|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Jul 11, 2012 9:40:42 GMT -5
Hiphopdx.com:
Current albums chart:
#1. Chris Brown - Fortune - 135,000 (135,000)
#12. Maybach Music Group Presents... - Self Made, Volume 2 - 35,000 (133,000)
#14. Flo Rida - Wild Ones - 31,000 (31,000)
#26. B.o.B. - Strange Clouds - 19,000 (119,000)
#34. Drake - Take Care - 15,000 (1,810,000)
#45. Nicki Minaj - Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded - 11,000 (569,000)
#68. Big K.R.I.T. - Live From The Underground - 6,800 (71,000)
#80. Waka Flocka Flame - Triple F Life: Fans, Friends & Family - 6,000 (62,000)
#105. Prodigy - H.N.I.C. 3 - 3,900 (4,000)
#179. Curren$y - The Stoned Immaculate - 2,400 (54,000)
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Jul 11, 2012 10:04:52 GMT -5
www.billboard.com/news#/news/chris-brown-s-fortune-album-debuts-at-no-1007545752.storyChris Brown's 'Fortune' Album Debuts at No. 1 on Billboard 200 by Keith Caulfield, L.A. | July 11, 2012 11:00 EDT Chris Brown earns his second No. 1 album on the Billboard 200, as "Fortune" debuts atop the chart, selling 134,000 copies according to Nielsen SoundScan. It follows his last release, and first No. 1, 2011's "F.A.M.E." That album launched atop the list with 270,000 -- more than double the start of "Fortune." Brown is the second R&B hitmaker in a month to debut at No. 1 with a comparably soft launch. Four weeks ago, Usher's "Looking 4 Myself" started at No. 1 with 128,000. That marked a significant slide from the 329,000 first week of his last full-length album, the No. 1-debuting "Raymond v Raymond." Had it not been for Brown's new "Fortune" release, we would have seen a surprise return to No. 1 for Katy Perry, as her "Teenage Dream" set zooms from No. 21 to No. 2 with 80,000 (up 417%) -- and its best sales frame since Christmas of 2010. The set was one of 20 titles the Amazon MP3 store sale priced for 99 cents -- for one day only -- on July 3. (Perry also benefits from buzz earned by the release of her "Part of Me" film, which hit U.S. theaters on July 5.) All but one of Amazon's 99-cent titles rank among the top 40 this week on the Billboard 200, and 17 of them post a gain of more than 100%. The largest percentage gain goes to Ellie Goulding's "Lights," which vaults from No. 116 to No. 21 with 23,000 (up 444%). It's both a new weekly sales high for the set and its best rank yet. Amazon also pushes three more albums back into the top 10 aside from "Teenage Dream" -- Gotye's "Making Mirrors" (31-6 with 44,000; up 248%), fun.'s "Some Nights" (23-7 with just under 43,000; up 181%) and the Black Keys' "El Camino" (55-10 with 37,000; up 396%). Last week's No. 1 album, Linkin Park's "Living Things," falls to No. 5 with 64,000 (down 72%) while Maroon 5's "Overexposed" slides 2-4 with 68,000 (down 70%) in its second week. Justin Bieber's "Believe" holds at No. 3 with 70,000 (down 40%) while Kenny Chesney's "Welcome to the Fishbowl" is down 6-8 with 43,000 (down 30%). Adele's "21" spends its 72nd straight week in the top 10, falling 7-9 -- its lowest rank yet -- with 41,000 (down 3%). "21" is now tied with Alanis Morissette's "Jagged Little Pill" for the most weeks in the top 10 for an album by a woman. (Among all albums, the soundtrack to "The Sound of Music" has the most weeks in the top 10, with 109.) Just outside the top 10, Jason Mraz's "Love Is a Four Letter Word" rises 45-13 with 32,000 (up 255%) -- again, thanks to Amazon MP3. All of the Amazon MP3 action blocks Flo Rida from earning his third top 10 album this week, as his new "Wild Ones" debuts at No. 14 with 31,000. It's likely that without the Amazon deal, "Wild Ones" would have bowed at No. 9 -- as there are five discounted titles that jumped ahead of Flo this week. (All of the discounted albums have been in release for at least five weeks, thus, they are not impacted by Billboard's pricing policy. Unit sales for Albums priced below $3.49 during their first four weeks of release will not be eligible for inclusion on the Billboard album charts and will not count towards sales data presented by Nielsen SoundScan.) Over on the Digital Songs chart, Carly Rae Jepsen's "Call Me Maybe" is a non-mover at No. 1, selling 244,000 downloads (down 3%). Katy Perry's "Wide Awake" (210,000; up 2%) and Maroon 5's "Payphone" (183,000; down 1%) are also stationary this week. Flo Rida's "Whistle" rises 8-4 with 172,000 (up 52%), Ellie Goulding's "Lights" stays put at No. 5 (160,000; up 6%) and Gotye's "Somebody That I Used to Know" falls 4-6 (142,000; down 9%). David Guetta's "Titanium" (featuring Sia) holds at No. 7 (138,000; up 10%), Owl City & Carly Rae Jepsen's "Good Time" slips 6-8 (127,000; down 9%) and Rihanna's "Where Have You Been" rests for a second week at No. 9 (102,000; down 7%). Usher's "Scream" rounds out the top 10 -- another non-mover at No. 10 -- with 97,000 (down 5%). Overall album sales in this past chart week (ending July 8) totaled 5.80 million units, up 1% compared with the sum last week (5.74 million) and up 9% compared with the comparable sales week of 2011 (5.34 million). Year-to-date album sales stand at 156.26 million, down 3% compared with the same total at this point last year (160.81 million). Digital track sales this past week totaled 25.17 million downloads, down 1% compared with last week (25.38 million) and down less than 1% stacked next to the comparable week of 2011 (25.29 million). Year-to-date track sales are at 672.73 million, up 6% compared with the same total at this point last year (635.35 million). Next week's Billboard 200 competes with the same week in 2011 when: Blake Shelton nabbed his first No. 1 album with "Red River Blue," bowing atop the list with 116,000 sold. Incubus' "If Not Now, When?" started in the No. 2 slot with 80,000.
|
|
popstop
6x Platinum Member
Pulse's Summer Intern
Advancing the Mountain Time Zone for all mankind
|
Post by popstop on Jul 11, 2012 10:16:19 GMT -5
Wow, Adele pulled out another week in the top ten after all. Without the .99 sales this week, she'll probably pass Alanis' top ten week total.
|
|
cking33
Gold Member
Joined: July 2010
Posts: 960
|
Post by cking33 on Jul 11, 2012 10:43:29 GMT -5
I noticed that HipHop DX says BoB has only sold 119,000 albums so far... That seems low to me. Should that be higher?
|
|
NeRD
Diamond Member
RIHANNA NAVY
Joined: March 2010
Posts: 15,298
|
Post by NeRD on Jul 11, 2012 11:15:31 GMT -5
I guess the good news for Nicki is that she's just now moving on to her second single PTA, which more than likely will be huge. I'm sure the album will eventually reach one million if not more in the long run assuming they release all the smashes (VVV, Young Forever, and Whip) combined with the Urban singles.
|
|
wavey.
Moderator
Look...
Positive Vibes🙏🏾❤
Joined: August 2006
Posts: 43,658
Pronouns: He/Him
Staff
|
Post by wavey. on Jul 11, 2012 11:22:23 GMT -5
I noticed that HipHop DX says BoB has only sold 119,000 albums so far... That seems low to me. Should that be higher? That 119 k should have been his opening week, tbh. Maybe "Both Of Us" will keep it afloat.
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Jul 11, 2012 11:31:11 GMT -5
I noticed that HipHop DX says BoB has only sold 119,000 albums so far... That seems low to me. Should that be higher? Good catch. He was at 171k last week.
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Jul 11, 2012 11:33:04 GMT -5
I guess the good news for Nicki is that she's just now moving on to her second single PTA, which more than likely will be huge. I'm sure the album will eventually reach one million if not more in the long run assuming they release all the smashes (VVV, Young Forever, and Whip) combined with the Urban singles. Let's hope. Her album was certified 1xp so she has 430k to go. We don't want a Femme Fatale situation here.
|
|
HolidayGuy
Diamond Member
Joined: December 2003
Posts: 33,918
|
Post by HolidayGuy on Jul 11, 2012 11:47:01 GMT -5
As long as an album has shipped 1 million, then it's deserving of a platinum cert. :) (I understand what ya mean, though)
|
|
Agent Yoncé
Diamond Member
Joined: November 2010
Posts: 24,872
|
Post by Agent Yoncé on Jul 11, 2012 11:53:09 GMT -5
B.o.B = 191k. They made a boo boo.
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Jul 11, 2012 12:37:42 GMT -5
Paul Grein's Chart Watch at Yahoo!:
Week Ending July 8, 2012. Albums: Chris Brown, 2; Rihanna, 0 By Paul Grein | Chart Watch – 2 hours 28 minutes ago
Chris Brown lands his second straight #1 album as Fortune debuts in the top spot. It follows F.A.M.E., which went on to win a Grammy as Best R&B Album of 2011. Since the February 2009 incident in which Brown assaulted his then-girlfriend Rihanna, Brown has landed two #1 albums. Rihanna has yet to reach the top spot. That doesn't seem right, but those are the facts. But let me hasten to add that Rihanna's six studio albums have sold substantially more copies overall (8,392,000) than Brown's five studio albums have (5,598,000).
The best-selling album that either artist has had is Rihanna's 2007 smash Good Girls Gone Bad (2,750,000), followed by Brown's 2005 debut Chris Brown (2,199,000) and his 2007 sophomore album Exclusive (2,014,000). The worst-selling album that either artist has had is Brown's Graffiti, which has sold just 362K. That album was released just 10 months after the assault, when Brown supporters were hard to find.
Brown's album sold 135K in its first week. That's down sharply from his last album, which opened with sales of 270K. The first-week tally for Fortune isn't much higher than the first-week tally for aforementioned Graffiti, which opened with sales of 102K. Of course, Brown isn't the only artist whose album sales are down. Usher's recent Looking 4 Myself also opened far below the level of his past works. It sold 128K in its first week, compared to 329K for his immediately previous full-length studio album, Raymond V Raymond.
Fortune also debuts at #1 in the U.K. It's Brown's first #1 album in that territory. His previous best mark there was #3 for Exclusive. Fortune is the first R&B album (excluding hip hop) to reach #1 in both the U.S. and the U.K. since Beyonce's 4 in 2010. Katy Perry's Teenage Dream rebounds from #21 to #2 in the wake of the release of her concert movie Katy Perry: Part Of Me. The movie ranked #8 for the weekend, which was considered a disappointment. Still, it helped shine a spotlight on the album. Teenage Dream also got a boost from a 99-cent promotion at Amazon MP3 on July 5. (That same promotion also brought Gotye's Making Mirrors, fun.'s Some Nights and the Black Keys' El Camino back into the top 10, and boosted numerous other albums as well.)
This is the 98th week on The Billboard 200 for Teenage Dream. That's the longest that an album ranking in the top five has spent on the chart since Adele's 19 peaked at #4 in February, in its 122nd week on the chart. Teenage Dream has never ranked below #94.
Teenage Dream has sold 2,354,000 copies. Just one other album in this week's top 50 has sold 2 million or more copies. That is, of course, Adele's 21 (9,533,000). Teenage Dream has sold half again as well as Perry's hit debut album One Of The Boys (1,473,000).
Some pundits argue that the tally for Teenage Dream should be even higher, given all the hits that Perry has had from the album. Teenage Dream is the only album in history to spawn three 5-million-selling digital hits: "Firework" (5,717,000), "California Gurls" (featuring Snoop Dogg, 5,315,000) and "E.T." (featuring Kanye West, 5,282,000).
I see the point they're making, but I think they're missing the big picture. The songs' success is in addition to the album's success. The album has been a big hit just by itself, and then when you factor in the songs' success, the whole story is even more impressive.
Teenage Dream sold 67K digital copies this week (out of 80K total). That put it at #1 on Top Digital Albums for the second week. It debuted at #1 on that chart in August 2010 with sales of 50K digital copies.
Adele's 21 drops from #7 to #9, which is its lowest ranking to date. This is, nonetheless, its 72nd week in the top 10. This puts it in a tie with Alanis Morissette's Jagged Little Pill for the longest run in the top 10 by an album by a female artist since 1963, when Billboard combined its separate mono and stereo charts into one comprehensive list. Both women were very young when these albums were released. Adele was 22. Morissette was 21. Both albums won the Grammy for Album of the Year.
Shameless Plug: Luke Bryan's "Rain Is A Good Thing" this week becomes the 100th country song to top the 1 million mark in digital sales. This calls for a Chart Watch Extra. I'll soon post a piece in which I look at the 100 biggest country hits in digital history. Taylor Swift has a pack-leading 15 of them, but Carrie Underwood isn't far behind with 10. I have tons of country lore in this Extra. If you're a country fan, don't miss it.
Carly Rae Jepsen's "Call Me Maybe" is #1 on Hot Digital Songs for the eighth straight week. It's the first song to be the nation's digital best-seller for eight weeks (consecutive or not) since the Black Eyed Peas' "I Gotta Feeling" wound up a 10-week run at #1 in September 2009. Will it also hold at #1 on the Hot 100 for the fifth straight week? Probably, but you'll find out for sure later today when we post Chart Watch: Songs.
Here's the low-down on this week's top 10 albums.
The Top Five: Chris Brown's Fortune debuts at #1 (135K). It's his fifth top 10 album; his second #1… Katy Perry's Teenage Dream rebounds from #21 to #2 in its 98th week (80K). This is its 10th week in the top 10…Justin Bieber's Believe holds at #3 for the second week in its third week on the chart (70K). It has been in the top five the entire time… Maroon 5's Overexposed drops from #2 to #4 in its second week (68K)…Linkin Park's Living Things drops from #1 to #5 in its second week (64K).
The Second Five: Gotye's Making Mirrors rebounds from #31 to #6 in its 27th week (44K). This is its fifth week in the top 10…fun.'s Some Nights rebounds from #23 to #7 in 20th week (43K). This is its third week in the top 10…Kenny Chesney's Welcome To The Fishbowl drops from #6 to #8 in its third week on the chart (43K). It has been in the top 10 the entire time. It's #1 on Top Country Albums for the third week…Adele's 21 drops from #7 to #9 in its 72nd week on the chart (41K). It has been in the top 10 the entire time…The Black Keys' El Camino rebounds from #55 to #10 in its 31st week (37K). This is its eighth week in the top 10.
One Direction's Up All Night drops from #8 to #11, ending (for now at least) a 16-week run in the top 10. The album jumps to #2 on the year-to-date album chart, pushing Lionel Richie's Tuskegee down to third place. Adele's 21 is far out front. If Adele and One Direction hold their rankings, this will be the first year in Nielsen SoundScan history in which U.K. acts account for the year's top two albums. (One Direction consists of four Englishmen and one Irishman, Niall James Horan.)
Four other albums drop out of the top 10 this week. Maybach Music Group Presents: Self Made, Vol. 2 drops from #4 to #12. R. Kelly's Write Me Back drops from #5 to #19. Usher's Looking 4 Myself drops from #9 to #15. The Rock Of Ages soundtrack drops from #10 to #20. It's #1 on Top Soundtracks for the fifth week.
Flo Rida's Wild Ones debuts at #14. It puts Flo Rida back in the top 15 after his last album, Only One Flo (Part 1) peaked at a shocking low #107. The new album was originally going to be called Only One Rida (Part 2), but cooler heads prevailed. Since the last album flat-lined, why play off the title? And the single "Wild Ones" (featuring Sia) has sold 3,001,000 copies, so that's something worthy of playing up. While Wild Ones is doing better than Only One Flo, it fell a little short of the hip-hopper's first two albums, both of which made the top 10. Mail On Sunday reached #4 in 2008. R.O.O.T.S. (Route Of Overcoming The Struggle) hit #8 in 2009).
Phillip Phillips' American Idol, a Wal-Mart exclusive EP, debuts at #25.
The Black Keys' Brothers drops from #38 to #43 in its 111th week. It jumps to #1 on Top Catalog Albums. This is the album's first week at #1 on that chart. The album won two Grammys, including Best Alternative Music Album of 2010. It beat Arcade Fire's The Suburbs, which went on to win for Album of the Year. Which suggests that Brothers might have won Album of the Year if the panel that determines the final nominees in the "Big Four" categories had put it in the finals. (Unless Brothers and The Suburbs had split the "alternative vote," allowing, say, Eminem's Recovery to win.)
One Direction's Up All Night: The Live Tour, is #1 for the sixth week on Top Music Videos. It sold 17,000 copies this week, bringing its six-week total to 195K.
The Amazing Spider-Man was #1 at the box-office over the weekend. The soundtrack sold about 3K copies this week, too few to make The Billboard 200. The soundtracks to the first two movies in this franchise reached the top 10 (in 2002 and 2004, respectively). The soundtrack to the third peaked at #33 in 2007.
Coming Attractions: Zac Brown Band's Uncaged is expected to be next week's top new entry. Also due: Frank Ocean's Channel Orange. Ocean created a stir last week by saying his first love was a man.
|
|
musicjunky318
5x Platinum Member
A Joy & The Laughter
Joined: November 2007
Posts: 5,168
|
Post by musicjunky318 on Jul 11, 2012 12:43:18 GMT -5
The Rhi shade was unnecesary Paul.
|
|
Agent Yoncé
Diamond Member
Joined: November 2010
Posts: 24,872
|
Post by Agent Yoncé on Jul 11, 2012 12:47:19 GMT -5
Since the February 2009 incident in which Brown assaulted his then-girlfriend Rihanna, Brown has landed two #1 albums. Rihanna has yet to reach the top spot. That doesn't seem right, but those are the facts.
|
|
|
Post by strikeleo on Jul 11, 2012 12:50:07 GMT -5
It's interesting though, it shows Rihanna has some real legs, because even though she never reaches the top, she ends up not only crossing the million mark but selling way more than Brown did.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jul 11, 2012 13:00:39 GMT -5
Why did Paul Grein even find that necessary? How am I supposed to tell people in one thread "stop talking about that damn incident, it's not on topic anymore" and expect them to listen to me when his Chart Watch article not only drags it back up but makes it the leading paragraph? I'm so annoyed right now.
Grein has always irked me, anyway. He's messy.
|
|
Cerbius
3x Platinum Member
Joined: April 2010
Posts: 3,703
|
Post by Cerbius on Jul 11, 2012 13:01:13 GMT -5
I'm looking forward to all the updated digital totals from this one.
|
|
Oprah
9x Platinum Member
Joined: August 2008
Posts: 9,064
|
Post by Oprah on Jul 11, 2012 13:49:03 GMT -5
The most interesting thing about the stats Grein listed is that 21 alone has outsold the cum total of both CB and Rihanna's entire catalogue. Granted 21 is a beast so it's not a fair comparison.
|
|
peterca
Charting
Joined: August 2010
Posts: 313
|
Post by peterca on Jul 11, 2012 15:55:10 GMT -5
I'm looking forward to all the updated digital totals from this one. Me too! I hope Paul provides songs that are very close to 1 million in sales, partly because I'm curious as to what the sales are for "I Told You So" and "Wasted".
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jul 11, 2012 19:12:28 GMT -5
I guess the good news for Nicki is that she's just now moving on to her second single PTA, which more than likely will be huge. I'm sure the album will eventually reach one million if not more in the long run assuming they release all the smashes (VVV, Young Forever, and Whip) combined with the Urban singles. 2nd? "Beez" and"Right By My Side" sis. Unless you mean pop. A stream of hits should take it there though I think, assuming the pop hits will actually do something for her. I kinda expected this to sell like Rihanna or Katy (a slow but steady sail to 1M) since it's essentially a pop album to the masses but her sales this week seem a bit scary for where her total is at. I'm not sure how to really gauge this campaign because I don't know if even bothering to push the urban songs will do anything for this particular era because "Beez" did or is doing pretty well (top 5/10 urban?) and I'm not sure how much that is really helping. Do we now primarily consider Nicki a pop artist?
|
|
Enigma.
Diamond Member
Joined: July 2007
Posts: 14,171
|
Post by Enigma. on Jul 12, 2012 2:22:32 GMT -5
The most interesting thing about Rihanna is that she has never reached #1. It's all because of the release schedules, but somehow I wish she'll never have one.
Obviously she will if there's a quiet week release at some point. Bang, a #1 no matter the opening sales.
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Jul 13, 2012 8:23:25 GMT -5
The Billboard 200
1 NEW 1 Fortune, Chris Brown 2 21 98 Teenage Dream, Katy Perry 3 3 3 Believe, Justin Bieber 4 2 2 Overexposed, Maroon 5 5 1 2 Living Things, Linkin Park 6 31 27 Making Mirrors, Gotye 7 23 20 Some Nights, fun. 8 6 3 Welcome To The Fishbowl, Kenny Chesney 9 7 72 21, Adele 10 55 31 El Camino, The Black Keys 11 8 17 Up All Night, One Direction 12 4 2 Maybach Music Group Presents: Self Made 2, Various Artists 13 45 12 Love Is A Four Letter Word, Jason Mraz 14 NEW 1 Wild Ones, Flo Rida 15 9 4 Looking 4 Myself, Usher 16 43 14 My Head Is An Animal, Of Monsters And Men 17 44 14 The Lumineers, The Lumineers 18 77 36 Ceremonials, Florence + The Machine 19 5 2 Write Me Back, R. Kelly 20 10 5 Rock Of Ages, Soundtrack 21 116 23 Lights, Ellie Goulding 22 36 15 Tuskegee, Lionel Richie 23 87 6 What We Saw From The Cheap Seats, Regina Spektor 24 13 48 Tailgates & Tanlines, Luke Bryan 25 NEW 1 American Idol: Season 11: Highlights (EP), Phillip Phillips
26 56 10 Strange Clouds, B.o.B 27 82 23 Born To Die, Lana Del Rey 28 46 5 That's Why God Made The Radio, The Beach Boys 29 18 10 NOW 42, Various Artists 30 117 11 The Wanted, The Wanted 31 11 3 The Idler Wheel Is Wiser Than..., Fiona Apple 32 NEW 1 Live: Cornerstone, Hillsong 33 15 4 Let It Shine, Soundtrack 34 53 34 Take Care, Drake 35 24 10 Blown Away, Carrie Underwood 36 176 7 Vows, Kimbra 37 25 50 Chief, Eric Church 38 78 13 Slipstream, Bonnie Raitt 39 144 8 Bloom, Beach House 40 22 5 Thirty Miles West, Alan Jackson 41 49 14 Boys & Girls, Alabama Shakes 42 NEW 1 Lideres, Wisin & Yandel 43 38 111 Brothers, The Black Keys 44 NEW 1 Periphery II, Periphery 45 RE-ENTRY 23 God's Not Dead, newsboys 46 35 14 Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded, Nicki Minaj 47 28 4 NOW That's What I Call Country: Volume 5, Various Artists 48 26 4 Clockwork Angels, Rush 49 30 7 Born And Raised, John Mayer 50 NEW 1 Life Cycles, The Word Alive
51 71 94 You Get What You Give, Zac Brown Band 52 33 10 Project X, Soundtrack 53 39 88 My Kinda Party, Jason Aldean 54 197 16 The Hunger Games: Songs From District 12 And Beyond, Soundtrack 55 29 120 Sigh No More, Mumford & Sons 56 32 4 Punching Bag, Josh Turner 57 58 37 Stronger, Kelly Clarkson 58 54 142 19, Adele 59 NEW 1 American Idol: Season 11: Highlights (EP), Joshua Ledet 60 27 2 Back In The Saddle, Chris Cagle 61 48 33 Talk That Talk, Rihanna 62 19 3 Oceania, The Smashing Pumpkins 63 40 4 +, Ed Sheeran 64 NEW 1 American Idol: Season 11: Highlights (EP), Skylar Laine 65 41 5 Americana, Neil Young With Crazy Horse 66 12 2 Days Go By, The Offspring 67 68 37 Mylo Xyloto, Coldplay 68 126 42 Nothing But The Beat, David Guetta 69 51 10 ...Little Broken Hearts, Norah Jones 70 106 5 Live From The Underground, Big K.R.I.T. 71 57 11 Hard 2 Love, Lee Brice 72 62 12 California 37, Train 73 83 189 The Foundation, Zac Brown Band 74 42 3 Brave, Soundtrack 75 63 47 Halfway To Heaven, Brantley Gilbert
76 175 230 Legend: The Best Of Bob Marley And The Wailers, Bob Marley And The Wailers (Diamond Certification) 10 77 NEW 1 American Idol: Season 11: Highlights (EP), Jessica Sanchez 78 37 90 Hands All Over, Maroon 5 79 60 11 Up All Night, Kip Moore 80 52 11 Blunderbuss, Jack White 81 69 28 Bangarang (EP), Skrillex 82 128 118 The Very Best Of The Beach Boys: Sounds Of Summer, The Beach Boys 83 76 5 Vans Warped Tour '12: 2012 Tour Compilation, Various Artists 84 66 43 Own The Night, Lady Antebellum 85 110 59 Torches, Foster The People 86 47 4 Triple F Life: Fans Friends & Family, Waka Flocka Flame 87 70 21 Hunter Hayes, Hunter Hayes 88 20 131 Mothership, Led Zeppelin 89 67 14 Changed, Rascal Flatts 90 125 148 Chronicle The 20 Greatest Hits, Creedence Clearwater Revival Featuring John Fogerty 91 65 33 Greatest Hits, Fleetwood Mac 92 114 27 Unbroken, Demi Lovato 93 96 57 Scary Monsters And Nice Sprites (EP), Skrillex 94 75 55 Sorry For Party Rocking, LMFAO 95 118 8 Rize Of The Fenix, Tenacious D 96 RE-ENTRY 17 Drive, Soundtrack 97 170 77 Greatest Hits II, Kenny Chesney 98 107 22 NOW 41, Various Artists 99 50 3 Rhythm And Repose, Glen Hansard 100 105 25 Kidz Bop 21, Kidz Bop Kids
101 81 15 Amaryllis, Shinedown 102 103 89 Speak Now, Taylor Swift 103 111 51 Whitney: The Greatest Hits, Whitney Houston 104 90 91 The Band Perry, The Band Perry 105 97 222 Journey's Greatest Hits, Journey (Diamond Certification) 15 106 61 110 Lungs, Florence + The Machine 107 108 4 The Best Of Donna Summer: 20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection, Donna Summer 108 72 4 Synthetica, Metric 109 127 20 Careless World: Rise Of The Last King, Tyga 110 94 12 Pluto, Future 111 79 5 Analog Man, Joe Walsh 112 138 92 Doo-Wops & Hooligans, Bruno Mars 113 148 8 Continued Silence (EP), Imagine Dragons 114 121 37 Clancy's Tavern, Toby Keith 115 109 33 Here And Now, Nickelback 116 92 6 Here, Edward Sharpe And The Magnetic Zeros 117 152 48 Watch The Throne, Jay Z Kanye West 118 160 42 Barefoot Blue Jean Night, Jake Owen 119 102 5 Victorious: Victorious 2.0: More Music From The Hit TV Show (EP), Soundtrack 120 RE-ENTRY 29 The Very Best Of Prince, Prince 121 162 40 Clear As Day, Scotty McCreery 122 100 7 The Hurt & The Healer, MercyMe 123 NEW 1 H.N.I.C. 3, Prodigy Of Mobb Deep 124 88 4 Edens Edge, Edens Edge 125 RE-ENTRY 27 The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn: Part 1, Soundtrack
126 122 52 Red River Blue, Blake Shelton 127 NEW 1 American Idol: Season 11: Top 10 Highlights, Soundtrack 128 124 22 Home, Dierks Bentley 129 64 74 Barton Hollow, The Civil Wars 130 16 2 Challenger, Memphis May Fire 131 NEW 1 At The Gates Of Sethu, Nile 132 99 83 Licensed To Ill, Beastie Boys 133 14 2 PTX: Volume 1, Pentatonix 134 NEW 1 XXX, Asia 135 123 7 Apocalyptic Love, Slash Featuring Myles Kennedy & The Conspirators 136 86 9 Go Get It (Soundtrack), Mary Mary 137 131 36 Four The Record, Miranda Lambert 138 17 2 If You Were A Movie, This Would Be Your Soundtrack (EP), Sleeping With Sirens 139 74 808 Dark Side Of The Moon, Pink Floyd (Diamond Certification) 15 140 112 5 Bear Creek, Brandi Carlile 141 136 39 American Capitalist, Five Finger Death Punch 142 NEW 1 Infamous, Abandon All Ships 143 120 2 Una Noche de Luna: Mas En Vivo Desde Buenos Aires, Marco Antonio Solis 144 84 3 Cabin By The Sea, The Dirty Heads 145 89 4 The Lion The Beast The Beat, Grace Potter & The Nocturnals 146 174 83 Doin' My Thing, Luke Bryan 147 143 55 Planet Pit, Pitbull 148 135 45 Tha Carter IV, Lil Wayne 149 104 107 Recovery, Eminem 150 98 110 [Hybrid Theory], Linkin Park (Diamond Certification) 10 151 181 148 The Wall, Pink Floyd (Diamond Certification) 23 152 RE-ENTRY 2 Never Trust A Happy Song, Grouplove 153 RE-ENTRY 13 The MF Life, Melanie Fiona 154 RE-ENTRY 94 Top Gun, Soundtrack 155 150 43 Neon, Chris Young 156 142 24 Emotional Traffic, Tim McGraw 157 163 23 Ronnie Dunn, Ronnie Dunn 158 169 68 Number One Hits, Tim McGraw 159 164 244 Greatest Hits, Guns N' Roses 160 RE-ENTRY 2 100 Must-Have Movie Classics, Various Artists 161 154 35 Life At Best, Eli Young Band 162 59 215 Greatest Hits, Queen 163 190 5 Our Version Of Events, Emeli Sande 164 157 40 Megalithic Symphony, AWOLNATION 165 137 8 Trespassing, Adam Lambert 166 147 11 The Ultimate Bee Gees, Bee Gees 167 193 2 Magic Mike, Soundtrack 168 129 13 Courageous, Soundtrack 169 159 12 Picture Show, Neon Trees 170 173 33 Ultimate Hits: Rock And Roll Never Forgets, Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band 171 RE-ENTRY 115 Jagged Little Pill, Alanis Morissette (Diamond Certification) 16 172 RE-ENTRY 53 White Blood Cells, The White Stripes 173 RE-ENTRY 16 The Greatest Hits Volume 1: 20 Good Vibrations, The Beach Boys 174 146 29 TM:103: Hustlerz Ambition, Young Jeezy 175 178 2 Super Hits, Bob Dylan 176 NEW 1 American Idol: Season 11: Highlights (EP), Hollie Cavanagh 177 RE-ENTRY 29 The Very Best Of Neil Diamond: The Studio Recordings, Neil Diamond 178 RE-ENTRY 115 Revolution, Miranda Lambert 179 113 151 Number Ones, Michael Jackson 180 145 114 Songs About Jane, Maroon 5 181 167 46 Hell On Heels, Pistol Annies 182 132 3 Walk The Moon, Walk The Moon 183 RE-ENTRY 29 Songs You Know By Heart: Jimmy Buffett's Greatest Hit(s), Jimmy Buffett 184 141 64 The Essential Michael Jackson, Michael Jackson 185 149 16 Shake It Up: Live 2 Dance: Music From The Disney Channel Series, Soundtrack 186 34 2 L'enfant Sauvage, Gojira 187 RE-ENTRY 86 One Of The Boys, Katy Perry 188 140 5 Jana Kramer, Jana Kramer 189 161 50 The Best Of Lionel Richie: 20th Century Masters The Millennium Collection, Lionel Richie 190 RE-ENTRY 5 Listen Up!, Haley Reinhart 191 RE-ENTRY 148 Rumours, Fleetwood Mac (Diamond Certification) 19 192 166 120 My World 2.0, Justin Bieber 193 184 77 The Very Best Of The Eagles, Eagles 194 RE-ENTRY 188 Fearless, Taylor Swift 195 NEW 1 God Bless The USA: A Salute To The American Spirit, Bill & Gloria Gaither And Their Homecoming Friends 196 RE-ENTRY 20 Elevate (Soundtrack), Big Time Rush 197 133 4 Blow Your Pants Off, Jimmy Fallon 198 200 37 Come To The Well, Casting Crowns 199 RE-ENTRY 64 Footloose, Soundtrack 200 RE-ENTRY 28 Thompson Square, Thompson Square
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Jul 13, 2012 8:29:59 GMT -5
New RIAA certifications:
Eric Church, Chief 1xp
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jul 13, 2012 8:54:41 GMT -5
Amazon's 99-Cent Deals Sends 20 Titles Soaring Up the Charts, But at What Cost? July 12, 2012 | By Ed Christman, New York Amazon picked last week -- July 3, to be exact -- to remind everyone that it is the low-price music retailer on the Internet, when it offered 20 current albums at 99 cents apiece.
Those 20 titles, which included Katy Perry's "Teenage Dream," Fun.'s "Some Nights," Regina Spektor's "What We Saw From The Cheap Seats," and Big K.R.I.T's "Live From The Underground," scanned a total of 519,000 units, an increase of 270% from the 140,000 they collectively sold in the prior week. Meanwhile, the digital version of those titles jumped 608% to 454,000 units from the prior week's combined total of 64,000.
The big winner during the week was the Katy Perry title, which jumped from 16,000 units to 80,000 units, of which 66,000 were from digital sales; it soared 21-2 on the Billboard 200.
Since it got into music, Amazon has been featuring a selective loss-leader pricing strategy to highlight its every-day low prices. But unlike big-box merchants that used to price the Top 10 at $9.99 at a time when they wholesaled for about $12.05, Amazon has a variety of deals, like the Daily Deals which features albums at $2.99, that continually driving their pricing message.
Record label and distribution executives see last week's pricing as Amazon reminding Google, its customers and music fans just who initiated pricing as a competitive differential tactic on the Internet. Sometimes it's the steady Daily Deal, and sometimes Amazon shocks the industry, like when it offered Lady Gaga's "Born This Way," for 99 cents on two different days during the title's debut week in May 2011.
Amazon Puts Lady Gaga's 'Born This Way' Again on Sale for 99 Cents Again
Amazon is using featured discount pricing in an attempt to lure customers away from iTunes. That strategy has been effective at least in helping to grow Amazon's MP3 market share, which in 2011 was 3.2% in overall U.S. market share, up one percentage point from the prior year's 2.2%. (Amazon's overall market share, including both CD and MP3 sales, is 7.93%.). But as much as it grows market share, it doesn't seem to be laying a glove on iTunes, whose market share grew to 38.23% in 2011, up from nearly 33% in 2010.
With that type of market share and growth, Apple doesn't have to resort to loss leaders.
But Amazon now has to worry about Google. Since its music store launched last November, the company engine has been dogging Amazon's discount pricing strategy, regularly featuring loss-leader pricing to drive traffic to its store. For example, in the second week after its launch, Google offered 13 frontline titles at $1.99. And then in March, it offered its "25-cent Play of The Day" deal on such titles as Lady Antebellum's "Own the Night," and Coldplay's "Mylo Xyloto."
Moreover the two merchants may be engaging in price matching each other, as some label executives report that Google featured the same albums as Amazon, while other sources insisted that didn't happen. On the other hand, when Google does a promotion, Amazon definitely does price-matching, but customers have to dig for those specific titles, as they aren't part of an overall promotion.
Google continues to feature loss-leader pricing as part of its overall strategy. For example, today, right at the top of the music store's home page, Google is running an ad touting top debut albums "from $3.99." Clicking on it will bring you to two pages of debut albums, including those by the Clash, Patti Smith, Boston, and Massive Attack, most priced at $6.99 with five priced at the advertised price. But if you don't click on that ad, right underneath it is a "best album deals" feature with 12 albums priced at $3.99 and $12 more at $6.99. That promotion consists of mostly hit catalog titles and one recent title, Mayer Hawthorne's "How Do You Do."
So Amazon's foray back into 99-cent territory is seen by label executives as a reminder that it too not only knows how to strategically discount, but also that it isn't giving up that pricing turf to Google -- at least not just yet.
"I don't think they would be doing this type of 99-cent stuff if Google wasn't constantly touting low prices," says the head of sales at one major label.
In what some see as a departure for Amazon, it immediately followed up the 99-cent sale with a July 5 e-mail to customers, through its AmazonLocal deal initiative, touting a $3 voucher off MP3 purchases in its store through today July 12. While Amazon spends a lot of effort trying to get shoppers at Amazon to visit its MP3 store, it rarely publicizes the overall store, let alone the music store, in mainstream media -- at least not the way it did when the Amazon site launched back in the mid-1990s with its radio spots about seeing whether enormous locations like the Houston Astrodome were big enough (it wasn't) to house its book inventory.
The closest Amazon ever got to tapping into widespread consumer awareness was with the Lady Gaga 99-cent deal, which in the end came off as a great publicity move.
How Many Millions Is Amazon Losing On Its 99 Cent Lady Gaga Sales?
As I pointed out on June 11 in Billboard.biz, for $3.3 million -- that is, $8.40 wholesale minus 99 cents retail times 443,000 scans during the two-day sale -- Amazon put itself on the map as a digital music merchant, in a way that the same amount of money spent on traditional advertising could never have accomplished.
Since then, Amazon has highlighted price discounts like its daily deal, and other daily offers like the ones it is featuring today, $3 CDs for $25 or country CD albums below $7; or the 25 country hit MP3 albums for $2.99.
But it's looking like the 99-cent promotions last week have generated collectively almost as much in sales -- if not in publicity -- as the Lady Gaga album did, although its hard to tell exactly what Amazon sold of those albums last week because Nielsen SoundScan doesn't break out sales of individual accounts like iTunes, Google and Amazon.
Still, it's safe to say a majority of the 454,00 units were sold by Amazon, since in the prior week download merchants only sold 64,000 units of those albums.
But also important to note is that Amazon is eating a loss on the promotion, although sources say it did get some price relief from the three majors that participated. According to sources, Amazon has put together a program for these pricing events that sees the labels selling them $9.99 list-price titles -- which usually carry a $7.00 wholesale cost -- for about $4.25 to $4.90, which means that Amazon is eating at least $3.25 for every unit sold. Amazon also has a higher wholesale cost of $5.60 for titles that have a higher than $9.99 list price.
(By the way, there were no titles from Sony Music Entertainment in the Amazon promotion probably because it is the only major to use the agency model in providing digital merchants with music. That means, among other things, that it controls the retail price. Even Google's $3.99 promotion has plenty of Sony titles -- but all of them were priced at $6.99, not $3.99, and since they were all catalog titles, Sony's low catalog pricing probably meant they didn't further discount the albums to Google.)
Usually, competitors tend to get upset when one merchant uses an outrageous pricing strategy like Amazon or Google are now occasionally known for. But a retailer once told Billboard about such Amazon pricing promotions: "I love it when they have a successful loss leader pricing deal. I can't stop laughing every time I think about how much money they must be losing."
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Jul 13, 2012 9:11:11 GMT -5
5,800,000 million albums were sold last week.
2,534,000 were digital albums.
3,266,000 were cds.
|
|
|
Post by areyoureadytojump on Jul 13, 2012 9:15:30 GMT -5
keelyskorner.com/category/soundscan/SOUNDSCAN (WEEK ENDING 7/8/12) 1) Chris Brown – Fortune – 134,642 2) Katy Perry – Teenage Dream – 80,221 (After 98 weeks – 2,354,235) 3) Justin Bieber – Believe – 69,537 (After 3 weeks – 559,080) Other Debuts 14) Flo Rida – Wild Ones – 30,677 25) Phillip Phillips – American Idol – 19,963 32) Hillsong Live – Cornerstone (Live) – 15,835 42) Wisin & Yandel – Lideres – 11,939
|
|
badrobot
3x Platinum Member
Joined: November 2006
Posts: 3,392
|
Post by badrobot on Jul 13, 2012 9:19:30 GMT -5
Interesting footnote from that article is that the labels *ARE* participating in these kinds of sale deals. It's still a loss for Amazon but not as bad as it would be otherwise.
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jul 14, 2012 12:20:07 GMT -5
|
|
pnobelysk
Diamond Member
Joined: November 2009
Posts: 10,239
|
Post by pnobelysk on Jul 16, 2012 8:35:38 GMT -5
content.usatoday.com/communities/idolchatter/post/2012/07/Your-Random-Weekend-Memo-803790/1Idol albums Phillip Phillips, American Idol (20,000, debut, 20,000) (#25 Billboard 200) Carrie Underwood, Blown Away (15,000, -4%, 617,000) (#35 BB200) Kelly Clarkson, Stronger (9,000, +24%, 855,000) (#57 BB200) Joshua Ledet, American Idol (9,000, debut, 9,000) (#59 BB200) Skylar Laine, American Idol (8,000, debut, 8,000) (#64 BB200) Jessica Sanchez, American Idol (6,000, debut, 6,000) (#77 BB200) Scotty McCreery, Clear as Day (4,000, +25%, 1.083 million (#121 BB200) Adam Lambert, Trespassing (3,000, -9%, 138,000) (#165 BB200) Hollie Cavanagh, American Idol (3,000, debut, 3,000) (#176 BB200) Haley Reinhart, Listen Up! (3,000, +33%, 44,000) (#190 BB200) Carrie Underwood, Some Hearts (2,000, +30%, 7.216 million) Casey Abrams, Casey Abrams (2,000, -45%, 7,000) Carrie Underwood, Play On (2,000, +14%, 2.119 million) Mandisa, What If We Were Real (1,000, +8%, 192,000) Carrie Underwood, Carnival Ride (1,000, +23%, 3.27 million) Lauren Alaina, Wildflower (less than 1,000, 0 change, 287,000) Casey James, Casey James (less than 1,000, +9%, 43,000) Idol-related albums One Direction, Up All Night (36,000, -8%, 935,000) (#11 Billboard 200) Soundtrack, Rock of Ages (23,000, -18%, 156,000) (#20 BB200) Various, Now That's What I Call Music! 42 (17,000, +2%, 353,000) (#29 BB200) Jason Aldean, My Kinda Party (10,000, -1%, 2.671 million) (#53 BB200) David Guetta, Nothing but the Beat (7,000, +86%, 345,000) (#68 BB200) Tyga, Careless World (4,000, +11%, 261,000) (#109 BB200)
|
|
Au$tin
Diamond Member
Pop Culture Guru
Grrrrrrrrrr. Fuckity fuck why don't you watch my film before you judge it? FURY.
Joined: August 2008
Posts: 54,623
My Charts
Pronouns: He/his/him
|
Post by Au$tin on Jul 16, 2012 13:20:24 GMT -5
Albums 500k+ in Top 100 2 Katy Perry - Teenage Dream 80.2k 2.3542 million 3 Justin Bieber - Believe 69.5k 559.1k 6 Gotye - Making Mirrors 44.4k 596.3k 9 Adele - 21 41.0k 9.5330 million 10 Black Keys - El Camino 37.0k 889.9k 11 One Direction - Up All Night 35.8k 934.6k 18 Florence + the Machine - Ceremonials 28.6k 683.4k 22 Lionel Richee - Tuskegee 22.4k 934.1k 24 Luke Bryan - Tailgates & Tanlines 20.4k 1.2463 million 34 Drake - Take Care 14.8k 1.8101 million 35 Carrie Underwood - Blown Away 14.6k 616.8k 37 Eric Church - Chief 14.4k 921.3k 43 Black Keys - Brothers 11.9k 1.1038 million 46 Nicki Minaj - Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded 11.1k 568.5k 51 Zac Brown Band - You Get What You Give 9.9k 1.5386 million 53 Jason Aldean - My Kinda Party 9.7k 2.6714 million 55 Mumford & Sons - Sigh No More 9.2k 2.3302 million 57 Kelly Clarkson - Stronger 8.8k 855.2k 58 Adele - 19 8.7k 2.2870 million 61 Rihanna - Talk That Talk 8.4k 946.0k 67 Coldplay - Mylo Xyloto 7.4k 1.4292 million 73 Zac Brown Band - The Foundation 6.5k 2.9435 million 75 Brantley Gilbert - Halfway to Heaven 6.4k 621.7k 76 Bob Marley & the Wailers - Legend 6.4k 11.0661 million 78 Maroon 5 - Hands All Over 6.3k 1.1386 million 82 The Beach Boys - Sounds of Summer: The Best of The Beach Boys 6.2k 3.0135 million 84 Lady Antebellum - Own the Night 6.1k 1.6750 million 85 Foster the People - Torches 6.1k 857.9k 88 Led Zeppelin - Mothership 5.8k 1.7063 million 90 Creedence Clearwater Revival - Chronicle, Vol. 1 5.8k 6.1776 million 91 Fleetwood Mac - Greatest Hits 5.6k 4.5683 million 94 LMFAO - Sorry for Party Rocking 5.1k 876.9k 97 Kenny Chesney - Greatest Hits II 4.9k 929.1k 98 Now That's What I Call Music!, Vol. 41 4.9k 718.7k
|
|
|
Post by ListenToItTwice on Jul 16, 2012 15:15:34 GMT -5
One Direction has outsold Lionel Richie by less than 500 copies as of this week.
|
|