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Week Ending Feb. 24, 2008: The Case Of The Missing #2 Album

Posted Wed Feb 27, 2008 1:52pm PST by Paul Grein in Chart Watch

For the second week in a row, Jack Johnson's Sleep Through The Static and Michael Jackson's Thriller 25 are the top two albums in the U.S. Or are they?

They are, if you look at the Top Comprehensive Albums chart compiled by Nielsen/SoundScan. Johnson is #1 for the week with sales of 105,000 copies, trailed by Jackson with 63,000 copies. (The gap between the two is wider than it was last week, when just 14,000 copies separated them.)

But Jackson is nowhere to be found on the list of Top Current Albums that is published each week (as The Billboard 200) in Billboard magazine. The top 10 from that chart is reprinted in countless newspapers and websites around the world, including this one. The reason for the omission, as I explained last week, is that Nielsen/SoundScan and Billboard exclude catalog titles-defined as albums that are 18 months old or older-from the main chart. (Continuously running "current" hits are exempted.)

The idea is to make more room on the chart for new albums, which need every break they can get. This week, the rule resulted in 31 older albums being removed from Top Current Albums and shifted over to Top Catalog Albums. Just four of these 31 titles would have ranked in the top 100: Thriller 25, which would have ranked #2; Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers' Greatest Hits, #63; Guns N' Roses' Greatest Hits, #64, and Bob Marley & the Wailers' Legend, #84.

The idea of clearing catalog product out to give new titles a break makes a certain amount of sense. But having a top 10 that forever has to carry an asterisk is a high price to pay. Billboard and Nielsen/SoundScan should consider revising their policy so that the top 10, at least, is presented without any modification. They could even present the top 100 exactly as is. This week, as noted, they're opening up only four spots in the top 100 by having this policy. Most of the catalog titles--including such perennial best-sellers as Pink Floyd's The Dark Side Of The Moon, AC/DC's Back In Black and Metallica's Metallica--rank in the second hundred.

In his Over The Counter column, Billboard's Geoff Mayfield reports that Thriller 25 is only the second album to be denied a top 10 spot on Top Current Albums by the catalog-exclusion rule since the Comprehensive chart bowed in late 2003. Il Divo's The Christmas Collection would have placed #10 on the main chart in December 2006 if it had been allowed to compete. Even so, two albums denied a hard-earned spot in the top 10 is two too many.

I know that Michael Jackson, a proud and highly competitive man, is never content to finish second. But he should bear in mind that his album, which won the Grammy for Album of the Year 24 years ago, sold more copies in each of the last two weeks than this year's freshly-minted Album of the Year champ, Herbie Hancock's River: The Joni Letters. River ranked #5 last week and this week dives to #16.

This will be a memorable week for Johnson, who also makes the cover of Rolling Stone for the first time. Johnson was born in 1975, when Jackson was roughly at the midpoint between his initial Jackson 5 smashes and his solo superstardom with Off The Wall.

On Hot Digital Tracks, "Low" by Flo Rida featuring T-Pain holds at #1 for a record 13th consecutive week. It is now just 129,000 copies behind "Crank That Soulja Boy" as the most downloaded track of all time. It will probably take two more weeks to top it. The Soulja Boy Tell ‘Em track just keeps adding to its total. It sold 30,000 downloads this week.

Here's the low-down on this week's top 10 albums.

1. Jack Johnson, Sleep Through The Static, 105,000. This brings the album's cumulative sales to 660,000, which lengthens its lead as the top-selling album so far in 2008. Alicia Keys' As I Am is runner-up with sales of 606,000 in 2008. (Of course, this doesn't count the 2,543,000 copies that Keys sold in 2007.)

2. Alicia Keys, As I Am, 53,000. In addition to spending four weeks at #1, this long-running hit has now  ranked #2 behind five different albums-Josh Groban's Noel (which has dropped off the chart), Mary J. Blige's Growing Pains (now #9), Radiohead's In Rainbows (now #29), the Juno soundtrack (now #6) and now Sleep Through The Static.

3. Amy Winehouse, Back To Black, 52,000. Winehouse dips a notch, two weeks after winning five Grammys. Of this week's sales tally, 8,000 copies are digital downloads. The album has sold 291,000 downloads to date, a total topped by only one album in music history--John Mayer's 2006 release Continuum. (Mayer's download tally for that album stands at 326,000 copies.)

4. Kidz Bop Kids, Kidz Bop 13, 49,000. This is the Kidz' seventh consecutive album (excluding ancillary releases) to debut in the top 10. It's the Kidz' fourth album to debut in the top five. Kidz Bop 9 opened (and peaked) at #2, the high mark for the series to date.

5. Various Artists, Step Up 2: The Streets soundtrack, 43,000. This is the week's top soundtrack, replacing Juno, which held that distinction for seven weeks. The movie was #4 at the box-office in its second weekend, bringing its total take to $41.2 million. The album from the initial Step Up movie was the top movie soundtrack for two weeks in August 2006.

6. Various Artists, Juno soundtrack, 38,000. This is the soundtrack's eighth week in the top 10, the longest run by any movie soundtrack since Hairspray last summer. The Oscar-winning movie was #8 at the box-office in its 12th weekend, bringing its total take to $130.4 million.

7. Sara Bareilles, Little Voice, 37,000. Except for new entries, this was the only album in the top 50 to sell more copies this week than last (when sales were sparked by a post-Grammy uptick and Valentine's Day gift-giving). Little Voice, which is making its first appearance in the top 10, is boosted by the smash "Love Song," which moves back up to #2 on Hot Digital Tracks. The track has been in the top five on that chart for 11 straight weeks.

8. Chris Cagle, My Life's Been A Country Song, 37,000. This is the first top 10 album for the budding country star. Cagle peaked at #15 with an eponymous 2003 album and reached #24 with his 2005 follow-up, Anywhere But Here.

9. Mary J. Blige, Growing Pains, 35,000. This marks 10 straight weeks in the top 10 for Blige, whose album has sold 1,261,000 copies to date. Blige's previous album, The Breakthrough, logged 11 consecutive weeks in the top five.

10. Taylor Swift, Taylor Swift, 33,000. This week's tally is nothing to write home about, but keep in mind that Swift has been selling steadily for 70 weeks. The album's cumulative total is 2,553,000, which was worth celebrating even back in the day.

Three albums drop out of the top 10. Sheryl Crow's Detours dips from #8 to #11, Herbie Hancock's River: The Joni Letters drops from #5 to #16, and Grammy Nominees 2008 drops from #4 to #17.

Nickelback's All The Right Reasons dips from #44 to #48 in its 125th week on the chart. Billboard's Keith Caulfield reports that the album has spent every one of those weeks in the top 50. It's the first album to spend its first 125 chart weeks in the top 50 since Shania Twain's multi-format monster, Come On Over, which was released in 1997. That's no small achievement. Come On Over is the best-selling album in SoundScan history, with sales to date of 15,453,000 copies. (You read that right.) Nickelback's album has sold 6,641,000 copies.

In addition to albums by Kidz Bop Kids and Chris Cagle, four other albums debut in the top 100. Jim Jones' Harlem's American Gangster opens at #19, Secondhand Serenade's A Twist In My Story arrives at #44, K-Paz De La Sierra's En Vivo Desde El Autitorio Nacional opens at #80 and Mike Doughty's Golden Delicious bows at #87. Jones' mixtape album had a limited release last year, but has been remixed, remastered and augmented with new tracks for this wide release.

Janet Jackson hit #1 with five consecutive studio albums from Control in 1986 through All For You in 2001. But she peaked at #2 with her last two releases, Damita Jo and 20 Y.O. Next week we'll see if she can return to her old chart-topping ways with her new album Discipline. Also due next week: Dolly Parton's Backwoods Barbie, Erykah Badu's New Amerykah, Pt. 1: 4th World War and Goldfrapp's Seventh Tree.

Alternate Headline for this week's column: Little Ditty ‘Bout Jack & Alicia. Around here, I let nothing go to waste.

753 Comments

61. mandarrocks -
mj cant sell more records any more

62. Patricia -
Michael J is the greatest of all time and he needs to come out with something new to shut up all the critics and if you all were worried about rap don't anymore I have an album coming out titled straddlin' da fence this year and I guarantee it is the best rap you've heard since Tupac. My rap name is Tone Rone my E-mail is pthompson16@yahoo.com if you want a rough draft please email w/your address and get a copy also visit my website store www.thompsonsgwop.com and do some shopping.

63. Yahoo! Music User -
I disgree with u amyrodriguez36, he is NOT the reason we have the music we have today. You need to look back at the more influencial artists, such as the Beatles, Elvis and others who influenced most of today's current music. You may think MJ is innocent, which is fine, but I will never forgive the freak for buddying up to Paul McCartney, then buying all rights to the Lennon/McCartney songs. I guess he needs this money from the re-issue of this album to save Neverland.

64. Yahoo! Music User -
This is the wrong way to try to boost sales.
The hits on the charts are there for a reason.
They have out sold the competition. As usual the
music business is fast to adjust marketing and statistics rather than scout better song
writers, performers, and entertainers.

65. Jeff -
I agree with number 5. Who gives a flying ****. There are more important issues to be informing Joe G. Public about.

66. salie -
??? kinda harsh back there u knw...??? hehehe...

67. NoraT -
Billboard, Maxim, and Rolling Stone just make up their own rules as they go along. I don't waste my money on any of them.
The saddest part is the injustice to poor little Taylor Swift, who inaccurately believes that she has a Top 10 selling album.

68. AnitaB -
ok big deal that mj isn't recognized this it's a 25th anniv. album anyway as for this jack guy i don't know him but i do know i love my mary j, alicia keys, and sara bareilles albums like whoa.....everybody should b checkin them out

69. eddie g -
Alright!!!! Jack Johnson #1 he deserves it .Johnson is a tasteful songwriter with catchy hooks and simple songs to nod your head as you go by listening to his songs who cares what the critics say about his 3 chord songs. RE.MEMBER the best music written is simple and catchy look at rap and hip hop.

you go Jack!!!!

70. Dolly Llama -
No.2 is exactly that, No.2

71. Dolly Llama -
No.2 is exactly that, No.2

72. REDGLASSES -
NUMBER 2 IN THE US, NUMBER 1 WORLDWIDE....!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

that STFU to ALL the mormons criticizing him...:))))

MJ's talent is still on TOP

THAT IS WHAT YOU CAN'T BEAR TO YOUR PITTY MIND ....

MJ IS BACK Yeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaasssssssssssssssssss

73. pitbull -
hes going broke,the album will be on a paid advertisement channel before long.

74. Yahoo! Music User -
I love this stuff!!!!!!!!!

75. DaddiesGurl -
Ido not like what he did and there is no excuse to harm a child but this was made before all that and his music was great and he deserves to get his credit.His music had soul, romance, and rytheme this music today only had cursing and sex in it. Old school music is music and our children need to know that clean and upbeat music is cool. Give him his title he deserved it what is happing now is different from the past. People make wrong choices in life and God will punish when the time comes not us.Give the music it's due M J might have sung it but why punish the song!!!

76. its a secret -
If i'm not mistaken, didn't they found a tape of the parents of mj alleged victim, coaching their son on what to say and they tried to swindle another celeb. Oh and don't forget that they tried to settle for money instead of going to court.please people it doesn't take bill gates to realize their true motives.Oh and for the person who said that elvis presley set the stage for todays artist must not known no that james brown was the real king of rock and that elvis borrowed almost about everything that supposed to have made him " original"
from james brown.

77. Yahoo! Music User -
could it be that the "catalog albums" are outselling new albums because new music isn't giving listeners what they want to hear? Much of the catalog albums are true classics not because of their age but because of their inovation, lyrics, and timeless relevance.

78. Yahoo! Music User -
all of you, who can not think on your own people, stop hating and being lead by what other people say ,but cannot know absolutely, MJ HAS ALWAY BEEN KNOWN AS A MUSIC ,DANCING SONG WRITING, ENTERTAINER TALENT AND THIS IS TALK ABOUT AND SHOWN EVERY TIME HIS NAME IS MENTION BY ANY LISTENER OF MUSIC OR ITS HISTORY.

79. Da Shiznit -
Thriller should be recognized on the top albums charts. If an album 25 years old can out sell the top competition that's out now, it should be recognized. It shows something when an album 25 years old can outsell the album of the year by Herbie Hancock. Regardless of his personal issues, MJ's music is timeless and should be recognized.

80. Jennifer -
And some of you people need to learn proper grammar and spelling. Use spell check before you post a comment.
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