Katy Perry Breaks Record Set by Gaga, Timberlake -- But Can't Yet Tell Jacko to Beat It

Katy Perry Breaks Record Set by Gaga, Timberlake -- But Can't Yet Tell Jacko to Beat It

Published: August 03, 2011 @ 11:30 am
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By Chris Willman

UPDATED

With her latest smash, “Last Friday Night (TGIF),” Katy Perry has beaten a chart record previously held by Lady Gaga and Justin Timberlake. But she'll have to wait till next week to find out whether she can match a milestone set by Michael Jackson.

"Last Friday Night" is the fifth song from her latest album to top Billboard’s Pop Songs airplay rankings. That put ahead of Gaga and Timberlake, who'd both had a mere four tunes from a single album land at No. 1 on that chart, which has been around for 19 years.

Perry is poised for a far more significant achievement if she can get the fifth single from her "Teenage Dream" album atop Billboard's historic Hot 100, which combines airplay and sales. Michael Jackson still holds that record, having landed five No. 1 singles from his 1987 “Bad” album.

Expectations were high that "Last Friday Night" might make it to the top of this week's Hot 100 and tie Jackson's mark. But Mrs. Russell Brand was denied by LMFAO's "Party Rock Anthem," which is spending a fifth straight week in that slot. She's got a good shot at it next week, having registered another strong airplay increase for the single this week, even as sales slightly declined.

And if that doesn't work, she could always do it with the next single, as EMI surely isn't done milking “Teenage Dream’s” treasure trove of hits yet.

Perry is, notoriously, a former church singer gone (very) secular. It was another Church singer, meanwhile, earning hosannas on the album sales chart.

It turns out country upstart Eric Church was indulging in some self-fulfilling prophecy when he titled his third effort “Chief.” Although he'd never had an album chart above No. 4 before, he easily became the commander-in-chief of the latest Billboard 200 sales chart, as his latest effort debuted on top with 145,000 copies -- more than quadrupling the opening SoundScan numbers for his previous album.

Female singers made most of the remaining news on the album sales chart, after Church’s stately bow. Adele fell from the top spot to No. 2, even though, at 83,000, her unit figures were actually up a little, as they have been almost every week.

Kelly Rowland’s ultimate career destiny is still a question mark, as her third solo album, “Here I Am,” entered at No. 3 on sales of 77,000 units -- a slight comedown for Beyonce’s former sidekick, despite the urban ubiquity of her “Motivation” single.

Amy Winehouse’s “Back to Black” sold 54,000 and moved up five spots to No. 4, in its first full week of predictably robust posthumous sales. Another white British soul singer, Joss Stone, enjoyed the week’s final top 10 entry, as “LP1,” her first independently released album, kicked in at No. 9 with 30,000 sold, a slight improvement over her previous major-label-backed effort.

Tags: adele, album sales, Amy Winehouse, Billboard, Chris Willman, Eric Church, Joss Stone, Katy Perry, Kelly Rowland, LMFAO, music, Music, soundScan
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Chris Willman has been a frequent contributor to TV Guide, New York magazine, the Los Angeles Times, Rolling Stone, Spin, Billboard, Parade and other publications. In a long run at Entertainment Weekly, he penned more than 20 cover stories as a senior writer before becoming the magazine’s chief music critic. His recent essay about Bob Dylan for New York magazine was selected for the latest edition of De Capo's’ "Best Music Writing" book series. Advertising Age’s media columnist included Willman in a short list of “the entertainment world’s sharpest critics.”

His book "Rednecks & Bluenecks: The Politics of Country Music" was praised by Stephen King, who said, “You won’t read a better book about American music this year — or, probably, a better one about American political thought.”

During his time at EW, meanwhile, he received the ultimate celebrity accolade from Kanye West, who famously blogged (in response to a B+ review), “Kill yourself, Chris Willman!” Failing to heed that advice, Willman has survived to live, live-blog, and grade another day.

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