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20 Jul 2020 Music Now!

DaBaby’s ‘Rockstar’ No. 1 on Hot 100 For Sixth Week, Juice WRLD Becomes Third Act Ever with Five Songs in Top 10 Simultaneously

Juice WRLD joins Drake and The Beatles as the only acts to occupy half of the top 10 at once.

DaBaby‘s “Rockstar,” featuring Roddy Ricch, logs a sixth week at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, while the late Juice WRLD joins exclusive company historically in the top 10.

Juice WRLD lands five songs in the Hot 100’s top 10, matching Drake and The Beatles as the only acts ever to claim at least half the region in a single week. All five tracks are from his LP Legends Never Die, which launches at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart with the biggest week, in terms of equivalent album units, of 2020.

Juice WRLD died at age 21 on Dec. 8, 2019, with the cause of death announced in January.

Let’s run down the top 10 of the newest Hot 100, which blends all-genre U.S. streaming, radio airplay and sales data. All charts (dated July 25) will update on Billboard.com tomorrow (July 21).

‘Rockstar’ rules: “Rockstar,” released on SouthCoast/Interscope Records, dips to No. 2 on the Streaming Songs chart, after eight weeks at No. 1, with 39 million U.S. streams, down 8%, in the week ending July 16, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data. It drops 2-3 on Digital Song Sales, with 11,000 sold, down 16%, in the same span. On Radio Songs, it rises 5-3 with 59 million airplay audience impressions, up 9%, in the week ending July 19.

“Rockstar” concurrently rules the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Songs charts, which use the same multi-metric formula as the Hot 100, for a sixth week each.

Juice WRLD has half of Hot 100’s top 10: Juice WRLD sends five songs into the Hot 100’s top 10, led by “Come & Go,” with Marshmello, a debut at No. 2. Three other tracks enter the chart in the top tier: “Wishing Well,” at No. 5; “Conversations,” at No. 7; and “Hate the Other Side,” also with Marshmello and featuring Polo G and The Kid LAROI, at No. 10. Plus, “Life’s a Mess,” with Halsey, vaults from No. 74 to No. 9 in its second week on the chart.

With those five entries, Juice WRLD becomes just the third act with at least five songs in the top 10 simultaneously in the Hot 100’s 62-year history. Drake charted a record seven songs in the top 10 on July 14, 2018, while The Beatles posted five each on April 4 and 11, 1964; on the former list, the group infused the entire top five, a feat that has yet to be repeated.

Top 10 totals: Juice WRLD’s count of Hot 100 top 10s swells to eight, as he previously reached the region with “Lucid Dreams” (No. 2 peak, October 2018); “Bandit,” with YoungBoy Never Broke Again (No. 10, October 2019); and “Godzilla,” by Eminem featuring Juice WRLD (No. 3). Juice WRLD, thus, ties his best Hot 100 rank, as “Come & Go” matches the high of “Lucid Dreams.”

Marshmello adds his second Hot 100 top 10 via “Come & Go,” likewise tying his top rank, after “Happier,” with Bastille, hit No. 2 in February 2019.

“Life’s a Mess” marks Halsey’s sixth Hot 100 top 10, while “Hate the Other Side” brings Polo G and The Kid LAROI their first trip each to the bracket.

Record-tying four top 10 debuts: Juice WRLD ties the record for the most simultaneous top 10 Hot 100 debuts, thanks to “Come & Go,” “Wishing Well,” “Conversations” and “Hate the Other Side,” at Nos. 2, 5, 7 and 10, respectively. Lil Wayne sent four songs onto the chart in the top 10 on Oct. 13, 2018, after Drake first premiered a quartet of titles in the top 10 on July 14, 2018.

No. 1 in streaming: “Come & Go” opens atop Streaming Songs, becoming Juice WRLD’s third leader (after “Lucid Dreams” and “Bandit”) and Marshmello’s first, registering 36.4 million streams in the tracking week. (Note that while that sum is lower than the 39 million for “Rockstar,” the former ranks at No. 1 on Streaming Songs and the latter places at No. 2 due to the application of weighting of paid subscription, ad-supported and programmed streams.) On Digital Song Sales, “Come & Go” opens at No. 2, with 12,000 sold.

Interscope’s six-pack: All five of Juice WRLD’s new Hot 100 top 10s are on Grade A/Interscope. As they join DaBaby’s “Rockstar,” Interscope boasts six songs in the top 10. That’s the most for a label in a single week since Republic also claimed six on the chart dated Sept. 21, 2019. Republic additionally logged six top 10s on charts dated May 18, 2019; Oct. 13, 2018; and July 28, 2018, the most since the label landed seven, all by Drake, on, again, July 14, 2018.

Republic also tallied six simultaneous Hot 100 top 10s on May 12, 2018, the first such occurrence since Interscope achieved the feat on Oct. 13, 2007, with: Soulja Boy Tell’em’s “Crank That (Soulja Boy)” (No. 1); Timbaland’s “The Way I Are,” featuring Keri Hilson (No. 4); Fergie’s “Big Girls Don’t Cry” (No. 5); Timbaland’s “Apologize,” featuring OneRepublic (No. 6); Feist’s “1234” (No. 8); and Keyshia Cole’s “Let It Go,” featuring Missy Elliott and Lil Kim (No. 9).

Alt apex: “Come & Go” concurrently premieres atop the multi-metric Hot Rock & Alternative Songs and Hot Alternative Songs charts, marking the first No. 1 on each ranking for both Juice WRLD and Marshmello. (The former chart was recently revamped, while the latter list began.)

Jack Harlow’s “Whats Poppin,” featuring DaBaby, Tory Lanez and Lil Wayne, holds at No. 3 on the Hot 100, after reaching No. 2 two weeks ago, and The Weeknd’s “Blinding Lights” backtracks 2-4, following its four-week reign.

“Blinding Lights” leads Radio Songs for a 15th week (76.4 million in audience, down 1%), becoming one of only five songs with a reign of at least that long and moving to within a week of tying for the second-longest command since the chart started in December 1990. Here’s an updated recap of the longest-leading Radio Songs No. 1s:

Weeks at No. 1, Title, Artist, Date Reached No. 1
18, “Iris,” Goo Goo Dolls, Aug. 1, 1998
16, “Girls Like You,” Maroon 5 feat. Cardi B, Aug. 4, 2018
16, “We Belong Together,” Mariah Carey, May 28, 2005
16, “Don’t Speak,” No Doubt, Dec. 7, 1996
15, “Blinding Lights,” The Weeknd, April 18, 2020
14, “High Hopes,” Panic! at the Disco, Dec. 1, 2018
14, “No One,” Alicia Keys, Nov. 3, 2007
14, “Because You Loved Me,” Celine Dion, April 13, 1996

“Blinding Lights” tops the multi-metric Hot R&B Songs chart for an 18th week.

Elsewhere in the Hot 100’s top 10, Megan Thee Stallion’s former one-week leader “Savage,” featuring Beyoncé, slips 4-6 and SAINt JHN’s “Roses” descends 5-8, after hitting No. 4, while leading the Hot Dance/Electronic Songs chart for a 12th week.

For all chart news, you can follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both Twitter and Instagram. And again, be sure to visit Billboard.com tomorrow (July 21), when all charts, including the Hot 100 in its entirety, will refresh.

Source: billboard.com

19 Jul 2020 Music Now!

Juice WRLD’s ‘Legends Never Die’ Debuts at No. 1 on Billboard 200 with Biggest Week of 2020

Set also launches with fourth-largest streaming week ever.

Juice WRLD’s Legends Never Die makes a smashing debut at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, capturing the largest week of 2020 for any album, as it earned 497,000 equivalent album units in the U.S. in the week ending July 16, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data.

The set registers the largest streaming week of 2020, and the fourth-largest streaming frame ever for an album.

Legends Never Die is the late artist’s second No. 1 album, following 2019’s Death Race for Love, which opened atop the list dated March 23, 2019, with 165,000 units earned.Legends Never Die was released via Grade A/Interscope Records on July 10. It’s Juice WRLD’s first release since his death on Dec. 8, 2019.

The Billboard 200 chart ranks the most popular albums of the week in the U.S. based on multi-metric consumption as measured in equivalent album units. Units comprise album sales, track equivalent albums (TEA) and streaming equivalent albums (SEA). The new July 25-dated chart (where Legends Never Die starts at No. 1) will be posted in full on Billboard‘s website on July 21.

Legends Never Die’s debut of 497,000 equivalent album units is powered by 283,000 SEA units (equating to 422.63 million on-demand streams of the tracks on the album), 209,000 in album sales (supported largely by over 100 merchandise/album bundle offers) and 3,000 in TEA units.

Biggest Week of 2020 for an Album by Units: With 497,000 units earned, Legends Never Die captures 2020’s biggest week for an album, by equivalent album units earned. It beats the previous high, logged by the arrival of The Weeknd’s After Hours, when it bowed at No. 1 with 444,000 units on the chart dated April 4. The last album to notch a larger week than Legends was Taylor Swift’s Lover, when it entered at No. 1 on the Sept. 7, 2019-dated list with 867,000 units.

Biggest Week for a Hip-Hop Album or by a Male Artist in Nearly Two Years: The last hip-hop album, or effort by a male artist, to capture a bigger week than Legends Never Die, was Travis Scott’s Astroworld, when it debuted at No. 1 on the Aug. 18, 2018-dated chart with 537,000 units.

Since January 2018, the only albums, of any genre, that logged a week as large as Legends were Swift’s Lover, Astroworld, and Drake’s Scorpion (732,000; July 14, 2018), and all in their debut weeks.

Biggest Streaming Week of 2020 & Fourth Largest Streaming Week Ever: Legends Never Die’s first week was led by blockbuster streaming figures, as the album’s tracks logged 422.63 million on-demand streams in the U.S. in the week ending July 16. That’s the largest streaming week of 2020 for any album, and the fourth-biggest streaming week ever for an album.

Legends’ streaming launch surpasses 2020’s previous record, earned by the arrival of Lil Uzi Vert’s Eternal Atake, when it started with 400.42 million streams (No. 1; March 21). In terms of the all-time streaming records, the only weeks that are larger than Legends are the debut frames of Drake’s Scorpion (745.92 million; July 14, 2018), Lil Wayne’s Tha Carter V (433.02 million; Oct. 13, 2018) and Post Malone’s Beerbongs & Bentleys (431.34 million; May 12, 2018).L

Legends Never Die replaces Pop Smoke’s Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. The latter title – another posthumously released effort — slips to No. 2 in its second week with 110,000 equivalent album units earned (down 56 percent). With Juice WRLD following Pop Smoke at No. 1, it’s the first time two acts have gone back-to-back at No. 1 on the chart with posthumous releases. It’s also the first time the top two on the tally are occupied by posthumously released albums.

At No. 3 on the new Billboard 200, the original Broadway cast recording of Hamilton: An American Musical falls one spot with 95,000 equivalent album units earned (down 7 percent). The album posts a gain in streaming activity for the week (72,000 SEA units earned; up 8 percent), as the filmed version of the Broadway show continues to stream on Disney+ (following its July 3 premiere on the service).

Four former No. 1s are next up on the chart, as Lil Baby’s My Turn dips 3-4 (58,000 equivalent album units earned; down 7 percent), Post Malone’s Hollywood’s Bleeding is steady at No. 5 (34,000; down 5 percent), DaBaby’s Blame It On Baby descends 4-6 (33,000; down 8 percent) and Harry Styles’ Fine Line is a non-mover at No. 7 (28,000 units; down 4 percent).

Summer Walker collects her second top 10 album, as Life On Earth debuts at No. 8 with just under 28,000 equivalent album units earned. Of that sum, 24,000 are in SEA units, 3,000 are in album sales and a negligible figure is in TEA units. The five-track Life On Earth project, billed as an EP, follows her previous top 10, the 18-track Over It, which debuted and peaked at No. 2 on the Oct. 19, 2019-dated chart.

Closing out the new top 10, The Weeknd’s former No. 1 After Hours falls 6-9 with 27,000 equivalent album units earned (down 8 percent) and Polo G’s The Goat slips 8-10 with nearly 27,000 units (down 6 percent).

Source: billboard.com

13 Jul 2020 Music Now!

DaBaby’s ‘Rockstar’ Rules Hot 100 For Fifth Week, Pop Smoke’s ‘For the Night’ Debuts in Top 10

Lil Baby & DaBaby are featured on the late Pop Smoke’s first top 10.

DaBaby‘s “Rockstar,” featuring Roddy Ricch, posts a fifth week at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Plus, late rapper Pop Smoke ranks in the Hot 100’s top 10 for the first time, as “For the Night,” featuring Lil Baby and DaBaby, debuts at No. 6. The song is from Pop Smoke’s first official full-length album, Shoot For the Stars Aim For the Moon, which launches at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart.

Let’s run down the top 10 of the newest Hot 100, which blends all-genre U.S. streaming, radio airplay and sales data. All charts (dated July 18) will update on Billboard.com tomorrow (July 14).

“Rockstar,” released on SouthCoast/Interscope Records, tallies an eighth week at No. 1 on the Streaming Songs chart, with 42.4 million U.S. streams, down 3%, in the week ending July 9, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data. It rises 3-2 on Digital Song Sales, although with a 16% decline to 13,000 sold in the same span. On Radio Songs, it surges 10-5 with 54.2 million airplay audience impressions, up 17%, in the week ending July 12, good for top Airplay Gainer honors on the Hot 100.

Notably, Roddy Ricch boasts the two longest-leading Hot 100 No. 1s of 2020 (encompassing 12 total No. 1s so far this year: 10 that have spent their first weeks on top since January and two that first led in 2019). Before the five-week reign of “Rockstar,” Roddy Ricch’s solo smash “The Box” dominated for 11 weeks; “Rockstar” breaks out of a second-place tie with The Weeknd’s four-week leader “Blinding Lights.”

“Rockstar” concurrently rules the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Songs charts, which use the same multi-metric formula as the Hot 100, for a fifth week each.

The Weeknd’s “Blinding Lights” lifts 3-2 on the Hot 100. It leads Radio Songs for a 14th week (77.3 million, essentially even week-over-week), tying for the fifth-longest command since the chart began in December 1990. Here’s a recap of the longest-leading Radio Songs No. 1s:

Weeks at No. 1, Title, Artist, Date Reached No. 1
18, “Iris,” Goo Goo Dolls, Aug. 1, 1998
16, “Girls Like You,” Maroon 5 feat. Cardi B, Aug. 4, 2018
16, “We Belong Together,” Mariah Carey, May 28, 2005
16, “Don’t Speak,” No Doubt, Dec. 7, 1996
14, “Blinding Lights,” The Weeknd, April 18, 2020
14, “High Hopes,” Panic! at the Disco, Dec. 1, 2018
14, “No One,” Alicia Keys, Nov. 3, 2007
14, “Because You Loved Me,” Celine Dion, April 13, 1996

“Blinding Lights” leads the multi-metric Hot R&B Songs chart for a 17th week, moving to within three frames of matching the longest No. 1 run on that chart, which started in October 2012. The Weeknd’s own “Starboy,” featuring Daft Punk, shares the record of 20 weeks at No. 1 (in 2016-17) with Bruno Mars’ “That’s What I Like” (2017) and Drake’s “One Dance,” featuring WizKid and Kyla (2016).

Jack Harlow’s “Whats Poppin,” featuring DaBaby, Tory Lanez and Lil Wayne, dips to No. 3 on the Hot 100, after reaching No. 2 a week ago; Megan Thee Stallion’s former one-week leader “Savage,” featuring Beyoncé, holds at No. 4; and SAINt JHN’s “Roses” keeps at No. 5, after hitting No. 4.

Late rapper Pop Smoke appears in the Hot 100’s top 10 for the first time, as “For the Night,” featuring Lil Baby and DaBaby, debuts at No. 6. The song is from Pop Smoke’s first full-length, Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon, which bows at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. The track arrives at No. 2 on Streaming Songs (27.6 million) and No. 18 on Digital Song Sales (5,000).

With the track, Lil Baby adds his fifth Hot 100 top 10 and DaBaby earns his fourth.

Meanwhile, DaBaby ranks in three of the Hot 100’s top six spots, thanks to “Rockstar” (No. 1), “Whats Poppin” (No. 3) and “For the Night” (No. 6). He becomes just the seventh act in the Hot 100’s nearly 62-year history to have charted at least three songs in the top six slots simultaneously, after The Beatles (who did so for nine weeks in 1964), 50 Cent (seven, 2005), Drake (six, 2018), Justin Bieber (five, 2015-16), Ariana Grande (one week, 2019) and Usher (one, 2004). DaBaby is the first artist to earn the honor since Grande, who claimed the top three on Feb. 23, 2019 (becoming the second act, after The Beatles, in 1964, to collect such a triple at the top).

The news of Pop Smoke’s new chart successes follows the July 9 arrests of five people in connection with his Feb. 19 murder. The Brooklyn artist (real name: Bashar Barakah Jackson) died, at age 20, at his Hollywood Hills home of a gunshot wound after suspects with masks entered the residence and shot him.

Harry Styles’ “Watermelon Sugar” hits a new Hot 100 high (8-7), while Lil Mosey’s “Blueberry Faygo” also ascends a spot to a new best (9-8). Rounding out the top 10, Doja Cat’s former one-week No. 1 “Say So” drops 6-9 and Justin Bieber’s “Intentions,” featuring Quavo, slides 7-10, after reaching No. 5.

For all chart news, you can follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both Twitter and Instagram. And again, be sure to visit Billboard.com tomorrow (July 14), when all charts, including the Hot 100 in its entirety, will refresh.

Source: billboard.com

12 Jul 2020 Music Now!

Pop Smoke’s ‘Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon’ Debuts at No. 1 on Billboard 200 Albums Chart

It’s the first posthumous No. 1 since December 2018.

Pop Smoke’s Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon debuts at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, giving the late rapper his first chart-topping effort. The set was released on July 3 via Victor Victor Worldwide/Republic Records and bows with 251,000 equivalent album units earned in the U.S. in the week ending July 9, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data.

Shoot for the Stars is billed as Pop Smoke’s first studio album, following a pair of mixtapes: Meet the Woo, V.1 and Meet the Woo, V.2. The latter became his first top 10 when it debuted and peaked at No. 7 on the Feb. 22-dated chart.

The Billboard 200 chart ranks the most popular albums of the week in the U.S. based on multi-metric consumption as measured in equivalent album units. Units comprise album sales, track equivalent albums (TEA) and streaming equivalent albums (SEA). The new July 18-dated chart (where Shoot for the Stars debuts at No. 1) will be posted in full on Billboard‘s website on July 14.

News of Shoot for the Stars’ No. 1 arrival comes shortly after five people were arrested on July 9 in connection with Pop Smoke’s murder on Feb. 19. The 20-year-old Brooklyn artist (real name: Bashar Barakah Jackson) died at his Hollywood Hills home of a gunshot wound after suspects with masks entered the residence and shot him.

Shoot for the Stars’ launch of 251,000 equivalent album units is powered by 190,000 SEA units (equating to 268.44 million on-demand streams of the 19 tracks on the album), 59,000 in album sales (supported by an array of merchandise/album bundle offers) and 3,000 in TEA units.

Sixth Biggest Week of 2020: All told, Shoot for the Stars’ haul of 251,000 units marks the sixth-biggest week of 2020 for any album, and the third-largest for a hip-hop album. It trails the debut weeks of The Weeknd’s After Hours (April 4-dated chart; 444,000 units), BTS’ Map of the Soul: 7 (March 7; 422,000), Lil Uzi Vert’s Eternal Atake (March 21; 288,000), Eminem’s Music to Be Murdered By (Feb. 1; 279,000) and Lady Gaga’s Chromatica (June 13; 274,000).

Fourth Largest Streaming Week of 2020: Shoot for the Stars’ bow of 190,000 SEA units — and 268.44 million streams — is the fourth-largest streaming week of 2020. It’s surpassed only by the debut week of Lil Uzi Vert’s Eternal Atake (March 21-dated chart; 278,000 SEA units; 400.42 million streams), the second week of Eternal (March 28; 239,000 SEA units; 348.72 million streams) and the debut frame of Drake’s Dark Lane Demo Tapes (May 16; 201,000 SEA units; 269.10 million streams).

First Posthumous No. 1 Album Since December 2018: Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon is the first posthumous album to reach No. 1 since XXXTentacion’s Skins opened atop the chart dated Dec. 22, 2018 (with 132,000 equivalent album units). The hip-hop artist died on June 18 of that year. Pop Smoke and XXXTentacion are two of four hip-hop artists with posthumous No. 1s. They follow The Notorious B.I.G. and 2Pac, who each have three posthumous leaders.

At No. 2 on the new Billboard 200, the original Broadway cast recording of Hamilton: An American Musical surges to a new peak, as the album vaults from No. 14 with 102,000 equivalent album units earned (up 294 percent). Of that sum, 32,000 are in album sales (up 592 percent).

The album is basking in the glow of the July 3 Disney+ streaming premiere of the filmed version of the Broadway stage show, with most of the original Broadway cast.

Of Hamilton’s unit haul of 102,000 for the week, 67,000 are in SEA units (equating to 90.41 million on-demand streams for the set’s tracks — easily the biggest streaming week ever for a cast recording), 32,000 are in album sales, and 4,000 are in TEA units.

The set previous peaked at No. 3 on the July 2, 2016-dated chart, following the 2016 Tony Awards, where the show won 11 trophies, including best musical.

With Hamilton’s rush back up the chart, it sets a couple new personal bests, as well as an eye-popping feat for cast recordings.

Highest-Charting Cast Album Since 1969: With Hamilton surging to No. 2, and surpassing its previous high of No. 3, the cast album is the highest charting cast album since the original cast recording of Hair spent 13 weeks at No. 1 in 1969 (on the April 26 through July 19-dated charts). Until this week, Hamilton was tied with the original Broadway cast recording of The Book of Mormon as the highest charting cast album since 1969, as Mormon peaked at No. 3 in 2011.

250 Weeks on the Chart: Hamilton celebrates its 250th week on the Billboard 200 chart. The set has never left the tally since its debut at No. 12 on the Oct. 17, 2015-dated list. That’s the longest run by any cast album since the highlights edition of the original London cast recording of The Phantom of the Opera, which has logged 331 weeks on the list between 1990 and 1996.

A Long, Long Climb to the Top Two: Hamilton reaches No. 2 in its 250th chart week (all consecutive) — the slowest climb to the top two ever on the chart in terms of weeks on chart.

Hamilton was released on Sept. 15, 2015, so it reaches the top two (and a new peak) just shy of the fifth anniversary of the album’s release.

The last album to take longer to reach the top two, in terms of counting between release date and peak date, is Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers’ Greatest Hits. The album re-entered at its peak of No. 2 on the Oct. 21, 2017-dated chart following Petty’s death on Oct. 2, 2017. The album was released on Nov. 16, 1993. When it re-entered at No. 2, it was the 235th week on the chart for the album, as it had not been charting consistently since 1993.

Largest Week, by Units, for a Cast Album: With 102,000 equivalent album units earned, Hamilton tallies the biggest week for any cast recording since Billboard and Nielsen Music/MRC Data began tracking albums by units in December 2014. Hamilton beats its own record, as it previously held the biggest week, by units, for a cast album since December 2014 — when it net 62,000 units on the July 2, 2016-dated chart.

Biggest Sales Week for a Cast Recording Since … Hamilton: With 32,000 copies of the album sold in the latest tracking week, Hamilton tallies the largest sales week for a traditional cast album since Hamilton itself moved 37,000 copies over the Christmas week of 2016 (reflected on the Jan. 14, 2017-dated charts). (Since then, one album categorized as a cast album sold more, but it’s not a traditional musical show recording: Bruce Springsteen’s one-man Broadway show Springsteen on Broadway saw its album open with 38,000 copies sold on the Dec. 29, 2018-dated chart.)

Hamilton – A Rare Hot-Selling Cast Album: Since Nielsen Music/MRC Data began electronically tracking sales in 1991, only five traditional musical cast recordings (six if you count Springsteen on Broadway) have ever sold at least 32,000 copies in a single week. Hamilton has now done it six times, the original Broadway cast recording of The Book of Mormon did it twice in 2011, the original Broadway cast recording of Rent managed it once (with its debut week of 43,000 in 1996), the original London cast recording of The Phantom of the Opera did it twice (once in 1992 and once in 1993) and then the Highlights edition of the original London cast recording of Phantom did it eight times between 1992 and 1996. (And then there’s Springsteen on Broadway, which opened with 38,000 sold in 2018.)

So far, Hamilton has sold 1.97 million copies in the U.S.

Back on the new Billboard 200 chart, Lil Baby’s My Turn falls from No. 1 to No. 3 with 62,000 equivalent album units earned (down 11 percent), while DaBaby’s former No. 1 Blame It On Baby slips from No. 3 to No. 4 with 36,000 units (down 8 percent).

Post Malone’s previous leader Hollywood’s Bleeding dips 4-5 with just under 36,000 units (down 8 percent).The Weeknd’s chart-topping After Hours shifts down 5-6 with a little more than 29,000 equivalent album units (down 7 percent), Harry Styles’ former No. 1 Fine Line backtracks 6-7 with 29,000 units (down 7 percent) and Polo G’s The Goat falls 7-8 with 28,000 units (down 8 percent).

Lil Uzi Vert’s former leader Eternal Atake descends 8-9 with 27,000 equivalent album units earned (down 11 percent), and Lil Durk’s Just Cause Y’all Waited 2 closes out the top 10, tumbling 2-10 with 27,000 units (down 36 percent, after its surge back up the chart a week ago, from No. 56, following its deluxe reissue with bonus tracks).

Source: billboard.com

6 Jul 2020 Music Now!

DaBaby Rules Hot 100 for Fourth Week; Jack Harlow Surges; Harry Styles, Lil Baby & 42 Dugg Hit Top 10

“Rockstar” reigns; “Watermelon Sugar” & “We Paid” hit top tier.

DaBaby‘s “Rockstar,” featuring Roddy Ricch, tops the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart for a fourth week.

Plus, Jack Harlow‘s “Whats Poppin” vaults from No. 8 to No. 2 on the Hot 100 and two tracks reach the top 10: Harry Styles‘ “Watermelon Sugar” (16-8) and Lil Baby and 42 Dugg’s “We Paid” (18-10).

Let’s run down the top 10 of the newest Hot 100, which blends all-genre U.S. streaming, radio airplay and sales data. All charts (dated July 11) will update on Billboard.com tomorrow (July 7).

“Rockstar,” released on SouthCoast/Interscope Records, posts a seventh week at No. 1 on the Streaming Songs chart, with 43.7 million U.S. streams, up 15%, in the week ending July 2, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data. It dips 2-3 on Digital Song Sales, although with a 32% gain to 16,000 sold in the same span. On Radio Songs, it pushes 12-10 with 46 million airplay audience impressions, up 16%, in the week ending July 5, becoming DaBaby’s second top 10, and first in a lead role, and Roddy Ricch’s third.

The song benefits from the release of its official video on June 26, as well as DaBaby and Roddy Ricch’s virtual performance of the track on the 2020 BET Awards on June 28.

“Rockstar” concurrently rules the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Songs charts, which use the same multi-metric formula as the Hot 100, for a fourth week each.

Jack Harlow’s “Whats Poppin” soars 8-2 on the Hot 100. The rapper’s first Hot 100 entry jumps 5-2 on Streaming Songs (34.1 million, up 72%) and 23-11 on Digital Song Sales (10,000, up 109%), following the June 24 arrival of its DaBaby, Tory Lanez and Lil Wayne remix, as the song wins dual top Streaming and Sales Gainer honors on the Hot 100. It also rises 29-23 on Radio Songs (29.9 million, up 15%).

Now listed as featured artists on “Whats Poppin,” as the remix accounts for the bulk of the song’s activity in the tracking week, DaBaby adds his third Hot 100 top 10, Tory Lanez scores his first and Lil Wayne logs his 25th.

Thanks to “Rockstar” and “Whats Poppin,” DaBaby is the first act to claim the Hot 100’s top two spots simultaneously since Ariana Grande, who monopolized the top three on Feb. 23, 2019, with, in order from Nos. 1 to 3, “7 Rings,” “Break Up With Your Girlfriend, I’m Bored” and “Thank U, Next,” becoming the second act, after The Beatles in 1964, to earn such a triple. Over the Hot 100’s history, which dates to Aug. 4, 1958, DaBaby is the 20th act to concurrently rank at Nos. 1 and 2 in at least one week.

Lil Wayne, meanwhile, becomes the 12th act with at least 25 Hot 100 top 10s, following Drake and Madonna, the leaders with 38 each, The Beatles (34), Rihanna (31), Michael Jackson (30), Mariah Carey, Stevie Wonder (28 each), Janet Jackson, Elton John (27 each) and Elvis Presley and Taylor Swift (also 25 apiece).

The Weeknd’s former four-week Hot 100 No. 1 “Blinding Lights” holds at No. 3. It leads Radio Songs for a 13th week (77.3 million, up 1%) and the multi-metric Hot R&B Songs chart for a 16th frame. Megan Thee Stallion’s former one-week Hot 100 No. 1 “Savage,” featuring Beyoncé, drops 2-4.

SAINt JHN’s first Hot 100 top 10 “Roses” slips to No. 5 from its No. 4 high. It also becomes his first Radio Songs top 10, rising 11-8 (46.7 million, up 11%). Doja Cat’s former one-week Hot 100 No. 1 “Say So” keeps at No. 6 and Justin Bieber’s “Intentions,” featuring Quavo, drops to No. 7 from its No. 5 best.

Harry Styles’ “Watermelon Sugar” surges 16-8 on the Hot 100. The song (which re-entered the chart at No. 64 and then rose 45-40-29-19-16 following the May 18 premiere of its official video) lifts 13-12 on Streaming Songs (15.3 million, up 7%), holds at No. 13 on Digital Song Sales (9,000, up 30%) and climbs 24-17 on Radio Songs (36.1 million, up 25%), good for the Hot 100’s top Airplay Gainer award.

Styles adds his third solo Hot 100 top 10, after “Adore You,” which reached No. 6 in April, and “Sign of the Times,” which debuted and peaked No. 4 in 2017. He also made six trips to the top 10, in 2012-15, as a member of One Direction, ranking as high as No. 2 with “Best Song Ever” in 2013.

With his third solo Hot 100 top 10, Styles passes former 1D bandmate Zayn for the most among members of the group. Zayn’s “Pillowtalk” topped the chart, upon its debut, for a week in 2016 and “I Don’t Wanna Live Forever (Fifty Shades Darker),” with Taylor Swift, hit No. 2 in 2017. The act’s Liam Payne has notched one top 10, “Strip That Down,” featuring Quavo (No. 10, 2017).

A slice of history: “Watermelon Sugar” becomes the second Hot 100 top 10, and highest-charting hit, with “watermelon” in its title. Mongo Santamaria Band’s “Watermelon Man” first tasted sweet success, reaching No. 10 in April 1963.

From watermelon to blueberry (well-timed for summer), Lil Mosey’s “Blueberry Faygo” holds at its No. 9 Hot 100 high.

Rounding out the Hot 100’s top 10, Lil Baby and 42 Dugg’s “We Paid” bounds 18-10. The song ascends 4-3 on Streaming Songs (24.6 million, up 11%), while gaining by 76% to 1.7 million in radio reach and 3% to 2,000 sold.

Lil Baby lands his fourth Hot 100 top 10, and second in three weeks, after “The Bigger Picture” debuted at its No. 3 peak on the June 27 chart. He previously reached No. 4 with “Drip Too Hard,” with Gunna, in October 2018, and No. 6 with “Yes Indeed,” with Drake, in June 2018.

42 Dugg earns his first Hot 100 top 10, after one prior chart entry, also with Lil Baby: “Grace” debuted and peaked at No. 48 in March. Both “We Paid” and “Grace” are from Lil Baby’s album My Turn, which spends a fifth week at No. 1 on the Billboard 200.

For all chart news, you can follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both Twitter and Instagram. And again, be sure to visit Billboard.com tomorrow (July 7), when all charts, including the Hot 100 in its entirety, will refresh.

Source: billboard.com

5 Jul 2020 Music Now!

Lil Baby’s ‘My Turn’ Hits Fifth Week at No. 1 on Billboard 200 Chart

Album now has most weeks at No. 1 among all albums in 2020.

Lil Baby’s My Turn holds steady at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, earning a fifth total week at the top of the chart. It sits tight for a fourth straight week with 70,000 equivalent album units earned in the U.S. in the week ending July 2 (down less than 1 percent), according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data. It spent its first week at No. 1 when it debuted atop the chart dated March 14.

With five weeks at No. 1, the set now owns the most weeks at the top in 2020 for any album, and the most in total since Post Malone’s Hollywood’s Bleeding locked up its fifth and final nonconsecutive week at No. 1 on Nov. 16, 2019.

The Billboard 200 chart ranks the most popular albums of the week in the U.S. based on multi-metric consumption as measured in equivalent album units. Units comprise album sales, track equivalent albums (TEA) and streaming equivalent albums (SEA). The new July 11-dated chart (where My Turn is No. 1 for a fifth week) will be posted in full on Billboard‘s website on July 7.

My Turn was released on Feb. 28 via Quality Control/Motown/Capitol Records and marks Lil Baby’s fifth charting effort. Among those earlier four albums were a trio of top 10s: Street Gossip (No. 2, 2018), Drip Harder (with Gunna, No. 4; 2018) and Harder Than Ever (No. 3, 2018).

Notably, with a fifth week at No. 1, My Turn ties Boyz II Men’s II for the most weeks at No. 1 for a Motown album in the last 40-plus years. II also logged five nonconsecutive weeks at No. 1 (Sept. 17-24, Oct. 8, Oct. 29, 1994, and March 11, 1995).

Only two other Motown other albums have logged at least five weeks at No. 1: Stevie Wonder’s Songs in the Key of Life (14 nonconsecutive weeks, Oct. 16, 1976-Jan. 8, 1977, and Jan. 29, 1977) and Diana Ross & The Supremes’ Greatest Hits (five consecutive weeks, Oct. 28-Nov. 25, 1967).

My Turn was already the longest-leading album released by Quality Control. The label’s two earlier No. 1s, Migos’ Culture and Culture II, spent one week atop the list, respectively, in 2017 and 2018.

My Turn also continues to have the most weeks at No. 1 for any Capitol Records set since The Beatles’ greatest hits compilation 1 snared eight nonconsecutive weeks at No. 1 in late 2000 and early 2001 (Dec. 2, 2000; Dec. 23, 2000-Feb. 3, 2001).

My Turn leads a top 10 absent of any debuts — the third time that’s happened in the last four weeks. The chart also went without a bow in the top 10 on the June 27 and June 20 lists. However, while there are no new albums debuting in the top 10, there is a lot of reshuffling in the region — and one album jumps back into the top 10 after nearly two months.

Lil Durk’s Just Cause Y’all Waited 2 surges from No. 56 to a new peak of No. 2 with 43,000 equivalent album units (up 202 percent) after the set was reissued on June 26 with seven new tracks. Nearly all of that unit total was driven by streaming activity, with 41,000 of the sum from SEA units (up 200 percent).

The album debuted seven weeks ago at No. 5 (May 23 chart) with 57,000 units earned in its first week.

Just Cause Y’all Waited 2 is the latest in a series of R&B and hip-hop albums in 2020 that have seen chart benefits from a deluxe reissue. It follows other titles such as A Boogie Wit da Hoodie’s Artist 2.0 (80-3 on the July 4 chart; up 292 percent to 43,000 units after nine tracks were added to a deluxe edition on June 19 – 18 weeks after its release) and Lil Baby’s My Turn (5-3 on the May 16 chart; up 147 percent to 100,000 units after six tracks were added to the album on May 1 — nine weeks after its release).

Other sets that got a post-release boost from bonus tracks, but on a much swifter schedule: The Weeknd added three new songs to After Hours in its second week of release (helping it hold at No. 1 for a second week on April 11 with 138,000 units, down 69 percent) and Lil Uzi Vert’s Eternal Atake got 14 new songs in its second week (the set stayed steady at No. 1 for a second week on the chart dated March 28 with 247,000 units, down 14 percent). NAV’s Good Intentions didn’t even bother waiting a full week to add songs — as the album had 14 new songs added to its tracklist on May 11, just three days after its release on May 8. Good Intentions debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 dated May 23 with 135,000 units.

Back in the new Billboard 200 top 10, a trio of former No. 1s are at Nos. 3-5, as DaBaby’s Blame It on Baby climbs one spot to No. 3 (40,000 equivalent album units; up 7 percent), Post Malone’s Hollywood’s Bleeding rises 5-4 (39,000 units; up 7 percent) and The Weeknd’s After Hours returns to the top 10, rising 11-5 (32,000 units; up 1 percent — a small percentage gain this week can yield a big positional jump, as the unit gap between titles in the top 10 is small). After Hours was in the top 10 just two weeks ago, and has only been out of the top 10 for two weeks in its 15-week chart run.

Another album returns to the top 10, but after a much longer time away from the region, as Harry Styles’ Fine Line bolts from No. 13 to No. 6 with 32,000 equivalent album units (up 4 percent). The set is up in SEA units (25,000; up 3 percent), album sales (6,000; up 3 percent) and TEA units (1,000; up 16 percent). The former No. 1, which opened atop the list and spent two weeks in charge, was last in the top 10 on the Feb. 8-dated tally.

The set continues to profit from the sustained popularity of its hit single “Adore You,” which hit No. 2 — a new peak — on the most recently published all-format Radio Songs airplay chart (dated July 4). The song peaked at No. 1 on the Pop Songs chart dated April 11 (the list ranks the most played songs of the week on top 40-formatted radio stations) and at No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart dated April 11 (the Hot 100 is an airplay/sales/streaming hybrid tally).

Also fueling Fine Line is the album’s latest hit, “Watermelon Sugar,” which, on the July 4-dated charts, climbed 35-24 on Radio Songs, 18-14 on Pop Songs and 19-16 on the Hot 100.

Polo G’s The Goat rises 10-7 on the new Billboard 200 with 31,000 equivalent album units earned (down 2 percent), Lil Uzi Vert’s former leader Eternal Atake shifts 9-8 with just under 31,000 units (down 3 percent) and Drake’s previous No. 1 Dark Lane Demo Tapes falls 7-9 with 30,000 units (down 5 percent).

Future’s former No. 1 High Off Life closes out the new top 10, as it steps 12-10 with 29,000 equivalent album units (down 8 pecent).

Source: billboard.com

29 Jun 2020 Music Now!

DaBaby & Roddy Ricch’s ‘Rockstar’ Returns to No. 1 on Hot 100, Jack Harlow & Lil Mosey Earn Their First Top 10s

“Whats Poppin” surges 18-8 & “Blueberry Faygo” bumps 11-9.

DaBaby‘s “Rockstar,” featuring Roddy Ricch, returns to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart for a third total week in the top spot.

The song reclaims the throne from 6ix9ine and Nicki Minaj’s “Trollz,” which plummets to No. 34 on the Hot 100, after it debuted at No. 1 a week ago.

Plus, SAINt JHN‘s “Roses” reaches the Hot 100’s top five, rising from No. 8 to No. 4, and Jack Harlow and Lil Mosey earn their first top 10 each, as the former’s “Whats Poppin” jumps 18-8 and the latter’s “Blueberry Faygo” climbs 11-9.

Let’s run down the top 10 of the newest Hot 100, which blends all-genre U.S. streaming, radio airplay and sales data. All charts (dated July 4) will update on Billboard.com tomorrow (June 30).

“Rockstar,” released on SouthCoast/Interscope Records, rebounds from No. 2 on the Hot 100, after it led the lists dated June 13 and 20. It posts a sixth week at No. 1 on the Streaming Songs chart, with 37.9 million U.S. streams (down 5%) in the week ending June 25, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data. It lifts 3-2 on Digital Song Sales with 12,000 sold (down 7%) in the week ending June 25 and 14-12 on Radio Songs with 39.7 million airplay audience impressions (up 27%, good for the Hot 100’s top Airplay Gainer award) in the week ending June 28, hitting new highs on both charts.

“Rockstar” concurrently rules the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Songs charts, which employ the same multi-metric formula as the Hot 100, for a third week each.

The song should benefit on next week’s charts from the release of its official video on June 26, as well as DaBaby and Roddy Ricch’s virtual performance of the track on the 2020 BET Awards last night (June 28).

Megan Thee Stallion’s former one-week Hot 100 No. 1 “Savage,” featuring Beyoncé, rises 4-2 and The Weeknd’s former four-week leader “Blinding Lights” lifts 5-3. The latter leads Radio Songs for a 12th week (76.8 million, up 3%) and the multi-metric Hot R&B Songs chart for a 15th frame.

SAINt JHN’s “Roses” enters the Hot 100’s top five, rising 8-4. It pushes 8-7 on Streaming Songs (17.4 million, down 3%) and holds at No. 8 on Digital Song Sales (9,000, down 3%) and No. 11 on Radio Songs (41.9 million, up 19%).

SAINt JHN first released “Roses” in July 2016. Imanbek’s remix arrived last September, sparking the song’s global chart surge. The track led the Official UK Singles chart for two weeks beginning in March; it tops the multi-metric Hot Dance/Electronic Songs for a ninth week. The song was released on the Hitco Entertainment label, which achieves its first top five Hot 100 hit.

Justin Bieber’s “Intentions,” featuring Quavo, returns to its No. 5 Hot 100 high, from No. 7; Doja Cat’s former one-week No. 1 “Say So” is steady at No. 6; and Lil Baby’s “The Bigger Picture” drops to No. 7 following its debut at No. 3 a week earlier, as it keeps at No. 2 on Streaming Songs (27.1 million, down 31%).

Jack Harlow scores his first Hot 100 top 10, as “Whats Poppin” bounds 18-8. The rapper’s first Hot 100 entry jumps 13-5 on Streaming Songs (19.8 million, up 21%) and debuts at No. 23 on Digital Song Sales (5,000, up 92%), following the June 24 arrival of its DaBaby, Tory Lanez and Lil Wayne remix (in which DaBaby shouts out his chart success with “Rockstar,” rapping, “Still on the Billboard, the No. 1 song in UK”; indeed, the song, in addition to its Hot 100 reign, tops the Official UK Singles chart for a sixth week). The track advances 37-29 on Radio Songs (26 million, up 23%).

Lil Mosey likewise earns his first Hot 100 top 10, as “Blueberry Faygo” rises 11-9. The single ascends 12-11 on Streaming Songs (17.6 million, down 1%) and repeats at No. 13 on Radio Songs (36.5 million, up 14%), while increasing by 6% to 3,000 sold. The song samples Johnny Gill’s former Hot 100 top 10 “My, My, My,” which reached No. 10 in September 1990.

Rounding out the Hot 100’s top 10, Post Malone’s “Circles” returns to the region, rising 13-10 and logging a record-extending 39th week in the top 10. The song led the chart for three nonconsecutive weeks in November, December and January.

As noted above, 6ix9ine and Nicki Minaj’s “Trollz” free falls from No. 1 on the Hot 100, where it debuted a week ago, to No. 34. It slides 1-7 on Digital Song Sales (9,000, down 92%) and 3-18 on Streaming Songs (13.8 million, down 62%), although it gains by 97% to 2.3 million in radio reach. The song sets the record for the steepest drop from No. 1 to another rank in the Hot 100’s nearly 62-year history, with its 1-34 tumble doubling that of the prior record-holder, The Weeknd’s “Heartless,” which fell 1-17 on the Dec. 21, 2019-chart.

As for the biggest overall drop from No. 1, Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas Is You” disappeared from the chart entirely after it logged its third week on top on Jan. 4, 2020; of course, the departure was essentially owed to the end of the holiday season, as all 25 Yuletide titles on the chart that week were no longer on the Jan. 11 ranking. (“Worth it haaa another record!” Carey joked on Twitter in response to Billboard.)

Elsewhere on the Hot 100, Beyoncé’s “Black Parade” debuts at No. 37, as it launches at No. 1 on Digital Song Sales with 18,000 sold, following its June 19 release. The song is her eighth leader on the sales survey and first on her own since “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It),” which dominated for three weeks in 2008-09.

With “Black Parade,” Beyoncé banks her 40th top 40 Hot 100 hit, becoming the 22nd artist in the chart’s archives to reach that level.

For all chart news, you can follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both Twitter and Instagram. And again, be sure to visit Billboard.com tomorrow (June 30), when all charts, including the Hot 100 in its entirety, will refresh.

Source: billboard.com

28 Jun 2020 Music Now!

Lil Baby’s ‘My Turn’ Clocks in a Fourth Week at No. 1 on Billboard 200

Plus: Bob Dylan lands highest charting album in over a decade and Teyana Taylor earns her first top 10.

Lil Baby’s My Turn tallies a fourth total week at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart, tying The Weeknd’s After Hours for the most weeks atop the list for any album released in 2020.

My Turn earned 70,000 equivalent album units (down 3 percent) in the U.S. in the week ending June 25, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data. The album (released via Quality Control/Motown/Capitol Records) has now strung together three consecutive frames at No. 1. It captured its first week at No. 1 when it bowed atop the chart dated March 14.

Among albums released in 2020, My Turn is now tied with After Hours for the most weeks at No. 1, each with four. After Hours spent its first four weeks on the chart at No. 1 (April 4-25). Special note goes to Roddy Ricch’s Please Excuse Me for Being Antisocial, as the late 2019 release logged one week at No. 1 on Dec. 21, 2019, then three weeks at No. 1 in 2020.

The Billboard 200 chart ranks the most popular albums of the week in the U.S. based on multi-metric consumption as measured in equivalent album units. Units comprise album sales, track equivalent albums (TEA) and streaming equivalent albums (SEA). The new July 4-dated chart (where My Turn is steady at No. 1) will be posted in full on Billboard‘s website on June 30.

At No. 2 on the Billboard 200, Bob Dylan captures his highest charting album in more than a decade, as Rough and Rowdy Ways arrives with 53,000 equivalent album units earned. Of that sum, 51,000 are in album sales, 2,000 are in SEA units, and a negligible figure are in TEA units.

Dylan was last higher on the chart with 2009’s Together Through Life, which debuted and peaked at No. 1 on the May 16, 2009-dated chart.

All told, Rough and Rowdy Ways marks Dylan’s 23rd top 10 album and 50th top 40 set. With Rough and Rowdy Ways’ debut, Dylan logs his seventh consecutive decade of charting top 40 albums. He captured eight in the 1960s, 14 in the ‘70s, seven in the ‘80s, four in the ‘90s, seven in the ‘00s, nine in the ‘10s, and now one in the ‘20s. He’s the first act to have achieved at least one top 10 album in each decade from the ‘60s through ‘20s. (The 2020s decade is still young, so a number of other acts could join him in this achievement.)

Dylan made his Billboard 200 debut (and overall Billboard chart debut) nearly 57 years ago with The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, which arrived on the list dated Sept. 7, 1963, at No. 125. It peaked at No. 22 on Oct. 5 of that year. He got his first top 10 with the No. 6-peaking Bringing It All Back Home on Oct. 9, 1965. He earned his first of five No. 1s with Planet Waves on Feb. 16, 1974.

The new album was led by the 17-minute track “Murder Most Foul,” which debuted and peaked at No. 5 on the Hot Rock Songs chart (April 11, 2020). It also entered atop the Rock Digital Song Sales chart, marking Dylan’s first No. 1 song on any

A Boogie Wit da Hoodie’s Artist 2.0 rockets back into the top 10 on the Billboard 200, as it flies from No. 80 to No. 3, following its deluxe reissue on June 19. The set earned 43,000 equivalent album units — up 292 percent. Most of that gain is attributed to streaming activity, as 41,000 of that figure is SEA units (up 281 percent).

The album debuted and peaked at No. 2 on the Feb. 29-dated list and spent its first two weeks in the top 10. The album was reissued on the 19th, adding nine songs to the original set’s 20-song tracklist.

A trio of former No. 1s are next on the Billboard 200, as DaBaby’s Blame It On Baby slips from No. 3 to No. 4 (37,000 equivalent album units; down 8 percent, Post Malone’s Hollywood’s Bleeding falls 4-5 (36,000 units; down 4 percent) and Lady Gaga’s Chromatica drops 2-6 (33,000 units; down 25 percent). Drake’s Dark Lane Demo Tapes falls from No. 5 to No. 7 with just over 32,000 units (down 11 percent).

Teyana Taylor achieves her first top 10 album, as The Album bows at No. 8 with 32,000 equivalent album units earned. Of that sum, 27,000 are in SEA units, 4,000 are in album sales and 1,000 are in TEA units. Taylor previously visited the Billboard 200 twice, with VII in 2014 (peaking at No. 19) and K.T.S.E. (reaching No. 17 in 2018).

Rounding out the new top 10 are Lil Uzi Vert’s former No. 1 Eternal Atake (moving 8-9 with just over 31,000 equivalent album units earned; down 8 percent) and Polo G’s The Goat (9-10 with 31,000 units; down 8 percent).

Source: billboard.com

22 Jun 2020 Music Now!

6ix9ine & Nicki Minaj’s ‘Trollz’ Launches at No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100, Lil Baby’s ‘The Bigger Picture’ Debuts at No. 3

6ix9ine achieves his first leader & Minaj adds her second.

6ix9ine and Nicki Minaj‘s “Trollz” blasts in at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart.

The song marks the first Hot 100 leader for 6ix9ine and the second for Minaj, who notches her first in a lead role.

Plus, Lil Baby’s “The Bigger Picture” bows at No. 3 on the Hot 100, a new career-rest rank.

Let’s run down the top 10 of the newest Hot 100, which blends all-genre U.S. streaming, radio airplay and sales data. All charts (dated June 27) will update on Billboard.com tomorrow (June 23).

“Trollz,” released June 12 on Create Music Group, arrives as the 1,105th No. 1 in the Hot 100’s nearly 62-year history. It’s the 40th No. 1 in debut ever, and the fifth this year, marking a new single-year high.

The track launches at No. 1 on the Digital Song Sales chart with 116,000 sold in the week ending June 18, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data, and No. 3 on Streaming Songs, with 36 million U.S. streams in the same span. It drew 1.2 million radio airplay audience impressions in the week ending June 21.

6ix9ine’s first Hot 100 No. 1, Minaj’s second: 6ix9ine scores his first Hot 100 No. 1. He tallied two prior top 10s, each of which reached No. 3: “FEFE,” featuring Minaj and Murda Beatz, in August 2018, and “Gooba,” which debuted at No. 3 on the May 23-dated chart, five weeks ago.

Minaj earns her second Hot 100 No. 1 (and 19th top 10) and first topper in a lead role. She previously ruled as featured on Doja Cat’s “Say So,” which led the May 16 chart, following the arrival of its Minaj remix. With “Say So,” Minaj set the record for the most Hot 100 appearances (109) needed for a first No. 1.

Biggest sales week in over a year: Starting with 116,000 sold, “Trollz” boasts the highest weekly sales sum since Taylor Swift’s “Me!,” featuring Brendon Urie, soared in with 193,000 (May 11, 2019).

“Trollz” was on sale in 6ix9ine and Minaj’s webstores via over a dozen physical/digital combination offerings (priced from 69 cents to $10) during the tracking week, including an alternate version released June 16. Consumers could purchase cassette, CD and vinyl singles (including an autographed CD copy), each with a digital download; the download would be sent to consumers upon purchase, with physical versions due to arrive at a later date.

6ix9ine posts his first Digital Song Sales No. 1 and Minaj collects her sixth.

Record fifth No. 1 debut of 2020: “Trollz” is the fifth song to debut at No. 1 on the Hot 100 in 2020, following Lady Gaga and Ariana Grande’s “Rain on Me” (June 6); Grande and Justin Bieber’s “Stuck With U” (May 23); The Scotts, Travis Scott and Kid Kudi’s “The Scotts” (May 9); and Drake’s “Toosie Slide” (April 18).

2020 now sports the most Hot 100 No. 1 debuts in a single year — besting 2018 and 1995, each with four chart-topping entrances.

Record-extending 7 straight No. 1 collabs: “Trollz” marks the record-extending seventh consecutive collaboration to top the Hot 100. It follows DaBaby’s “Rockstar,” featuring Roddy Ricch (June 13 and 20); “Rain on Me” (June 6); Megan Thee Stallion’s “Savage,” featuring Beyoncé (May 30); “Stuck With U” (May 23); “Say So” (May 16); and “The Scotts” (May 9).

Independent’s week: With “Trollz,” Create Music Group scores its first Hot 100 No. 1. It’s the first leader on the list for an independent label since Bad Vibes Forever reigned with XXXTentacion’s “Sad!” on the June 30, 2018-dated chart. (A label is considered independent if it currently qualifies for inclusion on Billboard‘s Top Independent Albums chart, the methodology of which considers the means in which labels conduct their distribution and revenue-based commercial services.)

Go figure(s): As for more numbers … 6ix9ine (real name: Daniel Hernandez) is the seventh act with at least two numerals in its name to top the Hot 100. He follows: 21 Savage, UB40, Stars on 45, 50 Cent, 98 Degrees and 112.

No. 1 R&B/hip-hop & Rap: “Trollz” concurrently opens atop the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Songs charts, which employ the same multi-metric formula as the Hot 100. 6ix9ine earns his first No. 1 on the former chart and second on the latter, after “Gooba.” Minaj scores her sixth No. 1 on each ranking.

DaBaby’s”Rockstar,” featuring Roddy Ricch, drops to No. 2 on the Hot 100, after two weeks at No. 1. The track rules Streaming Songs for a fifth week, with 39.8 million U.S. streams (up 11%), helped by a Black Lives Matter remix released June 12. It holds at No. 3 on Digital Song Sales, up 12% to 13,000 sold, and jumps 26-14 on the Radio Songs chart, up 21% to 31.4 million impressions.

Lil Baby’s “The Bigger Picture” debuts at No. 3 on the Hot 100. The song, released June 12 and which, like the new “Rockstar” remix, addresses the Black Lives Matter movement, opens at No. 2 on Streaming Songs (39.1 million U.S. streams) and No. 10 on Digital Song Sales (8,000 sold) and drew 3.6 million in radio reach in the tracking week.

Lil Baby lands his third Hot 100 top 10 and highest-peaking: “Drip Too Hard,” with Gunna, reached No. 4 in October 2018, after “Yes Indeed,” with Drake, hit No. 6 that June.

With “Trollz” and “The Bigger Picture” debuting at Nos. 1 and 3 on the Hot 100, respectively, the chart welcomes concurrent top-three arrivals for the just the fifth time ever, although it’s the second such double-up in a month, with both involving 6ix9ine: On the May 23 chart, Grande and Bieber’s “Stuck With U” bounded in at No. 1 and 6ix9ine’s “Gooba” began at No. 3. The only other such twofers: Adele’s “Hello” and Bieber’s “Sorry” (Nos. 1&2, Nov. 14, 2015); Clay Aiken’s “This Is the Night” and Ruben Studdard’s “Flying Without Wings” (Nos. 1&2, June 28, 2003); and Celine Dion’s “My Heart Will Go On” and Will Smith’s “Gettin’ Jiggy Wit It” (Nos. 1&3, Feb. 28, 1998).

Meanwhile, eight songs have debuted in the Hot 100’s top three in 2020, just over halfway through the year; In all of 2019, nine songs started in the region, after a record 10 launched in the top three in 2018. Along those lines, “Trollz” is the ninth song to hit No. 1 for the first time this year (with, again, a single-year-record five debuting on top); 2020 marks the first year with nine new No. 1s before July since 2007, when 10 hits rose to the top by that point.

Megan Thee Stallion’s former one-week Hot 100 No. 1 “Savage,” featuring Beyoncé, falls 2-4 and The Weeknd’s former four-week leader “Blinding Lights” dips 3-5. The latter leads Radio Songs for an 11th week, with 74.3 million in audience (down 2%), and the multi-metric Hot R&B Songs chart for a 14th frame.

Doja Cat’s former one-week Hot 100 No. 1 “Say So” slips 4-6; Bieber’s “Intentions,” featuring Quavo, descends to No. 7 from its No. 5 high; SAINt JHN’s “Roses” retreats to No. 8 from its No. 7 peak; Lady Gaga and Grande’s “Rain on Me” rebounds 10-9, following its introduction at No. 1 three weeks ago; and Roddy Ricch’s former 11-week leader “The Box” backtracks 9-10.

For all chart news, you can follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both Twitter and Instagram. And again, be sure to visit Billboard.com tomorrow (June 23), when all charts, including the Hot 100 in its entirety, will refresh.

Source: billboard.com

21 Jun 2020 Music Now!

Lil Baby’s ‘My Turn’ Spends Third Week at No. 1 on Billboard 200 Chart

Lil Baby’s My Turn nets a third total week at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart, as the set holds atop the list for a second straight week. It earned 72,000 equivalent album units earned (up 12 percent) in the U.S. in the week ending June 18, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data. The set (released via Quality Control/Motown/Capitol Records) notched its first frame in the penthouse when it opened in the top slot dated March 14.

Only three albums have logged at least three weeks at No. 1 in 2020: My Turn, The Weeknd’s After Hours (four) and Roddy Ricch’s Please Excuse Me for Being Antisocial (three in 2020, one in 2019).

The Billboard 200 chart ranks the most popular albums of the week in the U.S. based on multi-metric consumption as measured in equivalent album units. Units comprise album sales, track equivalent albums (TEA) and streaming equivalent albums (SEA). The new June 27-dated chart (where My Turn holds at No. 1) will be posted in full on Billboard‘s website on June 23.

Of My Turn’s 72,000 units earned for the week, just under 71,000 are SEA units (up 11 percent, equating to 110 million on-demand streams of the album’s songs), while TEA units (up 12 percent) and album sales (up 91 percent) total a little less than 1,000 each.

My Turn got an overall boost thanks in part to buzz generated by the release of Lil Baby’s new non-album single “The Bigger Picture” on June 12. While the track is not on the My Turn album, the set likely found increased streams and sales thanks to general promotion around Lil Baby and the track. As for the songs on the album, the track currently leading the charge in the streaming world is “We Paid,” with 42 Dugg. On the most recently published Streaming Songs chart, dated June 20, it climbed 27-14.

Meanwhile, back on the Billboard 200, for the second week, My Turn leads a top 10 absent of debuts. It’s the first time since January 2019 where there have been two straight weeks without a bow in the top 10. That month, the chart experienced three consecutive weeks without a top 10 debut, on the charts dated Jan. 12, 19 and 26, thanks to a quiet post-Christmas album release schedule.It’s not unusual during the annual post-Christmas period to see two weeks in a row without a top 10 debut. It is rare, however, to see it happen at some point during the rest of the year.

The last time the top 10 was absent of debuts for two weeks in a row outside of the post-Christmas period was on the charts dated March 2 and 9, 2013 (back when the chart ranked titles only by album sales, before it transitioned to a multi-metric consumption ranking in December 2014).

On the March 2, 2013 chart, Mumford & Sons’ Babel returned to No. 1, rising 4-1, to collect its fourth week in the lead. The album surged back to the top following its Grammy Award win for album of the year. The chart’s highest debut that week was Bullet for My Valentine’s Temper Temper at No. 13. On the March 9 chart, Babel claimed a fifth and final week at No. 1, while the top debut was Buckcherry’s Confessions at No. 20.

Back on the new Billboard 200, Lady Gaga’s former leader Chromatica sits at No. 2 for a second week, earning 44,000 equivalent album units (down 31 percent). Another former No. 1, DaBaby’s Blame It on Baby, rises 6-3 (40,000 units; up 4 percent). (Fans of infant-related words on the chart take note of the top three, as Lil Baby, Lady Gaga and DaBaby hold court at Nos. 1, 2 and 3, respectively.)

Post Malone’s former topper Hollywood’s Bleeding climbs 8-4 with 38,000 equivalent album units (up 4 percent), Drake’s Dark Lane Demo Tapes is steady at No. 5 with 36,000 units (down 8 percent) and Future’s former No. 1 High Off Life dips 4-6 with nearly 36,000 units (down 9 percent).

Gunna’s previous leader Wunna falls 3-7 (35,000 equivalent album units; down 12 percent), Lil Uzi Vert’s former No. 1 Eternal Atake is up 9-8 (just over 34,000; down 3 percent) and Polo G’s The Goat slips 7-9 (34,000; down 7 percent).

Rounding out the top 10 is The Weeknd’s former No. 1 After Hours, holding steading at No. 10 with nearly 34,000 units (down 3 percent).

Source: billboard.com

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