Reading Time: 3 min read

Panic! At The Disco, Death Of A Bachelor © Fueled By Ramen

Panic! At The Disco accomplish the previously unaccomplished – a number one album on the Billboard 200, five albums in! That’s the big news of the Billboard 200 this week, but are more chart stories from the Billboard 200 dated February 6, 2016.

1. Panic! At The Disco, now down to just Brendon Urie, scores its first career no. 1 album with Death Of A Bachelor. “Damn, it feels good to top the Billboard 200…” Yeah, that wasn’t exactly how the Geto Boys said it, was it?

2. David Bowie’s Blackstar falls from the top spot to no. 4. Similarly, Best Of Bowie slips from no. 4 to no. 7.

3. Kidz Bop makes its presence known at no. 6 with Kidz Bop 31. Those Kidz know how to score a top 10 album consistently, that’s for sure!

4. Bryson Tiller DID NOT see his chart position nor sales improve this week, but the Louisville, Kentucky singer/rapper still clings onto a spot in the top 10 at no. 10 with TRAPSOUL. Represent homeboy!

5. Lecrae definitely has some support behind him as his mixtape Church Clothes 3 debuts respectably at no. 12.

6. Hank Williams, Jr. sees his latest album It’s About Time debut at no. 15.

7. Brothers Osborne see their debut album Pawn Shop enter the top 20 of the Billboard 200 at no. 17.

8. One Direction falls seven spots from no. 12 to no. 19. 19th is the worst spot that Made In The A.M. has been in as of yet. Made in The A.M. spends its 10th week on the charts.

9. Taylor Swift’s 1989 slips out of the top 20 for the first time this week. The album falls six spots from no. 15 to no. 21.

10. Thanks to some Google Play magic – aka price slashing to the tune of $.99 – Fleetwood Mac’s Greatest Hits and Blake Shelton’s Reloaded: 20 no. 1 Hits fly up the charts sitting at no. 25 and no. 26 respectfully. Fleetwood Mac’s set made the biggest jump of the two rising from no. 66 to no. 25. Others sets also see a spike in sales.

11. Following the passing of Glenn Frey (1948 – 2016., The Very Best of The Eagles reenters the charts at no. 28.

12. Rachel Platten sees her Wildfire slip from no. 18 to no. 32 in it’s third week.

13. Jesus Culture land at no. 35 with Let It Echo.

14. Coldplay hasn’t had the greatest run with A Head Full Of Dreams. The set slides 16 spots from no. 23 to no. 39 in week number seven.

15. Despite slipping from no. 39 to no. 46, the Straight Outta Compton soundtrack shows “gains in performance” according the BB200 chart.

16. The Randy Rogers Band debuts quietly at no. 47 with Nothing Shines Like Neon.

17. Kirk Franklin sees his Losing My Religion album improve 120 spots from no. 194 to no. 74.

18. With Death of a Bachelor sitting pretty at no. 1, Panic! At The Disco’s previous album Too Weird To Live, Too Rare To Die! improves from no. 123 to no. 75 in its 58th charting week. (A Fever You Can’t Sweat Out lands at no. 102.

19. Anderson .Paak’s Malibu didn’t exactly ignite the charts – the set lands at no. 79.

20. Brett Eldredge sees Illinois pick up steam, rising from no. 119 to no. 99. Oh the little things in life!

21. Rick Ross continues to epically fail with Black Market – it slides from no. 95 to no. 120, seven weeks in.

22. It hasn’t been smooth going for Enya but Dark Sky Island sees a 49 spot improvement this week from no. 175 to no. 126.

23. Hmm, is 5 Seconds of Summer cooling off? Perhaps. Sounds Good Feels Good drops 28 spots from no. 101 to no. 129 in its unlucky 13th week.

24. Need it be mentioned once more that R. Kelly has the worst-selling album of his career on his hands? The Buffet dropped 27 more spots from no. 116 to no. 143. Even worse? Kelly’s latest album has spent only six weeks on the charts!

25. August Alsina clings onto a spot on the Billboard 200 this week. This Thing Called Life slips 39 spots from no. 153 to no. 192. Like R. Kelly, he’s only been on the charts six weeks with his latest effort.

Photo Credit: Fueled by Ramen
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

the musical hype

the musical hype aka Brent Faulkner has earned Bachelor and Masters degrees in music (music Education, music theory/composition respectively). A multi-instrumentalist, he plays piano, trombone, and organ among numerous other instruments. He's a certified music educator, composer, and a freelance music journalist. Faulkner cites music and writing as two of the most important parts of his life. Notably, he's blessed with a great ear, possessing perfect pitch.

Verified by MonsterInsights