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Global Chart Report
'Need You Now' starts with
nearly a half million copies
Friday, February 5, 2010
by Fred Chuchel, Dresden
American country-trio Lady Antebellum scores the current tally
with their second effort 'Need You Now'. After one week at retail the
album moved 495.000 copies in the USA and Canada, enough to kick off |
the charity release 'Hope
For Haiti Now' from the chart-throne, which sold another 193.000
copies last week and slides down at no.2. Lady Antebellum's
self-titled first album is still on the list and climbs at no.31 this
week with 32.000 units sold. Back to the upper regions of the chart,
Lady GaGa's 'The Fame (Monster)' sails one slot at no.3 (down 2% at
170.000), Susan Boyle's 'I Dreamed A Dream' slips also one slot at
no.4, but loses much more in sales, down 25% to 129.000. Rounding out
the top five is Alicia Keys' 'The Element Of Freedom' (up 9% to
114.000). Behind Lady Antebellum are another nine new entries, a new
record for the current year! Hy's 'Whistle' bows at no.8 (82.000),
Corinne Bailey Rae's 'The Sea' at no.10 (61.000), Barry Manilow's
'Greatest Love Songs Of All Time' at no.13 (57.000), Celtic Woman's
'Songs From The Heart' at no.18 (44.000), the 17th edition of Kidz Bop
Kids at no.22 (36.000), Abingdon School Boys' 'Abingdon Road' at no.28
(34.000), the soundtrack to 'Final Fantasy XIII' at no.29 (33.000),
André Rieu's 'Forever Vienna' at no.38 (26.000) and Mumford & Sons'
'Sigh No More' at no.40 (24.000). COMPLETE GLOBAL ALBUM CHART
Ke$ha 'Tik Tok'
expands its reign to a fifth non-consecutive week and achieves another
417.000 points, 2% less than the previous week. Lady GaGa's 'Bad
Romance' follows with 377.000 points at the second (also a 2% loss),
Owl City's 'Fireflies' is still waiting at third (up 2% to 289.000
points), Iyaz' 'Replay' climbs one position at no.4, but lost 13% to
225.000 points. Jay-Z feat. Alica Keys' 'Empire State Of Mind' returns
to the top five, despite a 7% decrease to 217.000. Tohoshinki's
'Breakout!' breaks out with massive sales in Japan, the track sold
nearly 170.000 singles on the first day at retail alone, 256.000 in
the first week, enough to propelled it to no.7 on the global track
chart |
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(214.000 points). Another
J-pop smash bows at no.39, L'arc-En-Ciel's 'Bless' with 67.000 points.
A new version of Leonard Cohen's classic 'Hallelujah' enters at no.13
(151.000 points). It's a part of the 'Hope For Haiti Now' set,
performed by Justin Timberlake, Matt Morris & Charlie Sexton. 'I Gotta
Feeling' by the Black Eyed Peas arrives the top 20 of the All Time
Chart. With a total of 10.184.000 points, it is the first song since
Leona Lewis' 'Bleeding Love', which breaks the 10-million border. In
its 34th week on the tally, 'I Gotta Feeling' holds no.8 (down 2% to
188.000 points). COMPLETE GLOBAL TRACK CHART |
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30 years ago the british
pop-rock duo Buggles, consisting of vocalist and guitarist Trevor Horn
and keyboarder Geoff Downes, landed a worldwide smash with the prophetic
'Video Killed The Radio Star'. The song went to no.1 in United Kingdom,
Switzerland, Austria and Sweden, no.2 in Germany and no.40 in the USA.
But the biggest success was in France, where the track held the top spot
for 12 weeks and sold more than 1,2 million singles. 'Video Killed The
Radio Star' was the only major success for the Buggles. Trevor and Geoff
joined the group Yes in 1980, Geoff joined Asia ('Heat Of The Moment')
in 1981. Some time later Trevor Horn became a prolific producer (Frankie
Goes To Hollywood) and founded his own label ZTT.
COMPLETE GLOBAL CHART, 30 YEARS AGO |
10 years ago

No.1:
Celine Dion
'That's The Way It Is' |
20 years ago

No.1:
Phil Collins
'Another Day In Paradise' |
30 years ago

No.1:
Pink Floyd
'Another Brick In The Wall' |
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USA
Billboard Report
(Excerpt)
Lady Antebellum leads banner week for EMI
Wednesday,
February 3, 2010
by Keith Caulfield, L.A. & Silvio Pietroluongo, N.Y.
Lady Antebellum's sophomore effort, "Need You Now," starts its
chart run at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, selling 481,000, according to
Nielsen SoundScan. That's the biggest debut sales week for any |
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album since Susan Boyle's "I Dreamed a Dream" bowed atop the list
with 701,000 in November, and the best for a country album since Taylor Swift's
"Fearless" opened at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with 592,000 copies in November
2008.
Lady Antebellum's self-titled first album debuted and peaked at No. 4 with
43,000 in its opening week back in May 2008. This week, in the set's 94th week
on the chart, it climbs one spot to No. 15 with 31,000 (up 32%).
The eye-popping sum that Lady A's "Need You Now" racked up is also the biggest
opening week for an album released in January since the Game's "The Documentary"
bowed with 587,000 at No. 1 in 2005. Traditionally, January isn't packed with
albums that earn blockbuster debut weeks, as most of the big guns come out in
time for the busy November-December holiday shopping season. But for the Capitol
Nashville set, all the stars have seemingly aligned.
The new album's title track, which the trio performed on the Jan. 31 Grammy
Awards, already spent five weeks atop the Hot Country Songs chart and jumps from
No. 37 to No. 30 on the Pop Songs tally this week. The trio also has another reason to
celebrate, as it won its first Grammy Award during the show's pre-telecast
ceremony, taking home the trophy for best country performance by a duo or group
with vocals (for "I Run to You," from its first album).
Lady A's arrival at No. 1 helps EMI Music claim four out of the top 10 titles on
the Billboard 200 this week, the first time the company has done so in nearly 12
years. Lady A's Capitol Nashville effort is joined by Capitol's Corinne Bailey
Rae and her second album, "The Sea" (a debut at No. 7 with 53,000); the
Grammy / Capitol "Grammy Nominees 2010" compilation (down three slots to No. 8 in
its second week with 45,000; down 7%); and Manhattan's Celtic Woman with "Songs
From the Heart" (debuting at No. 9 with 42,000). The last time EMI had four
albums in the top 10 was July 4, 1998, when Master P's "MP Da Last Don" (No. 3;
No Limit/Priority), the soundtrack to "Hope Floats" (No. 4; Capitol), Garth
Brooks' "The Limited Series" (No. 6; Capitol Nashville/Capitol) and the Smashing
Pumpkins' "Adore" (No. 10; Virgin/Capitol) held court.
Last week's No. 1, the "Hope for Haiti Now" charity compilation, drops to No. 2
with 143,000—down just 16% after its first full week of availability. Lady
Gaga's "The Fame" holds at No. 3 with (68,000; up 10%), Susan Boyle's "I Dreamed
a Dream" drops two rungs to No. 4 (59,000; down 31%), and Barry Manilow's "The
Greatest Love Songs of All Time" debuts at No. 5 (57,000). Michael Jackson's
"This Is It" jumps 11 spots to No. 6 with 55,000 (up 136%) courtesy of the
attention generated from the DVD release of the same-named film. At Nos. 7-9 are
the aforementioned Rae, "Grammy Nominees" and Celtic Woman titles, respectively.
Closing out the top 10, at No. 10, is the Black Eyed Peas' "The E.N.D." with
40,000 (up 14%).
Expect significant jumps next week for last Sunday's (Jan. 31) Grammy Awards
performers, including Gaga and the Peas, once a full week of sales impact is
felt. (SoundScan's tracking week ends at the close of business on Sunday
evening.) Overall album sales in this past chart week (ending Jan. 31) totaled 6.50
million units, up 11% compared with the sum last week (5.8 million) and down
.06% compared with the comparable sales week of 2009 (6.51 million).
After several of music's biggest stars showed their support for Haiti relief
efforts, consumers are doing the same. Songs from the charity compilation "Hope
for Haiti Now" scale the Billboard Hot 100, along with all Billboard sales and
airplay charts, on Billboard.com. Justin Timberlake and Matt Morris'
"Hallelujah," featuring Charlie Sexton, vaults 48-13 on the Hot 100 with
Greatest Gainer/Digital honors, spurred by a 24-5 charge on the Digital Songs
chart (151,000 downloads sold, up 136%). Three additional cuts from "Hope for
Haiti Now" debut on the Hot 100: "Lean on Me" by Sheryl Crow, Kid Rock and Keith
Urban, the Hot Shot Debut at No. 47; Taylor Swift's "Breathless" (No. 72); and
Jennifer Hudson's cover of the Beatles' "Let It Be" (No. 98). In the chart's
upper ranks, Ke$ha clocks a seventh week at No. 1 with "TiK ToK." The song leads
Radio Songs/Hot 100 Airplay for a second week (130 million audience impressions)
and rebounds for a sixth week atop Digital Songs (200,000 downloads). Lady
Gaga's "Bad Romance" returns for a seventh week in the runner-up spot on the Hot
100 (3-2), the song's highest rank to date. Rising 4-3, Young Money's "BedRock,"
featuring Lloyd, claims Greatest Gainer/Airplay accolades. The song climbs 6-3
on Radio Songs (101 million in audience, up 14%). The Black Eyed Peas zoom 11-4
on the Hot 100 with "Imma Be," marking their fourth top 10 from their former
Billboard 200 No. 1 album, "The E.N.D." David Guetta's "Sexy Chick," featuring
Akon, lifts 7-5, and Ludacris' "How Low" surges 12-6, each title rebounding to
new peak positions. Iyaz's "Replay" dips 6-7, and Lady Antebellum's "Need You
Now," the title cut to the Billboard 200's new leader, returns to the top 10 of
the Hot 100 after 10 weeks with gains at retail (18-8, Digital Songs) and radio
(19-14, Radio Songs). The song reached a highpoint of No. 5 on the Hot 100 in
November. Rounding out the Hot 100's top 10, Train's "Hey, Soul Sister" edges
10-9. The track swaps places with Rihanna's "Hard," featuring Jeezy. COMPLETE
CHARTS
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United Kingdom
Music Week Report (Excerpt)
Alicia Keys tops the UK album chart for the first time
Monday, February 8, 2010
by Alan Jones, London
A busy release slate and the approach of Valentines Day help album sales
to jump 6.30% week-on-week to 2,034,416 an excellent 19% above same
week 2009 sales of 1,713,255. Making the biggest |
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contribution, The Element Of Freedom tops the artist
album chart at the eighth attempt, becoming the first UK number one
album for Alicia Keys. Ironically, the album is her first not to reach
number one in America, after a quartet of chart-toppers. Galvanised by
the success of first two singles Empire State Of Mind (Part II) and
Doesn't Mean Anything, The Element Of Freedom sold 35,337 copies last
week, and is the 21st Top 75 album, 13th Top 10 album but first number
one album in the UK for Sony CEO Clive Davis' J Records imprint since
its 2000 inception.
Dutch violinist Andre Rieu's Forever Vienna set continues to make
sterling progress, moving 4-2 on sales of 33,709 copies. Although Sunny
Side Up slips 1-3, Paolo Nutini still has cause to celebrate: the 31,607
copies it sold last week lift its overall tally to 1,019,208, making it
the Paisley singer/songwriter's second straight million selling album
from as many releases following 2006 debut These Streets, which has thus
far sold 1,220,576 copies.
Among 12 debuts on the Top 75 the biggest intake for eight weeks are
albums by four acts who have at various times topped the chart,
including Corinne Bailey Rae, who nabs top debut honours, with The Sea
entering at number five (22,914 sales), three years to the month after
her self-titled debut set arrived at number one on first-week sales of
108,181. Other former chart-toppers to occupy lower berths this week
are: Peter Andre (Unconditional Love Songs, number nine, 18,331 sales),
George Benson (Classic Love Songs, number 30, 7,107 sales) and Ocean
Colour Scene (Saturday, number 35, 6,454 sales). Andre's album is a
compilation including five new songs, and arrives just 20 weeks after
his successful comeback album, Revelation, which reached number three
and sold 258,181 copies.
Meanwhile, two artists make their first ever appearance in the Top 75
album chart. Ke$ha's debut album Animal enters at number eight (18,723
sales), following the success of introductory single Tik Tok, which has
spent 14 weeks in the Top 20, selling 422,287 copies to date; and
Midlake's second album, The Courage Of Others, debuts at number 18
(10,803 sales), following the sleeper success of their 2006 debut The
Trails Of Van Occupanther, which never got higher than number 162 but
has sold more than 38,000 copies to date. Several tracks from Ke$ha's
album debut on the Top 200 singles chart, most notably the 3OH!3
collaboration Blah Blah Blah, new at number 11 (27,161 sales).
Elsewhere, there are album chart debuts for Hot Chip (One Life Stand,
number 11, 14,613 sales), Lil Wayne (Rebirth, number 24, 8,552 sales),
Marvin Gaye (The Greatest Love Songs Of, number 38, 5,790 sales), Nick
Jonas & Administration (Who I Am, number 50, 4,220 sales) and Rob Zombie
(Hellbilly Deluxe 2, number 65, 3,053 sales).
While the rest of this week’s album entries have taken just six days to
cement their chart debut, it has taken Journey's Greatest Hits 22 years.
The 1988 compilation has sold more than 100,000 copies since it was
first released without ever bothering the chart compilers but the
success of Don't Stop Believin' which has been in the Top 10 for eight
weeks and a new TV campaign prove the charm, as the album debuts at
number 12 (13,578 sales).
Owl
City's Fireflies continues its reign for a third straight week, with
sales of 77,669 lifting its career tally to 295,994. On Tuesday, it was
just 24 sales ahead of X Factor duo Jedward's debut single, Under
Pressure (Ice Ice Baby) a recreated mash-up of Queen & David Bowie's
Under Pressure and the rap hit based on it, Vanilla Ices Ice Ice Baby,
number one hits in their own right in 1981 and 1990, respectively.
Jedward 18 year old Dubliners John & Edward Grimes thus fall short, at
least for the moment, of becoming the latest identical(ish) twins to top
the charts. Hal & Herbie Kalin (The Kalin Twins) did it, so did Charlie
& Craig Reid (The Proclaimers), not to mention Matt & Luke Goss (two
thirds of Bros).
Vanilla Ice himself joins Jedward on Under Pressure (Ice Ice Baby),
which debuts at number two on sales of 50,468 copies. Vanilla Ice's
original recording of Ice Ice Baby sold more than 600,000 copies.
Although critically panned, it is a recording that has prospered in the
digital age, selling 104,912 copies in a little over five years since
OCC started counting sales of the format, and spending 14 weeks in the
Top 200. It climbs 129-113 this week on sales of 2,272 copies. Under
Pressure (Ice Ice Baby) is not the only new entry to the chart this week
to bear a writing credit for Freddie Mercury. The late Queen legend's
Somebody To Love is one of two newly released songs from Glee Cast to
make the Top 75, arriving at number 26 (11,772 sales), while Heart cover
Alone debuts at number 47 (6,151 sales). All 14 Glee Cast songs issued
as downloads to date are in the Top 200 this week, with the cover of
Journey's Don't Stop Believin' continuing as the TV show's major hit,
slipping 2-4 (43,285 sales).
After plucking four Top 30 hits off her album One Of The Boys, Katy
Perry is enjoying two concurrent Top 10 hits as featured guest on other
acts songs. Starstrukk, on which she accompanies 3OH!3, has barely moved
since its first charted, with a chart history to date of
5-5-6-3-4-4-4-7, and is now joined in the top tier by If We Ever Meet
Again, her collaboration with Timbaland. Starstrukk sold 36,260 copies
last week to lift its career tally to 344,143 but its success and the
number 21 position posted by first single Don't Trust Me has not
translated into sales for 3OH!3s album Want, which peaked at number 77
four weeks ago and now dips out of the Top 200. If We Ever Meet Again up
17-3 on sales of 47,494 - is similarly the second single from Timbalands
current album, Shock Value II, following the Nelly Furtado collaboration
Morning After Dark, which reached number six in December. It is rather
more successful in attracting sales to its parent, which jumps 83-58
(3,463 sales) to eclipse the number 60 position in which the set debuted
and initially peaked eight weeks ago.
Singles sales increase 4.07% week-on-week to 3,029,919, 10.90% above same
week 2009 sales of 2,732,059.
COMPLETE
CHARTS |
Japan

No.1
Single:
Tohoshinki
'Breakout!' |
Germany

No.1 Album: Tocotronic
'Schall & Wahn' |
France

No.1
Single: Christophe Maé
'Dingue Dingue Dingue' |
'World-Chart
Theme' is performed by Surroyal
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