Rod Stewart on Top Again
Rod Stewart is in the Number One spot for the first time in
twenty-five years. His latest standards album, Stardust . . .
The Great American Songbook: Volume III, sold 240,000 copies
in its first week, according to Nielsen SoundScan.
But this comes as little surprise, considering Stewart’s success
with his American Songbook series. The fifty-nine-year-old
rocker last topped the charts in 1979 with Blondes Have More
Fun (the album that spawned the Number One single “Do Ya Think
I’m Sexy?”). His first standards release came in 2002 with It
Had to Be You . . . The Great American Songbook: Volume I,
which debuted at Number Four, and went on to sell 2.6 million
copies. The 2003 follow-up, As Time Goes By . . . The Great
American Songbook: Volume II, debuted two spots higher, and
has moved 2.1 million copies.
George Strait’s compilation of chart-toppers, 50 Number
Ones, slipped down from the top spot to Number Three this week
(142,000), while St. Louis rapper Nelly’s Suit reversed
momentum and stepped up from Three to Two, with 153,000 copies
sold. Arizona rockers Jimmy Eat World’s Futures made a
strong debut at Number Six (99,000), while country faves Brooks and
Dunn’s latest best-of, The Greatest Hits Collection II,
came in at Number Seven (83,000).
Another winner this week is Ray Charles’ posthumous release,
Genius Loves Company, which jumped eight spots to Number
Five (99,000), no doubt bolstered by the much-advertised Charles
biopic, Ray, which hits theaters this week. And the late,
great singer-songwriter Elliott Smith had his first Top Twenty
debut, as the posthumous collection of his last songs, From a
Basement on the Hill, sold 43,000 copies to garner Number
Nineteen.
Canadian pop-punk princes Sum 41’s Chuck, expected to
be a blockbuster, has dropped dramatically in its second week from
the Ten spot to Number Twenty-Six, with just 32,000 copies sold.
And after a strong performance last week at Number Five, Mos Def’s
sophomore solo effort, New Danger, slipped seven places to
exit the Top Ten (60,000). Good Charlotte’s Chronicles of Life
& Death also continues its downward momentum, dropping
from Number Seven to Sixteen (51,000) in its third week.
With no powerhouse releases this week, expect Rod Stewart’s
reign to continue. We may even see a slow, steady climb from the
boys of Jimmy Eat World.
This week’s Top Ten: Rod Stewart’s Stardust . . . The Great
American Songbook: Volume III; Nelly’s Suit; George
Strait’s 50 Number Ones; Usher’s Confessions; Ray
Charles’ Genius Loves Company; Jimmy Eat World’s
Futures; Brooks and Dunn’s The Greatest Hits
Collection II; Celine Dion’s Miracle; Hilary Duff’s Hilary Duff; Tim McGraw’s Live Like You Were
Dying.