Lizzo tops the Hot 100 billboard, Malone's post brings Ozzy Osbourne and Lewis Capaldi back to the top 10



[ad_1]

The Malone ticket is in the top 10 of the launch of his album "Hollywood & Bleeding". at Billboard 200. Osbourne, meanwhile, writes the story on the Hot 100.

Lizzo spends a third week at the top of Billboard Hot 100 with his first number 1 on the chart, "Truth Hurts".

In addition, "Goodbyes" Post Malone, starring Young Thug, climbs 10 to 3; "Circles" jump from # 7 to # 4; "Take What You Want", starring Ozzy Osbourne and Travis Scott, debuts on Hot 100 at number 8; and the former number 1 "Sunflower (Spider-Man: In the Spider Verse)", with Swae Lee, raises to 14-10.

Notably, "Take" marks Osbourne's first Top 100 in 10 years, while the rock legend breaks the record for the highest number of times between the top 10 in the history of the standings. The four songs appear on the new Post Malone LP Bleeding from Hollywood, which scolds No. 1 chart of the Billboard's 200 albums.

In addition, singer-songwriter Lewis Capaldi records his first Top 10 of the 100 best songs, while "Someone You Loved" raises the score of 11-9.

Let's take a look at the top 10 Hot 100 (dated September 21st), which combines all-genre streaming in the United States, radio broadcasts, and sales data. All cards will be updated on Billboard.com tomorrow (17 September).

Nice Life / Atlantic Records' Truth Hurts Spends Third Week at the Top of Digital Song Sales, But Down 19% to 31,000 Sales in the Week Ending September 12, Nielsen Reports Music. It increased 4-2 on Radio Songs, up 6%, to reach 110.8 million audiences during the week ending September 15th, and 3-14 on Streaming Songs, down 16% to 29.2 million US flows during the week ending September 12th.

The song simultaneously adds a fourth week to the top of the charts of Hot R & B / Hip-Hop and Hot Rap Songs genres (which use the same methodology as Hot 100).

"SeƱorita" by Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello are in second place in the Hot 100, having passed the August 31 ranking. He directs the second week Radio Songs, with an audience of 111.9 million euros.

Post Malone's "Goodbyes" steals 10 to 3 on the Hot 100, which is his first record on July 20; "Circles" climbs 7-4 in his second week; "Take What You Want" starts at No. 8 in the standings; and "Sunflower" bounces 14-10. The songs attracted 39.1 million, 33 million, 35.7 million and 32.1 million US streams respectively during the week of follow-up; On Radio Songs, "Circles" debuts at number 32 (28.1 million impressions) and "Goodbyes" and "Sunflower" rank respectively at numbers 9 (65.8 million) and 33 (27.7 million) .

With "Take", Post Malone scores his ninth Hot 100 in the top 10, while Scott scores his sixth. Osbourne, meanwhile, wins his second top 100 of the Top 100 (and his best rank), more than 30 years after his first: "Close My Eyes Forever" with Lita Ford, number 8 in 1989. The return of Osbourne tops the record, as he rewrite the brand, formerly owned by Dobie Gray, for the longest break between the top 10:

The longest gaps between the top 100 top 10

Ozzy Osbourne, 30 years and three months
June 17, 1989, "Close My Eyes Forever" (duet with Lita Ford)
September 21, 2019, "Take What You Want" (Post Malone & Osbourne & Travis Scott)

Dobie Gray, 30, two months and one week
May 26, 1973, "Drift Away"
August 2, 2003, "Drift Away" (Uncle Kracker & Gray)

Paul McCartney, 29 and two weeks
February 8, 1986, "Spies like us"
February 21, 2015, "FourFiveSeconds" (Rihanna & Kanye West & McCartney)

McCartney continues to hold the record for the longest wait among the 100 best artists in the top 100 in leading roles on both bookend hits. (Between his two songs mentioned above, McCartney was in the top 10 in 1995-1996 as part of the Beatles in "Free as a Bird".)

Back to Post Malone, he presents for the first time four Hot 100 top 10 simultaneous. It only becomes the sixth act of this feat, joining 50 Cent, the Beatles, Drake, Lil Wayne and T-Pain. Drake set the record for the most competitive top 10 by scoring seven results in the July 14, 2018 survey (while the Beatles are the only other act that counts five, which they managed for two weeks in 1964; these mounts, that on April 4, they claimed all of the top five, a race that no other artist has equaled).

"Bad Guy" by Billie Eilish, who directed the Hot 100 dated August 24th, falling from 3 to 5; Lil Tecca's "Ran $ om" is retiring to 6th place after peaking at No. 4, as he spends a fourth week at the top of Streaming Songs (46.7 million, down 5%); and Chris Brown's "No Guidance," starring Drake, goes down to No. 7 of his No. 6 Hot 100 Summit, while earning a third week at No. 1 on Hot R & B Songs.

Lewis Capaldi collects his first Hot 100 in the top 10, while "Someone You Loved" goes up 11-9 The ballad strikes 6-4 on sales of digital songs (17,000, up 2 %) and 8-6 on songs on the radio (79 million, up 11%), while the drop of 13-23 on streaming songs, but with a 9% increase to 22.3 million.

The song of this 22-year-old Scottish artist completes a steady climb into the top 10 of the Hot 100, reaching the support of the 18th week of the chart, which dates back to its debut on May 25th. Previously, he was in first place in the official United Kingdom singles rankings for seven weeks in March and April, and has increased other international surveys. Two videos adapted to the song contributed to his profile: a release in February and a new clip released in late August.

The song is a first album of Capaldi, Divinely uninspired in an infernal measure, which opened at the top of the UK official charts in June and reached a 32nd place finish on the Billboard 200 dated September 14th.

Check out more Hot 100 news on Billboard.com this week and for all the news on the charts, you can listen (and subscribe) to Display panelChart Beat Podcast and Pop Shop Podcast and follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on Twitter and Instagram. And again, do not forget to visit Billboard.com tomorrow (September 17th), when all the cards, including the one of the Hot 100 in its entirety, will be updated.

[ad_2]

Source link