CLICK BELOW TO DISPLAY SECTIONS FOR
1957:

Labels Listed By
Billboard Top 20 Success:
Label Point Total 1957 Top Twenty 1957 Number Ones 1957
Dot 2122 12 5
RCA Victor 2091 15 5
Columbia 1511 15 2
Capitol 946 10 1
Cadence 921 5 2
Coral 675 5 1
Imperial 603 6 0
Roulette 593 5 2
Mercury 447 5 0
Fraternity 374 1 0
ABC-Paramount 371 4 1
Cameo 335 2 1
Atco 328 2 0
Specialty 250 4 0
Sun 249 2 0
Kapp 224 2 0
Keen 220 1 1
Chess 218 2 0
Brunswick 214 2 1
Atlantic 197 3 0
Glory 169 2 0
Decca 163 3 0
Aladdin 119 1 0
Phillips 111 1 0
Checker 108 1 0
Liberty 100 4 0
Verve 90 3 0
Jubilee 64 1 0
J & S 63 1 0
EPIC 44 1 0
Groove 40 1 0
Bally 28 1 0
Vik 8 1 0
LIN 5 2 0
Sparton 5 1 0
London 3 1 0
Main Line 1 1 0
Chancellor 1 1 0
LANCE 1 1 0
*The Power Points are based on how the record did in the weekly Billboard top twenty. For each week a record was in the top twenty it is awarded one point for each ranking slot -- the 20th ranked record would receive one point, while the top record would receive 20 points for that week. If a record is in the top ten, it received 5 bonus points and if a record was ranked #1, it received 5 bonus points. The power points for a label is the total of all the points earned by records from that label that made the top twenty for at least one week. The top twenty for 1956, 1957, and 1958 through July 28th are taken from the Top 100 chart which had been in use since 1955 in an effort to combine the Best Seller, Most Played by Jockeys, and Most Played by Jukeboxes charts. With the publication of the Hot 100, the Best Seller, the other charts were soon all abandoned and all top twenty listings from August 4th, 1958 through 1963 (end of the Elvis Era), are taken from the Billboard Hot 100.
Click on the appropriate button above to view an historical acccount of the record labels for the year, a chart ranking the popularity of the labels in the Billboard top twenty for the year, or a list of the labels that had records in the top twenty for the year.
Dot owed most of its top ranked success to Pat Boone who had two chart topping hits, but Tab Hunter also produced a #1 with his version of "Young Love."
While Elvis Presley was responsible for a large portion of RCA's success, old style crooner Perry Como also helped the label to achieve a #2 ranking in 1957.>
While Columbia got a lot of mileage out of Johnny Mathis in 1957, Marty Robbins' "A White Sport Coat" was also a big hit.