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I work for Nielsen - It's not Final until we say so - Yes, It's Final "3121" is #1 Prince Nets First No. 1 Album Debut With '3121'
March 29, 2006, 11:25 AM ET Katie Hasty, N.Y. Prince achieves his first career No. 1 debut on The Billboard 200 this week with his new NPG Music/Universal album, "3121." The set sold 183,000 copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan, to open at No. 1 on the big list, as well as on Billboard's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums tally. Prince last topped the R&B/Hip-Hop chart with 1991's "Diamonds & Pearls." On The Billboard 200, he now has four No. 1s, including 1989's "Batman," 1985's "Around the World in a Day" and 1984's "Purple Rain." The Prince set leads a charge of debuts this week as new titles from B.G., Ben Harper and Teddy Geiger all bow inside the top 10. The soundtrack to Disney's "High School Musical" continued with strong sales, although its 7% increase to 152,000 was not enough to stay in front of Prince, so the set falls 1-2 on The Billboard 200. James Blunt's Atlantic release "Back to Bedlam" drops 2-3 with 111,000 (-12%), but crowns the Top Rock Albums chart for a fourth, non-consecutive week. Barry Manilow's "The Greatest Songs of the Fifties" rebounds 24-4 with sales of 78,000 copies, a whopping 140% increase. The Arista effort, which debuted at the top of the chart in February, got new legs after Manilow coached "American Idol" contestants and performed "Love is a Many Splendored Thing" last week on the show. Right behind him is Ne-Yo with "In My Own Words" (Def Jam), which slips one to No. 5 with 72,000 (-7%). Rapper B.G.'s "The Heart of Tha Streetz, Vol. 2: I Am What I Am," bows at No. 6, his best start in six years. The Koch release sold 62,000 copies and features the guest talents of former Cash Money labelmate Mannie Fresh. His 2000 album, "Checkmate," set his high-water sales mark with 128,000 units, although at that time it was only good enough for a No. 21 debut. Ben Harper garners his first top 10 placement with the double album "Both Sides of the Gun" (Virgin) which debuts at No. 7. Sales of 59,000 copies gave him the best single-week sales tally of his career. Harper's last appearance on the chart was with his Blind Boys Of Alabama collaboration, "There Will Be a Light," which opened at No. 81 in November 2004. Harper also appears on Jack Johnson's recent No. 1 album, a companion to the film "Curious George," which drops 10-16 this week. Seventeen-year-old Geiger's first full-length, "Underage Thinking" (Cred./Columbia) debuts at No. 8 on sales of 56,000. Alan Jackson's "Precious Memories" climbs 14-9 on The Billboard 200 on a 31% jump to 56,000 copies, likely prompted by a sale at Wal-Mart this past week. The ACR/Arista Nashville release also moves up three slots to take over at No. 1 on the Top Country Albums chart. Rounding out the top 10 is "The Legend of Johnny Cash" (Legacy/Columbia Nashville/American/Island), which falls 8-10 on sales of 53,000 units (-5%). Kenny Rogers' "Water & Bridges" (Capitol) bows at No. 14 with 44,000 copies, which is also good enough for a No. 5 debut on Top Country Albums. Other big debuts include From First To Last's "Heroine" (Epitaph) at No. 25 (33,000) and My Chemical Romance's "Life on the Murder Scene" (Reprise) at No. 30 (31,000). At 10.6 million units, overall CD sales were up 2% from the previous week and down 13% compared to the same week a year ago. Sales for 2006 are down 4% compared to 2005 at 129.6 million units. | |
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anyone know what all his albums charted? I thought Musicology went Number 1. Christian Zombie Vampires | |
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superspaceboy said: anyone know what all his albums charted? I thought Musicology went Number 1.
I thought musicology was number 1 as well. | |
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Musicology debuted at #3. In fact it reached 3 again later in the summer. It never went as high as that, I'm not a fan of "old Prince". I'm not a fan of "new Prince". I'm just a fan of Prince. Simple as that | |
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It's interesting that not even Purple Rain debuted at #1 | |
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wizard said: It's interesting that not even Purple Rain debuted at #1
that's weird. in fact, i never knew that the albums that hit number one never debuted there. strange but true. I'm not a fan of "old Prince". I'm not a fan of "new Prince". I'm just a fan of Prince. Simple as that | |
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purplecam said: wizard said: It's interesting that not even Purple Rain debuted at #1
that's weird. in fact, i never knew that the albums that hit number one never debuted there. strange but true. It's not really strange if you know the history of the charts. All of Prince's #1 albums were back in the days before SoundScan. Back then, record stores would have to manually report their sales into the Billboard. So, many stores saved up their numbers for weeks and then reported in, leading to a build-up of sales numbers on the Billboard charts. That would then lead more people to be interested in the album, and sales would go up further, etc etc. Also, I think Billboard's calculation of their charts were different, so the number of weeks were taken into account as well. Nowadays, albums are electronically tracked by SoundScan, so big-name artists are much more likely to debut high and then drop down the charts, since their fans buy the album earlier. That's why it's quite an achievement for an artist to hold onto the #1 spot for more than a week or two... It's not quite as exciting as the old days, but it's more accurate. | |
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FunkyMan said: purplecam said: that's weird. in fact, i never knew that the albums that hit number one never debuted there. strange but true. It's not really strange if you know the history of the charts. All of Prince's #1 albums were back in the days before SoundScan. Back then, record stores would have to manually report their sales into the Billboard. So, many stores saved up their numbers for weeks and then reported in, leading to a build-up of sales numbers on the Billboard charts. That would then lead more people to be interested in the album, and sales would go up further, etc etc. Also, I think Billboard's calculation of their charts were different, so the number of weeks were taken into account as well. Nowadays, albums are electronically tracked by SoundScan, so big-name artists are much more likely to debut high and then drop down the charts, since their fans buy the album earlier. That's why it's quite an achievement for an artist to hold onto the #1 spot for more than a week or two... It's not quite as exciting as the old days, but it's more accurate. very interesting. and you are right, it's not exciting anymore. I'm not a fan of "old Prince". I'm not a fan of "new Prince". I'm just a fan of Prince. Simple as that | |
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key...DEBUT at number One. Doesn't mean it's his only. I think this means it's his first Number One Debut. Christian Zombie Vampires | |
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superspaceboy said: key...DEBUT at number One. Doesn't mean it's his only. I think this means it's his first Number One Debut.
I've never debuted at number one in anything. | |
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superspaceboy said: anyone know what all his albums charted? I thought Musicology went Number 1.
Wikipedia has a pretty damn fine Discography | |
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THE AMAZING THING ABOUT MUSICOLOGY IS THAT IT CHARTED DURING THE SUMMER DURING PRINCE'S TOUR!
Imagine if he goes on tours and heavily pushes the album... the album could regain strength in the charts! | |
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