"Can't Buy Me Love" headed up a record week. Plus, remembering feats by Leona Lewis, Garth Brooks & ABBA.

Your weekly recap celebrating significant milestones from more than seven decades of Billboard chart history.

April 3, 2004

Kenny Chesney and Uncle Kracker's party anthem "When the Sun Goes Down" logged its first of five weeks at No. 1 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart.

April 4, 1964

The Fab Four's fab five: Songs by The Beatles infused the Billboard Hot 100's entire top five, the only week that an act has monopolized the chart's top five positions. "Can't Buy Me Love" zoomed 27-1, followed by "Twist and Shout" (3-2), "She Loves You" (1-3), "I Want to Hold Your Hand" (2-4) and "Please Please Me" (4-5). The headline on page 1 of Billboard that week? "Chart Crawls With Beatles."

April 5, 2008

Leona Lewis' debut smash "Bleeding Love" spent its first of four weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

April 6, 1991

Garth Brooks dealt the third Hot Country Songs No. 1 from his sophomore album No Fences, as "Two of a Kind, Workin' on a Full House" rose 2-1. He's tallied 19 career leaders (and is currently scaling the Country Airplay chart with his latest single, "Ask Me How I Know.")

April 7, 2001

Rap-rockers Crazy Town soared to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 with "Butterfly." The song had previously topped Alternative Songs for two weeks.

April 8, 2006

A lot of good came out of Daniel Powter having a "Bad Day": his song, as featured on American Idol in 2006 as contestants' departure theme, rose to the top of the Billboard Hot 100.