Britney Spears still dominates

Thursday, January 20, 2011




Week Ending Jan. 16, 2011: Songs: Britney Tops Taylor
Britney Spears' "Hold It Against Me" sold 411,000 digital copies this week, which enables Spears to break Taylor Swift's record for the biggest first-week sales tally for a song by a female solo artist. The old record-holder was Swift's "Today Was A Fairytale," which sold 325K in its first week a year ago.
This is Spears' biggest one-week digital sales total to date. It surpasses "Womanizer," which sold 303,000 copies during Christmas week 2008 (when sales traditionally spike).
"Hold It Against Me" posted the fourth biggest first-week sales tally in digital history. It trails Flo Rida's "Right Round," which sold 636K in its first week in February 2009; the Black Eyed Peas' "Boom Boom Pow," which sold 465K in its first week in April 2009; and Eminem, Dr. Dre & 50 Cent's "Crack A Bottle," which sold 418K in its first week in February 2009.
"Hold It Against Me" debuts at #1 on this week's Hot 100. This is the second time that Spears has opened atop the chart. She achieved the feat in October 2009 with "3." Spears is only the second artist in the chart's 52-year history to debut at #1 with two or more songs. Mariah Carey has debuted at #1 three times. She scored with "Fantasy" in September 1995, "One Sweet Day" (with Boyz II Men) in December 1995 and "Honey" in September 1997. (What about Celine Dion? See The Fine Print, below.)
Spears' achievement is all the more impressive because she has been a star so long. Her first single, "...Baby One More Time," reached #1 in January 1999. Most of the artists who have entered the Hot 100 at #1 have been relative newcomers (such as the red-hot Ke$ha, who did it in November with "We R Who We R").

Only five other artists who have debuted at #1 had been stars for more than a decade at the time they made these powerful debuts. Elton John had been a star for 27 years when he debuted at #1 in 1997 with "Candle In The Wind 1997." Michael Jackson had been a star for nearly 26 years when he debuted in the top spot in 1995 with "You Are Not Alone." Aerosmith had been a top act for 25 years when they debuted at #1 in 1998 with "I Don't Want To Miss A Thing." Eminem had been a star for nearly 12 years when he debuted at #1 last year with "Not Afraid." Whitney Houston had been on top for 10 years when she debuted in the top spot in 1995 with "Exhale (Shoop Shoop Song)."
"Hold It Against Me" is Spears' fourth #1 hit on the Hot 100. It follows "...Baby One More Time," which took 11 weeks to reach #1, "Womanizer," which took two weeks to hit the top spot, and "3."
"Hold It..." will quickly become Spears' eighth million-selling digital hit. Her top digital sellers, per Nielsen SoundScan, are "Womanizer" (3,114,000), "Circus" (2,763,000), "3" (2,049,000), "Piece Of Me" (1,668,000), "Gimme More" (1,627,000), "Toxic" (1,537,000) and "If U Seek Amy" (1,175,000).
The key line in Spears' song is "If I said I want your body now/would you hold it against me." Groucho Marx is said to have come up with the double entendre when he hosted the TV game show You Bet Your Life. The line provided the title of Bellamy Brothers' 1979 hit "If I Said You Have A Beautiful Body Would You Hold It Against Me," which topped the country chart for three weeks and cracked the top 40 on the Hot 100. The dry wit of the line was central to the success of the Bellamy Brothers' hit. I'd say the line is incidental to the success of Spears' song. The driving techno beat is what matters.
Spears' song sold nearly 10 times as many copies as this week's #1 album, Cake's Showroom Of Compassion, which sold just 44,000 copies this week, a new low for a #1 album in the Nielsen SoundScan era. Here's a link to this week's Chart Watch: Albums in which I give all the depressing details. (Of course, albums cost about 10 times as much as an individual song, so it evens out, sort of.)
The Fine Print: Celine Dion debuted at #1 in February 1998 with "My Heart Will Go On (Love Theme From ‘Titanic')" and did it again that December with "I'm Your Angel" (with R. Kelly). But Billboard doesn't count the second hit as an official #1 debut. Let me explain: The song bowed at #1 the same week that the magazine changed its chart methodology to allow non-singles to enter the chart. Silvio Pietroluongo, the magazine's Director of Charts, explains, "That debuted at No. 1 due to the change in chart rules, not on a proper week to week comparison. The song was ranked in the prior week's test chart." (Billboard is right to be scrupulous about its chart standards, though I'm pretty sure that Dion's small army of devoted fans won't be happy with this.)
Bruno Mars' "Grenade" slips to #2 on the Hot 100 after a total of two weeks on top. It debuts at #1 in the U.K. It's Mars' third hit to reach #1 in both countries, following B.o.B's "Nothin' On You" and Mars' solo smash "Just The Way You Are."

Mars is only the fourth male solo artist in chart history to hit #1 in both countries with consecutive singles. Elvis Presley reached #1 in both countries in 1960-61 with three consecutive hits: "It's Now Or Never," "Are You Lonesome To-night?" and "Surrender." Shaggy scored in 2001 with "It Wasn't Me" (featuring Ricardo "RikRok" Ducent) and "Angel" (featuring Rayvon). Usher triumphed in 2004 with "Yeah!" (featuring Lil Jon & Ludacris) and "Burn."
This is amazing (to lift a word from "Just The Way You Are") given that Mars made his very first appearance on the Hot 100 (at a lowly #89) on Feb. 13, 2010.
Here's the low-down on this week's top 10 songs.
1. Britney Spears, "Hold It Against Me." This new entry is Spears' fourth song to reach #1; her ninth song to reach the top 10. Digital sales rank: #1 (411k).

2. Bruno Mars, "Grenade." The former #1 song dips to #2 after two weeks on top. This is its eighth week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #2 (219K).

3. Katy Perry, "Firework." The former #1 song dips from #2 to #3. This is its 11th week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #4 (184K).
4. Rihanna featuring Drake, "What's My Name?." The former #1 song dips from #3 to #4. This is its 11th week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #12 (114K).
5. Wiz Khalifa, "Black And Yellow." The song jumps from #7 to #5. This is its fourth week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #3 (190K).
6. Enrique Iglesias featuring Ludacris & DJ Frank E, "Tonight (I'm Lovin' You)." The song holds at #6 for the third straight week. This is its fourth week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #5 (182K).
7. Ke$ha, "We R Who We R." The former #1 song drops from #4 to #7. This is its 12th week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #9 (141K).
8. P!nk, "Raise Your Glass." The former #1 song drops from #5 to #8. This is its 13th week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #13 (108K)
9. The Black Eyed Peas, "The Time (Dirty Bit)." The song dips from #8 to #9. This is its eighth week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #7 (157K).
10. Bruno Mars, "Just The Way You Are." The former #1 song dips from #9 to #10. This is its 22nd week in the top 10. Digital sales rank: #21 (86K).
Rihanna's former #1 hit "Only Girl (In The World)" drops out of the top 10 (to #12) after a total of 15 weeks there.
Avril Lavigne's "What The Hell" enters the Hot 100 at #13. It bows on Hot Digital Songs at #6 with sales of 163K. The song, from Lavigne's upcoming album Goodbye Lullaby, is vying to become Lavigne's sixth top 10 hit on the Hot 100.
"H*A*M" by Kanye West and Jay-Z enters the Hot 100 at #23. It bows on Hot Digital Songs at #10 with sales of 125K. The song is from their upcoming collabo album, Watch The Throne. The two stars teamed in 2009 for the #2 smash "Run This Town," which also featured Rihanna.
Staying Power: Cher's "You Haven't Seen The Last Of Me" jumps to #1 on this week's Dance/Club Play Songs chart. Billboard's Keith Caulfield notes that this makes her the first artist to have a #1 hit on a Billboard chart in each of the last six decades. Combining her solo and Sonny & Cher hits, Cher topped the pop chart in the '60s, '70s, and '90s. She topped the AC chart in the '70s and '80s. She has topped the Dance/Club Play chart in the '90s, '00s and '10s.
Pop Quiz: "You Haven't Seen The Last Of Me" brought songwriter Diane Warren her first Golden Globe for Best Song this past Sunday. It may also bring the pop veteran her first Academy Award. Warren has been nominated for an Oscar six times. With what songs? Name as many as you can. Bonus points: Who recorded the songs and how high did the songs climb on the Hot 100? Answers below
Willow's "Whip My Hair" tops the 1 million mark in paid downloads this week, nearly 19 years after her dad, Will Smith, landed his only platinum single (which denoted the sales of 1 million singles). D.J. Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince, a hip-hop duo which consisted of Smith and Jeff Townes, went platinum with "Summertime" in July 1991.
Song Scorecard: Two other songs top the 1 million mark in paid downloads this week: Eminem's "No Love" and "Stereo Love" by Edward Maya & Vika Jigulina.
R.I.P. Margaret Whiting was probably before your time, but if you saw the 2009 movie Julie & Julia, you heard her touching version of the standard "Time After Time." Whiting had top 30 hits spanning 21 years, from 1945's Oscar-winning "It Might As Well Be Spring (with Paul Weston and his Orchestra) to 1966's "The Wheel Of Hurt." Whiting died last week. She was 86.

Quiz Answer: Diane Warren's six songs that have received Academy Award nominations for Best Original Song are "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" from Mannequin (Starship's version hit #1 in 1987), "Because You Loved Me" from Up Close And Personal (Celine Dion's version hit #1 in 1996), "How Do I Live" from Con Air (LeAnn Rimes' version hit #2 in 1997), "I Don't Want To Miss A Thing" from Armageddon (Aerosmith's version hit #1 in 1998), "Music From My Heart" from Music Of My Heart (*NSYNC & Gloria Estefan's version hit #2 in 1999) and "There You'll Be" from Pearl Harbor (Faith Hill's version hit #10 in 2001.)

0 comments:

Post a Comment