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Global Chart Report
Mr.Children bows with two
compilations at the top
Friday, May 18, 2012
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
Only few people in the western hemisphere know Mr.Children, but
in Japan the rock band is very, very successful. Two impressive facts:
Mr.Children sold more than 50 million albums and singles to date |
and had 30 consecutive no.1
singles, according to Oricon. So it's no wonder, that their best-of
new compilations are huge sellers. '2005-2010 Macro' and '2001-2005
Micro' bowing easily atop the global album chart this week with
732.000, respectively 716.000 copies. Last week's chart-topper, Carrie
Underwood's 'Blown Away', throws down at no.4 after a 53% sales
decline to 134.000 copies. Adele's '21' is still at the third place
and sold another 187.000 copies in its 68th week on the tally (up 16%
compared to the previous week). Norah Jones' 'Little Broken Hearts'
falls three slots no.5 in its second week on the list and loses 43% in
sales to 121.000 copies. The most important international release of
the week, Keane's 'Strangeland', opens at no.6 with 106.000 copies.
German punk band Die Toten Hosen arrives at no.10 with their 13th
studio album 'Ballast Der Republik' and sales of 65.000 copies.
Outside the top 10 debuting Los Angeles based indie-rock band
Silversun Pickups with 'Neck Of The Woods' at no.14 (47.000 sales),
R&B singer / songwriter Tank with 'This Is How I Feel' at no.22
(33.000 sales), metal act Storm Corrosion with their self-titled album
at no.37 (21.000 sales), Karmin's 'Hello EP' at no.38 with 20.000
sales and Richard Hawley's 'Standing At The Sky's Edge' at no.39 with
20.000 sales. COMPLETE
GLOBAL ALBUM CHART
Congratulations to
Gotye
feat. Kimbra, their 'Somebody That I Used To Know' tops the global
track chart for an excellent 10th week and gets another 424.000 points
(down 9% compared to last week). Next week the track will break the 6
million points border and
enter the big
ALL TIME CHART. |
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Fun. feat. Janelle Monáe's
'We Are Young' climbs back at no.2 (down 2% to 343.000 points) and
exchanged with Carly Rae Jepsen's 'Call Me Maybe', which is now |
 |
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at the third place (down 5%
to 342.000 points). Unchanged at no.4 and no.5 are Maroon 5 feat. Wiz
Khalifa's 'Payphone' (also down 5% to 280.000 points), respectively
Nicki Minaj's 'Starships' (up 1% to 261.000 points). Highest debut of
the week is United Kingdom's current no.1 smash, Tulisa's |
 |
'Young', which arrives at
no.17 with 103.000 points. Rihanna's bows with another lift-off from
her 'Talk That Talk' album, 'Where have You Been' debuts at no.23 with
94.000 points. Nogizaka 46, another girl-group from Japan, follows at
no.24 with 'Oide Shampoo' (91.000 points), 'Both Of Us', B.o.B's
collaboration with Taylor Swift, jumps at no.25 with (90.000 points),
Rino Sashihara's 'Soredemo Sukidayo' flies to no.31 (73.000 points),
Flo Rida's 'Whistle' goes at no.35 (68.000 points) and finally
Girls Generation's Twinkle' climbs to no.39 (63.000 points). Outside
the top 40 waiting among others Eric |
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Church's 'Springsteen' at
no.44, Luca Hänni's 'Don't Think About Me' at no.46, Madonna's 'Girl
Gone Wild' at no.47 and Luke Bryan's 'Drunk On You' at no.55 for their
first appearance on the big list.
COMPLETE GLOBAL TRACK CHART |
10 years ago

No.1:
Shakira
'Whenever Wherever' |
20 years ago

No.1:
Kome Kome Club
'Kimi Ga Irudakede' |
30 years ago

No.1:
McCartney & Wonder
'Ebony And Ivory' |
 |
USA
Billboard Report
(Excerpt)
Carrie Underwood's 'Blown Away' nabs second week at no.1
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
by Keith Caulfield, L.A. & Silvio Pietroluongo, N.Y.
Carrie Underwood holds at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart a
second week with "Blown Away," selling another 120,000 copies (down 55%
according to Nielsen SoundScan). It's Underwood's 3rd |
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No. 1 album, but first to spend more than a
week at the top.
With the Mother's Day holiday falling on the final day of the tracking week (May
13) reflected in the new chart, it's not surprising to see Adele's mom-friendly
"21" see a big gain in sales. The album rises 4-2 this week on the Billboard 200
with 101,000 sold -- up 31%.
Lionel Richie's "Tuskegee" also sees a mother-fueled jump, climbing 6-3 with
71,000 (up 11%). The "Now 42" compilation falls 3-4 (65,000; down 31%) while
Norah Jones' "Little Broken Hearts" slips 2-5 (60,000; down 46%).
The chart's highest debut comes from rock band Silversun Pickups, which sees its
"Neck of the Woods" drive in at No. 6 with 41,000. It's the highest charting set
for the act, but not its best sales week: 2009's "Swoon" bowed at No. 7 with a
career-high 43,000.
One Direction's "Up All Night" spends its ninth straight week in the top 10, as
it rises one slot to No. 7 with 40,000 (down 11%). Right behind the U.K. boy
band is Jack White's "Blunderbuss," moving 7-8 with 34,000 (down 38%).
Rounding out the top 10 are Tank's new "This Is How I Feel," debuting at No. 9
(33,000), and Luke Bryan's "Tailgates & Tanlines" stepping 13-10 (26,000; down
1%). Tank's latest gives him his fifth top 40 set and third to reach the top 10.
His last release, 2010's "Now Or Never," debuted and peaked at No. 35 with
44,000 that December.
Overall album sales in this past chart week (ending May 13)
totaled 5.56 million
units, down 3% compared to the sum last week (5.77 million) and down 2% compared
to the comparable sales week of 2011 (5.68 million). Year to date album sales
stand at 112.32 million, down 1% compared to the same total at this point last
year (113.79 million).
Over on the Digital Songs chart, the
top three are non-movers this week, led by Gotye's "Somebody That I Used to
Know" at No. 1 with 321,000 (down 8%). The song, which features Kimbra, crosses
the 4 million sales mark this week -- rising to 4.04 million downloads sold in
the U.S.
At No. 2, Maroon 5's "Payphone" (featuring Wiz Khalifa) sells 293,000 (up 2%)
while Carly Rae Jepsen's "Call Me Maybe" is at No. 3 with 234,000 (up 12%).
Justin Bieber's "Boyfriend" rises 5-4 (165,000; down 4%), fun's "We Are Young" (featuring Janelle Monae) is down one
to No. 5 (164,000; down 12%) and Nicki Minaj's "Starships" sails 7-6 (151,000;
up 3%).
Flo Rida's "Wild Ones" (featuring Sia) is up two rungs to No. 7 (150,000; up
8%), One Direction's "What Makes You Beautiful" drops 6-8 (146,000; down 3%) and
Jennifer Lopez's "Dance Again" (featuring Pitbull) zips 15-9 (104,000; up 39%).
The latter benefits from J.Lo's performance of the track on "American Idol's"
May 10 episode.
The Wanted's "Glad You Came" closes out the top 10 on the Digital Songs chart,
holding at No. 10 with 95,000 (down 21%).
Digital track sales this past week totaled 24.96 million downloads, down 2%
compared to last week (25.41 million) and up 1% stacked next to the comparable
week of 2011 (24.79 million). Year to date track sales are at 520.35 million, up
7% compared to the same total at this point last year (487.16 million).
COMPLETE
CHARTS
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United Kingdom
Music Week Report (Excerpt)
Keane's 'Strangeland' lands at no.1
Monday, May 14, 2012
by Alan Jones, London
12 weeks after storming to number one as featured vocalist on DJ Fresh's
Hot Right Now, 21 year old Rita Ora - originally from Kosovo but now
based in London - races back to the summit with R.I.P. |
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Sounding the death knell for
Tulisa's Young, which dips to number two (63,649 sales) after just a
week at the top, R.I.P. sold 104,592 copies on its debut. It is the
sixth biggest weekly sale of the year in a list topped by Hot Right
Now's introductory week's sales of 127,998.
R.I.P boasts a multi-national writing team including an Afghan, a
Canadian (rapper Drake), A Nigerian, an American, two Norwegians and two
Brits (Chase & Status), and features a rap by Tinie Tempah, for whom it
is the third number one hit.
Its sales increasing for the eighth week in a row, Alex Clare's debut
smash Too Close climbs 5-4, shifting 58,284 copies. Originally released
in March 2011 and belatedly blasted into the chart after featuring in
the TV advertising campaign for Microsoft Internet Explorer, it has sold
175,664 copies in total. Clare's debut album, The Lateness Of The Hour,
which came out last July, increases its sales for the seventh week in a
row, despite falling 17-22. It sold 6,357 copies last week to increase
its cumulative tally to 27,060.
Train's three biggest hits were released in 2001, 2010 and 2012 - and
all three are in the Top 75 together for the fourth week in a row. Their
latest single Drive By is their highest charting hit to date, with a
14-10-7-6 trajectory thus far, and sold 37,939 copies last week. Most
rock singles are in decline from week one, but Drive By has bucked the
trend, and has helped parent album California 37 to achieve a smart
turnaround too. The album debuted at number 10 three weeks ago, and
immediately slipped to number 29 but it recovered to number 25 last
week, and now jumps to number 15 (7,954 sales). Meanwhile, Train's 2010
number 18 hit Hey Soul Sister jumps 38-25 (12,859 sales), while 2001
number 10 hit Drops Of Jupiter (Tell Me) falls 68-71 (3,964 sales).
American hip-hop group Far East Movement had their first Top 20 hit in
2010, their second in 2011, and their third this week, with Justin
Bieber collaboration Live My Life, which debuts at number seven (33,287
sales). It is Bieber's ninth Top 40 hit - and he also registers his
10th, with Turn To You (Mother's Day Dedication) debuting at number 39
(7,857 sales), having only been released on Friday. Mother's Day, of
course, fell here on 18 March - but the track was released to mark
Mother's Day in Bieber's native Canada and The USA, where it fell on 13
May.
She may have passed on R.I.P., which co-writer Drake offered to her
before Rita Ora, but Rihanna scores her 21st Top 10 hit, as Where Have
You Been sprints 21-8 (30,149 sales).
Other singles in the Top 10 this week not mentioned elsewhere: Carly Rae
Jepsen's Call Me Maybe falls 2-3 (59,183 sales); Fun's We Are Young
(feat. Janelle Monae) dips 3-5 (52,719 sales) and Somebody That I Used
To Know recovers 10-9 (29,241 sales) for Gotye feat. Kimra.
Overall singles sales are down 3.49% week-on-week at 3,382,333 - 6.27%
above same week 2011 sales of 3,182,665.
Two years to
the week after securing their fourth number one album, Keane make it
five in a row, with Strangeland racking up first week sales of 47,839.
In 2004, the Sussex band's debut album Hopes And Fears entered the chart
at number one on sales of 155,373; in 2006, Under The Iron Sea debuted
in pole position with sales of 222,297 copies; in 2008, Perfect Symmetry
accessed the apex with a 79,106 start; and in 2010, Night Train - which
has eight tracks and a playing time of less than 32 minutes and is
generally regarded as a mini album or an EP - took the title on sales of
28,063.
Strangeland's success comes despite a fairly lukewarm reception for
introductory single, Silenced By The Night. Although the track has been
given plenty of exposure, climbing as high as number 21 on the radio
airplay chart -it recovers 27-25 this week, its sixth in the Top 50 - it
has struggled in the sales chart. It finally breaches the Top 75 this
week, having moved 78-152-162-46.
The only acts to have had more number one albums than Keane in the 21st
century are Eminem, Robbie Williams and Westlife (seven apiece) and
Madonna (six). Coldplay, Oasis and Bruce Springsteen have also had five.
Eminem also topped the chart with D12, while Oasis' Noel Gallagher also
reached top perch with his High Flying Birds album. Although some might
suggest that 2005 import Live Recordings 2004 broke Keane's string of
number ones by reaching number 131, on a less strict interpretation of
their career limited to the Top 75 - which would also exclude digital
releases of Live From London (2004), Live Recordings: European Tour
(2008) and iTunes Live: London Festival (2010) - they have had five
number one albums in a row, something only Abba (eight), Led Zeppelin
(eight), The Beatles (seven) and Eminem (six) have exceeded in chart
history. Of these acts, however, only The Beatles' run starts - like
Keane's - with their first album.
Helped by an appearance on Later...With Jools Holland, enigmatic
Sheffield singer/songwriter Richard Hawley's seventh studio album,
Standing At The Sky's Edge delivers his second and highest charting Top
10 entry, debuting at number three (16,070 sales). Hawley's fifth album,
Lady's Bridge, debuted and peaked at number six on sales of 17,396 a
week after Tonight The Streets Are Ours became his only Top 40 single in
2007. Despite a lower (number 37) chart peak, Hawley's 2005 album, Coles
Corner, is his biggest seller, with sales to date of 144,722.
Yorkshire indie band The Cribs’ fifth album, In The Belly Of The Brazen
Bull, delivers their third Top 75 entry, debuting at number nine (8,952
sales). It thus fails to match first week sales of 2009 predecessor
Ignore The Ignorant, which debuted and peaked at number eight (14,824
sales) and breakthrough album Men's Needs Women's Needs Whatever, which
got to number 13 on sales of 11,272 in 2007.
A week after debuting at number one, Marina & The Diamonds' second
album, Electra Heart plunges to number 13 (8,416 sales).
21 climbs 5-4 for Adele but its sales are down again, to 14,644 - the
lowest tally of its 68 week chart tenure.
Overall album sales are down 4.05% week-on-week at 1,457,792 - 8.16%
below same week 2011 sales of 1,587,342.
COMPLETE
CHARTS
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Japan

No.1 Single:
Arashi
'Face Down' |
Germany

No.1 Album:
Toten Hosen
'Ballast Der Repubik' |
France

No.1 Album:
Sexion D'Assaut
'L'apogée' |
'World-Chart
Theme' is performed by Surroyal
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