Top 2000

The Top 2000 is an annual Dutch marathon radio programme that plays the 2,000 most popular songs listeners have deemed the best of all time. The show runs 24 hours a day, starting Christmas and ending on New Year's Eve, functioning as a countdown to the new year. The show is hosted by national public radio station NPO Radio 2. A significant part of the population of the Netherlands listens to the broadcast each year; during the 2019 edition, NPO Radio 2 had a national radio market share of 17.7 percent. In regard of its popularity and notoriety, the show is often called de lijst der lijsten, the chart of charts.

The Top 2000, first held in 1999 to inaugurate the new millennium, was intended to be a one-time event. It became immensely popular. Following this success, Radio 2 decided to make it an annual programme.

The broadcast initially started at midnight on the day after Christmas (Tweede Kerstdag, also known as Boxing Day). From 2009 onwards, the show begins broadcasting on 25 December, Christmas Day. From 2009 to 2015, the show started at noon. From 2015 to 2018 the show started at 9:00, with 2019 starting at 8:00 in the morning and 2020 starting right after midnight. It continues until midnight of New Year's Eve.

The show is hosted in a temporary studio called the Top 2000 Café at the Netherlands Institute of Sound and Vision in Hilversum. Visitors are able to purchase a timed ticket to enter the studio. Because of the popularity of the show and the small size of the studio, visitors are only allowed to stay for a limited period of time. The tickets have been known to sell out quickly.

Voting
During the six-to-seven day broadcast, the station broadcasts a set of 2,000 songs that have been voted on by the show's audience through the Internet to be the "most popular songs of all time". The first year of voting was limited to a set list of 2000 songs that the users ranked themselves. Radio 2 changed the format in 2005 to allow voters to nominate their own suggestions. In 2008, Radio 2 used a different voting format: the votes from the previous nine years were compiled to create a "jubilee list" for the tenth anniversary of the radio show.

People can choose as few as five to as many as 35 songs. The voting period lasts one week, starting late November or early December. People can vote through the radio channel's website on any Internet device during this period. Hosts of the radio channel tour the Netherlands in a bus (stembus, which means 'ballot box', but literally translates to 'voting bus') during the period of voting to promote the show. People who visit the bus can also submit their songs there. People living in other countries can also vote for the Top 2000.

Voters can choose which version of a certain song they prefer. These include covers, live performances or full versions whose running time exceed mainstream radio standards. The eventual lineup of the program can contain multiple versions of one song. The longest song to have aired on the Top 2000 is "Echoes" by Pink Floyd, at 23 minutes and 31 seconds.

For listeners to know if or when their favourite songs get aired, the running order, which includes the date and time songs are set to air, is revealed at least a week prior to the start of the show's broadcast. Since the show is aired all day and night, it is not uncommon for some people to set their alarms to listen to certain songs on the show.

Visitors can enter the Top 2000 Café while the list is being broadcast, and tickets to visit go on sale before the list is released so that those in attendance will not know which songs will be played during their timeslot. As a result of the show's popularity, a ticket gives visitors access to the Top 2000 Café for just a 50-minute timeslot. In recent years, tickets can only be bought online and not at the door.

Other media
In 2002, the television show Top 2000 a Go-go was introduced to supplement the radio programme. The show contains quizzes, live performances and clips of various songs on the list, as well as interviews with performers and artists featured in the all-time charts. The following year they added Top 2000 in Concert, where various Dutch artists are invited to sing one of their favorite songs, along with one of their own songs. The concert is typically broadcast on New Year's Eve, right after the end of Top 2000. In 2019, Radio 2 DJs released a book about the Top 2000 to celebrate its twentieth anniversary, which was accompanied by a vinyl record.

Other public and commercial radio stations in the Netherlands often have their own take on the end-of-year countdown lists, and similar events have been held by radio stations abroad.

Snob 2000
Beginning in 2012, an alternative version of the Top 2000, the "Snob 2000", was created by writers of the Dutch music blog Ondergewaardeerde Liedjes (English: "Often Overlooked Songs"). Each year, the Snob 2000 receives between 60,000 to 75,000 votes. Only songs that are not currently on the formal Top 2000 list are eligible for the Snob 2000. In 2016, the full list was broadcast live on NPO 3FM KX, and since 2017, it airs live on Pinguin Radio. Co-founder Freek Janssen said, "The Snob 2000 started as a kind of joke. The Top 2000 drop-down list was far from complete at the time. For example, there was a lot to choose from the 70s and 80s, but more recent 'classics' were missing. Artists such as Queens of the Stone Age, Daft Punk and Arctic Monkeys were not even represented in the drop-down list at all. Radio 2 has now made a catch-up, because hundreds of songs have now made the switch to the Top 2000."

Starting from 2019, songs that have previously made the number one spot can no longer be voted on, in order to keep the list fresh. These previous winners include: Bruce Springsteen's "Jungleland" (2012), Queens of the Stone Age's "No One Knows" (2013), Arcade Fire's "Rebellion (Lies)" (2014–15), Radiohead's "Exit Music (For a Film)" (2016–18), Porcupine Tree's "Arriving Somewhere But Not Here" (2019) and "Anesthetize" (2022), The War on Drugs' "An Ocean in Between the Waves" (2020) and dEUS' "Instant Street" (2021).

Current

 * Bart Arens (since 2015)
 * Wouter van der Goes (since 2014)
 * Desiree van der Heiden (since 2022)
 * Frank van 't Hof (since 2015)
 * Jeroen van Inkel (since 2020)
 * Jeroen Kijk in de Vegte (2001–2002, since 2020)
 * Morad El Ouakili (since 2022)
 * Paul Rabbering (2018–2020, since 2022)
 * Jan-Willem Roodbeen (2006–2012, 2014–2018, since 2020)
 * Annemieke Schollaardt (since 2017)
 * Gijs Staverman (since 2013)
 * Ruud de Wild (since 2016)
 * Emmely de Wilt (since 2019)

Former

 * Marc Adriani (2009–2012, 2014)
 * Giel Beelen (2020-2021)
 * Jurgen van den Berg (2011)
 * Leo Blokhuis (2019)
 * Carolien Borgers (2020-2021)
 * Cobus Bosscha (2009)
 * Evelien de Bruijn (2016–2018)
 * Daniël Dekker (1999–2008, 2011, 2013)
 * Gerard Ekdom (2015–2017)
 * Sjors Fröhlich (1999)
 * Sander Guis (2011–2013)
 * Bert Haandrikman (2002–2015)
 * Sander de Heer (2007–2014)
 * Tom Herlaar (2004)
 * Marisa Heutink (2016)
 * Ruud Hermans (2001, 2003–2004)
 * Corné Klijn (2011, 2015)
 * Kasper Kooij (2012–2013)
 * Bert Kranenbarg (1999–2008, 2010, 2012)
 * Pedro van Looij (2000–2001)
 * Ferry Maat (1999–2000)
 * Riks Ozinga (2001–2002)
 * Hans Schiffers (1999–2014)
 * Cielke Sijben (2017)
 * Hans Smit (2004–2006)
 * Frits Spits (1999–2000, 2002, 2005–2008)
 * Stefan Stasse (1999–2010, 2012, 2015–2018)
 * Ron Stoeltie (1999–2002, 2004–2008)
 * Henk van Steeg (2011–2013)
 * Rob Stenders (2009, 2015–2016, 2018–2019)
 * Harjo Thijs (1999)
 * Roderick Veelo (2003)
 * Rick van Velthuysen (2018–2019, 2021)
 * Jasper de Vries (2014–2015)
 * Alfred van de Wege (2010–2012)
 * Jeffrey Willems (1999–2000, 2002–2005)

Notable occurrences within the list
"Bohemian Rhapsody" by Queen has traditionally been voted the most popular song on the countdown, with Boudewijn de Groot's "Avond" achieving the top spot in 2005 (as the first Dutch and currently only Dutch-language song to do so) and the Eagles' "Hotel California" doing the same in 2010 and 2014. "Roller Coaster" by Dutch singer Danny Vera surprisingly ended up on the #1 spot for the 2020 edition, after having been the highest debuting song of all time the previous year at #4.

Up until 2018, The Beatles consistently occupied the most spots in the list, but in 2019, Queen took over the role as the Top 2000's main supplier with 37 songs.

The song with the highest position in its debut year in the list (from 2000 onwards) is "Roller Coaster", from Dutch country singer Danny Vera in 2019, entering in fourth place. The highest-scoring foreign newcomer was Adele with "Someone Like You" in 2011, placing sixth.

Some songs enter or get a higher placement because of certain events. On 27 November 2015, it was announced that John Lennon's song "Imagine" was voted number one for the first time, in association with the piano act of Davide Martello after the November 2015 Paris attacks. In 2019, farmers across the Netherlands protested against regulations limiting nitrogen emissions. In support of those farmers, a farmers' alliance called people on social media to vote for "De boer dat is de keerl" (The Farmer, That's The Man) of the Dutch band Normaal. This resulted in the song entering the list that year in ninth place. In 2021, "A Whiter Shade of Pale" by Procol Harum jumped up 150 spots to number three after the murder of crime reporter Peter R. de Vries, who listed the song as his favourite and had it played at his funeral.

Current events have also caused songs to drop on the list. In 2021, rumors about Marco Borsato's inappropriate behavior led to four of his songs falling off the list entirely. In 2022, Borsato was officially accused of sexual assault, and his songs all dropped by an average of 375 spots.

Social media are also used by voters to get a song into the list of all lists. A notable example is the Pokémon Theme, which entered the chart in 2015 after a successful Facebook campaign and has remained on the chart since.

In 2023, the entire top 10 remained in the same position as the year before, for the first time. In honor of the list's 25th anniversary in 2023, the songs which ranked 2,001 to 2,500 were also published as De Extra 500 and broadcast on NPO Radio 2 from 11 to 15 December.