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Carrie rides carnival straight to No. 1
David Jenison
LOS ANGELES—Carrie Underwood’s new single might be “So Small,” but her
new album is big, big, big! With the 41st Country Music Awards less than
a week away, several country artists debuted new albums, but it was the
season-four American Idol champ who ultimately ruled the rodeo, selling
527,000 copies of Carnival Ride, according to Nielsen SoundScan numbers
released today.
In addition to topping the charts, Underwood scored the best first-week
sales of any female artist in 2007. Norah Jones’ Not Too Late held the
previous mark with 405,000 during its opening week back in February.
Carnival Ride is the year’s sixth-best bow overall, following albums by
Kanye West, 50 Cent, Linkin Park, the High School Musical 2 cast and
Rascal Flatts.
Carnival Ride also makes Underwood the first American Idol champ to top
the charts since Ruben Studdard’s Soulful debut four years ago.
Follow-up albums by Kelly Clarkson and Studdard, the only other champs
to top the chart, failed to repeat. Likewise, debut albums by Fantasia
and Taylor Hicks never made it to the top, entering the charts at eight
and two, respectively. In fact, Chris Daughtry, the fourth-place
finisher from season five, is the only other former contestant to hit
number one in recent years, though season-six champ Jordin Sparks will
get her chance Nov. 20, when her self-titled debut drops.
Meanwhile, Underwood’s debut disc, Some Hearts, remains in the Billboard
200. The 2005 album, which debuted at number two, entered its 102nd week
at 60, up 21 spots, bringing its two-year tally to nearly 6 million.
It was a busy week with six top 10 debuts, enough to send last week’s
chart-topper, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band’s Magic, down 11
spots to number 12. Among the other new debuts, the odd coupling of
Zeppelin rocker Robert Plant and bluegrass songbird Alison Krauss was
good enough for a second-place debut as Raising Sand sold 112,000 copies
for the week ended Sunday.
Another country crooner, Gary Allan, sold 69,000 copies of Living Hard
to follow at three. Remarkably, this is the first time in Billboard 200
history that three country albums debuted in the top three spots.
A trio of rock releases made up the rest of the top 10 bows. System of a
Down screamer Serj Tankian sold 66,000 copies of his solo album Elect
the Dead for a number four finish. Sci-fi prog-rockers Coheed & Cambria
followed at six, selling 62,000 copies of No World for Tomorrow. Seether,
powered by the top 10 rock hit “Fake It,” nabbed the nine spot, moving
62,000 copies of Finding Beauty in Negative Spaces. The week’s top 10
holdovers were Josh Groban’s Noël at five, Kid Rock’s Rock N Roll Jesus
at seven, Rascal Flatts’ Still Feels Good at eight and the High School
Musical 2 soundtrack at 10.
With the exception of Groban, each of these albums originally debuted at
number one.
A pair of rockers just missed the top 10. Neil Young’s Chrome Dreams II
sold nearly 54,000 copies at 11. Colombian superstar Juanes, who’s often
called the Latin Bono for his exceptional humanitarian efforts, sold
47,000 of La Vida...Es un Ratico at 13.
Further down the chart, Hurricane Chris’ 5150 Ratchet sold 26,000 copies
at 24, while Say Anything’s In Defence of the Genre debuted at 27, with
25,000. |