Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
week: Two-digit week indicating the week being reported by the chart. Week is a number from 01 to 53, with a leading 0 for weeks 01-09 (some charts do not require the leading zero; consult Support tables below). Used in combination with the year parameter and only for certain charts; not necessary (or even used) for others.
In the iteration of the chart dated 2 January, Mary Chapin Carpenter's The Age of Miracles spent its fifth week at number one, retaining its position from the final year of 2010. The album would hold at the top spot for the first four weeks of the year before being displaced by 34 Number Ones , a compilation album by country legend Alan Jackson .
Taylor Swift's 2010 album Speak Now was the first number-one of 2011. It spent four consecutive weeks at the top. Michael Bublé's Christmas was the last number-one album of the year, with four consecutive weeks atop the chart. Born This Way by Lady Gaga scored the biggest sales week of 2011, opening with 1,108,000 copies sold.
week: Two-digit week indicating the week being reported by the chart. Week is a number from 01 to 53, with a leading 0 for weeks 01-09 (some charts do not require the leading zero; consult Support tables below). Used in combination with the year parameter and only for certain charts; not necessary (or even used) for others.
In 2011, eight different songs topped the chart in 52 issues of the magazine, based on weekly airplay data from radio stations compiled by Nielsen Broadcast Data Systems. On the first chart of the year, the number one spot was held by Mariah Carey with "Oh Santa!", the song's third consecutive week at number one. [1]
Issue date Album Artist Reference January 1 Tron: Legacy: Daft Punk [2]January 8 [3]January 15 [4]January 22 [5]January 29 [6]February 5 [7]February 12 [8]February 19
Brad Paisley spent two weeks at number one with This Is Country Music. Top Country Albums is a chart that ranks the top-performing country music albums in the United States, published by Billboard. In 2011, 19 different albums topped the chart; placings were based on electronic point of sale data from retail outlets. [1]
The highest-selling singles in Japan are ranked in the Oricon Weekly Chart, which is published by Oricon Style magazine. The data are compiled by Oricon based on each singles' weekly physical sales. [1]