits on the Hot 100:
Rank, Artist Billing, Title
No. 19, Lil Uzi Vert feat. Chief Keef, “Bean (Kobe)”
No. 26, Lil Uzi Vert & 21 Savage, “Yessirskiii”
No. 54, Lil Uzi Vert feat. Future, “Wassup”
No. 89, Lil Uzi Vert feat. Young Thug, “Money Spread”
Bourne dethrones Brandon Finessin (real name Brandon Veal), who ruled the Hot 100 Producers chart for one week (March 21), thanks to eight production credits that appeared on the Hot 100 a week earlier, also all from Eternal Atake.
Prior to Bourne’s four production credits on the current Hot 100, he had charted as a producer with eight songs, including tracks by 6ix9ine, Travis Scott, Kanye West and Young Thug.
As a solo artist, Bourne has charted two albums on the Billboard 200: Sli’merre, with Young Nudy, reached No. 63 in May 2019, and The Life of Pi’erre 4 peaked at No. 107 that July.
Bourne concurrently debuts at No. 6 on the Hot 100 Songwriters chart, as he also co-wrote the four tracks listed above.
Lil Uzi Vert (real name Symere Woods) logs his second week atop the Hot 100 Songwriters chart, powered by 22 songs on the Hot 100, all of which he co-wrote. Here’s a rundown:
Rank, Title (Songwriters in addition to Lil Uzi Vert)
No. 13, “Myron” (Jonathan Priester, Jordan T. Ortiz)
No. 19, “Bean (Kobe)” (Chief Keef, Pi’erre Bourne)
No. 26, “Yessirskiii” (21 Savage, Pi’erre Bourne)
No. 27, “Baby Pluto” (Brandon Finessin, Bugz Ronin, Cousin Vinny, Ike Beatz)
No. 37, “P2” (TM88)
No. 41, “That Way” (Jonathan Priester, Felipe Spain, Milan Modi, Andreas Carlsson, Max Martin)
No. 42, “Lo Mein” (Brandon Finessin, Bugz Ronin)
No. 45, “Lotus” (Jordan T. Ortiz, Treshaun Beats, Don Cannon)
No. 52, “Silly Watch” (Jonathan Priester)
No. 54, “Wassup” (Pi’erre Bourne, Future)
No. 60, “Strawberry Peels” (Young Thug, Wheezy, Gunna)
No. 62, “Moon Relate”
No. 66, “I Can Show You” (Jordan T. Ortiz)
No. 68, “Trap This Way (This Way)” (Jordan T. Ortiz)
No. 72, “Leaders” (NAV, Amir Cash, Mohkom Singh Bhangal)
No. 76, “No Auto”
No. 82, “Homecoming” (Bugz Ronin)
No. 83, “Come This Way” (Nicole Miglis, Paul Giese Garonzik, Trayer Tryon, Zach Tetreault)
No. 87, “Got the Guap” (Young Thug, Brandon Finessin, Tobias Dekker)
No. 89, “Money Spread” (Pi’erre Bourne)
No. 94, “Futsal Shuffle 2020” (Brandon Finessin, Star Boy, Cas van der Hijden, Mees van der Bruggen)
No. 95, “Prices” (Harold Harper, Travis Scott, Roget Chahayed, Kid Cudi, Swizz Beatz, Cashmere Cat, Hit-Boy, Starrah, Carlton Mays Jr.)
The weekly Hot 100 Songwriters and Hot 100 Producers charts are based on total points accrued by a songwriter and producer, respectively, for each attributed song that appears on the Hot 100; plus, genre-based songwriter and producer charts follow the same methodology based on corresponding “Hot”-named genre charts. As with Billboard’s yearly recaps, multiple writers or producers split points for each song equally (and the dividing of points will lead to occasional ties on rankings).
The full Hot 100 Songwriters and Hot 100 Producers charts, in addition to the full genre rankings, can be found on Billboard.com.