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Post by Golden Bluebird on Apr 10, 2018 8:09:12 GMT -5
kworb.net/airadio/*** = Dropped or added a format Overall AI (Top 20) - 04/10/20181. (=) BEBE REXHA - Meant To Be f/F.G.L. (188.921) (+1.720) 2. (=) BRUNO MARS & CARDI B - Finesse (165.803) (-3.254) 3. (=) ZEDD/MAREN MORRIS/GREY - The Middle (160.771) (+1.779) 4. (=) DRAKE - God's Plan (156.346) (+0.218) 5. (=) ED SHEERAN - Perfect (143.155) (-1.566) 6. (=) THE WEEKND & KENDRICK LAMAR - Pray For Me (121.064) (+0.499) 7. (=) CAMILA CABELLO - Never Be The Same (109.815) (+1.658) 8. (=) MAX - Lights Down Low (105.784) (-2.031) *** 9. (=) DUA LIPA - New Rules (103.718) (-1.372) 10. (=) IMAGINE DRAGONS - Whatever It Takes (96.475) (+0.872) 11. (=) CAMILA CABELLO - Havana f/Young Thug (90.493) (-1.041) 12. (=) G-EAZY & HALSEY - Him & I (86.800) (-2.083) 13. (=) NF - Let You Down (81.808) (-1.235) 14. (=) PORTUGAL. THE MAN - Feel It Still (73.063) (-0.079) 15. (=) LUKE BRYAN - Most People Are Good (72.457) (-0.365) 16. (=) MAROON 5 - Wait (72.341) (+1.182) 17. (=) JORDAN DAVIS - Singles You Up (68.611) (+0.261) 18. (=) KENDRICK LAMAR & SZA - All The Stars (68.486) (+0.887) 19. (=) POST MALONE - Psycho f/Ty Dolla $ign (64.386) (+0.894) 20. (+2) JASON ALDEAN - You Make It Easy (62.488) (+1.213) Outside the Top 20: 26. (+1) KANE BROWN - Heaven (57.996) (+1.011) 35. (+1) SHAWN MENDES - In My Blood (50.302) (+1.565) 45. (+4) MARSHMELLO & ANNE-MARIE - Friends (39.211) (+1.109)
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annoymous1
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Post by annoymous1 on Apr 10, 2018 8:21:08 GMT -5
Did No Excuses Totally Fall off on radio and Billboard Also ?
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Post by Golden Bluebird on Apr 10, 2018 8:28:12 GMT -5
Did No Excuses Totally Fall off on radio and Billboard Also ? "No Excuses" is at #55 on the Hot 100 and #38 on the radio.
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Abbaschand
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Post by Abbaschand on Apr 10, 2018 8:55:11 GMT -5
Guys, I hear that Despacito were hacked but now it's been fixed. Will it reenter the charts? I know it's impossible, but a man can dream.
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kanfad
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Post by kanfad on Apr 10, 2018 9:16:49 GMT -5
Guys, I hear that Despacito were hacked but now it's been fixed. Will it reenter the charts? I know it's impossible, but a man can dream. Why would anyone want that?
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Post by Golden Bluebird on Apr 10, 2018 9:22:25 GMT -5
Guys, I hear that Despacito were hacked but now it's been fixed. Will it reenter the charts? I know it's impossible, but a man can dream. Why would anyone want that? I wouldn't mind if it does, but I don't think it's gonna happen.
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Post by Golden Bluebird on Apr 10, 2018 10:45:12 GMT -5
www.billboard.com/articles/columns/chart-beat/8301241/drake-nice-for-what-hot-100-top-10-projectionDrake's New Track 'Nice for What' Headed for Hot 100's Top 10 With Sizzling Start in Streams & SalesThe song scored over 20 million U.S. streams and sold over 40,000 downloads in its first three days.Drake's new song "Nice for What" has blasted to a strong start in streaming and sales. According to industry sources, the track -- released Friday, April 6 -- on Young Money/Cash Money/Republic Records, drew over 20 million U.S. streams and sold over 40,000 downloads in its first three days (through April 8). Based on that fast out-of-the-gate response, the song should make a top 10, perhaps top five, debut on next week's Billboard Hot 100 chart (dated April 21), which blends streaming, airplay and sales data, according to Nielsen Music. Helping the song's initial action, its official video, featuring stars including Tiffany Haddish, Rashida Jones and Olivia Wilde, also arrived April 6. As previously noted, the track samples Lauryn Hill's "Ex-Factor," which hit No. 7 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and No. 21 on the Hot 100 in 1999. As previously reported, Drake's own "God's Plan" this week logs an 11th week at No. 1 (on the chart dated April 14), passing his 2016 10-week leader "One Dance" (featuring WizKid and Kyla) for his longest reign. "Plan" rules with 52.1 million U.S. streams, 48,000 sold and 109 million in all-format airplay audience.
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Gary
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Post by Gary on Apr 10, 2018 10:50:44 GMT -5
Guys, I hear that Despacito were hacked but now it's been fixed. Will it reenter the charts? I know it's impossible, but a man can dream. Why would anyone want that? It is still charting in Canada - week 62
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Gary
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Posts: 45,891
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Post by Gary on Apr 10, 2018 10:54:10 GMT -5
www.billboard.com/articles/columns/chart-beat/8301241/drake-nice-for-what-hot-100-top-10-projectionDrake's New Track 'Nice for What' Headed for Hot 100's Top 10 With Sizzling Start in Streams & SalesThe song scored over 20 million U.S. streams and sold over 40,000 downloads in its first three days.Drake's new song "Nice for What" has blasted to a strong start in streaming and sales. According to industry sources, the track -- released Friday, April 6 -- on Young Money/Cash Money/Republic Records, drew over 20 million U.S. streams and sold over 40,000 downloads in its first three days (through April 8). Based on that fast out-of-the-gate response, the song should make a top 10, perhaps top five, debut on next week's Billboard Hot 100 chart (dated April 21), which blends streaming, airplay and sales data, according to Nielsen Music. Helping the song's initial action, its official video, featuring stars including Tiffany Haddish, Rashida Jones and Olivia Wilde, also arrived April 6. As previously noted, the track samples Lauryn Hill's "Ex-Factor," which hit No. 7 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and No. 21 on the Hot 100 in 1999. As previously reported, Drake's own "God's Plan" this week logs an 11th week at No. 1 (on the chart dated April 14), passing his 2016 10-week leader "One Dance" (featuring WizKid and Kyla) for his longest reign. "Plan" rules with 52.1 million U.S. streams, 48,000 sold and 109 million in all-format airplay audience. 25tb top 10 on the way
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Gary
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Post by Gary on Apr 10, 2018 11:00:32 GMT -5
Drake Passes Paul McCartney For Fifth-Most Hot 100 Top 10s Among Solo Males News By Gary Trust | April 10, 2018 9:58 AM EDTDrake adds his 24th top 10 as featured on Migos' "Walk It Talk It." As Migos' "Walk It Talk It" bounds from No. 15 to No. 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart (dated April 14), featured artist Drake one-ups an icon in the race for the most top 10s among solo males. The track marks Drake's 24th Hot 100 top 10, breaking him out of a fifth-place tie with Paul McCartney for the most top 10s among male soloists. Here's an updated count of the solo males with the most Hot 100 top 10s, dating to the chart's Aug. 4, 1958, inception. Most Hot 100 Top 10s Among Solo Males 29, Michael Jackson 28, Stevie Wonder 27, Elton John 25, Elvis Presley 24, Drake 23, Paul McCartney 21, JAY-Z Notably, McCartney made even more trips to the top 10 as a member of The Beatles, who earned 34, a sum second only to Madonna's 38; Rihanna ranks third with 31 top 10s, followed by Michael Jackson's 29. Similarly, the Jackson 5/Jacksons, of which Michael Jackson was a member, totaled 11 top 10s as a group. (Additionally, Elvis Presley's career predated the Hot 100's origin.) Beyond top 10s, Drake boasts the most overall Hot 100 entries among solo acts, male and female: 161. As previously reported, Drake's "God's Plan" leads the Hot 100 for an 11th week, passing his 2016 hit "One Dance" (featuring WizKid and Kyla) for his longest reign. "Plan" is also the first single to spend its first 11 weeks on the Hot 100 at No. 1 since Elton John's "Candle in the Wind 1997" / "Something About the Way You Look Tonight," which logged its first 14 weeks on the chart at the summit in 1997-98. Drake also appears headed for a lofty launch – and perhaps his Presley-tying 25th top 10 – on next week's Hot 100 (dated April 21) with new track "Nice for What," released Friday, April 6. Check Billboard.com this week for projections on where the song could start on the Hot 100. will tie post-58 Elvis
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renaboss
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Post by renaboss on Apr 10, 2018 15:03:24 GMT -5
"Whatever It Takes" expected to hit the top 20 next week, finally. And also "Friends", which I hate, because it hits close to home, so I feel like Anne-Marie is singing right at me and honestly being a b*tch.
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Gary
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Post by Gary on Apr 10, 2018 15:08:52 GMT -5
Drake's 'God's Plan' Was a Pop Classic All Along - Just One Specifically for 2018 4/10/2018 by Andrew Unterberger
When "God's Plan" originally debuted atop the Billboard Hot 100 with record streaming numbers, it seemed to many observers to be an achievement based more on Drake's unparalleled career momentum -- seven consecutive No. 1 albums on the Billboard 200 chart, more Hot 100 entries (both total and simultaneously) than any solo artist in history, including eight straight years on the chart -- than about the song's own specific merits.
"It’s hardly his best, even of the more straightforwardly pop Drake hits like 'Hotline Bling,' 'Hold On, We’re Going Home,' and 'One Dance,'" wrote Lindsay Zoladz of The Ringer in a not unrepresentative critical take on the song's chart success. "Something about the smash-hit status of 'God’s Plan' feels … by default." Complex's Alphonse Pierre, in a story about how the reception to "God's Plan" proves that Drake is "easily the most popular rapper in the game," was even more succinct in his dismissal, claiming the single "sounds like a throwaway next to his biggest hits."
Indeed, at first blush "God's Plan" didn't sound like the sort of song that traditionally demands multiple weeks atop Billboard's all-encompassing songs chart. But at this point, "God's Plan" isn't just a two- or three-week chart-topper, it's an 11-week champion -- one of only 24 such hits in Hot 100 history, and still with a sizable edge over the runner-up. It's now Drake's own longest-running No. 1 (of four), trumping all those other previously mentioned pop classics of his.
At this point, its success demands a much better explanation than Drake-because-Drake. And really, that explanation never totally held water in the first place, since it's not like Drake had a long-established pattern of debuting atop the Hot 100: Lest we forget, before "God's Plan," only one Drake entry as a lead artist even hit No. 1 on the Hot 100 -- "One Dance," a 10-week champ in 2016 -- while no other song off 2016's Views or its 2017 follow-up More Life even peaked in the listing's top five. (Drake's two other visits to the Hot 100's summit came as a featured performer on two singles by longtime collaborator Rihanna, "What's My Name?" in 2010 and "Work" in 2016.)
True, "God's Plan" undoubtedly benefited from a strong release strategy. The song dropped as the A-side of the two-song Scary Hours release on a Saturday in January after an extended period of (relative) Drake inactivity since More Life the March before, feeding off a thirst in Drake's fanbase that, by his standards, had gone largely unquenched. It instantly got a full promotional push across all streaming services, where Drake had long proven to reign supreme, and as the clear focus track of Scary Hours -- without, say, around 20 other surrounding tracks dropping at the same time, as happened with Views and More Life -- it was able to put up virtually unprecedented numbers.
That would've been sufficient to explain a couple weeks' worth of chart dominance, sure. But 11 weeks is longer than any artist can coast at No. 1 on name, rep and business acumen alone; at that point, it's a special song they're working with. And that's what "God's Plan" is -- a song that might've been tossed off as album filler in years past, but is essentially a perfect pop single for 2018. When most people compare "Plan" unfavorably to the likes of "Hotline Bling" and "Hold On, We're Going Home" in pop terms, it's understandable, because the latter two songs fit much more neatly into what we traditionally consider pop music to be. They have instantly memorable choruses and instrumental hooks, their titles are catchphrases on their own, and their structures could be neatly diagrammed in mathematical terms that the likes of Max Martin and Steve Mac would nod at in recognition. They made sense everywhere on pop radio this decade, and with minor lyrical and instrumental tweaks, they could've made as much sense on top 40 in the '90s or '70s. ("Hotline Bling" even built its musical backbone from a sample of a major '70s crossover hit.)
"God's Plan" doesn't make sense as a timeless pop classic in those terms. It has no traditional chorus. It lacks an instrumental hook as infectious as the skanking organs to "Hotline Bling" or the whispering synths of "Hold On." Its structure is knotty and unconventional. Its title pops up at two points in the song, uttered twice each, with no real surrounding context made available. It runs 3:18, but feels a lot shorter, because once the song starts there are no real breaks from Drake's vocals -- until the 2:40 mark, where Drake's vocals exit entirely and the instrumental rides out for the track's remainder. That doesn't sound like pop music in 1978 or 1998, certainly.
It does, however, sound increasingly like pop in 2018. With the Hot 100's biggest metric, on average, now being streaming, and consumers favoring Spotify's most-played, the top of the chart is no longer solely the province of the radio-saturating Classic Pop Song -- and arguably hasn't been for five years, since streaming-friendly rule changes to the Hot 100's formulation allowed a grimy, underground trap instrumental to debut atop the chart. In the last year, such songs as Lil Pump's "Gucci Gang," Lil Uzi Vert's "XO Tour Llif3," XXXTentacion's "Sad!" and Cardi B's "Bodak Yellow (Money Moves)" have ascended to the chart's top 10, the latter a three-week No. 1 -- all streaming-friendly songs, some with sub-three-minute runtimes, some with decentralized or hidden-in-plain-sight choruses, most not needing significant assistance from radio on their way to becoming massive hits.
Like these songs, "God's Plan" might be lacking in some conventional pop hallmarks, but it has others that are quickly proving to be just as important. Its whooshing synth opening, which echoes throughout the track, guarantees that the song is instantly recognizable and exhilarating from its first seconds. The term "God's Plan" doesn't anchor a larger chorus, but it still proves a valuable mid-song mini-refrain in its own right. It's perhaps not a song designed for radio play, but it's an absolute dream for club or festival DJs, since the song's even momentum allows you to enter or exit it neatly at any moment -- and of course, the beat-free singalong break ("She said, 'Do you love me?'/ I tell her, 'Only partly...") ensures at least one floor-wide singalong, as exemplified even in the song's own music video. (It's a lesson possibly learned from Kendrick Lamar's similarly Hot 100-topping "Humble.," whose stickiest refrain isn't its relatively monotonous chorus, but Kendrick's opening-verse "My left stroke just went VYYYY-RALLLL!!!" a cappella callout.)
And about that music video: It'd be naive to downplay its significance in extending the reign of "God's Plan" from a multi-week Hot 100 No. 1 to a multi-month No. 1. Dropping a little less than a month into the song's run, the charity-themed clip lent its accompanying single a valuable narrative hook -- "Drake gives away a million dollars!" -- and inspired a series of carved-out memes and .gifs, as most Drake videos are wont to do. But most importantly, it drew out a feel-good vibe within what is otherwise a largely melancholy song ("It's a lot of bad things that they wishin' on me"), allowing it to sound as exultant on a Saturday night as it is comforting the morning afterwards. Unlike 20 years ago, when an unavoidable MTV clip like Jamiroquai's "Virtual Insanity" could still fail to send the song to the Hot 100 if pop radio (and sales, pre-streaming) didn't follow suit, "God's Plan" becoming a runaway YouTube hit can reinforce its own chart success as a single -- but again, that usually lasts for just a couple weeks of virality. It only maintains for this long if the video helps bring out and reinforce what people might not have even realized they loved about the song in the first place. Eleven weeks in, with the song's presence on top 40 radio now growing in light of its presence in streaming, as well as sales -- the song reaches a new peak of No. 8 of Billboard's Pop Songs chart this week, while holding at No. 4 on the all-genre Radio Songs chart -- it's fair to say the clip is having that effect.
And it might not be the only one. Drake has provided a challenge to his own Hot 100 supremacy with the late-Friday (April 6) release of "Nice for What," another unconventional, circuitous pop song with an eye- and headline-catching music video -- one that, in its own feminist way, is nearly as triumphal as "God's Plan." This time, he released the clip simultaneously with the song itself, making the blinding star power and overwhelming glamour of the visual instantly inextricable from the joyousness of the music, feeding one into another and ensuring that the anthem is already getting Song of the Summer buzz barely a couple weeks into spring. It's the ultimate compliment to "God's Plan" that even 11 weeks from its debut atop the Hot 100, Drake couldn't afford a similarly languid rollout with his follow-up if he hopes to overtake that song, and it's the ultimate compliment to "Nice" that it might actually succeed in doing that -- the song is currently No. 1 on both the iTunes real-time charts and the Spotify US Top 50, while the music video has already racked up 12 million views on YouTube (with the song having drawn over 20 million total U.S. clicks in just its first three days). But even if Drake manages to replace himself at No. 1 on the Hot 100, it won't just be because of brand-name recognition: It's because Drake understands better than any other artist in 2018 what music listeners want and how to give it to them, and because he has the songs with with which to execute his plan.
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renaboss
Platinum Member
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Post by renaboss on Apr 10, 2018 15:29:34 GMT -5
^^That's nice and all but "God's Plan" is still boring af.
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renaboss
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Post by renaboss on Apr 10, 2018 16:58:13 GMT -5
I like "Nice for What", though.
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𝓲𝓽'𝓼.𝓰𝓿
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𝓪 𝓽𝓸𝓻𝓽𝓾𝓻𝓮𝓭 𝓹𝓸𝓮𝓽
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My Charts
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Post by 𝓲𝓽'𝓼.𝓰𝓿 on Apr 10, 2018 17:41:06 GMT -5
"Whatever It Takes" expected to hit the top 20 next week, finally. And also "Friends", which I hate, because it hits close to home, so I feel like Anne-Marie is singing right at me and honestly being a b*tch. YASSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
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jebsib
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Post by jebsib on Apr 10, 2018 17:50:19 GMT -5
If God's Plan is the new pop music, I believe it. The rush of XXXtentacion, Logic, NF, Post Malone and generally minor-key downbeat Hip-Hop feels like it started with Drake several years ago.
I wonder how the 2010s will be primarily remembered (as the 70s were disco, the 80s New Wave / MTV superstars, 90s grunge / gangsta / divas, etc): … as the decade of EDM Turbo Pop (Gaga, Katy, Flo Rida, etc) or moody Hip-Hop?
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renaboss
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I don't want to miss a thing.
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Post by renaboss on Apr 10, 2018 17:57:06 GMT -5
If God's Plan is the new pop music, I believe it. The rush of XXXtentacion, Logic, NF, Post Malone and generally minor-key downbeat Hip-Hop feels like it started with Drake several years ago. I wonder how the 2010s will be primarily remembered (as the 70s were disco, the 80s New Wave / MTV superstars, 90s grunge / gangsta / divas, etc): … as the decade of EDM Turbo Pop (Gaga, Katy, Flo Rida, etc) or moody Hip-Hop? Both I guess? Are those downbeat songs the hip-hop equivalent of ballads?
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dynamac
Charting
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Post by dynamac on Apr 10, 2018 18:07:15 GMT -5
All this downbeat hip hop stuff really started with Kanye and 808’s
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willapted33
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Post by willapted33 on Apr 10, 2018 19:08:36 GMT -5
Kanye influenced everything
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velaxti
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Post by velaxti on Apr 10, 2018 19:18:23 GMT -5
"Whatever It Takes" expected to hit the top 20 next week, finally. And also "Friends", which I hate, because it hits close to home, so I feel like Anne-Marie is singing right at me and honestly being a b*tch. Friends, I'm pretty sure, is targeted towards females anyway, like New Rules. The song has a great beat in my opinion, but the lyrics remind me of those sorts of those big-headed girls who think everybody is hitting on them all the time. At least New Rules has a good message (be careful who you have sex with, don't just sleep with everybody), but with Friends I can imagine a load of self-centered women thinking "OMG, I relate to this song so much", when really they're just deluded and nobody has ever hit on them before in their life! lol Drake's new song, in my opinion, sounds a bit like some of the hip hop songs that I used to hear 10 years ago. Hopefully his next single is a crunk song haha.
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lazer
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Post by lazer on Apr 10, 2018 19:22:12 GMT -5
Will "Nice For What" be number 1 next week?
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Gary
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Post by Gary on Apr 10, 2018 19:29:04 GMT -5
Will "Nice For What" be number 1 next week? No probably not
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jayhawk1117
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Post by jayhawk1117 on Apr 10, 2018 19:49:49 GMT -5
Question, when was the last time an artist had 3 songs in the top 5? Because the top 2 is probably NFW and GP with Look Alive being 5 minimum.
Looks like Drake MIGHT be the first since the Beatles
Edit - I'm wrong af
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Soundcl🕤ck
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Post by Soundcl🕤ck on Apr 10, 2018 19:51:14 GMT -5
Question, when was the last time an artist had 3 songs in the top 5? Because the top 2 is probably NFW and GP with Look Alive being 5 minimum. Looks like Drake MIGHT be the first since the Beatles since Justin Bieber (I think) January 16, 2016 #2 Sorry #3 Love Yourself #5 What Do You Mean
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jayhawk1117
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Post by jayhawk1117 on Apr 10, 2018 19:54:15 GMT -5
Question, when was the last time an artist had 3 songs in the top 5? Because the top 2 is probably NFW and GP with Look Alive being 5 minimum. Looks like Drake MIGHT be the first since the Beatles since Justin Bieber (I think) oh yeah I forget how insane his last era was
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Post by Golden Bluebird on Apr 10, 2018 20:44:22 GMT -5
"Whatever It Takes" expected to hit the top 20 next week, finally. And also "Friends", which I hate, because it hits close to home, so I feel like Anne-Marie is singing right at me and honestly being a b*tch. Friends, I'm pretty sure, is targeted towards females anyway, like New Rules. The song has a great beat in my opinion, but the lyrics remind me of those sorts of those big-headed girls who think everybody is hitting on them all the time. At least New Rules has a good message (be careful who you have sex with, don't just sleep with everybody), but with Friends I can imagine a load of self-centered women thinking "OMG, I relate to this song so much", when really they're just deluded and nobody has ever hit on them before in their life! lol
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fhas
3x Platinum Member
Three-time World Champions: 1992 - 2-1 vs. Barcelona, 1993 - 3-2 vs. Milan, 2005 - 1-0 vs. Liverpool
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Post by fhas on Apr 10, 2018 20:55:48 GMT -5
Kworb finally updated his sales predictions: Nice For What 94k I Like It 53k God's Plan 35k kworb.net/cc/
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Post by hot100predictions on Apr 10, 2018 21:06:00 GMT -5
Kworb finally updated his sales predictions: Nice For What 94k I Like It 53k God's Plan 35k kworb.net/cc/Do you think Nice For What coming for #1 now next week, 94k and its only Tuesday with sales ending Thursday, he can easily rack 120k at this rate by then. Plus, rhythmic starting to cash that song in up to #35 on latest check in airplay. Lastly, Drake is pumping out Spotify and Apple Music right now with daily streams likely excessing over 2.5-3m through Thursday on Spotify, and likely 3-6m daily on Apple Music. Thoughts? Should he be number one next week with all this or nah. I'm worried with Nicki and Zayn releasing that this may slightly hurt his approach if it don't reach number one next week on Billboard.
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fhas
3x Platinum Member
Three-time World Champions: 1992 - 2-1 vs. Barcelona, 1993 - 3-2 vs. Milan, 2005 - 1-0 vs. Liverpool
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Post by fhas on Apr 10, 2018 21:37:32 GMT -5
Kworb finally updated his sales predictions: Nice For What 94k I Like It 53k God's Plan 35k kworb.net/cc/Do you think Nice For What coming for #1 now next week, 94k and its only Tuesday with sales ending Thursday, he can easily rack 120k at this rate by then. Plus, rhythmic starting to cash that song in up to #35 on latest check in airplay. Lastly, Drake is pumping out Spotify and Apple Music right now with daily streams likely excessing over 2.5-3m through Thursday on Spotify, and likely 3-6m daily on Apple Music. Thoughts? Should he be number one next week with all this or nah. I'm worried with Nicki and Zayn releasing that this may slightly hurt his approach if it don't reach number one next week on Billboard. This is the prediction for the entire week. According to Billboard, Nice For What sold more than 40k after 3 days. IMO, Nice For What has a chance to debut at #1 if: A) NFW is almost two* times more popular on Apple Music and the other on-demand services than it's on Spotify; B) The video is uploaded to Drake's VEVO channel on YouTube. The OVO channel is not popular; C) God's Plan loses 2M+ daily on radio; GP is still the favorite, tho.
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Leo ✔
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Post by Leo ✔ on Apr 10, 2018 22:27:09 GMT -5
"Whatever It Takes" expected to hit the top 20 next week, finally. And also "Friends", which I hate, because it hits close to home, so I feel like Anne-Marie is singing right at me and honestly being a b*tch. The reason I like "Friends" is because Anne-Marie fits her image of bad bitch on the video with her voice.
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