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Week Ending May 11, 2008: Diamond Tops Dylan As Oldest Living Chart-Topper

Posted Wed May 14, 2008 11:28am PDT by Paul Grein in Chart Watch

Neil Diamond this week becomes the oldest living artist to land a #1 album in the 52-year history of Billboard's weekly album chart. Diamond, 67, achieves the feat with Home Before Dark. The old record was held by Bob Dylan, who was 65 when he last topped the chart in September 2006 with Modern Times.

Only two other solo artists have had #1 albums past the age of 60--Louis Armstrong, who was 62 in 1964 when he topped the chart with Hello, Dolly! and Rod Stewart, who was 61 in 2006 when he rang the bell with Still The Same...Great Rock Classics Of Our Time.

Key group members who had #1 albums past the age of 60 are Ronald Isley, who was 62 in 2003 when the Isley Brothers' Body Kiss topped the chart; Ringo Starr, who was 60 in 2000 when the Beatles' 1 hit #1; and Don Henley, Joe Walsh and Timothy B. Schmidt, all of whom were 60 last fall when Eagles' Long Road Out Of Eden hit #1.

I know what you're thinking: How about those old-timers who had #1 albums in the early years of the rock era? Surely they were over 60 at the time. Surprisingly, except for Armstrong, they weren't. (People just seemed older back then.) Lawrence Welk was 58 in 1961 when he hit #1 with Calcutta!, Bing Crosby and conductor Enoch Light were both 54 when they landed their last #1 albums, conductor Mantovani was 53 and "Sing Along With Mitch" creator Mitch Miller was 50.

(Two pop legends were older than Diamond when they recorded their final albums, but the albums weren't released until after their deaths. Ray Charles' Genius Loves Company hit #1 in 2005, eight months after the R&B legend died at 73. Johnny Cash's American V: A Hundred Highways hit #1 in 2006, nearly three years after the country giant died at 71.)

(Two other legends who were older than Diamond is now just missed hitting #1 with late-career releases. Frank Sinatra was 77 in 1993 when Duets peaked at #2; Tony Bennett was 80 in 2006 when Duets: An American Classic peaked at #3.)

There is no question that the pop scene is more receptive to older artists than it used to be. From 1966, when Sinatra, then 50, landed his last #1 album, Strangers In The Night, until 1993, when Barbra Streisand, then 51, scored with Back To Broadway, not one artist over the age of 50 topped the chart. But in the last 15 years, it's become commonplace. No one thought twice about it in April when George Strait, 55, hit #1. After all, just last fall, in addition to the aforementioned Eagles, Bruce Springsteen, 58, and Reba McEntire, 52, had #1 albums. In the last five years, we've also seen #1 albums by Barry Manilow, who was 59 at the time, Jimmy Buffett, 57, and Led Zeppelin, whose members ranged from mid to late 50s.

What's going on here? The baby boomer audience is staying connected to the pop scene much longer than their parents ever did. Also, older fans are proving to be the most reliable album buyers. They came of age buying albums and are perfectly content to continue. What's more, if these older fans download an album (Nielsen/SoundScan includes paid downloads in its tallies), they are more inclined to pay than go to a file-sharing site.

I'm not sure how Diamond will react to being called "the oldest living chart-topper." But let's break it down. Certainly, it's good to be living. It's a nice bonus to be a chart-topper. As for being the oldest, well, as they say, it beats the alternative. So take it, Neil, and run with it.

Diamond lands his first #1 album nearly 42 years after he first entered the chart with The Feel Of Neil Diamond. That sets a new record for the longest any artist has had to wait for his or her first #1 album. The old record belonged to Jimmy Buffett, who took a little more than 30 years between first entering the chart in March 1974 and landing his first #1 album, License To Chill, in July 2004.

Diamond's highest-charting album before this week was the soundtrack to Jonathan Livingston Seagull, which reached #2 in 1973. That album also brought Diamond his only Grammy Award to date, for Best Album of Original Score. If you stopped people on the street, most would assume that Diamond has had numerous #1 albums and has won a shelf-full of Grammys. Why he hasn't, I don't know. But maybe that's one reason he has lasted so long: He has never been so white-hot that people got sick of him.

Home Before Dark is Diamond's second collaboration with Grammy-winning producer Rick Rubin, following 12 Songs, which opened (and peaked) at #4 in November 2005. Rubin also produced a series of five late-career albums for Johnny Cash, which culminated in the aforementioned chart-topper American V: A Hundred Highways.

Rihanna, 20, also makes news this week, opening at #1 on Hot Digital Songs with "Take A Bow." Rihanna is the first artist to top this chart four times. She previously led the list with "Pon De Replay," "SOS" and "Umbrella." "Take A Bow" opens with sales of 267,000 downloads. Only two songs have sold that many downloads in their first week. Mariah Carey's "Touch My Body" sold 286,000 and Rihanna's own "Umbrella," featuring Jay-Z, moved 277,000. Ne-Yo, Rihanna's duet partner on the recent "Hate That I Love You," wrote "Take A Bow." This is the eighth consecutive week that the #1 title on the Hot Digital Songs chart has sold 200,000 or more downloads.

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

1. Neil Diamond, Home Before Dark, 146,000. This album is off to a faster start than the first Diamond/Rubin collaboration, 12 Songs, which sold 93,000 copies in its first week. (Maybe it pays to actually come up with a title!) Diamond had 13 top 10 singles on the Hot 100 from the ‘60s into the ‘80s, but none of them were from #1 albums. Now, he finally has a #1 album without help from a hit single. Go figure.

2. Toby Keith, 35 Biggest Hits, 103,000. This two-CD set is the latest greatest hits album to tout the number of hits right in the title, the better to position the album as a good value for the money. It follows Elvis Presley's Elv1s: 30 #1 Hits and George Strait's 50 Greatest Hits. Both of those collections reached #1. (George's hit count is largest, so he wins.) The album includes Keith's new hit, "She's A Hottie," which jumps from #115 to #79 on Hot Digital Songs.

3. Madonna, Hard Candy, 94,000. Sales of the album dropped by 66%, the steepest decline of any album in the top 200. Hard Candy had just one week at #1, which has been the case with all four of Madonna's #1 albums in this decade. Her three #1 albums from the ‘80s all had extended stays in the top spot. Like A Virgin was #1 for three weeks, True Blue for five and Like A Prayer for six. "4 Minutes," Madonna's smash collabo with Justin Timberlake, slips from #3 to #5; "Give It 2 Me" falls from #21 to #74.

4. Clay Aiken, On My Way Here, 94,000. Aiken's solo debut, Measure Of A Man, debuted at #1 with sales of 613,000. His collection of pop covers, A Thousand Different Ways, opened at #2 with sales of 211,000. This third release (not counting a holiday album) continues the downward trend. Unlike most recording stars whose numbers are softening, Aiken has Broadway and TV to fall back on.

5. Mariah Carey, E=MC2, 87,000. Carey drops from #2 to #4 in her fourth week. "Touch My Body" drifts from #11 to #14 on Hot Digital Songs. "Bye Bye" regains some ground, jumping from #41 to #36.

6. Leona Lewis, Spirit, 76,000. Sales of Lewis' album now stand at 555,000, making it the eighth best seller so far in 2008. "Bleeding Love" slips to #2 on Hot Digital Songs after four weeks on top; "Better In Time" drops from #87 to #120.

7. Gavin DeGraw, Gavin DeGraw, 66,000. DeGraw's sophomore album puts him in the top 10 for the first time.  The adult alternative artist debuted in 2003 with Chariot, which was reissued as a two-CD set the following year. "In Love With A Girl" jumps from #19 to #15 on Hot Digital Songs; "We Belong Together" bows at #122.

8. Josh Groban, Awake Live, 58,000. Groban's first release since walking off with the #1 album of 2007 (Noel) is a live revisiting of the songs on his most recent pop album, Awake (which re-enters the chart this week at #87). Groban has released a live album after each of his three pop studio albums, a strategy that is known inside the industry as "milking it." This is the first of Groban's three live albums to reach the top 10.

9. Dierks Bentley, Greatest Hits/Every Mile A Memory 2003-2008, 43,000. This is Bentley's third album to crack the top 10, following Modern Day Drifter and Long Trip Alone. (Memo to Dierks: Amass a few dozen more hits, and then one-up George Strait with 51 Greatest Hits.) The album includes Dierks' newest hit, "Trying To Stop Your Leaving," which enters Hot Digital Songs at #111.

10. Luis Miguel's Complices, 32,000. This is the first top 10 album for the Latin superstar, who has been a fixture on the pop chart for 15 years. Miguel's previous highest charting album was Romances, which reached #14 in 1997. This is the first Latin album to reach the top 10 since Jennifer Lopez's Como Ama Una Mujer debuted at #10 in April 2007. Miguel was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico. J Lo was born in the Bronx to Puerto Rican parents.

Seven albums fall out of the top 10 this week. Lyfe Jennings' Lyfe Change slips from #4 to #12, Now 27 drops from #9 to #13, Tim McGraw's Greatest Hits 1 & 2 falls from #10 to #20, Portishead's Third drops from #7 to #24, The Roots' Rising Down drops from #6 to #28, Def Leppard's Songs From The Sparkle Lounge falls from #5 to #30 and Mudcrutch's Mudcrutch plummets from #8 to #53.

Two songs from Coldplay's upcoming album Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends (that's a mouthful) enter the Hot Digital Songs chart. "Viva La Vida" arrives at #6; "Violet Hill" opens at #18.

Market Indicator: Now 27 logged eight weeks in the top 10 before slipping this week to #13. Alas, only now, after nine weeks of release, has the album equaled the first-week sales (621,000) of the fastest-selling Now volume, Now 7. That album was released in 2001 when the industry was at its peak.

Rascal Flatts' Still Feels Good jumps from #78 to #37 with an 85% sales increase, the week's biggest for a non-debuting album. The album has sold 1,922,000 copies since it debuted at #1 in October.

I Can Only Imagine: Power Anthems Of The Christian Faith holds at #1 for a fourth week on the Catalog Albums chart, with sales of 17,000. The Time/Life collection would have ranked #37 on the big chart if older, catalog albums were eligible to compete there.

Ol Blue Eyes: Hard to believe, but it's been 10 years since Frank Sinatra died--on May 14, 1998. In addition to being a tremendous artist and an eternal icon of cool, Sinatra was one of the biggest recording stars of all time. Sinatra ranks as the #30 album seller of the Nielsen/SoundScan era, with sales of 25,804,000. The remarkable thing about this statistic is that it measures sales only since Nielsen/SoundScan set up shop in May 1991.

Sinatra first hit the Billboard album chart--which was not yet a weekly feature--in 1946 with The Voice Of Frank Sinatra. Only one other artist on Nielsen/SoundScan's list of the top 200 album sellers first entered the album chart prior to 1955. That's Nat "King" Cole, whose jazz trio was #1 on the very first album chart in 1945 with The King Cole Trio. Cole is the #185 album seller since 1991.

Sinatra has sold 14,872,000 albums in the 10 years since his death (a figure that many current artists would be quite content with.) That number will swell with the release this week of Nothing But The Best. The compilation is certain to become Sinatra's highest-charting posthumous album. That title is currently held by Greatest Love Songs. Released just before Valentine's Day 2002, the album peaked at #32.

Which of today's chart-toppers will still be relevant 60 years from now? Discuss amongst yourselves.

Heads Up: Death Cab For Cutie is expected to debut at #1 next week with Narrow Stairs. Other albums due to enter next week's chart include Jason Mraz's We Sing, We Dance, We Steal Things, Ryan Cabrera's The Moon Under Water, Keith Sweat's Just Me, Duffy's Rockferry and 10 Years' Division.

It's Here: My favorite song about May is "The Lusty Month Of May," from the 1960 Broadway musical, Camelot. The show was Lerner & Loewe's follow-up to My Fair Lady. Composer Frederick Loewe has many fans to this day, including rapper Flo Rida, who, on his recent smash, chanted, "Loewe, Loewe, Loewe, Loewe."

158 Comments

121. LeslieMS -
Having been raised by a couple of Baby Boomers... I grew up in love with the music of the 50s-70s... The 80s were ok if you don't count Disco, and the 90s had its own shining moments and one hit wonders. Given the Sad state of current music, if you can call it music at all, it is refreshing to see the good old classics holding thier own. This is probably because many see that today's oversynthesized, low quality ridden, hyped up, fakers just aren't fooling anyone. Long live the Classics, and God Rest the one's who have Joined Heaven's Chior!

122. Yahoo! Music User -
Neil Diamond has been one of my favorite artists for many, many years. It is good to see he still has his voice and his looks. The recording, Pretty Amazing Grace" was a delight to listen to and even watch. Keep singing, Neil. We need some real music with decent lyrics, good melody and great presentation. Woot for the over 50 crowd. We've still got it!!!

123. Vuduchld658 -
With the exception of Diamond, the top 10 here is pretty lame. Maddona, it's time to pursue "real" motherhood because your 15 minutes was up long ago. The rest of these bums on the charts need to take note, people are not feeling your music. Even MH is having problems selling CD's and she's one heck of a vocalist. It time for something new and fresh, the gravy train is over!!

124. alan -
There have always been crappy bands that can achieve a moderate status of success in every generation, that's how they coined the phrase one hit wonders...it's the truely talented from each generation that can endure and redifine their sound and success for the next generations. It's not just exclusive to todays generation- just a fresher wound to examine.

125. rahua -
I was born in 1979 and I can tell you that nowadays chart music is empty for the most part. Most "musicians" and "singers" today are in the industry for the wrong reasons. They have nothing to say and they are in it just for the fame and fortune.

126. David B -
You kids may want rethink you idea that the
67 year old guy is too old and has no talent.
Let's see how long Linkin Park or Maroon 5 lasts! Most of theses kids just make one record or even song with a group...put it online...make their million or so...and split from the band...how sad. They really don't care about the music...just the money. Guys like Diamond love to write and sing songs. If you kids remember that old show 'The Monkees' you might remember an old tune called 'I'm a Believer'? Diamond wrote that. It was a top 10 hit for the Monkees in 1968 or 69. Things get fuzzy at my age. It's not drugs...just cobwebs...

127. Pamela -
IT IS HIGH TIME NEIL GOT HIS #1-I LOVE ALL THE MUSIC HE HAS BLESSED US WITH AND THE NEW CD IS ALSO GREAT!!!!!

128. Yahoo! Music User -
The Diamond is brilliant. He has established himself so well that it is hard to listen to this new album of his and not hear the classic Diamond. I am not saying that it is the same, but just that he is an iconic figure in our cultural mind. His voice, his style-- we know and love the Diamond. He is a part of us all and a part of our culture-- whether one likes him or not.
Therefore I think it is difficult for anyone to compare musicians that are new today with those that are embedded culturally. Music today is in the perfect place: transition. The music scene is always in transition. If you don't like it I suggest you wait a couple years and you won't like what's going on at that point, but you'll like what's going on today (i.e. the past). It's the nature of the beast. So buck up and let the kids have their music (even if it's rubbish).
Remember, "Nothing so dates a man as to decry the younger generation." Adlai Stevenson.

129. SALLY -
HAPPY FOR NEIL DIAMOND. JUST WISH THE DAMB VIDEO WOULDN'T SKIP.

130. LifeIsGood -
I came across a post by some fan the other day - I have altered the original post slightly as follows:

“Darkness hates the light. The entertainment industry today is a very dark and empty place indeed. Occasionally we are fortunate to have a new (and sometimes older) entertainer step into this darkness and shine a light on the negativity, hypocrisy, and total lack of decency that describes today's cultural wasteland. Of course these entertainers are going to be attacked and mocked for it. Those clinging to their jaded world view cannot understand someone decent - they believe that such a person does not, cannot exist. That, my friends, is a mirror into their own souls.”

131. Ronald -
i don't know how you can even put bob dylan and neil diamond in the same catagory..apples and oranges

132. noel h -
aw bless him

133. David B -
True...kids can have their growling 3 cord music...and chit-chat with thumping. ok that was mean...Let's see how long their ears, their metal attachments, that look like you should hook up your jumper cables to last. Oh yes, those wonderfull paintjobs on their bodies! I guess they figure by time they get to be my age...you can go out and buy new skin. Hmmm...Hanabill's? Oh boy, skin by the foot!

134. dave c -
I've been a Neil Diamond fan for 40 years plus and I think it's great that he can still put out music that interest enough people to get him a #1 album.

135. dave c -
I think it's great that an artist who has been around as long as Neil Diamond still interests enough people to make his album #1.

136. Yahoo! Music User -
To those folks who rip on Bob Dylan, don't get him, etc., consider what Jack White said. He said something to the effect that, if you don't like Bob Dylan, you don't like music. Of course, that may be a bit of over the top, but I see his point. Those who dismiss him because they don't like his voice ... or because he has embarrassed himself live, etc. are not really giving the music a good listen. And, by "the music," I mean the albums, the stuff he took time to make and had to approve. When you consider the quality of the songs as a whole ... rhythmically, melodically and lyrically ... few compare. I admit his voice is not a great one in the traditional sense, but tell me who else USES his voice to convey the poetry and meaning of the songs in the way Dylan does. Lots of disciples for a reason.

137. Yahoo! Music User -
Go Neil! One of the first songs I learned on guitar was "Song Sung Blue".
"Everybody knows one"! Still love it!

138. marka -
still have some amazing talent mrDiamond.

139. J V -
Yadda Yadda Yadda! Whatever you people are saying. Neil Diamond deserves whatever he gets on the charts not just because HE CAN REALLY SING (unlike those crappy "singers" aka screamers/mumblers of today) but he can also write amazing songs. Hey, a Grammy for Lifetime Achievement sounds pretty good to me ;-)

140. Maw R -
Congrats Neil on your #1!! I've been a Neil Diamond fan since the Song Sung Blue days when I was little on through the Jazz Singer (my favorite of his)in the 1980's till now. You are never too old for good music and keep rockin'!
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