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Week Of Nov. 12, 2007: Jay-Z, The New Elvis?

Posted Wed Nov 14, 2007 3:41pm PST by Paul Grein in Chart Watch

Jay-Z's American Gangster knocks the Eagles out of the #1 spot on Nielsen SoundScan's list of the nation's best-selling albums, while Garth Brooks' latest hits compilation debuts at #3.

American Gangster is Jay-Z's 10th #1 album, which puts the rapper in a tie with Elvis Presley for second place among artists with the most #1 albums in the history of Billboard magazine's pop album chart. Only the Beatles, with 19 chart-topping albums, have amassed more. (For the sake of perspective, it's only fair to point out that Jay-Z's entire career is in the SoundScan era, when there's been more rapid turnover at #1. This allows more albums to reach the top spot. Jay-Z has had only two albums that made the Top 5 but failed to reach #1, while the Rolling Stones have had 21 such albums-in addition to their nine albums that went all the way. If there had been point-of-sale tracking in the Stones' heyday, presumably several of their albums that peaked in runner-up slots would have had a turn on top. The same is true of such other veteran acts as Barbra Streisand, who has had eight #1 albums-and 10 more that made the Top 5 but stopped short of #1.)

American Gangster opens with sales of 425,000 copies, which is a little off for Jay-Z. Six of his nine previous #1 albums opened with larger tallies. He achieved his biggest opening week one year ago when Kingdom Come started with sales of 690,000.

The official line is that Jay-Z's album was "inspired by" the new Ridley Scott movie of the same name, which stars Denzel Washington as a 1970s Harlem drug lord and Russell Crowe as the cop trying to take him down. The movie has grossed $80.6 million in domestic receipts in its first two weeks.

But the truth is much more interesting: Jay-Z hoped to write the song score for the film. But Brian Grazer, the film's producer, wanted the music to be songs from the era depicted in the film, which focuses on the years 1968-1975. Washington lobbied for Jay-Z to get the gig, but Grazer held firm.

The soundtrack, which includes both period R&B classics by Sam & Dave and the Staple Singers and out-of-period rap hits like Public Enemy's "Can't Truss It"-opens at #36 this week, with sales of 21,000. So does this mean Grazer made the wrong call? Not necessarily. His priority was the film, not achieving a smash soundtrack album. And while a chart-topping soundtrack can certainly help a film, a producer can't let the soundtrack take precedence. That would be letting the tail wag the dog. (In a unique move that feels a little like a peace offering to Jay-Z, advertisements for the film plug both the soundtrack album and Jay-Z's album.)

This isn't the first time that there have been competing albums from one film. In 1989, Danny Elfman composed the score for "Batman," while Prince had a #1 single with the song "Batdance." Warner Bros. marketed Elfman's music as the "original motion picture score" and a collection of nine Prince songs as the "motion picture soundtrack."

The Eagles' Long Road Out Of Eden slips to #2, with sales of 359,000. This pushes its total sales to 1,070,000 after two weeks. That's more than twice as many copies as the group's last major release, 1994's mostly live Hell Freezes Over, had sold at the same point. Much has already been made, including in this space, about the veteran group's debut last week with 711,000 copies. I'll add just one new wrinkle: The vast majority of albums that open with eye-popping sales totals are by artists that have been prominent for 10 years or less-hot, "current" acts, at the peak of their popularity. The Eagles are only the second act with 30 years under their belts to achieve such a lofty opening-week number. The first? The Beatles, who opened with sales of 855,000 with their 1995 retrospective, Anthology 1.

Garth Brooks' The Ultimate Hits enters at #3 with sales of 352,000. Brooks's original The Hits album in 1994 also opened at #3, though with a higher sales tally (520,000). The Ultimate Hits contains all 18 tracks that appeared on The Hits as well as 16 additional tracks, including four that are previously-unreleased. The two-CD set also contains a DVD which features videos for 33 of the tracks. (Long Road Out Of Eden is also a two-CD set, giving super-sized packages two of the top three spots.)

Brooks is a shrewd and clever marketing man-too much so for his own good. Like Michael Jackson, whom he dethroned as the king of the album charts in the early ‘90s, he is all too aware of his statistical achievements; too enamored with setting new records. This is why, many believe, he keeps repackaging his old hits. In addition to The Hits and The Ultimate Hits, Brooks revisited his greatest hits on the 1998 Double Live album and repackaged entire albums on two, non-overlapping boxed sets, both dubbed (confusingly!) The Limited Series. Brooks should focus less on trying to come up with new ways to repackage "Friends In Low Places" and "The Dance" and more on coming up with new songs of that caliber.

Chris Brown's second album, Exclusive, debuts at #4, with sales of 294,000. Brown's eponymous debut debuted (and peaked) at #2 in December 2005, on opening-week sales of 154,000. Brown's "Kiss, Kiss" is the current #1 single. Brown, 18, is not the youngest artist in this week's Top 10. Taylor Swift, who is just 17, jumps from #26 to #8 with her eponymous debut album. Swift won the Horizon Award at the recent Country Music Assn. Awards.

Carrie Underwood's "Carnival Ride," which debuted two weeks ago at #1, slips from #3 to #5; Josh Groban's holiday album Noel jumps from #8 to #6; and Britney Spears' Blackout drops from #2 to #7.

Angels & Airwaves' second album, I-Empire, opens at #9. The alternative band's debut, We Don't Need To Whisper, opened (and peaked) at #4 in June 2006.  The band includes Tom DeLong, also a member of Blink-182, and Atom Willard, a former member of the Offspring.

Cassidy's third album, B.A.R.S. The Barry Adrian Reese Story, opens at #10. It's the rapper's first album since he served eight months in prison after being convicted of involuntary manslaughter in the June 2005 shooting death of 22-year old Desmond Hawkins. In an earlier, gentler time, such a turn of events might have derailed a promising career. These days, it serves to give artists "street cred."

All three of Cassidy's albums have reached the top 10. Split Personality debuted (and peaked) at #2 in 2004. I'm A Hustla debuted (and peaked) at #5 the following year. Barry Adrian Reese is Cassidy's real name. Many previous rap album titles have featured the artist's real names. Among them: Jay-Z's Vol. 3...Life And Times Of S. Carter, Eminem's The Marshall Mathers LP and LL Cool J's G.O.A.T. Featuring James T. Smith The Greatest Of All Time.

This is the third week in a row that six albums move into the top 10. It's the first time in more than a year that six albums have entered the top 10 three weeks running. So what becomes of the six albums that fall out to make way for this week's new arrivals? Raising Sand by Robert Plant and Alison Krauss drops from #6 to #16, Rascal Flatts' Still Feels Good falls from #10 to #17, Andrea Bocelli's The Best Of Andrea Bocelli-Vivere drops from #9 to #18, Josh Turner's Everything Is Fine crashes from #5 to #19, Avenged Sevenfold's eponymous album nosedives from #4 to #29, and the Backstreet Boys' Unbreakable plummets from #7 to #40. The Backstreet Boys' album has sold just over 100,000 copies after two weeks in release, less, probably, than their peak-period albums sold in their first two hours.  I think we can call these 100,000 buyers "hard-core fans."

It won't be easy for Jay-Z to hold at #1 next week. Only three of his previous nine #1 albums managed a second week on top. And, as ever, there will be fresh competition. The week's key releases include Alicia Keys' As I Am, Celine Dion's Taking Chances, Led Zeppelin's Mothership, Seal's System and the compilations Now 26 and Now Party Hits.

 

370 Comments

121. Kristina -
I've read some comments.... you all should take it easy...admire talent, noone makes u love it or even listen to it, take it or leave it, that's all I have to say...

122. BEBOP! -
Screw rap. Seriously, this is like depriving the innocence of what America AND music once was. Rap/hip-hop or whatever his crappy music is, just doesn't belong up there in the charts. People these days are always listening to crap and screwing up culture and tradition and trying to do their idiotic non-conformist crap. Not that being "different" isn't bad, this is just the wrong way to head. This is a NO GO.

123. The Duke of Earl -
The headline stat is a bit misleading. When Elvis was at his peak in the '50s, rock n' roll was based around singles. The album charts were more dominated by adult-pop artists such as Sinatra. It was not until the mid to late '60s that rock began to dominate the album charts. For his time, Elvis' 10 #1 albums was a bigger feat than it may seem today.

124. S.G. -
Hova my man you've done it again, The American Gangster album displays jay's lyrical talent and the production quality is magnificent. If you haven't heard the album go get it immediately after you read this comment. If you're a fan of Jigga you will notice some similarity between a lot of the content of this album and Jay's classic and incredibly overlooked Reasonable Doubt album. That being said Hov still shows off with enough new word play and metaphors to make you wonder did Hov write The Holy Bible, lol, that's a hot line right there I might have to keep that one for myself. Long story short I appreciate Elvis for his era but I'm a 80's Baby, so I'm sticking with Jay. LAC/BMC, SMILE:)!!!!!!!!!, Muh- [profane]a, It's The Movement. The R.O.C. Is Definitely In The Building.

125. Yahoo! Music User -
ok, jay-z has some talent, but he's hardly important to american music history just because he's selling a few meaningless records in the soundscan/internet era (the beatles didn't have their myspace page up and running in the 60's or 70's, sorry). jay-z is a story teller and he's telling the same stories over and over and over about thugs and gangsters. people keep buying it so...

jay-z probably paid yahoo for the space to promote that misleading headline.

126. Ronald -
To the person who left comment 120, you need to find Jesus! This is the year 2007! No one is trippin on that anymore. State your name and stand up. Stop hiding behind the sheet!

127. s l -
congrats to Jay-Z. I am not a big rap fan. don't really know his songs. he must have done something right to get to #1.

BUT, in 20 or 30 years from now, will he be remembered around the country\work like Elvis? the answer would be a NO.

128. Yahoo! Music User -
Rap, hip-hop, the total genre from the beginning to present and all that passes for the same in conceivable future is simply not music. It is chant & rant and bad rhyme-at least the 'beatniks' had some entertainment value but they never escalated their street poetry into the musical realm. Our society has a bad case of the emperor's new clothes-very few will step up to identify the noise that it is. In pop culture, there has always been the element of people having a taste for crap. Passing off minimal scratch, electronic drums, a sub-sonic, indefinable bass, a synth sound or two over a pedestrian 4/4 beat (boring) while an individual or individuals go on and on speak-singing is tedious in the extreme. The lyric content is poor enough, but this has been covered of late by others as a way to have a critical complaint concerning the obvious. Anyone who really loves this stuff does not really know music. I am a composer and perfoming muscian on several instruments. I love ethnic world musics, creative, (mostly) instrumental rock, Renaisance, Baroque, 20th Century music, progressive folk/bluegrass, fusions of any of the above and Jazz (another fusion) of all periods including 'free' jazz like Albert Ayler, Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane, Sonny Rollins, Eric Dolphy, Bird and a couple of hundred others. The last named were real musicians that could PLAY their instruments and talked through them. Their music still exits on thousands of recording as well as the true artists out there still 'playin' their dues'. Give me an adventure, not monotony. Try to get away from the spoon fed culture you commonly are fed by some producer of a radio or tv show when it comes to music. Read some reviews, SEARCH. Get out of the toliet bowl whirlpool of the false. There is so much out there that is and has been and you want to chew on the same curd (or is it turd?). Park in same spot every day. Sit in the same chair. Wind yourself up and take what is given, God forbid that you may find out about something that is ecletic and wonderful. I would have to write a book to express a lifetime of feeling and revelations based on listening and searching for is possible. There can be a cutting edge to the arts as well as technology, and yes they can be combined to make something that will be 'golden' decades later. When you can create something that is timeless, and can be appreciated and perhaps studied decades later, then you've got something...real.

129. Yahoo! Music User -
Is there anyone who really knows what they're talking about when it comes to music?? ...Or... is everyone just a little too eager to argue about race and rap? If u like Jay-Z, that's what's up. If you don't, that's what's up....who cares? He's making money, bottom line so instead of comparing him to elvis and rap to punk rock... get like all of these artist.... and get money!! PS* they don't do it by sitting behind a computer, hating on the next man all day!!!

130. Yahoo! Music User -
Such a discrase, Jay z is horrible. I agree, all "rap" is missing is the "c" at the beginning

131. MARK -
Elvis is dead get over it....The money is in Hip-Hop music get use to it. Maybe Elvis should've wrote his own music...

132. brian -
This is really pathetic. Just goes to say that people don't have good taste in music. I'd rather listen to dying animals rather than listen to the garbage Jay-Z puts out. Children need better role models than these rappers. Most kids today are just followers and they start dressing and acting like these clowns. Which believe me rappers fashion looks straight ridiculous. So then they dress and act like them then they start disrespecting women. Why? Because of this music. "Oh, don't blame it on Jay-Z. He's a positive influence and his songs are what hiphop are supposed to be like." Bah! His music is garbage and it's tearing down the moral fabric of this country. Ever read the lyrics of "2 Many Hoes"? Read that peice of trash and then tell me he's not disrespectful to women. If you don't believe so you're dillusional and in denial. His mother should be proud. I will never own a Jay-Z record nor will I listen to this junk. So reply with your "you don't know anything, Jay-Z is great" posts but what you should really do is find a new rolemodel.

133. Mr.New York -
Just looking at these posts lets me know America has some serious issues. Until they are resolved with a national dialogue "Democracy is Hipocracy"

134. Asterix -
Haters out here need to actually listen to Jay and what he says. I am not a rap fan so to speak but he is one artist in an genre today who commands attention. Many of you diss rap and yet only listen to what you hear on the radio or on TV. You need to get records that are real and not the junk you hear everyday. This is why he is in demand. You should also know that rap evolves. What was hip today is not going to be so tomorrow. Rock, punk, grunge, country or in short "white music" rarely changes. Listen to a rap record two years ago and listen to one today, you will see why it is hard for one to stay in the game. I love and respect U2, Rolling Stones, e.t.c. but they would not last as rappers. Their music is beloved but does not change at the same pace as rap. So before you put rap down, listen to the records you do not hear on the radio. Only then will you know how good these artist and how poetic people like Jay, Common, Mos Def e.t.c. are. Forget the 50 Cents and M. These are the cats to listen to beyond the bling. Peace.

135. warnero y -
I give props to jigga. Like it or not people 10 number ones puts him on that list. Proofs in black and white. So hate if you want, you're wasting your time.

136. Tonya -
All right lets clear things up!!! Yes it is very obvious racism is still going strong these days and as before it's more strongly being shown by the "other race"..... Take in point that I am AFRICAN-AMERICAN and so is a lot of Jay's followers. But there are just as many of the "other race" at every concert I go to spending $200-$300 a show just like us.... So everyone breathe easy and just PUSH..... IT'S THE ROC........

137. kalu -
Guess what, Elvis is dead, but Jay is alive. While Jay lits up and smoke his ciggar, Elvis is eating soil under there.

138. blairs_smirk... -
Jay Z is one of the few rappers out there who still gets it and who sees things his own way. He got a little distracted when Beyonce came into the picture but his new album definitely shows he's back on top of his game.

139. Joaquin -
2 Pac!!!

140. Scrappy -
jay-z suckz azzzzzzzzz.MANSON rocks.rap is for people with no talent.
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