The Weeknd Hits No. 1 for a Fifth Time With ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ | CPT PPP Coverage
Cryptopolytech (CPT) Public Press Pass (PPP)
News of the Day COVERAGE
200000048 – World Newser
•| #People |•| #World |•| #Online |•| #Media |•| #Outlet |
View more Headlines & Breaking News here, as covered by cryptopolytech.com
The Weeknd Hits No. 1 for a Fifth Time With ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ appeared on www.nytimes.com by Ben Sisario.
The Weekend has scored his fifth No. 1 album with “Hurry Up Tomorrow,” posting the biggest overall numbers on the Billboard chart since Taylor Swift nearly a year ago.
The release of “Hurry Up Tomorrow,” which the poppy-yet-creepy Canadian star announced at a livestreamed concert in São Paulo in September, was delayed by a week to Jan. 31 because of the Los Angeles wildfires. But then it got a prominent boost when the Weeknd performed a two-song medley on the Grammy Awards broadcast last week, revealing that he had quashed his four-year boycott over the show’s voting process.
“Hurry Up Tomorrow,” the Weeknd’s sixth studio album, had the equivalent of 490,500 sales in the United States, according to the tracking service Luminate. Although the Weeknd is a streaming heavyweight — more than 20 of his tracks have garnered at least a billion clicks on Spotify — the album’s opening-week numbers were driven by unit sales. It sold 183,000 digital downloads, 99,000 CDs and 77,000 copies on vinyl, the Weeknd’s best week in that format. (There were even 1,000 on cassette.) Its 22 tracks were streamed 172 million times.
The album’s total number of 490,500 — a composite derived from a formula used by Luminate and Billboard to reconcile the various music formats — was the biggest weekly take since last April, when Swift’s “Tortured Poets” burst out of the gate with 2.6 million.
Also this week, Bad Bunny’s “Debí Tirar Más Fotos” (“I Should Have Taken More Photos”) fell to second place after three weeks at the top and SZA’s “SOS” dropped one spot to No. 3.
The Grammys offered a modest boost to some of the night’s big winners and nominees. Kendrick Lamar, who took record and song of the year (“Not Like Us”), fell one spot to No. 4 with “GNX,” though its numbers were slightly up. Billie Eilish, who performed but went home empty-handed, saw her LP “Hit Me Hard and Soft” rise five spots to No. 5. And Chappell Roan, who performed and won best new artist, jumped eight spots to No. 6 with “The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess.”
FEATURED ‘News of the Day’, as reported by public domain newswires.
View ALL Headlines & Breaking News here.
Source Information (if available)
This article originally appeared on www.nytimes.com by Ben Sisario – sharing via newswires in the public domain, repeatedly. News articles have become eerily similar to manufacturer descriptions.
We will happily entertain any content removal requests, simply reach out to us. In the interim, please perform due diligence and place any content you deem “privileged” behind a subscription and/or paywall.
CPT (CryptoPolyTech) PPP (Public Press Pass) Coverage features stories and headlines you may not otherwise see due to the manipulation of mass media.
First to share? If share image does not populate, please close the share box & re-open or reload page to load the image, Thanks!