2006/Dec/09

1. all saints - rock steady
2. take that - patience
3. corinne bailey rae - like a star
4. beyonce' knowles - irreplaceable
5. justin timberlake ft. t.i. - my love
6. p. diddy ft. christina aguilera - tell me
7. the pussycat dolls ft. timbaland - wait a minute
8. sugababes - easy
9. christina aguilera - hurt
10. paris hilton - nothing in this world
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top 10 downunder
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robin thicke - lost without u
pink - u + ur hand
jay-z - show me what you got
gnarls barkley - smiley face

2006/Nov/23

20/11/06

The tale of the tape: 4 new entries, 1 re-entry, 10 climbers and 2 non-movers. The usual rules of cause and effect come into play here, a lack of major new activity means less downward pressure on the rest of the market and many of those climbers are older songs recovering chart position a little.

That doesn't apply to the songs at the top of the chart though and one of the most intriguing weekly battles for several months is resolved in a rather unexpected manner. For most of the week it was Westlife who had the edge, with 'The Rose' narrowly outselling its nearest competition and raising the possibility that for their second chart-topper running they would manage what is for them the unusual feat of managing more than a week at the summit. Over the weekend the picture changed however and in the event the Irishmen are forced down to an unexpected Number 3.

In their place at the top are Akon and Eminem whose 'Smack That' fulfils its online promise with combined sales giving the single a comfortable 12-1 chart rise. Repeated listens show just how cleverly put together the song is, with Akon singing his part of the melody rather than rapping. It means that Eminem's contribution out of the blue halfway through makes an appropriately strong impact. The track is by no means the first chart topper for either man, Akon of course having had a fortnight at the summit with 'Lonely' in May 2005. It is Eminem's seventh appearance at the top in total, albeit his first as a duettist rather than solo performer. His only other directly credited guest appearance came in June 2000 when he featured heavily on Dr Dre's 'Forgot About Dre' which was a Number 7 hit. Slim Shady also featured as a member of D12 who have twice made Number 2 with 'Purple Pills' in 2001 and 'My Band' in 2004.

Assuming we class 'Smack That' as R&B rather than hip-hop, the genre manages a neat chart 1-2 with the second place single of the week going to Justin Timberlake with 'My Love', he took taking a leap on combined sales after hitting Number 14 with downloads seven days ago. The single is the followup to the chart-topping 'Sexyback' and assuming it gets no further will go down as his fourth solo Number 2 hit (his sixth in his career if one also counts his presence on Snoop Dogg's 'Signs' and 'NSync's 'Girlfriend').

Next week's Number One single is pretty much a foregone conclusion based on the first week download performance of the week's highest new entry. A decade and a half on, it is hard to convey the impact that Take That had on pop music. Inspired by Maurice Starr's work with New Kids On The Block in the States, manager Nigel Martin-Smith and producer Ian Levine created the oh so 90s concept of the boy band and recruited five good looking youngsters to participate, carefully grooming them so they would be as much gay icons as teen sex symbols. It is also worth noting that they took almost a year to catch fire, their first three singles being frustrating flops, their chart breakthrough only coming in June 1992 when a cover of the Tavares' 'It Only Takes A Minute' hit Number 7. After that there was no stopping them with the songwriting talents of Gary Barlow and the charisma of a certain Robbie Williams coming to the fore. They topped the charts seven times between 1993 and 1996 but the departure of Robbie for a solo career in the summer of 1995 marked the beginning of the end and their 1996 cover of 'How Deep Is Your Love' turned out to be their swansong.

Solo careers for all followed. Robbie became a superstar, Gary Barlow released two albums but then lost his muse and retreated to anonymity in America, Mark Owen released some well received but undersold solo work, Howard Donald became a DJ and Jason Orange turned to acting. Then a year ago the final four appeared together in a retrospective TV documentary about the group and a week later announced plans for a comeback tour. The initial 11 dates rapidly became 30 as demand for the tickets soared - and with such ready evidence that their market was still there a new record deal was all but inevitable.

Hence the Number 4 appearance this week of 'Patience', a song which in terms of a comeback gets everything right that All Saints got wrong. The song is a Gary Barlow anthem to rank with his best, the harmonies of the foursome sounding just as good as they did a decade ago but with a lush production that is firmly rooted in the modern day. Nobody can be in any doubt that this will turn out to be one of the most worthwhile musical comebacks of modern times.

The one person missing from the reunion is of course Robbie Williams. During the tour at the start of the year he gave the project his blessing, supplied new footage of himself for use on stage but those hoping for even just one surprise cameo appearance were left disappointed. In truth he doesn't need to relive the past, doing very nicely thank you in the present. The debate rages over whether the 'Rudebox' album is a self indulgent mess or the work of a slightly misfiring genius, a debate only exacerbated by the title track and its Number 4 peak earlier in the autumn. For the second single the more conventional and George Michael-esque'Lovelight' makes its chart appearance. The track is actually a cover version although the Lewis Taylor original is obscure enough to make this the first exposure to the song for virtually everyone. Charting at 28 last week, the single rises to Number 8 to give Robbie and his former bandmates simultaneous Top 10 singles.

Also on the rise on combined sales is Christina Aguilera who follows up the Number 2 hit 'Ain't No Other Man' with 'Hurt'. Also from the 'Back To Basics' album, the track is a plaintive ballad in which her powerful lungs are given their most extensive workout since 'The Voice Within'. It is an impressive track but actually one which displays her biggest vocal shortcoming. Working at the very edge of her range, she winds up howling rather than singing, robbing the track of some of its emotional impact. The single landed at Number 33 on downloads last week and mysteriously misses the Top 10 with a Number 11 placing, potentially breaking her run of nine Top 10 hits. Her only other single to miss the Top 10 was the Number 19 hit 'I Turn To You' way back in the summer of 2000.

There is a similar setback for Snow Patrol who follow up the career-defining 'Chasing Cars' with 'Set The Fire To The Third Bar', the third chart single from the 'Eyes Open' album. A duet with folk singer Martha Wainwright, I saw it memorably described somewhere as being simultaneously the worst Snow Patrol and best Wainwright track ever. Not a bad track but not one of their best, Number 18 probably being all it deserves.

If Take That are expected to have an easy Number One single next week, I suspect it will be joined in the Top 3 by Emma Bunton's 'Downtown'. The solo career of the former Baby Spice appeared to finally click in 2004 with the 'Free Me' album as she found her groove as a 60s jazz-pop revivalist, most notably with the Number 6 hit 'Maybe' and her inspired cover of Astrid Gilberto's 'Crickets Sing For Anamaria' which sadly suffered from being the album's fourth single and could only peak at Number 15. Her newest single is what you might regard as the song she was born to cover, Petula Clark's 1964 hit 'Downtown' which doubles as this year's Children In Need charity single. Emma's version sensibly pays homage to the Petula Clark version of Tony Hatch's song with the most minor of tweaks to the production to bring it up to date. The magic of the original remains though, right down to the trumpet led instrumental although quite how we are supposed to interpret the choreography in the video which has Emma and the backing dancers pointing "downstairs" when the title is sung is still open to question. Petula Clark had a hit with the single twice over, originally hitting Number 2 in the 60s and Number 10 eighteen years ago when the track was remixed in dramatic 80s style. One of the all time great pop songs, it was long overdue for a revival and Emma Bunton pays it the respect it deserves. If that wasn't enough, the single also features her version of Cilla Black's 'Something Tells Me (Something's Gonna Happen Tonight)' aka the music from the Ferrero Roche advert. Watch it soar next week.

The final new entry of note this week is another frustratingly mid-table appearance for Little Man Tate, the Sheffield pub-rock band who by rights should be experiencing Artic Monkeys level of acclaim. 'Man I Hate Your Band' is their third Top 40 hit of the year, the followup to September's 'House Party At Boothy's' which deserved far better than its Number 29 peak. Number 26 for the new single equates to their biggest hit to date but I would suggest that if you are ticked off with R&B tracks in the Top 3 and think I've taken leave of my senses by heaping praise on an Emma Bunton single, go check out anything you can by Little Man Tate. Huge grin on face guaranteed.

2006/Nov/19

INCLUDING SONGWRITER OF THE YEAR AND SONG OF THE YEAR

NORTH AMERICAN TOUR PLAYS TO PACKED HOUSES EVERY NIGHT

10 Million worldwide selling album THE EMANCIPATION OF MIMI generates 25 industry awards - three Grammys, two Soul Train Music Awards, four VIBE Awards, American Music Award, five Billboard Music Awards, four Radio Music Awards, six BMI Awards

As she reaches the half-way point on her North American tour, playing to packed houses and roaring, fanatical crowds in every city - including sold-out homecoming New York-area shows last week at Madison Square Garden and the Continental Airlines Arena - performer and song?writer Mariah Carey, the top-selling female artist in history, has now been honored with six of the most prestigious awards of her entire career. Mariah is the recipient of BMI's Songwriter of The Year Award; Song of the Year "We Belong Together"; #1 Billboard Song "We Belong Together"; and the 3 most performed songs: "We Belong Together" "Shake It Off" and "Don't Forget About Us".

The six BMI Awards cap one of the most phenomenally successful year-and-a-halfs of Mariah's entire career, centering upon the success of her Island Records album The Emancipation Of Mimi, which generated three Grammy awards and more than a dozen additional major industry awards. Soundscan's biggest-selling album of 2005, Mimi has sold over 10 million units worldwide to date, bringing Mariah's career sales to over 160 million units world?wide.

Mariah's most successful tour ever, "The Adventures of Mimi: The Voice, The Hits, The Tour," is selling out arenas from coast to coast. The Los Angeles Times said that the Live Nation-produced "'Adventures' tour showcases a well-toned and well-honed talent." Live Nation President and Chief Executive Officer, Michael Rapino, called the tour "An absolute home run that solidifies Mariah as one of the most successful live acts around."

Mariah's new cache of BMI Awards join a shelf of honors that began last November at the 33rd annual American Music Awards, where she was voted Favorite Soul/Rhythm & Blues Female Artist. At the 3rd annual VIBE Awards the same month, Mariah led everyone with four wins generated by Mimi: Artist Of The Year, Album Of The Year, R&B Voice Of The Year, and Best R&B Song for "We Belong Together."

At the 2005 Billboard Music Awards in December, Mariah was named Top R&B Singles Artist - Female, Top R&B/Hip-Hop Artist - Female, Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums Artist - Female, and Top Overall Albums Artist - Female, with "We Belong Together" named the #1 Hot 100 Single Of the Year. Later that month, at the annual Radio Music Awards broadcast from Las Vegas, Mariah was honored with the Legend Award and was named Artist of the Year/Urban and Rhythmic Radio, in addition to "We Belong Together" winning both Song of the Year/Main Stream Hit Radio and Song of the Year/Urban and Rhythmic Radio.

It was the prelude to the 48th annual Grammy Awards in February 2006. Mariah received 8 nominations (tied for the highest number of nominations for the year) and was ultimately honored for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance and Best R&B Song for "We Belong Together," and Best Contemporary R&B Album for The Emancipation Of Mimi. At the broadcast, Mariah delivered a rousing, career-defining medley of "We Belong Together" and "Fly Like A Bird," the latter backed by Hezekiah Walker & Brooklyn's 30-voice Love Fellowship Tabernacle Choir.

Mimi includes Mariah's 16th and 17th #1 career singles, "We Belong Together" and "Don't Forget About Us," respectively - which tied one of the most enduring chart records in Billboard Hot 100 history, Elvis Presley's 17 #1's. Mariah is now positioned as the only active recording artist in the 48 years of the Hot 100 (which began in 1958) with the potential to match or surpass the Beatles' all-time high of 20 #1 hits. With 76 total weeks of #1 hits (since her career began in 1990), Mariah also ranks second only to Presley's all-time high 79 weeks.

from http://www.mariahcarey.com/news/news.php?uid=127