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Charts: Turner, Crue Break Through
02/09/2005 4:10 PM, E! Online David Jenison
Apparently the Super Bowl wasn't the only big game last week.
Compton rapper the Game returned to number one with The
Documentary a week after being displaced by country star Kenny
Chesney's Be As You Are: Songs from an Old Blue Chair. For the
week ended Sunday, The Documentary made its chart-topping
comeback by selling 190,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan.
But Compton wasn't the only comeback in the house. Tina Turner , benefiting from appearances on Oprah, Today,
Live with Regis and Kelly, The Ellen DeGeneres Show and
CBS' The Early Show, landed the week's best bow at number two as
All the Best sold 121,000 copies.
Turner's new
hits two-disc anthology, spanning her stint with ex-husband Ike to her
Private Dancer days, is her highest ever debut on the
Billboard 200 pop chart. Her lead single, "Open Arms," one of
three new tracks on the album, is in the Top 20 on the Adult
Contemporary chart.
All the Best also got a big
boost from java junkies. The disc is the second major album carried by
Starbucks, which became a major music player with Ray Charles'
multiplatinum Genius Loves Company.
Another group of comeback kids, Mtley Cre, nabbed a number six debut
with their own anthology, Red, White & Cre, selling 90,000
copies. The three new tracks mark the reunited band's first new music in
seven years, while the disc itself marks the band's seventh Top 10
debut. Back in 1989, the group scored its only number one bow with
Dr. Feelgood.
With a new single at radio, "If I
Die Tomorrow," the rockers launch their Better Live Than Dead tour on
Feb. 17 in Fort Lauderdale.
The week's final Top 10
entry belonged to the Grammy Nominations 2005 compilation,
featuring Black Eyed Peas, Green Day and Alicia Keys. The disc sold
78,000 copies at number eight.
The rest of the Top 10
were holdovers: Green Day's American Idiot at three, Chesney's
Be As You Areat four, John Legend's Get Lifted at five,
Eminem 's Encore at seven, Lil Jon & The East Side Boyz's Crunk
Juice at nine and Usher's Confessions in the 10 spot.
With the Ray DVD hitting retail stores, the new
companion disc More Music from Ray debuted at 46, selling 25,000
first-week copies. Likewise, the original Ray soundtrack jumped
27 spots to 26, while Genius Loves Company leapt 11 to 24.
Other noteworthy debuts included Sigue La Mata's Montez De
Durango at 34, D.O.D.'s Do Or Die at 40, Unwritten Law's
Here's to the Mourning at 51, and Joe Cocker 's Heart &
Soul at 61.
Finally, Grammy nominee Norah Jones '
current album, Feels Like Home, celebrated its one-year
anniversary on the charts this week at number 81. Her previous disc,
Come Away With Me, spent more than 2 1/2 years on the charts
before finally dropping off a few months ago.
Next week,
expect sales spikes from Super Bowl and Grammy performers.
Here's a recap of the Top 10 for the week ended Sunday, based on sales
data by Nielsen SoundScan:
1. The Documentary, The
Game
2. All The Best, Tina Turner
3. American
Idiot, Green Day
4. Be As You Are: Songs from an Old Blue
Chair, Kenny Chesney
5. Get Lifted, John Legend
6. Red, White & Cre, Mtley Cre
7. Encore,
Eminem
8. 2005 Grammy Nominations, various
9.
Crunk Juice, Lil Jon & The East Side Boyz
10.
Confessions, Usher
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