|
"Now!" Too Popular for Los Lonelys
07/26/2006 5:06 PM, E! Online David Jenison
It might be lonely at the top, but it's even lonelier at number
two.
For the second straight week, the pop hits collection
Now That's What I Call Music! Vol. 22 ruled the album chart,
easily outselling the latest from Los Lonely Boys. Now! 22 was
the only album to register six-figure sales for the week ended Sunday,
selling 207,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan figures today.
Now! 19 was the last installment to hold the top spot
for consecutive weeks, a feat accomplished at this same time last
summer.
Los Lonely Boys' Sacred had to settle for the
biggest debut of the week, checking in at number two with 67,000 copies.
The Grammy-winning Tex-Mex rockers first broke big in 2004 with the
smash single "Heaven" off their self-titled debut disc. The new album's
single, "Diamonds," is an updated version of a song they first released
nine years ago.
Country singer Rodney Atkins followed at
three, with If You're Going Through Hell (which he prophetically
titled before the current heat wave) selling 55,000 copies. The
Knoxville-born singer previously had modest success with his 2003 debut
Honesty.
It was a typically slow midsummer week at
retailers--overall CD sales were down 4 percent from the previous week
and 13 percent from the same period in 2005. Year-to-date sales are
lagging 5 percent behind last year.
With no other Top 10
debuts, two albums--the Dixie Chicks' Taking the Long Way and the
Pussycat Dolls' PCD--climbed back in at nine and 10,
respectively.
Thanks to the radio hit "Face Down," Floridian
rockers Red Jumpsuit Apparatus landed the week's next best bow at 25
with Don't You Fake It, while Eric Church's Sinners Like
Me opened at 29.
New self-titled discs by Eighteen
Visions and Black Stone Cherry landed at 74 and 90, respectively, while
Golden Smog's Another Fine Day came in at 95, Third Eye Blind's
hit disc A Collection opened at 103, Billy Ray Cyrus' Wanna Be
Your Joe broke at 113, Alien Ant Farm's Up in the Attic
entered at 114 and Helmet's Monochrome registered at 159.
Finally, Dane Cook's Retaliation celebrated its
one-year anniversary on the charts this week. The comedy album currently
sits at 84 with nearly 800,000 total copies sold; its number four bow
last summer made it the most successful comedy debut since Steve Martin's 1979 classic, A Wild and Crazy Guy.
Here's a
rundown of the Top 10 albums, per Nielsen SoundScan:
1.
Now That's What I Call Music! Vol. 22, various
2.
Sacred, Los Lonely Boys
3. If You're Going Through
Hell, Rodney Atkins
4. St. Elsewhere, Gnarls Barkley
5. High School Musical soundtrack, various
6. Me
& My Gang, Rascal Flatts
7. Loose, Nelly Furtado
8. Girl Like Me, Rihanna
9. Taking the Long Way,
Dixie Chicks
10. PCD, Pussycat Dolls
|