Post by jt40 on Mar 24, 2006 19:41:13 GMT -5
www.freewebs.com/jessicastop40/charts.htm
Pearl Jam's "Suicide" At #1
In just its third week on the chart, Pearl Jam's new single "World Wide Suicide" moves two spots from #3 to #1 to have the third new #1 of the month and the seventh #1 of the year. It's the grunge band's first JT40 hit, though they've had a long career dating back to the early 90's with their breakthrough album "Ten".
"Suicide" debuted at #27 two days after its release to radio and rocketed up to #3 last week before claiming #1. The jump knocks Guns N' Roses' "IRS" down to #4 after just one week on top.
A distant contender comes from Girls Aloud's "Whole Lotta History", up 5-2 to become the UK girl group's biggest JT40 hit since "I'll Stand By You" went to #1 in January 2005.
The Armchair Cynics' former #1 "Coalmine" refuses to die, down 2-3 in its 16th week on the chart and 10th week within the top 3. However it may soon suffer due to increasing competition from songs 5-11, all still climbing and with bullets.
New to the top 10 are Jewel's "Again and Again" (11-8, finally top 10 after being robbed just barely by the big climbs from GNR and Pearl Jam), Richard Ashcroft's "Break The Night With Colour" (13-9) and the Arctic Monkeys' "I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor" (18-10).
The pick of the week is Michael Stipe's "In The Sun" up 31-22. Chris Martin of Coldplay, who sings backup, has never made the chart with his respective band, though chances are they might finally get a JT40 hit with "Talk", added to the bubbling under this week.
The week's greatest gainer is HIM's "Wings of a Butterfly" up 38-26 in its second week. Two spots down, Natasha Bedingfield has the week's highest debut at #28 with "Single", the third US release from her "Unwritten" album.
Also debuting this week are Bon Jovi's "Who Says You Can't Go Home" (#35), Orson's "No Tomorrow" (#36) and Jack's Mannequin's "The Mixed Tape" (#37). Tori Amos's "Cars and Guitars" drops off this week, making this week's chart the first in 63 weeks without one Tori song inside the top 40.
Pearl Jam's "Suicide" At #1
In just its third week on the chart, Pearl Jam's new single "World Wide Suicide" moves two spots from #3 to #1 to have the third new #1 of the month and the seventh #1 of the year. It's the grunge band's first JT40 hit, though they've had a long career dating back to the early 90's with their breakthrough album "Ten".
"Suicide" debuted at #27 two days after its release to radio and rocketed up to #3 last week before claiming #1. The jump knocks Guns N' Roses' "IRS" down to #4 after just one week on top.
A distant contender comes from Girls Aloud's "Whole Lotta History", up 5-2 to become the UK girl group's biggest JT40 hit since "I'll Stand By You" went to #1 in January 2005.
The Armchair Cynics' former #1 "Coalmine" refuses to die, down 2-3 in its 16th week on the chart and 10th week within the top 3. However it may soon suffer due to increasing competition from songs 5-11, all still climbing and with bullets.
New to the top 10 are Jewel's "Again and Again" (11-8, finally top 10 after being robbed just barely by the big climbs from GNR and Pearl Jam), Richard Ashcroft's "Break The Night With Colour" (13-9) and the Arctic Monkeys' "I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor" (18-10).
The pick of the week is Michael Stipe's "In The Sun" up 31-22. Chris Martin of Coldplay, who sings backup, has never made the chart with his respective band, though chances are they might finally get a JT40 hit with "Talk", added to the bubbling under this week.
The week's greatest gainer is HIM's "Wings of a Butterfly" up 38-26 in its second week. Two spots down, Natasha Bedingfield has the week's highest debut at #28 with "Single", the third US release from her "Unwritten" album.
Also debuting this week are Bon Jovi's "Who Says You Can't Go Home" (#35), Orson's "No Tomorrow" (#36) and Jack's Mannequin's "The Mixed Tape" (#37). Tori Amos's "Cars and Guitars" drops off this week, making this week's chart the first in 63 weeks without one Tori song inside the top 40.