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Global Chart Report
Eminem tops a 4th week, Katy
Perry a 7th week
Friday, July 23, 2010
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
No one has enough power at the moment to dethrone Eminem's
'Recovery'. The album spent a fourth week at the summit and sold
another 351.000 copies, down 11% compared to the previous week. |
On the year-to-date list
'Recovery' climbs at no.5 (2,4 million) behind Lady GaGa's 'The Fame
(Monster)' (4,2 million), Justin Bieber's 'My Worlds' (3,6 million),
Lady Antebellum's 'Need You Now' (2,7 million) and Black Eyed Peas'
'The E.N.D.' (2,4 million). Highest debut on this week's tally is
Yui's new set 'Holidays In The Sun', which jets at no.2 with 186.000
copies sold in Japan and South Korea. Justin Bieber's 'My World'
returns at no.3 after a little 2% increase to 107.000 copies. Korn
arrives at the fouth with the new effort 'Korn III (Remember Who You
Are)' and 106.000 sales. The former album 'Untitled' bowed at no.2 in
the week 33, 2007 with 194.000 sales.Lady GaGa's 'The Fame (Monster)'
slides on slot at no.5 (down 2% to 103.000 copies). Also debuting on
the list are AKB 48's 'Set List (Greatest Songs 2006-2007)' at no.8
(68.000), Sting's 'Symphonicities' at no.13 (55.000), M.I.A.'s 'Maya'
at no.14 (52.000), Newsboys' 'Born Again' at no.15 (45.000), Jerrod
Niemann's 'Judge Jerrod & The Hung Jury' at no.23 (34.000), Monkey
Majik's 'Best (10 Years & Forever)' at no.27 (31.000), Hell Yeah's
'Stampede' at no.28 (30.000), The Maine's 'Black & White' at no.38
(26.000) and Eliza Doolittle's self-titled debut at no.39 (23.000).
COMPLETE GLOBAL ALBUM CHART
Katy Perry's summer-smash 'California Gurls' expands its
presence at the top to a seventh week (down 5% to 476.000 points). But
for the first time, a competitor comes closer: Eminem feat. Rihanna's
'Love The Way You Lie' waits at no.2 a fouth week in a row and grows
up another 15% to 441.000 points. 'California Gurls' sold another
370.000 copies last week and holds no.1 in global airplay with 178.000
points, 'Love The Way You Lie' moved over 510.000 copies last week and
climbs to no.16 in global airplay with 48.000 points. No change at the
following places, B.o.B. feat. Hayley William's 'Airplanes' sits tight
at no.3 (up 2% to 304.000 points), Lady GaGa's 'Alejandro' is still at
no.4 (down 4% to 283.000 points) and Enrique Iglesias feat. Pitbull's
'I Like It' holds no.5 (up 2% to 244.000 points). An australian dance
smash becomes enormous worldwide attention, 'We No Speak Americano' by
Yolanda Be Cool & D Cup roars like a tsunami from country to country,
boarded nearly all national chart and overtakes the lead in more than
a dozen countries. On the global hitlist the song shoots from no.19 to
no.10 (up 23% to 182.000 points). Three tracks debuting on the current
tally: 'Moon' by Ayumi Hamasaki is the highest at no.34 (72.000),
following by 'DJ Got Us Fallin' In |
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Love' by Usher feat. Pitbull
at no.35 (72.000) and 'Bang Bang Bang' by star-producer Mark Ronson &
The Business International at no.39 (66.000). Behind the top 40
waiting Christina Perri's 'Jar Of Hearts' (no.42), Ne-Yo's 'Beautiful
Monster' (no.44), Scissor Sisters' 'Fire With Fire' (no.48), Nicki
Minaj's 'Your Love' (no.50), Usher's 'There Goes My Baby' (no.51), DJ
Khaled's 'All I Do Is Win' (no.52), David Guetta feat. Kelly Rowland's
'Commander' (no.55), Carrie Underwood's 'Undo It' (no.56) and Alicia
Keys' 'Un-Thinkable (I'm Ready)' (no.57) for their first appearance on
that list. COMPLETE GLOBAL TRACK CHART |
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30 years ago... the funk
project Lipps, Inc. from Minneapolis landed one of the biggest hits in
that year with 'Funkytown'. The unusual track spent four weeks at no.1
in the USA and sold more than a million copies there, went also to no.1
in Canada, Germany, Australia, Netherlands, Austria, Switzerland,
Norway, Belgium, New Zealand and no.2 in United Kingdom, France and
Sweden. Lipps, Inc. were formed by producer / songwriter /
multi-instrumentalist Steven Greenberg and performed by Cynthia 'Miss
Minnesota' Johnson. Seven years later the song had a resurrection, a
cover version by the australian act Pseudo Echo reached no.13 globally.
COMPLETE GLOBAL CHART, 30 YEARS AGO |
10 years ago

No.1:
Bon Jovi
'It's My Life' |
20 years ago

No.1:
Roxette
'It Must Have Been Love' |
30 years ago

No.1:
Lipps, Inc.
'Funkytown' |
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USA
Billboard Report
(Excerpt)
'Recovery' reaches 5th week at No.1, Rick Ross comes in second
Wednesday,
July 28, 2010
by Keith Caulfield, L.A. & Silvio Pietroluongo, N.Y.
Eminem makes it five weeks in a row at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 as
"Recovery" sells another 187,000 (down just 4%), according to Nielsen
SoundScan. Rick Ross' "Teflon Don" arrives in the runner- |
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up
spot with 176,000. Ross' last three studio albums all debuted at No. 1, with his
last set, 2009's "Deeper Than Rap," arriving with 158,000. The opener for
"Teflon" is Ross' best sales week since 2008's "Trilla" arrived with 198,000.
A week ago industry observers had initially projected that Ross had a good shot
at a No. 1 debut. However, "Recovery" held on strong with a small weekly sales
decline. Chalk that up in part to its sale pricing at Target and Best Buy and
the continued popularity of its single "Love the Way You Lie."
The Billboard 200's second-highest debut is Sheryl Crow's "100 Miles From
Memphis," which starts at No. 3 with 55,000. It's the singer's eighth top 10
album. All of her releases—save for one live set from 1999—have reached the top
10. The singer/songwriter's last effort, "Detours," debuted and peaked at No. 2
with 92,000 in 2008. It was her fourth set to peak at No. 2; she has yet to
claim a No. 1 album.
The "Kidz Bop Kids" series continues its profitable run on the Billboard 200 as
"Kidz Bop 18" bounces in at No. 5 with 43,000. It's the 26th permutation of the
"Kidz Bop" franchise to chart on the Billboard 200, including brand offshoots
like "Kidz Bop Christmas" and "Kidz Bop Sings the Beatles." The new set is the
11th "Kidz Bop" title to reach the top 10.
The Jonas Brothers' soundtrack to their Disney Channel TV series "Jonas L.A."
surfs in at No. 7 with 32,000. The album is the eighth charting set for the
brother trio. The act has so far released four studio sets, its "3D Concert
Experience" soundtrack, two live EPs and the new "Jonas L.A." offering.
As for the rest of the top 10, Drake's "Thank Me Later" falls one spot to No. 4
(47,000; down 6%), Justin Bieber's "My World 2.0" also drops one to No. 6
(39,000; down 5%), the "Now 34" compilation climbs four rungs to No. 8 (27,000;
down less than 1%), Lady Antebellum's "Need You Now" rises two slots to No. 9
(25,000; down 8%), and Lady Gaga's "The Fame" hops forward three positions to
No. 10 (24,000; down 9%).
Overall album sales in this past chart week (ending July 25) totaled 5.3 million
units, up 2% compared with the sum last week (5.2 million) and down 15% compared
with the comparable sales week of 2009 (6.3 million). Year-to-date album sales
stand at 169.7 million, down 12% compared with the same total at this point last
year (193.2 million).
"Love The Way You Lie," Em's smash collabo with Rihanna, tops Hot Digital Songs
for the fifth straight week. It sold 332,000 copies this week, bringing its
five-week total to 1,620,000. It's only the third song in digital history to top
300.000 in weekly sales four times. It follows Flo Rida's "Right Round" and
"California Gurls" by Katy Perry featuring Snoop Dogg. "California
Gurls" by Katy Perry featuring Snoop Dogg tops the 3 million mark in paid
downloads this week. It took just 11 weeks to reach this milestone, which ties
Flo Rida's "Right Round" as the fastest that any song has reached 3 million in
digital sales. This is Perry's third song to reach 3 million, following "I
Kissed A Girl" (3,833,000) and "Hot N Cold" (4,450,000).
Here's the rest of the top 10 on Hot Digital Songs. Taio Cruz's "Dynamite" holds
at No. 2 for the second week (223.000), Katy Perry featuring Snoop Dogg's "California
Gurls" holds at No. 3 for the second week (190.000), Enrique Iglesias featuring
Pitbull's "I Like It" jumps from No. 5 to No. 4 (183.000), B.o.B featuring Hayley
Williams' "Airplanes" dips from No. 4 to No. 5 (153.000), Mike Posner's "Cooler Than Me"
holds at No. 6 for the second week (137.000), Travie McCoy featuring Bruno Mars'
"Billionaire" holds at No. 7 for the second week (137.000), Jason Derulo's "Ridin'
Solo" holds at No. 8 for the sixth week (132.000), Eminem's "Not Afraid" hold at
No. 9
for the fourth week (123.000) and Usher featuring will.i.am's "OMG" holds at
No. 10
for the third week (96.000).
Digital track sales this past week totaled 21 million downloads, up less than 1%
compared with last week (20.9 million) and down 1% stacked next to the
comparable week of 2009 (21.4 million). Year-to-date track sales are at 660.1
million, down 1% compared with the same total at this point last year (663.9
million).
COMPLETE
CHARTS
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United Kingdom
Music Week Report (Excerpt)
'We No Speak Americano' ... but Britain loves you ...
Monday, July 26, 2010
by Alan Jones, London
After climbing 5-2 last week,
Australian act Yolanda Be Cool Vs. D Cup’s debut single We No Speak
Americano surges to the summit, on sales of 89,107 copies. The track,
which has already been no.1 |
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in Denmark, The
Netherlands, Sweden and Flanders, samples the late Renato Carosone’s
1956 recording Tu Vuò Fà L'Americano, and is sung predominantly in
Italian, though it lapses into English for “I love you” and “whiskey
soda”.
Of 1,135 previous UK number ones since the chart’s 1952 inception, the
only other number ones sung wholly or predominantly in a foreign tongue
are: Oh Mein Papa by Eddie Calvert (1954, only lyric is the title,
German), Je T’Aime...Moi Non Plus by Jane Birkin & Serge Gainsbourg
(1967, French), Rock Me Amadeus by Falco (1986, mostly German, sporadic
English), La Bamba by Los Lobos (1987, Spanish), Sadness Part 1 by
Enigma (1991, background vocals: Latin, foreground: French), and The
Ketchup Song (Asereje) by Las Ketchup (2002, Spanish).
Doop’s self-titled 1994 chart-topper has its title repeated many times
but although the group is Dutch and doop means baptism in Dutch, it is
used in the track simply as a vocal ‘tic’ and not as a word.
There are no new entries to the Top 10 this week, just a reshuffling of
the pack. Last week’s number one, Airplanes, dips to number three
(63,283 sales), while Love The Way You Lie, by Eminem feat. Rihanna,
rebounds 3-2 (64,082 sales). Aside from Yolanda Be Cool, the only song
in the Top 10 to increase sales week-on-week is Eliza Doolittle’s Pack
Up, which rises 8-5 with sales up 20% at 45,279.
The week’s highest debut is DJ Got Us Falling In Love (number 20, 14,484
sales) by Usher feat. Pitbull.
In pursuit of his fourth top three hit in less than a year, Jason
DeRulo’s What If climbs 40-19 (14,847 sales). Diana Vickers also makes a
big move, with The Boy Who Murdered Love – follow-up to her
chart-topping debut Once – jumping 57-36 (5,289 sales). DeRulo’s
self-titled debut surprisingly retreats 24-25 (6,464 sales), while
Vickers’ Songs From The Tainted Cherry Tree catapults 42-13 (8,703
sales), achieving its best placing for 10 weeks.
Singles sales are down 3.3% week-on-week at 2,726,637 – 8.75% above same
week 2009 sales of 2,507,294.
The number one artist album, for the fourth time in five weeks, is
Eminem’s latest, Recovery.
The album sold a further 41,593 copies last week, lifting its 34-day
tally to 351,028, enough for it to rank ninth in the year-to-date chart.
We suggested last week that Eminem had spent 15 weeks at the top of the
album chart in the 21st century, a total inferior only to Robbie
Williams (23 weeks) and Dido (17).
In fact, with The Marshall Mathers LP, Encore and Relapse all spending
two weeks at number one, The Eminem Show and Curtain Call – The Hits
reigning for five weeks each and Recovery’s current run, Eminem has
spent 20 weeks at number one, and that total rises to 21 if we also
include the week that his group D12 spent at number one with their 2004
album D12 World.
Kylie Minogue’s Aphrodite and Eliza Doolittle’s self-titled debut
occupied second and third places last week, and now fall two notches
each on sales of 21,504 and 21,231 respectively, pushed down by
Professor Green, whose introductory album, Alive Till I’m Dead, debuts
at number two (27,409 sales), and the 4-3 rise of Plan B’s The
Defamation Of Strickland Banks (23,811 sales). With Eminem at one and
Green at two, hip hop scores its second double – the only previous
occasion in chart history when rap albums were at one and two was in
week ending September 22 2007, when Kanye West was number one with
Graduation, and 50 Cent was second with Curtis. Plan B’s R&B/hip-hop
hybrid makes it an all-urban top three. While Mumford & Sons’ Sigh No
More subsides 6-7 (14,865 sales) it is joined in the Top 20 by fellow
folk/rock crossover act Seth Lakeman, whose Hearts & Minds debuts at
number 17 (7,992 sales). It’s Lakeman’s second Top 20 album, following
Poor Man’s Heaven, which debuted at number eight on sales of 12,522 in
2008.
Into the album chart for the first time in the 21st century, Earth, Wind
& Fire debut at number nine (11,361 sales) with their new Greatest Hits
compilation. It’s their 11th chart album since their 1978 debut, and
their highest charting album since The Collection reached number five in
1986.
Thanks to Professor Green (Virgin) Kylie Minogue and Eliza Doolittle
(both Parlophone), EMI has 3 albums in the top five, equalling its
21st century best. It has achieved the feat on eight previous occasions
since 2000, most recently last September, courtesy of Jamie T, David
Guetta and The Beatles. 3OH3! reached only number 77 with last album
Want but follow-up Streets Of Gold debuts at number 19 (7,545 sales),
following the band’s success with Don’t Trust Me, Katy Perry
collaboration Starstrukk (which has sold 525,408 copies), and current
single My First Kiss (feat. Ke$ha), all of which are included.
Now That’s What I Call Music! 75 has sold fewer than 600,000 copies to
date, less than any of its 11 immediate predecessors and follow-up Now!
76 is off to a slower start. Including 10 number one hits among its 46
tracks, it achieved first-week sales of 249,195 last week – 1.54% below
Now! 75’s first week tally of 253,081, and 9.27% down on its 2009
equivalent Now! 73’s first week tally of 274,661.
Overall album sales last week improved 7.3% to 2,027,196 – 0.46% above
same week 2009 sales of 2,017,820. COMPLETE
CHARTS |
Japan

No.1
Single:
AKB 48
'Kokoro No Hane' |
Germany

No.1 Album:
Unheilig 'Große Freiheit' |
France

No.1
Album:
Zaz
'Zaz' |
'World-Chart
Theme' is performed by Surroyal
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