Train's "Hey, Soul Sister" and "California Gurls" by 
Katy Perry featuring 
Snoop Dogg  are locked in an extremely tight race to wind up as the song with the  most paid downloads in 2010. With just three weeks to go in  Nielsen/SoundScan's chart year, the two songs are just 2,000 units  apart. "Hey, Soul Sister" has sold 4,154,000 digital copies so far this  year. "California Gurls" has sold 4,152,000. Train's best hope of  retaining its slim lead is that a quintessential summer song like  "California Gurls" may have limited appeal in the closing weeks of  December.
"Hey, Soul Sister" headed the year-to-date chart from  the beginning of April through the end of October. "California Gurls"  pushed ahead in the week ending Nov. 7. "Hey, Soul Sister" regains the  lead this week. The song received two big boosts in recent weeks.  It  was featured in an episode of 
Glee on Nov. 30. The following night, Train performed it on the Grammy nominations special.
No  matter which song winds up on top three weeks from now, "Hey, Soul  Sister" is a bigger hit overall. It sold an additional 687K copies in  2009, which made it that year's #131 song.

"California  Gurls" exemplified one of the year's hottest trends: the collaboration.  Five of the top 10 songs so far this year (and 10 of the top 20) pair  two artists who don't normally record together.
[
Photos: Katy Perry's Crazy Costumes] 

"Hey, Soul Sister" also exemplified one of the year's notable trends: the name-drop. The song mentions 
Madonna and 
Mr. Mister. "TiK ToK" gave a name-check to 
Mick Jagger and 
P. Diddy. "Billionaire" mentions 
Oprah, Angelina Jolie, Brad Pitt and
 President Obama. "I Like It" also refers to Barack and 
Michelle Obama, as well as 
Tiger Woods and 
Jesse James.
Bruno Mars is the only artist with three of the year's top 20 hits. His own smash "Just The Way You Are" is #13. 
Travie McCoy's "Billionaire" and 
B.o.B's  "Nothin' On You," on which Mars is featured, rank #15 and #16,  respectively. Mars will wind up as the first artist with three of the  year's top 20 songs since 2008, when 
Rihanna had four of the top 20.
Eminem and
 Taio Cruz  are the only artists with two songs each in the year-to-date top 10.  Both are represented with one solo hit and one collaboration.
It's remarkable that a generation of pop fans will think first of 
Katy Perry and 
Bruno Mars when  they hear the titles "California Gurls" and "Just The Way You Are."  Older fans have vivid memories of hit songs with the same titles by 
the Beach Boys and 
Billy Joel, respectively. (But the new songs were substantially bigger hits. Both had long runs at #1. The oldies both peaked at #3.)
Here  are the 20 songs that have sold the most digital copies so far this  year. The tally after the title is the total number of copies the song  has sold through the week ending Dec. 12. Some of these hits sold  additional copies prior to this chart year (which began with the week  ending Jan. 10). If a song ranked among the top 200 songs of 2009, I  show its 2009 ranking and sales tally. At the end of each entry, I show  the song's peak position on the Hot 100 and the number of weeks it held  that spot.

1. 
Train,  "Hey, Soul Sister," 4,154,000. This likeable tune is the group's  biggest hit to date, surpassing its 2001 hit "Drops Of Jupiter (Tell  Me)." "Hey, Soul Sister" sold an additional 687K copies in 2009, which  made it that year's #131 song. Peak: #3.

2.
 Katy Perry featuring
 Snoop Dogg,  "California Gurls," 4,152,000. This irresistible popsicle, which topped  the charts in both the U.S. and the U.K., is the year's top  collaboration. This will be the second time in the past three years that  Perry has had a hit in the year-end top five. "I Kissed A Girl" was #4  for 2008. Peak: #1 for six weeks.
[
Photos: Snoop Dogg volunteers at a community center in Manchester, England] 

3. 
Eminem featuring 
Rihanna,  "Love The Way You Lie," 4,003,000. This smash is vying for Grammys for  both Record and Song of the Year. It's Eminem's longest-running #1 hit  since "Lose Yourself."  It ties "Umbrella" as Rihanna's longest-running  #1 to date. Peak: #1 for seven weeks.

4. 
B.o.B featuring
 Hayley Williams, "Airplanes," 3,855,000. This was the biggest of B.o.B's three hits and the biggest hit ever for the lead singer of 
Paramore. This hit #1 in the U.K. Peak: #2.

5. 
Taio Cruz, "Dynamite," 3,663,000. This is the year's biggest hit by a male solo artist. This hit #1 in the U.K. Peak: #2.

6. 
Usher featuring
 will.i.am,  "OMG," 3,633,000. Peak: #1. This ebullient smash, which hit #1 in both  the U.S. and the U.K., is the year's biggest collaboration by two male  artists. Peak: #1 for four weeks.

7. 
Eminem,  "Not Afraid," 3,158,000. This anthemic smash was Eminem's first solo #1  hit on the Hot 100 since "Lose Yourself." Peak: #1 for one week.

8. 
Taio Cruz featuring
 Ludacris,  "Break Your Heart," 3,146,000. Ludacris was added to the U.S. remix of  the song. A solo version by Cruz topped the U.K. chart for three weeks  in September and October. Peak: #1 for one week.

9. 
Lady Antebellum,  "Need You Now," 3,084,000. This heartfelt ballad, a Grammy finalist for  both Record and Song of the Year, is the year's biggest country hit. It  sold an additional 1,325,000 copies in 2009, which made it that year's  #57 song. Peak: #2.

10. 
Ke$ha,  "TiK ToK," 2,913,000. This is the year's biggest hit by a female solo  artist. It sold an additional 2,443,000 copies in 2009, which made it  that year's #17 song. It has sold 5,346,000 total copies, more than any  other song on this list. (Only six songs in digital history have sold  more.) Peak: #1 for nine weeks.

11. 
The Black Eyed Peas,  "Imma Be," 2,814,000. The Peas had the top two songs on the year-end  Digital Songs chart for 2009: "Boom Boom Pow" and "I Gotta Feeling."  Peak: #1 for two weeks.

12. 
Enrique Iglesias featuring 
Pitbull,  "I Like It," 2,790,000. This genre-bending smash was Iglesias' first  top 10 hit since "Hero" in 2001. It was the Latin/pop star's fourth top  10 hit and the third for the reggaeton rapper. The song borrowed a riff  from 
Lionel Richie's "All Night Long (All Night)." Peak: #4.

13. 
Bruno Mars,  "Just The Way You Are," 2,747,000. Mars proved he could fly solo with  this sweet song, which hit #1 in both the U.S. and the U.K. (In the  U.K., it carries the subtitle "Amazing" to differentiate it from 
Billy Joel's 1978 smash.) Peak: #1 for four weeks.

14. 
Katy Perry,  "Teenage Dream," 2,676,000. Perry followed "California Gurls" with this  terrific single. This will be the second time in the past three years  that Perry will have two songs in the year-end top 15. 
Darren Criss' distinctive version on 
Glee also made waves. Peak: #1 for two weeks.

15. 
Travie McCoy featuring 
Bruno Mars, "Billionaire," 2,632,000. This charmer is the biggest hit ever for the lead singer of 
Gym Class Heroes, surpassing 2007's "Cupid's Chokehold," which also reached #4 on the Hot 100. Peak: #4.

16. 
B.o.B featuring
 Bruno Mars,  "Nothin' On You," 2,604,000. This smash, a Grammy finalist for Record  of the Year, reached #1 in both the U.S. and the U.K. It combines the  old-school romanticism of 
Smokey Robinson with a modern, hip-hop sensibility. Peak: #1 for two weeks.

17. 
Ke$ha,  "Your Love Is My Drug," 2,570,000. This is the year's third biggest hit  by a female solo artist. Impressively, Ke$ha sings two of these three  songs. Peak: #4.

18. 
Justin Bieber featuring
 Ludacris,  "Baby," 2,568,000. This catchy tune was Bieber's first top five hit. It  gives Ludacris featured billing on two of the year's top 20 songs.  Peak: #5.

19. 
Far*East Movement featuring
 Cataracs & 
Dev, "Like A G6," 2,480,000. This is the year's biggest techno smash. Peak: #1 for three weeks.

20. 
Jason Derulo,  "In My Head," 2,390,000. This hit reached #1 in the U.K. Derulo's  previous hit, "Whatcha Say," was #10 on the year-end Digital Songs chart  for 2009. Peak: #5.
To My Readers: Check back tomorrow  for the top 10 albums for the year-to-date and six other albums that  have achieved noteworthy distinctions. I'll even throw in the top video.  I'll update every single number in both of these pieces (gulp) after  the final charts come in on Jan. 5. Check back that day and see the  final, official tallies. 
 
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