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58 MusicWeek 20.09.13


CHARTSANALYSIS WEEK 37 N


CHARTBOUND


Based on midweek sales, the following releases are expected to debut in or around the Official Charts Company Top 75 singles and artist albums charts this Sunday.


SINGLES  BY ALAN JONES


o.1 with In My Head (2010) and Don’t Wanna Go Home (2011), Jason


UK SINGLES CHART  JASON DERULO FEAT. 2 CHAINZ Talk Dirty Warner Bros  JESSIE J It’s My Party Universal  AVICII You Make Me Positiva/PRMD  CHRISTINA PERRI A Thousand Years Atlantic  BIRDY Wings Atlantic  DEMI LOVATO Skyscraper Hollywood  CHVRCHES The Mother We Share National Anthem  CHRISTINA PERRI Jar Of Hearts Atlantic  DANIEL MERRIWEATHER Red J  ONE DIRECTION Little Things Syco  LEONA LEWIS Run Syco  EVA CASSIDY Songbird Blix Street  TOM ODELL Another Love Columbia  PEWDIEPIE & GREGORY BROTHERS Jabba The Hutt Gregory Residence  COLDPLAY Paradise Parlophone


UK ARTIST ALBUMS CHART


 AVICII True Positiva/PRMD  MANIC STREET PREACHERS Rewind The Film Columbia  ELTON JOHN The Diving Board Mercury  DEAF HAVANA Old Souls BMG Rights  KATIE MELUA Ketevan Dramatico  TEMPERANCE MOVEMENT Temperance Movement Earache  PLACEBO Loud Like Love Vertigo  DIANA VICKERS Music To Make Boys Cry So Recordings  JACK JOHNSON From Here To Now To You Brushfire/Island  ELVIS COSTELLO & THE ROOTS Wise Up Ghost Blue Note  CARCASS Surgical Steel Nuclear Blast  MGMT MGMT Columbia  BILL CALLAHAN Dream River Drag City  NAKED & FAMOUS In Rolling Waves Fiction  MARK LANEGAN Imitations Heavenly  BOB MARLEY & THE WAILERS Legend Tuff Gong  JONAS KAUFMAN The Verdi Album Sony Classical  ONEREPUBLIC Native Interscope  DAVID BOWIE The Next Day Columbia  VAMPIRE WEEKEND Modern Vampires Of The City XL Recordings


The new Official Charts Company UK sales charts and Nielsen airplay charts are available from every Sunday evening at musicweek.com.


Source: Official Charts Company © Official Charts Company 2012


DeRulo will return to pole position on Sunday, with Talk Dirty (feat. 2 Chainz). The first single from DeRulo’s third album, Tattoos, which drops on Monday (23rd), Talk Dirty sold more than 80,000 copies by close of business on Monday night, and is certain to dethrone Katy Perry’s Roar, which it is outselling by a margin of nearly three to one. Roar sold 103,444 copies last


week - enough to give Perry an extremely comfortable second week at No.1.


Its sales exploding 92.04%


week-on-week, Counting Stars moved into runners-up slot behind Roar on Sunday to become US band OneRepublic’s highest charting UK hit. With a 179-43-30-20-17-13-2 chart trajectory, the track has sold 115,843 copies, 39,696 of them last week. Their debut hit, and previous highest charting single, Apologize (credited to


ALBUMS  BY ALAN JONES


F


ive studio albums, five instant No.1’s - that’s the proud record of the Arctic


Monkeys, whose latest success, AM, stormed to the top of the chart last Sunday with an impressive first week sale of 157,329. The only artist album to sell more copies in a week this year is Daft Punk’s Random Access Memories, which opened 16 weeks ago on sales of 165,091. Following hot on the heels of hit singles Do I Wanna Know? (No.11) and Why’d You Only Call Me When You’re High? (No.8), AM sold 69,432 copies digitally last week, a total beaten only by six albums in chart history. It also sold 5,170 copies on vinyl, the fifth highest tally for an album in that format in the 715 weeks that have elapsed thus far in the 21st century. Previous Arctic Monkeys albums followed a perfect but downward spiral, with each album opening with a lower sale and spending fewer weeks at No.1 than its predecessors - a pattern now broken by AM. First album Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not


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sales), Miley Cyrus’ We Can’t Stop dipped 7-8 (24,186 sales) and Lady Gaga’s Applause faded 8-10 (21,876 sales). Coldplay’s Atlas debuted at


No.12 (19,546 sales) and Example’s All The Wrong Places at No.13 (18,616 sales). Two other singles debuted


Jason DeRulo: Talk Dirty (feat. 2 Chainz) MIDWEEK NO.1


Timbaland presents One Republic), reached No.3 in 2007 and has sold 611,412 copies. OneRepublic’s sudden leap meant that Ellie Goulding was bumped 2-3 with her former chart-topper, Burn (39,056 sales) - a song co- written and produced by the band’s lead singer Ryan Tedder. Canadian rapper Drake’s third


Top 10 hit, Hold On, We’re Going Home climbed for the fifth straight week, moving 6-5 (36,853 sales).


Macklemore & Lewis’ Same


Love (feat. Mary Lambert) jumped 20-9 (23,621 sales) on its third chart appearance. Parent album The Heist climbed 46-34 (3,050 sales). Elsewhere in the Top 10:


Avicii’s Wake Me Up drifted 3- 4 (38,493 sales), Klangkarussell’s Sonnentanz (Sun Don’t Shine) fell 4-6 (34,014 sales), Lana Del Rey Vs. Cedric Gervais’ Summertime Sadness descended 5-7 (29,736


inside the Top 40: What I Might Do by Ben Pearce (No.25, 9,723 sales) and Party Right byLethal Bizzle feat. Ruby Goe (No.29, 8,773 sales). Love More climbed 52-34 (7,746 sales) for Chris Brown feat. Nicki Minaj. Olly Murs’ Right Place Right


Time, continued its ascent, jumping 35-27 (8,838 sales). Returning to the Top 40 after


a 25 week break thanks to a cover version aired on The X Factor, Swedish House Mafia’s Don’t You Worry Child leapt 122-40. It sold 6,712 copies last week, and raises its career tally to 892,264. Overall singles sales are down


8.33% week-on-week at 2,956,800 - 13.52% below same week 2012 sales of 3,418,998. It breaks a run of 108 straight weeks in which more than 3m singles have been sold.


well, peaking at No.33. One of the hottest new bands


of 2013, Irish band The Strypes have been making a big noise, with a series of triumphant festival appearances in the summer. Their first album, Snapshot, debuted at No.5 this week (11,553 sales). Fleet of foot, Rod Stewart


Arctic Monkeys: AM MIDWEEK NO.1


(2006) sold 363,735 copies on the first of its four weeks at No.1; second album Favourite Worst Nightmare (2007) sold 227,922 copies on the first of its three weeks at No.1; Humbug (2009) sold 96,313 copies on the first of its two weeks at No.1; and Suck It And See (2011) sold 82,424 copies on its only week at No.1. Arctic Monkeys are the 24th


group to have five No.1 albums but only the fifth to do so with their first five albums, following The Beatles, Oasis, Coldplay and Keane.


Despite a slew of new entries


in the first of this week’s sales flashes, AM looks set to continue at No.1 this weekend. While second single Strong


climbed 17-16 (16,871 sales), London Grammar’s first album, If You Wait, posted a No.2 debut (33,130 sales) behind Arctic Monkeys last Sunday and Goldfrapp scored their fourth straight Top 10 studio album, debuting at No.4 (13,817 sales) with Tales Of Us. Surprisingly, their most recent release before Tales Of Us - the compilation The Singles - didn’t do nearly as


quickstepped his way to a six week peak with Time, which dashes 26-6 (10,194 sales) following his appearance on the season premier of Strictly Come Dancing. Rod’s new album of old recordings, Rarities made a good first impression too, debuting at No.35 (2,965 sales). Elsewhere in the Top 10, The


1975’s eponymous debut dipped 1-3 (15,130 sales), Richard & Adam’s The Impossible Dream declined 4-7 (7,517 sales), Passenger’s All The Little Lights recovered 9-8 (7,056 sales), Bastille’s Bad Blood jumped 12-9 (6,866 sales) and Tom Odell’s Long Way Down bounced 15-10 (6,738 sales). Overall album sales were up


6.35% week-on-week at 1,430,926 - 1.24% below same week 2012 sales of 1,448,913, and 32.43% below same week 2003 sales of 2,117,583.


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