There's more. Last week, teen wonders 'N Sync (with two albums on
the chart) and the Backstreet Boys were entrenched at Nos. 3, 7 and
5, respectively. Last year at this time, teen wonders the Spice
Girls and Hanson were entrenched at No. 6 and No. 9, respectively.
This year, Jewel's Spirit is connecting spiritually and
commercially, landing at No. 4, while last December it was Barbara
Streisand's Higher Ground filling the Top-Ten folkie
niche.
Artists who make a habit of hitting it big during the holiday
shopping season are wise indeed, as sales traditionally skyrocket.
This year is no exception. In fact, twenty-six of the top thirty
albums saw sales increase last week. How strong of a week was it?
Rapper Redman's latest effort, Doc's the Name, debuted by
selling a hefty 182,000 copies and still didn't crack the Top 10.
In fact, the top twenty-three albums for the week all managed to
break the 100,000 barrier; during a normal sales week, just a
handful of titles manage that feat.
Interestingly, of the few titles that failed to cash in last week
with significant sales gains, most were from rap and R&B, two
genres that have sold exceedingly well all year. New albums by
Tupac, R. Kelly, Dru Hill, Method Man, Ice Cube, Bone
Thugs-N-Harmony and RZA did not benefit from the gift-buying sprees
across the country.
From the top, it was Double Live (451,000 copies),
followed by These Are Special Times (413,000); 'N
Sync (379,000); Spirit (310,000); The Backstreet
Boys (252,000); Mariah Carey's #1's (228,000); 'N
Sync's Home for Christmas (221,000); Shania Twain's
Come On Over (210,000); Offspring's Americana
(193,000); and Metallica's Garage Inc. (191,000).
ERIC BOEHLERT
(December 16, 1998)
Email
Stumble
AIM
Del.icio.us
DiggThis
Fark It!

- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.