U.S. Charts 03/23/2002
GHV2 (Platinum)
---------------
| TW LW WO PK(#) |
-----------------------------|----------------------------|
Billboard 200 | 182 160 17 7 |
-----------------------------|----------------------------|
"GHV2" scans 7,090 copies, a 13.7% decline from last week.
Drowned World Tour 2001 (DVD/VHS) (Platinum)
--------------------------------------------
| TW LW WO PK(#) |
-----------------------------|----------------------------|
Top Music Video | 27 26 17 1 |
-----------------------------|----------------------------|
What It Feels Like For A Girl (D)(M)(T)<>
------------------------------------------
| TW LW WO PK(#) |
-----------------------------|----------------------------|
Hot Dance/Maxi-Singles Sales | 19* 23 46 1 |
-----------------------------|----------------------------|
The Immaculate Collection (Diamond)
-----------------------------------
| TW LW WO PK |
-----------------------------|---------------------------|
Top Pop Catalog Albums | -- 45 359 8 |
-----------------------------|---------------------------|
"Immaculate" falls off the top 50 this week, ranking #53 with sales
just under 4,500.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Maverick Records
----------------
B200 WO H100 WO H100A T40T AT40
----------------------------------------------------------------
Michelle Branch 54->46* 30 45->37* 4 40* 19* 11*
Alanis Morissette 1->3 2 26->23* 8 24* 16* 4*
Billboard 200 position and number of weeks on, Hot 100 position and
number of weeks on, Hot 100 Airplay, Top 40 Tracks, Adult Top 40.
"Under Rug Swept" scans another 119,600. The second-week drop of 44% is
slightly higher than that of "Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie,"
which opened with much higher sales. Note, however, that "Thank U" was
in airplay top 3 when that album opened.
On the Hot 100, Michelle Branch is leaped over by another young girl
Vanessa Carlton with her debut single "A Thousand Miles." The difference
is that "Miles" is sales-driven. With #65* airplay and #4* sales, it
jumps #46->#31* on the Hot 100.
Singles Charts
--------------
SALES: You might feel deja vu looking at the Singles Sales chart, what
with Kris Kross's "Jump" at #65 and Mariah Carey's "I'll Be There" at
#54. They are part of Columbia's "Platinum Series" which re-issues
former hit singles on CD. Six of them enter this week's chart, all of
which are former Hot 100 #1s and four are former Singles Sales #1s.
Aside from the two mentioned above, "I Don't Wanna Miss A Thing" grabs
#14 with a whopping 1,793 copies, "Gettin' Jiggy With It" and "One Sweet
Day" are back-to-back at #37 and #38, and "Truly Madly Deeply" gets #44.
Selling 521 copies, "Livin' La Vida Loca" barely misses the 75-position
chart. Even further down, Mariah Carey's "Emotions" and George Michael's
"Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me." And then there's Ini Kamoze's "Here
Comes The Hotstepper," a #1 smash in 1994 that topped Singles Sales for
eight weeks... This time around, it scans a spectacular 240 copies out
of the box. (In comparison, "What It Feels Like For A Girl" moves 353
copies this week; "Music," 284.)
For their "Maximum Hits" series, Arista is releasing recurrent hits that
have never been available on CD single. Dido's "Thank You" debuted last
week and jumps to #36* this week. Also on the chart are Pink's "You Make
Me Sick" and 112's "Peaches & Cream."
However, it doesn't seem like these older songs are what people really
want. Overall singles sales remain dismal at 295,000, up from 291,000.
Among current hits, the only noteworthy commercial release is 'NSync's
"Girlfriend," which enters at #68 on this week's Singles Sales due to
street date violations.
TOP 40: "Ain't It Funny" topples 12-week-champion "How You Remind Me"
on Top 40 Tracks, but not before the latter rewrites the record for most
weeks at #1. The previous record of 10 weeks was achieved by "Livin' La
Vida Loca," "Smooth" and "Bye Bye Bye." (Note that Top 40 Tracks was
only implemented in December 1998.)
R&B: In its third week atop R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay as well as R&B/Hip-Hop
Singles & Tracks, Tweet's "Oops (Oh My)" registers 55 million in R&B
audience impression. Only one song has ever done better: Alicia Keys's
"Fallin'" reached 56 million last year. Hot on the heels of "Oops" is
"U Don't Have To Call," Usher's third hit in less than half a year. With
a 21% airplay growth, it trails "Oops" by less than one million.
AC: Elton John's "This Train Don't Stop There Anymore" becomes his 35th
top 10 hit on Adult Contemporary. He is tied with Barbra Streisand at
second place among all artists, and only one away from matching Neil
Diamond's record. With Adult Contemporary's small audience reach and
niche song selection, many titles on this chart have not entered the
Hot 100. In addition to Elton John, other examples from this week's
chart include Cher, Michael Bolton, Marc Anthony, Jim Brickman, Brian
McKnight, Enya (new single "Wild Child"), Barry Manilow, and - of all
people - Britney Spears.
Billboard 200
-------------
Even with its sales scaling back by 24%, "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"
wrestles the pole position from Brandy's new album with a 4,000-unit
advantage. Now in its 63rd chart week, "O Brother" marks the second-
longest climb to #1 in the history of Billboard 200. Paula Abdul's
"Forever Your Girl" reached #1 in October 1989 in its 64th week. Two
other albums took even longer, if we include their time of absence
between separate chart runs. Roberta Flack's "First Take" first charted
in 1970, and re-entered in 1972 after 91 weeks off chart. It quickly
ascended to #1 in what would have been its 118th chart week had it never
fallen off. Similarly, Jim Croce's "You Don't Mess Around With Jim"
started in 1972 and triumphed in 1974, but the 81-week period included
a 34-week interruption.
In the SoundScan era (since 1991), the three slowest-climbing #1 albums
were Live's "Throwing Copper," 52 weeks; No Doubt's "Tragic Kingdom," 49
weeks; and Hootie And The Blowfish's "Cracked Rear View," 44 weeks. All
three made their way up during 1994-1996.
The chart life of "O Brother" is reminiscent of Bonnie Raitt's 1989
album "Nick Of Time." That album performed decently and peaked at #22
before winning a handful of Grammies. It immediately bounced #40->#22,
and rose to #1 four weeks later (note that this was before SoundScan)
in its 52nd chart week. Similarly, "O Brother" never reached the top 10
until the week before the awards ceremony.
"O Brother" is the first soundtrack to top the chart since "Armageddon"
in July 1998. This is the longest gap between soundtrack #1s since the
one between 1987's "Dirty Dancing" and 1992's "Wayne's World." This is
also the first time bluegrass dominates the album chart since 1973's
"Dueling Banjos," which was also related to a film ("Deliverance").
Eclipsed by the aura of "O Brother," Brandy's "Full Moon" settles for #2
with 155,000 sold. Her 1998 album "Never S-A-Y Never" started at #3 with
160,000, and shuffled up to #2 the following week on its way to scanning
4.5 million copies. Although Brandy is denied her first #1 album on the
Billboard 200, she achieves that on R&B/Hip-Hop Albums.
Kylie Minogue drops #3->#9 on a 36% decrease, and Cher tumbles #9->#22
due to a 40% sales loss. Natalie Imbruglia, Kylie's fellow Australian,
bows at #35 with 33,2000 sold. Her 1998 album opened at #10 and scanned
two million copies, thanks to the smash hit "Torn." In comparison, her
new single "Wrong Impression" is already dropping from a #64 peak on the
Hot 100. Other debuts include Jars Of Clay at #28 and Chieftains at #85.
The major Grammy winners are losing some luster but still riding the
wave. Aside from them, the highest-ranking albums from before 2002 are:
Linkin Park #2 (72nd chart week), Ludacris #6, Pink #10, Nickelback #11,
Creed #12, Puddle Of Mudd #13, Usher #14, Shakira #16, P.O.D. #19, and
Ja Rule #20. (The 2002 version of Mary J. Blige's 2001 album "No More
Drama" is at #15.)
--------------------------------------------
A "*" (bullet) beside a chart position marks that a single or album
registered a notable gain in sales or airplay or chart points. Debut
titles automatically carry bullets. Video charts and Top Internet Album
Sales do not award bullets.
(C): CD Single, (D): DVD Single, (M): Maxi CD, (T): 12" Maxi Vinyl,
(V): 7" Vinyl, (X): Cassette Single, (Z): Maxi Cassette, <>: Videoclip
http://www.eecs.harvard.edu/~zhwang/Madonna/chart/BBGHV2_3.html#Mar16
--
Hey MS.Madonna
Put a record on
I wanna dance with my baby
When the music starts
I never wanna stop
It’s gonna drive me crazy
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 140.115.228.188
Madonna 近期熱門文章
PTT偶像團體區 即時熱門文章